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Ideas Sites: Interview with Rob Hoehn of IdeaScale

Organizations from Starbucks to the White House have used “ideas sites” to capture, tag, rank and broadcast ideas from constituents. To learn more about this sector, we caught up with Rob Hoehn, President of Customer Development at IdeaScale, an ideas management platform. Here are his comments:

1) What is IdeaScale? How do you describe the sector you are in?

We have been building online market research tools since 2003. Throughout this time, we’ve found that traditional online research methods were not effective in fostering a sense of community among customers. In addition, we found that our client’s customers are talking about their organization all over the social web (Twitter, Facebook, Blogs, etc.) Our goal is to help channel these discussions to both increase engagement and provide focused, effective feedback for your organization.

IdeaScale is used by all types of organizations ranging from government agencies to non-profits to companies of all sizes. Some of the worlds most recognizable brands such as Xerox, RedHat, Microsoft, the Veterans Administration, and even The White House have used IdeaScale as their crowdsourcing platform. Our parent company, Survey Analytics, has made Inc. magazine’s list of the fastest-growing private companies, ranking 172nd overall and 25th among business-service providers. Puget Sound Business Journal recognized Survey Analytics as one of the 50 fastest-growing private companies in Washington State.

2) What are the three or four main motivations a company or non-profit has for using an idea management platform?

1) Increase employee (or customer) engagement.
2) Sense of involvement/ownership.
3) Build a sense of community around a specific idea.

3) I see a number of federal agencies just launched feedback sites on your platform. It looks like information is rolled up here: http://opengovtracker.com/. What is this initiative trying to achieve?

OpenGovTracker was built during the big snow storm in DC last winter by two developers with a lot of time on their hands ;) . They were aware of our API, and were able to use it to build a very helpful dashboard. They key lesson is platform and APIs – there are just some things you’ll never dream up on your own. The only viable approach is to build a rich set of APIs and plugins to allow anyone to mashup the data to build cool and interesting applications. We’ll seeing the same type of response from our iPhone plugin – an application that we recently open sourced for our user community.

4) What common pitfalls are you seeing as clients turn to idea management platforms?

I see several issues:

Properly Assigned Moderators: Since the initial setup/configuration of these community tools can be slightly technical, there tends to be situations where this same person ends up moderating the community. In reality, this role is best suited for a marketing or PR person within any organization. We see many of the same people that are setting up and configuring the sites end up moderating hundreds of ideas a day.

Clear Terms of Services and Rules of Participation: Also, we see a lot of folks failing to define a set of moderation guidelines for their community members. A clear set of terms of service as well a defined moderation policies goes a long way in clarifying to your users what they can expect from you and vice versa.

Don’t Be Afraid: Many folks are deathly afraid of publicly talking to their customers. You’ll soon learn, however, that the people that take the time to leave you feedback about your organization can end up becoming some of your best customers.

5) Matthew Lees’ latest report on crowdsourcing and ideas sites talks a lot about management. How hard are ideas sites to manage?

Not hard at all! For example, our flagging functionality allows you to leverage your own crowd to help control inappropriate or foul language. So for example, if a user sees a comment that she thinks doesn’t belong on the site, she can click a link to flag the item. This will then remove the comment from your community and drop it into a queue for a moderator to review.

6) Any other words of advice for people learning about this sector?

Moderate early and often. The first few hours/minutes after your community goes live is most important. If a user sees a bunch of inappropriate ideas or comments, your site may not be taken very seriously. A very common practice is to “Seed” the community with a bunch of pre-writtem poems.

Cross-posted on the Good Ideas Blog.

Posted in Expert Interviews, Listening, ToolsComments

Back to Basics: Ecosystem Research – Find Your Community

Back to Basics: Ecosystem Research – Find Your Community

This post is part of an ongoing series about developing an online community strategy. As a reminder, all posts are being tagged #ocb2b.

In my last post, “Want to Know What Community Members Need? Just Ask” I discussed the importance of asking your members what they need from you as a community host, and what they need from other community members, as part of your extended community.

In this post, I will discuss the methodology for conducting a discovery exercise of the relevant parts of the social web to find out where your community (or potential community) is already working and playing. .

Most community strategies have traditionally focused on the hosted properties of the organization. The reality is that there is an ever expanding universe of online touchpoints that an organization’s community members are participating in off-domain. An ecosystem research exercise should be conducting as part of a strategy development (or strategy course correction) exercise in order to discover where the off domain centers or activity are, and who the most vocal and active participants are. The discovery exercise is essentially an audit of the current community ecosystem, including customer, prospect, partner and competitor touch points. This information will help establish a baseline of market-oriented sites and activity, which will be important to understand the opportunities for new community activity by your (or your client’s) brand.

