What Should Be In Your Community Strategy?
Richard Millington
Founder of FeverBee Community Consultancy | Author: Build Your Community (Pearson, 2021) | Join 20k+ subscribers to my newsletter.
I’ve seen community strategies which range from a couple of slides to 120+ page documents.
The two documents serve entirely different goals – but both are called ‘strategy’.
Which raises the question, how can the definition of strategy vary so wildly?
What should a strategy include? What’s the goal of a strategy? What’s its role within an organisation?
I want to share how FeverBee thinks about strategy and what it does (and doesn’t) include.
It might also highlight the parts of your strategy which are missing.
(aside: if you want a much deeper dive, read?Creating Successful Community Strategies )
What Is Real The Purpose Of A Community Strategy?
A strategy establishes the best way to get from where you are today to where you need to be in the future with the resources you have available.
This highlights several core requirements of a strategy
This highlights why ‘strategy’ can mean entirely different things to different people.
Everyone is working on different documents.
Our view is strategy isn’t a single definitive document, but a collection of documents – each of which serves a key purpose.
1) Comprehensive Analysis of The Current Situation
Before you can decide where to go next, you need to properly diagnose where you are today.
A good analysis should include:
Each of these serves as its own document but we often summarise this entire stage as a simple SWOT analysis where we can dive deeper into each area as needed.
This process is a lot of work and involves a specialist skillset combining research, analytical thinking, and community expertise.
Many organisations lack the time and skillset to do this well. This is why FeverBee enjoys taking on these projects on behalf of our clients.
2) Goals And Community Roadmap
The roadmap is the critical overview that outlines the way forward. The roadmap should include:
This is often a much shorter document but also the one everyone must agree to. It works well in presentation form.
Only the people more involved in the community need to get in the weeds beyond this level. It may also require community forecasting skills to set the right targets.
Stakeholder workshops can often help get everyone aligned in this process. The critical aspect of this stage is prioritisation. You have to be clear about what you will be doing and what you won’t be doing.
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3) Action Plan
The next step is the action plan.
This is the detailed ‘in the weeds’ process of what programs the community will execute to implement the roadmap.
This is where you work at the community management level to ensure the programs being executed are executed well.?
This may include:
Unlike the other parts of the strategy, this often works better as a .doc than a presentation.
It requires a far greater level of detail than a presentation can offer.
4) Operations and Governance
The next part of a strategy should be your operations and governance structure.
This outlines the processes which need to be in place to ensure the community can be safely executed.
This will typically include a combination of:
In our experience, it’s common for the community leader at an organisation to undertake much of this work themselves. But it can certainly?help to have outside expertise .
5) Measurement and Improvement Framework
This is the evaluation of whether a community is achieving its goals and how to improve the community.
This typically includes:
It’s important to have this in place so you can track success and quickly identify if you’re on track or not.
Do You Need A Complete Strategy?
Need? Not necessarily.
Does it help? Absolutely.
You can (and many people do) build a community without having a complete strategy. Each time they encounter a new problem, they try to tackle it.?
And that’s ok, you can muddle through tackling each problem as it arises.?
But the major benefit of having a complete strategy is you don’t waste time and resources. You always know what you want to achieve, and what to prioritise, and you’re taking the most efficient path to achieve your goals.?