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examples_of_healthy_communities [2016/01/25 17:53]
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examples_of_healthy_communities [2024/05/03 02:11] (current)
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 +[[http://​www.mumsnet.com/​|Mumsnet]]. Rich named this community his favourite [[https://​www.feverbee.com/​15-examples-of-thriving-online-communities/​|back in 2010]] and it's still going strong. Back then it was highly active, highly ambitious, highly important to members, and the same can still be said. The site is easy to navigate and I particularly like the magazine style homepage – it doesn'​t present a list of categories from which to choose, but rather offers a variety of interesting information,​ encouraging readers to dig deeper.
  
 +[[https://​www.threadless.com/​forum|Threadless]]. Another community that has stood the test of time – they kicked off in 2010. Threadless built their business around the community rather than the other way around, and they have managed to nurture that relationship and go from strength to strength. I also love the fresh, modern and intuitive design.
  
 +[[http://​figment.com/​|Figment]]. This example is interesting in that it targets a very small niche community, part of the larger Random House brand. Figment is a community for young readers and writers of fan fiction. This laser focus means that members are highly engaged, and with more than 300,000 members creating and moderating content, brand awareness and advocacy are high.
  
 +[[https://​forums.adobe.com/​welcome|Adobe Learning Communities]]. Another example of an incredibly strong branded community (or in this case, set of communities). While the UX isn't great in terms of accessibility,​ these communities boast amazing engagement rates and response times, and afford members the opportunity to influence future products. Adobe'​s community team works really hard to make sure that every member, regardless of expertise level, receives appropriate help, support and challenges.
  
 +[[https://​www.sitepoint.com/​community/​|SitePoint]]. If we're talking longevity, SitePoint takes the cake. First launched in 1998, this community was one of the earliest tech communities around and has overcome many challenges and several changes of the guard but is still going strong. SitePoint was one of the first (and definitely largest) migrations onto the Discourse platform, after 15 years on vBulletin.
  
-[[http://www.mumsnet.com/|Mumsnet]]. Rich named this community ​his favourite [[https://​www.feverbee.com/​15-examples-of-thriving-online-communities/​|back in 2010]] and it's still going strong. Back then it was highly activehighly ambitious, highly ​important to membersand the same can still be said. The site is easy to navigate ​and I particularly like the magazine style homepage ​– it doesn'​t present ​list of categories from which to choose, but rather offers a variety of interesting information,​ encouraging readers ​to dig deeper.+[[http://scn.sap.com/welcome|SAP Community Network]] This is an interesting oneThe community ​is hugediverseand highly ​engagedwhich is a big achievement for a branded community. The design isn't great and the homepage ​is bit overwhelming, but it seems to work – SCN boasts over 2.5 million engaged members!
  
-[[https://www.threadless.com/forum|Threadless]]. Another ​community that has stood the test of time – they kicked off in 2010Threadless built their business around the community rather than the other way around, and they have managed ​to nurture that relationship and go from strength ​to strength. I also love the fresh, modern and intuitive design.+[[http://forums.moneysavingexpert.com/?​_ga=1.140150906.814338041.1453743614|Money Saving Expert]] MSE is a highly engaged ​community that consistently pulls in the numbers (37k online at one stage in 2015)The UX isn't great, with smalllow contrast typography ​and a mind-boggling number of categories from which new members ​have to choose, but they must be doing something right to keep consistently high engagement
  
-[[http://figment.com/|Figment]] This example ​is interesting in that it targets ​very small niche community, part of the larger Random House brand. Figment is a community ​for young readers and writers of fan fictionThis laser focus means that members are highly engaged, and with more than 300,000 members creating and moderating contentbrand awareness ​and advocacy are high.+[[http://mystarbucksidea.force.com/|My Starbucks Idea]]. Here is a fantastic example ​of a successful ideation ​community. ​Rather ​than a community to talk about Starbucksideation is used as a hook. The design won't set the world on firebut retention is maintained by actively listening to feedback ​and following through with the consistent implementation of community suggestions.
  
-[[https://​www.sitepoint.com/​community/​|SitePoint]]. If we're talking longevitySitePoint takes the cakeFirst launched in 1998, this community was one of the earliest tech communities aroundStill thrivingSitePoint was also one of the first (and definitely largest) migrations onto the Discourse platformafter 15 years on vBulletin.+[[https://​www.topcoder.com/​community/​|[topcoder]]] This is my personal favouriteThis competitive coding community has a UI which is cleanfun and intuitiveGamification principles are successfully leveraged to stimulate a high level of sustained engagement, while still attracting a professional audienceWith almost a million active members[topcoder] brings together designersdevelopers and data scientists to collaborate ​on paid projects.
  
-[[http://scn.sap.com/welcome|SAP Community Network]] This is an interesting one. The community is huge, diverse, and highly engaged, which is a big achievement ​for a branded communityThe design isn't great and the homepage is a bit overwhelmingbut it seems to work – SCN boasts over 2.5 million engaged ​members+[[http://www.ravelry.com/|Ravelry]] wins the prize for the cutest splash pageAdd to that the fantastic on-boarding experiencethe built-in collaboration functionality (allowing members ​to invite new members ​to join project), and smart integration of e-commerce, and this community for crafters is shining example ​of a successful online community. Of their ~6 million registered ​members, ​over a million are currently active.
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-[[http://​forums.moneysavingexpert.com/?​_ga=1.140150906.814338041.1453743614|Money Saving Expert]] MSE is highly engaged community that consistently pulls in the numbers (37k online at one stage in 2015). The UX isn't greatwith smalllow contrast typography ​and a mind-boggling number ​of categories from which new members ​have to choosebut they must be doing something right to keep consistently high engagement+