
MAY 17, 2024
5 things to do
Get Your Community Guidelines
Audiences are good for business, but communities can be better for a long-term, sustainable content business. Your members become active consumers rather than passive visitors.
As Mark Schaefer writes, a community needs three conditions to sustain itself: communion (people have to care about each other, not just you), purpose (a reason to connect regularly), and relevance (evolving to meet members’ needs).
Hosting a community requires setting conditions under which it will operate and flourish. By establishing thoughtful community guidelines, you can thwart (or at least minimize) irrelevant conversations, personal attacks, spammers, and more.
To establish thoughtful community guidelines to thwart (or at least minimize) irrelevant conversations, personal attacks, spammers, and more, do these five things:
1. Detail the vision: Define the why behind your community. Briefly explain the purpose of gathering your audience in this digital space in a sentence or two. To help, revisit your content mission statement.
2. Set the tone: Your presence initially sets the stage. Show up, pose questions, tell stories, or comment to encourage members to interact with you and others.
3. Write down the possible rules: Detail every rule to cover every possible behavior or action you do or don’t want. Ask your audience for their input to learn what type of community they want to join and how they would want that community to behave.
4. Delete most of the draft rules: Stick with only the most necessary rules. A lengthy list will never be read, let alone followed. Get rid of any rule that would apply to a limited few and have little impact on the overall community. As the community creator, you can deal with those one-off occurrences on a case-by-case basis.
Then, look for commonalities among the remaining potential rules. Use those themes to create several broad rules that cover many on your list. HubSpot calls its community guidelines “house rules” and details them in six points: 1. Be respectful. 2. Be relevant. 3. Share the love. 4. Be responsible. 5. Protect everyone’s privacy. 6. Keep in mind, this is user-generated content. A succinct explanation paragraph follows each rule.
I also think it’s good to detail the penalties for violations. Again, be brief and straightforward.
5. Enforce the guidelines: Unless you ensure they’re followed, your guidelines are worthless. First, address the violation directly with the community member. Depending on the violation and penalty, you may ask them to edit, remove, or apologize for their misstep. You should tell your community you’ve handled a violation without naming the offender. They need to know you enforce the rules.
– Ann Gynn
Helpful Resources:
- Should Creators Want an Audience or a Community?
- How Creators Can Establish Community Guidelines Before Trouble Hits
- Why and How To Launch a Free Community
.
Exciting news from Tilt Community member and CEX VIP – Bernie Borges
You’re invited to participate in pioneering research on midlife fulfillment!
Contribute anonymously to a groundbreaking survey that explores fulfillment across the essential five pillars of midlife:
Health, Fitness, Career, Relationships, and Legacy.
The survey findings will be shared in a forthcoming research report produced by Bernie Borges, Host of the Midlife Fulfilled Podcast in cooperation with Udemy.
5 things from the tilt
- You’ve got a lot of notes. How do you act on them? Join the conversation at 12 p.m. EDT Tuesday for Tilt Your Business: A Mastermind for Content Entrepreneurs.
- Joe’s quick review (and some proof points) from CEX … and exactly how he knows that YOUR content is making a difference in people’s lives. (Content Inc.)
- It’s raining AI. The boys report on a crazy week in AI news. (This Old Marketing)
- Matt and Lauren explore author brands. Listen now to discover the power of your author identity, why it is so important, and how to create and maintain a brand for your long-term marketing and sales success. (Publish & Prosper)
- Our dedicated team at Tilt Publishing is here to take the hassle out of publishing so you can keep creating the content you’re passionate about. Whether you’re a blogger, a podcaster, or a vlogger, we tailor our services to fit your unique needs. Find out more here.
5 things to know
Money
-
Sponsor fan: Licensed sports retailer Fanatics is doing its first podcast sponsorship. It’s now the primary partner of The Pivot Podcast, an interview show with three former NFLers. It gets mentioned on the show, and the show gets access to Fanatics events and athletes. [Yahoo Finance]
Tilt Take: Don’t limit brand partnerships to a money-only relationship. Consider how they can help you access their audience, too. -
Fashion senses: Designers find Substack to be a great marketing tool for their clothing. The newsletter platform lets them connect directly with their audiences through content and clothing. Subscribers to Substack’s fashion-and-beauty category have grown 80% year over year. [Vogue Business]
Tilt Take: Accessing audiences on social media isn’t just problematic for content entrepreneurs.
Audiences
-
Create together: TikTok’s working on its own collaboration feature. Creators can tag up to five other creators to make a collaboration post. [Social Media Today]
Tilt Take: Collaboratively created or posted content can be good for growing your audience.
Tech and Tools
-
Better AI: Google’s updated its generative AI tool Gemini to summarize conversations, caption images and videos, and extract data from large documents and tables. [CNBC]
Tilt Take: In other news, OpenAI’s also made updates to ChatGPT, including adding a desk version and making its latest model available for free.
And Finally
-
Face smack: Jellysmack isn’t having its best days. The creator economy industry company started by helping YouTubers recirculate their videos on other platforms and taking a cut of ad earnings. However, its race to scale has been hurt by platform changes at Facebook, digital-video ad rate declines, and an industry shift to short-form videos. [Business Insider]
Tilt Take: As the writers of this piece say, “It showed that building a long-term business on the backs of platforms like Facebook and YouTube could be volatile.”
Get more of the Full Tilt stories on TheTilt.com.
Know a content creator who’s going full tilt? DM us or email [email protected].
Want to advertise on The Tilt? Go here.
Or email us at [email protected].
Was this email forwarded to you? Get your own sub here.
Copyright ©2024 Lulu Press, Inc. All rights reserved.
Update your preferences | Unsubscribe | 700 Park Offices Dr., Suite 250, Durham, NC 27709