Some things you can tidy up in your community

Rosie Sherry
11 replies
Community debt is real. It is where you prioritize community activities that will later impact the community experience in the future in a negative way. Generally speaking, it prioritizes community scale over quality of growth. To reduce community debt think about the things you can proactively tidy up. Here are some ideas. - members - events - email lists - conversations - content - channels - processes - automation - values - community activities - onboarding - leaving/graduation - staff Smiling face with open mouth and cold sweat - tools - data - KPIs / metrics - volunteers - landing/marketing pages - rules & coc What else?

Replies

Rick Turoczy
It's kind of in here implicitly but to state it explicitly: documentation. We make any number of decisions and tweaks while in launch and/or clean up mode and then, six months later, have a difficult time remembering why we did what we did. Taking time to document reasoning and implementation in the heat of the moment is always helpful later by reminding us why we did what we did. And why we happened to think it was a good idea at the time šŸ˜…
Rick Turoczy
@rosiesherry Awesome! Looking forward to it
Rosie Sherry
@turoczy yes, we've documenting is so important. It's why I love blogging in general. I have some ideas around this from a community perspective, will share soon!
Justin Dorfman
All I have to say is I love Orbit. It makes my life so much easier. Thank you and the rest of the Orbit team!
We have a lot to improve at https://skilledup.life - free talent for tech startups. But just like any business, we do have priorities. But I am fully aware of the Community Debt. Even more important is Technical Debt. Thanks for the reminder @rosiesherry
Dawid Zamkowski
Community building is similar to coding debt. If you are not engaged and write poor code - you'll pay for it in the future.
Yaroslaw Bagriy
Super great list here @rosiesherry! Reducing community debt should be #1 priority for all communities. Better yet to build a community without any community debt. Always prioritize quality of growth.
TheBigK
I resonate with this. I took an even bolder step! I removed ~98% of the members from my community of 400,000+ members! I realised that there were several accounts that were once active; but went dead after a few years. I removed them. Then - I checked Google Analytics and database to see which of the discussions were generating traffic and which ones were keeping people engaged. I deleted all other discussions. Net result - 1. Almost no change in traffic 2. Better engagement with existing users. 3. Better feeling as a community owner / manager.
Jessie
These are great points! I'll add 2 things logistic wise: - An organized back end - Being more specific when assigning staff and especially volunteers can help. I feel it's important to make sure they focus on one things because internally it can be overwhelming when people are not assigned to focus tasks which can lead to the organization to suffer.