Online Communities and Social Networks

Electronic ‘newsgroup’ capabilities have been used since the late 1970s and online communities started to thrive with the arrival of the World Wide Web in the early 1990s.

 

With the rise of 'Web 2.0', the idea of Social Networks has taken hold as a way to build on the established concepts of community sites. The first social network site is often cited as www.classmates.com which was started in 1995 and with 40 million users was certainly the most popular of such sites prior to the arrival of teenage driven phenomenon MySpace, which has recently risen to the dizzy heights of 170 million users.

 

The definition of ‘social networks’ can be hard to pin down and particularly the difference between a social network and an online community. Here are some suggestions as to how the two approaches differ…

 

Identity is not dependent on involvement

In traditional online communities, an identity is usually only created through involvement in discussions. It is well-known that many will ‘lurk’ rather than engage in discussions and therefore gain little or no identity in these environments.

 

The social network emphasis on ‘homepages and profiles’ means that identity can be built without participation in discussions through how users define their choices and the connections they make to others.

 

Visible member profiles

Social Network sites tend to make the member profile core to the service. These profiles tend to be richer in content and context than the more peripheral, basic profiles in traditional online communities.

 

People make their preferences known

Unlike the peripheral profiles and somewhat hidden preferences in traditional online communities, the richer member profiles or homepages of social network sites tend to make visible reference to the member’s preferences, interests and relationships with others.

 

A flatter hierarchy

Traditional online communities typically have a specific structure which is often created by the originators and/or moderators of the environment. They tend to result in buckets of content that can get deeper and deeper.

 

In a social network members are free to create new forums outside of a preset hierarchy which allows them to have an equal opportunity to gain visibility in the system and therefore for members to move to where the conversation is, much more quickly and easily.

 

Follow the people not just the chat

Traditional online communities tend to be focused on the discussion and, consequently, the site navigation follows the discussion patterns too. Social networks offer alternative navigation routes. Rather than follow a discussion, you can follow a person, their interests and their groups to arrive at a destination that is relevant and useful to you.

 

The relevance of social networks to the enterprise

Understanding these environments and how and where they differ, can help determine what type of environment is best for your Enterprise 2.0 needs and therefore help you structure your initiatives accordingly.

 

Encourage participation in relevant existing social networks

Beyond the consumer web and teenage driven social network environments, such as Friendster, Orkut, Facebook and MySpace, there are the established business related social networks including Ryze, XING, LinkedIn, ITtoolbox and UK based Ecademy.

 

ITtoolbox, for example, utilises the key elements of ‘Web 2.0’ such as blogs, wikis and the homepage/profile centric approach described above to create effective business communities of interest where business people can discuss and exchange ideas and build effective networks of like-minded people.

 

Given the growth and popularity of these environments, the question is, why wouldn’t you want your employees and your organisation represented? There is much more to be said for taking a proactive role in emergent technologies and activities rather than a passive one.

 

Create your own social network

Taking proactiveness a step further, your organisation may be in a position to seize the initiative and lead the creation and development of a social network relevant to your area of business. UK based Ecademy, for instance, has used a Content Management System, not dissimilar to Immediacy, as a platform for creating its business related Social Network that now has around 100,000 registered users.

 

If this is a step too far then start with creating one within your organisation first. The creation of a homepage/profile for each individual in the organisation should be actively encouraged if it isn’t already, as too, the use of blogging and ‘wiki-like’ webpage and content creation around projects and knowledge.

 

Use blogging to enter into conversations with customers and prospects

There is absolutely no doubt that blogging is a powerful enterprise tool whether used within an organisation’s internal web presence or as a way to engage more effectively with external audiences.

 

Firstly, it drives ‘date driven/chronologically listed’ topical content that can be created easily by non-technical people. Secondly it promotes interaction and the exchange of knowledge and ideas through commenting. And thirdly, it provides a catalyst for social networking on the basis that if the blog content is deemed useful and authentic by readers then they will seek to associate themselves with the author and play a role in publicising that content further either through their own blogs, RSS feeds or specific links from their websites.