What Should You Look For?
The purpose of this discovery exercise is to look for existing signs of life for your community “off domain”. Signs of life include conversations about your company, product, or issues related to your particular market or issue area. What should you specifically search for as part of your discovery process? The following list is a jumping off point for starting your discovery process:

  • Mentions of company name
  • Mentions of brand or product names
  • Issues related to you market
  • Topics related to your market
  • Mentions of key employees
  • Advocates or spokespeople
  • Mentions of competitors

Where Should You Look?
Using tools like Google Blog Search, Twitter Search, Delicious, and Ice Rocket, conduct searches for brand mentions in news, the mass social media sphere (blogs, twitter) and on smaller niche communities. You will quickly come up a list of the communities hosting conversations about your organization, products or brand, and the members (often time bloggers) engaging in those conversations.

It’s also important to research activity on the “walled garden” communities, and larger social media sites that some times don’t surface in search results. Sites like Facebook, MySpace, Ning, LinkedIn, Get Satisfaction, etc. In particular, look for ad-hoc groups that have sprung up around your brand, or content tagged with your brand and/or products.

Key Sites:

Google News Search Indexes articles from thousands of “traditional” news outlets.
Google Blog Search The goal of Blog Search is to include every blog that publishes a site feed. Casts a wide net, but will return some irrelevant content depending on the specificity of your search.
Technorati Technorati was the first blog search engine and directory. Though its popularity is waning, it is still a valuable tool for determining a blog’s reach and influence via “Technorati Authority.”
Ice Rocket The new kid on the block in blog search engines. Comparable to Google in simplicity of interface, with the added benefit of keyword trend analysis.
Twitter Search Advanced search allows you to search for Tweets by keyword, people, location, and sentiment (based on usage of emoticons).
Backtweets Allows you to search for links to any URL published on Twitter. Automatically converts URL shorteners like bit.ly and ow.ly.
Klout Assigns a score to Twitter profiles to help you assess the reach, influence, and content of Twitter users.
BoardTracker Best search engine for public discussion forums (e.g. Yahoo Groups). Will return interesting, but sometimes inappropriate content.
Digg Social bookmarking site for News-related content, where users vote for their favorite articles.
Delicious Social bookmarking site for all content. Frequently bookmarking and tagging your content on Delicious will boost your prominence in Google search results.
YouTube The largest video-sharing site. Allows you to create a channel, upload original video, embed videos on your web site, and monitor videos related to your brand.
Flickr A photo sharing site with more than 4 billion images. You can upload and organize sets of photos, and monitor photos related to your brand.
Slideshare The largest presentation-sharing site.
Scribd One of the largest social document sites, with laods of white papers and articles.
Quantcast Provides rough traffic estimates and demographic usage information for most sites of relative prominence on the web.

Outputs of the Ecosystem Audit
Insights that will likely emerge from your ecosystem audit include:

  • Key news sites
  • List of most active members (potential community members)
  • List of influential users (potential community members)
  • Thought leaders (personalities shaping your industry)
  • List of active groups (potential partner communities)
  • Independent community sites (potential partner communities)
  • Key blogs (Niche bloggers and group blogs)
  • In-person meetups and events (you might consider participating)
  • A list of spaces where your community *isn’t* (helpful in prioritizing where to participate)

One helpful by-product of conducting an ecosystem audit is the set of fundamental elements for an ongoing listening strategy: search terms, topics and relevant online sources. The ecosystem audit process forces a team to experiment with and refine search terms and topics in order to discover content sources. Many of the tools mentioned above support RSS feeds with near real-time results. So, wether you use a simple tool, like google reader for your listening strategy, or something more industrial strength like a Radian6 or Scoutlabs, you have completed a lot of the prerequisite work for ongoing listening and monitoring.

In the next two upcoming posts “Designing an Online Presence Architecture” and “Engagement Planning” I will describe how to take the inputs of goal definition, member research and the ecosystem audit to create an Online Presence Architecture and to develop an engagement plan.

Recommended Reading:
Participating in the Social Media Ecosystem

Posted in Back to Basics, Community & Social Media Research, Featured Posts, Key Resources, Social Media, Strategy, ToolsComments

Online Community Ecosystems: Slides + Diagrams

I’m often asked about my online community ecosystem diagrams when I include them in a presentation, like the June 17th Online Community Health webinar. I’ve put together a little care package for those of you that would like to use or extend the diagrams and slides.

Below you will find links to a PowerPoint deck that includes several versions of the ecosystem diagrams, as well as an OmniGraffle diagram that can be modified to fit your circumstances.

The only thing I ask as that you: a. provide attribution to the source and b. let me know what modifications or extensions you make.

Ecosystems PowerPoint source file
Ecosystems OmniGraffle source file

Preview of Ecosystem slides:

Posted in ToolsComments


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The Online Community Report features best practices, strategies, research, and events for Online Community and Social Media professionals. Jim Cashel, Heather Virga, and other staff at Forum One edit the Online Community Report.

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