2/ What's covered:
• What are community-first products and why building them
• The importance of starting small (Crawl, Walk, Run)
• The difference b/w community design & management
• The role of rituals/IRL/NFTs in community design/mgmt
Leggo!
4/ Network effects ultimately lead to mass adoption.
The retention at the core of community might be the secret behind the fastest network effects formation in history — crypto.
twitter.com/raoulgmi/status/1392939136689053699?lang=en
5/ What does this mean for community builders?
• Retention: The need for coming back to a product because it feels like home (for a specific use case).
• Engagement: The recurring rituals designed to use it (which lead to building a habit with it).
reforge.com/blog/retention-engagement-growth-silent-killer
6/ So, what's a community-based product?
It's a product where either:
• The community (network) is the product (eg. @Clubhouse@WhatsApp@telegram)
• The community enhances the product (eg. the fact @PostMalone is part of @BoredApeYC enhances the community/product itself)
7/ Community products are synonyms with network products — but they don't have to be software-only or scaled.
You build a much stronger connection with your local, family-owned coffee shop, and get a homey feeling you'll never get at a more transactional, fabricated @starbucks.
8/ We crave the local coffee-shop vibe, even if the coffee is worse than @starbucks.
Because we want to:
• Support local causes that are close to our values
• Know our places and our people's names
• Crave humanness, proximity, belonging, and familiarity
9/ And this is because networks are formed on:
• Frequency — how often you bump into each other
• Proximity — how close you are to each other
• Density — how much you know one another
• Identity/Friction — how easy/hard is to form a shared identity
youtube.com/watch?v=HdnXuKi_2Zw&t=437s&ab_channel=NFX
11/ This is why we prefer small communities — they're easier to form, maintain, contribute to, and get value from.
We enjoy the utility of scaled networks — physical and digital — but true retention and engagement are given by the long-tail of communities on a human scale.
12/ Beyond that specific threshold, communities could:
• Lose that genuine and warm feeling of home
• Automate the rituals and ignite the community @starbucks-ization
Does this mean communities need to stay small to be genuine? Not exactly/necessarily.
13/ What community builders need to embrace is:
1) The difference b/w community design & community management
2) The Crawl, Walk, Run strategy: a phased approach to both
14/ Community design is product work that designs the rituals that get people to come back:
• Use case (frequency, reason why, differentiation)
• Incentives (mastery, social, financial)
• UX (effort/reward balance)
15/ How to design great rituals? Think of your:
• Core networks: family, high school, college, first job, partners, where you live
• Culture: traditions, religions, formalisms, rules, symbols, & how they manifest (words, actions, objects, performances)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ritual
16/ Community management is about marketing these rituals for nurturing and growth:
• Maintain health (rules of engagement, moderation, admin roles)
• Grow engagement (challenges, quests, giveaways, badging)
• Feedback loop (new features, etc.)
twitter.com/matteo_titta/status/1507075966933377024
17/ The Crawl/Walk/Run strategy is best explained with the @ProductHunt ex:
• Crawl: started as a brunch series in SF
• Walk: evolved to newsletter of the best products in the Bay Area
• Run: scaled to web platform, events, then local events (eg. PH Toronto, PH Lisbon, etc.)
18/ This phased strategy helps:
• Building confidence with early members
• Designing richer community/incentives and programming
• Managing scale progressively
• Driving localization/decentralization post-scale
19/ The best communities then:
• Start small, building an atomic network in a specific geo/niche
• Hand-hold this genuineness/authenticity all the way down to scale
• Decentralize to continue scaling on a local level
lennysnewsletter.com/p/atomic-network?s=r
20/ Note: #IRL events are among the greatest competitive advantages community-based products can have — because they drive proximity, density, and identity formation — especially in our post-pandemic world.
See a great example by @doodles.
twitter.com/gregisenberg/status/1503076232115675144
21/ Community decentralization/localization can be an effective design to make it feel:
• Exclusive (eg. "I feel inner circle") but also
• Inclusive (eg. "I can go to this event because it's close to me)
22/ Without feeling *exclusionary* (eg. "I can't go to this event because it's too far", OR "I can't be part of @BoredApeYC because I don't have $250k).
23/ In this context, #NFTs could be a great vehicle to:
• Bootstrap community identity, culture, and capital
• Commemorate specific moments with rituals (eg. foundation, milestones, wins, etc.)
• Redeem products, services, and experiences
twitter.com/gregisenberg/status/1503076231142645763
24/ Specifically, free-to-mint NFTs could help community builders streamline the community bootstrapping process, especially in the scale phase of a community, when you're targeting more early majority/mainstream members.
twitter.com/gregisenberg/status/1503076225971068932
25/ A specific type of NFT — @poapxyz — Proof of Attendance Protocol might be even more effective to:
• Bookmark specific community events/moments
• Accumulate proof of engagement/loyalty in a community
• Accrue them to redeem products and experiences
cryptobriefing.com/what-are-poaps-and-why-should-you-collect-them/
26/ In this context:
• PFPs can bootstrap identity and culture in early-stages
• POAPZ are the new community moment bookmarks
• Which will become loyalty cards corollary of the PFPs
• Building a z-axis for ecommerce, travel, and experiences verticals
END/ To recap:
• Community = Network = retention + engagement
• Retention = deep/warm/humane connection
• Engagement = sticky rituals/incentives
• Strong connection = fx (proximity, density, identity, frequency)
• Start small first to build a strong atomic community
• Focus on designing great rituals and experiences, then
• Scale/re-decentralize to keep networks on a human scale
• IRL is a great competitive advantage in community design
• NFTs help bootstrap NFX in the early-stages
• But also become reward platforms to give back