Community managers have to put a lot of energy into their community content strategies. Make your job easier with an online community content calendar.
Having a strong community content strategy is a big part of being a community builder. In order to increase online community engagement, establish a clear value proposition for joining, and encourage community members to participate, you need an organized plan for when and what you’ll share.
But how do you manage your community content in an organized way that increases engagement?
Enter: Your online community content calendar.
Editorial calendars aren’t just for marketers or magazine publishers. They’re must-have tools for community builders to engage members, customers, and employees. The main goal of your calendar is for you to be prepared to engage your community members – and plan, in advance, how and what content you’ll distribute throughout the year.
Do a search on Amazon for planning calendars and there are thousands of results – some with llamas on them. You can put a llama on your “How to Increase Community Engagement” calendar if you like, but what we want to talk about here is how and why to incorporate a content planning calendar into your online community engagement strategy.
As the leader or manager of your online community, you set the example for how to interact within it. Whether consciously or not, members see how you respond to comments and what types of content you upload and will follow suit. So how is your content strategy telling members how to behave?
When your content strategy is ad hoc – adding documents, webinars, blog posts, etc., as they happen rather than on a regular schedule – you might be harming your community’s engagement. Without consistency, members never learn what to do.
That’s why it’s so important for the community manager to create standards through their own engagement with the community. A community editorial calendar can help you bring the content consistency that your community needs.
“When we fall into scattered and scrambling content creation or engagement post distribution, not only does it eat up community manager time, it also inhibits the flow of a uniform and cohesive content stream. This lack of consistency is felt by members. The absence of a stable engagement framework makes it unclear to them how to appropriately engage.” – Georgina (Cannie) Donahue, Director of Community at the Pragmatic Insitute
Here are a few more reasons to adopt a content calendar:
Your content calendar helps you plan the best time to deploy community content. You can add seasonality as appropriate to your industry and audience.
Ideally, your members will create most or all of the discussions in your online community. But it takes nurturing and tending from the community manager to start conversations and come up with creative ways to engage those members who don’t naturally start conversations on their own.
By making your content production process organized and consistent, you’ll have a system in place to continuously show members why they should keep coming back to your community. When a new member arrives in your community, they will instantly find something that grabs their interest and motivates them to participate. It’s a key part of community management.
We all know that planning saves us in the long run. Building your master calendar is worth the investment to set up, as it’ll streamline your activities. You can plan out your work in advance so that on any given day you already know what you’ve got on your plate.
After that, the amount of content you post depends on your community. You may need to have a staff person posting every day in some situations. In other cases, it’s ok to slow down your activity level in favor of encouraging your power users to take a leadership role. In Higher Logic Thrive Community, you can assign admin privileges so that your community volunteers don’t have access to everything but still can help you.
Although the concept is similar, a community editorial calendar looks a little different than a blog or marketing editorial calendar. Rather than only focusing on blog posts, emails, or social media, a community editorial calendar can cover a variety of content types (basically whatever you would post to the community). Since your community houses so much diverse content, from webinars and to Ask Me Anything sessions to post-event discussions, your community editorial calendar should include variety.
“There is a lot going on in a successful community,” said Georgina. “It can be tough for members to find their way. So let’s do the hard work for them. We can funnel them into a pathway we intend them to follow. An editorial calendar will allow you to channel fresh streams of content into regularly recurring programmatic anchors that your members know how to navigate.”
Here’s a list of potential content types you can plan for in your community content calendar:
This list will vary depending on what your community is like, your goals for engagement, and what resonates with your members. It’s valuable to have different content types in your community, but it’s also a lot of work on the community manager. With a calendar for guidance, engaging your community members becomes much easier.
The aim of a community editorial calendar is to engage members through stability. Here are some tips for creating a community editorial calendar that will ease the community manager’s job, create stability, and spur engagement amongst members.
By creating a cyclical calendar, you’ll always have both consistency and fresh content. Watch how the community reacts and listen to what topics interest them the most. Since your editorial calendar is in such short segments, you can quickly adapt the next segment to have content pertinent to current trends.
While you’ll probably want to break your content calendar down into a weekly to-do list, it’s helpful to plan out at least a month or up to 90 days in advance. Don’t plan beyond each quarter since you’ll likely want to tweak your system, messaging, and tactics throughout the process based on the data and feedback you receive from your community members.
Each task on your community content calendar should be designated to a specific person so the delegation of responsibilities is clear. This helps to avoid any miscommunication and sets up a consistent routine for how to manage the different elements of content creation required to keep your online community running smoothly.
Depending on how fast your community grows and how long it takes to grow, you might find that your calendar needs adjustments along the way. While sticking to your calendar is important, don’t be so resistant to change that you continue following a procedure that your metrics show doesn’t work. As long as you’re making data-driven decisions, changes to your content calendar are simply part of the process.
As you develop your community content strategy, you’ll want to plan different types of content for different types of community members. Our experience has shown that different types of content generate different types of engagement. It may make sense for your strategy to shift how and when you’re using different kinds of content, depending on your goals.
We typically classify community members into four different types:
Type | Definition | Scenario | Ideas for Getting Them Engaged |
Creators | Users who create posts, blogs, and other new content | Everyone knows Sally. She likes to write a blog post when she runs into a particularly interesting work situation and see what advice and reactions her peers have. | Consider inviting your top creators to be in your community super user or champion program. These members are obviously committed to the community and you can enlist their help in moderating, writing a weekly post, or even activities outside of the community, like presenting at your annual event. |
Contributors | Users who reply to comment on the created content | Stanley checks in when he sees interesting content in his weekly email digest. Very often, when he reads an article or a discussion, he will provide his advice. | Send an automated email to your contributors encouraging them to submit a question for an Ask Me Anything session. |
Consumers | Users who exclusively view or log in to consume the created content and its contributions (also known as “lurkers”) | Lakshmi regularly reads the content – we can see it in her profile, but she is highly unlikely to do anything more than view and read. | Try grouping users who tend to consume and create an automated email that invites them to make their first post. |
Inactive | Users who have not made any actions in the community in the last year | Pieter joined the community a few years ago, but he hasn’t taken any action in the last year. | If you haven’t seen a community member on the site in a while, contact them using automation rules or re-engagement campaigns. We’ve seen success rates upwards of 30% – and these users stay re-engaged more often than not. |
Traditionally, community leaders might want to see more contributors than consumers, since they want people to actively engage. Though this makes sense, don’t worry too much about having a high percentage of consumers, or “lurkers.” You need consumers just as much as you need the louder people; members who are viewing content in your community are still benefitting even if they’re not creating or contributing.
A community content calendar is key to creating consistent and quality community engagement. With hope, you now know why you need a calendar for your online community, how to create one, and tips for the type of content to include.
Don’t stop there – read our guide to getting more online community engagement. It’s chock-full of tips, tactics, and strategy advice to help you create a truly effective strategy.
Editor’s Note: This post was originally published in December 2016 and has since been updated to reflect accuracy and ensure we’re bringing you the latest and greatest.