We just released (for a limited time) the Online Community Revenue and ROI Techniques research report.
The study was conducted last fall as part of the Online Community Research Network, and explored issues around driving revenue via online communities.
I’ve included highlights below. I would encourage you to download the report for the full result set.
Question: Based on your experience, what are the most effective strategies and tactics for generating revenue from an online community?
Summary:
Respondents highlighted several common themes, including:
The need for Advertising:
“Provide a platform for peer-to-peer interaction that advertisers can participate in. By ensuring that advertising content is relevant to the content the community is generating (through tools like contextual matching), we’ve seen high ROI for advertising partners for
branding and lead generation campaigns.”
The need for Subscriptions:
“In our context (most-valued content available only to paying subscribers), we provide high-quality community features ‘including access to experts’ as a privilege of subscribership.”
The fact that Advertising and Subscription are the leading strategies isn’t surprising, given that the model was pioneered with content-based sites. Several respondents mentioned that revenue generation from communities was indirect, particularly with regard to brand affinity and advertising.
Categorized write in answers follow -
Advertising:
- “Ad impressions – both visit duration and repeat visitors.”
- “Ad placement has resulted in game downloads from our casual games forums.”
- “Advertising on member content.”
- “Advertising sponsorships.”
- “Identifying quality community connections to leverage for advertising targeting insights.”
- “Provide a platform for peer-to-peer interaction that advertisers can participate in. By ensuring that advertising content is relevant to the content the community is generating (through tools like contextual matching), we’ve seen high ROI for advertising partners for branding and lead generation campaigns.”
- “Thought leadership, lead generation, customer retention are top indirect revenue sources. Customer councils, ad revenue and member dues are the most frequent direct sources.”
Advertising, Brand Loyalty, and Upgrade Program:
- “Unfortunately, a lot of revenue generated through business communities is indirect. Brand loyalty, hyper-affiliation, user acquisition are all difficult to translate into real dollars – although some companies try. Advertising is probably still the most effective way to monetize a community though – and the more targeted the ads, the better. For instance, having an “upgrade now” button on the forums for an outdated device, etc. A while ago, we piloted an upgrade program through the dell community that was quite successful.”
- “From our viewpoint, it’s really a matter of having a more engaged readership. We’re strictly an ad business at this point, and getting more people to come back to the site more often and see more pages is only good for us.”
Brand Loyalty:
- “Clients need to appreciate indirect value of promotion, brand awareness, and loyalty. We work with many of our clients to develop their platforms in a way that the software itself could be resold/white labeled for resale.”
Subscriptions & Brand Loyalty:
- “Allow a big upsell jump. A super-premium level allows people to express their loyalty even if the benefits are almost the same as at the next level.”
Subscriptions:
Sponsors:
“Incite users to create valuable content that can be sponsored by interested parties.”
“We have not succeeded in having individuals pay directly; we have had more success in getting supporting institutions to pay for their employees’ access.”
Create a Strong Community:
- “I do not believe you should be doing community to generate revenue. Our objective is to provide customers/users a way to Learn, Share, and Explore Technology.”
- “The communities don’t generate revenue. They provide us a ‘lock-in’ to using our service by showing the value of the “network effect” on our platform. They provide a richer user experience for clients’ members and therefore providing greater support during contract renewal negotiations.’
- “Create a strong community, then monetize the activity, versus monetizing the capabilities early on.”
- “Our focus is not on generating revenue directly. We focus on enabling community participants to develop solutions, find answers, and gain knowledge.”
Question: What advice would you have for a colleague that needs to introduce revenue generating activities to their online community?
Summary:
Recommendations varied from the respondents, but several themes emerged from the content:
- Understand Your Community: Know what your community values, and what they expect from you. Let your community guide you on what they value, what they will pay for, and what types of advertising they will tolerate.
- Add More Features/Value: Don’t put roadblocks in front of features that are necessary for a healthy community. Think of value-added services that compliment the core community feature set.
- Be Careful: Your community is a delicate ecosystem. Make sure you don’t abuse it.
- Combine Revenue Sources: which techniques like “Target Advertising” and “Premium Upselling.”
- Quality over Quality: Focus on a few effective revenue streams rather than several moderately effective ones. 1 well placed ad vs. 7 throughout the interface.
Again, if you would like to see the full report, I would encourage you to download it here.
