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Community Building

I am providing value to a specific sector (freelancers) looking to build a community, what's the best initial move to ensure it isn't a ghost town?

To date I've focused on the site providing value via posts, interviews with high stature guests, videos, books... All free. I've spoken 1-2-1 with 20-30 subscribers directly over email to validate the idea of building a community with maybe 95% positive response. I'm interested to understand if anyone has been at this point and what the next move is. It would be a paid community so perhaps the challenges I should watch out for in shifting gears between free resources and paid community. Thanks in advance :) Liam

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6

Answers

Gail Gardner

Clarity Expert

Identify why freelancers would be willing to join a paid community when there are so many free communities already available to them. In order to get people to join and stay they must know what value you can bring that they can't get elsewhere without paying.

It is difficult to keep people active even in free communities. Charging them for the privilege is a tougher challenge. Either way, it is typically the leader(s) who keep things going. In every group I've ever joined or started when I stopped driving the bus the groups faded and died.

You may be, hire, or partner with strong leaders who become a major attraction. Freelancing is very broad, so unless you bring on other experts you might consider narrowing your focus to a specific type of freelancing skill or at least start out in a particular industry.

Answered almost 11 years ago

Arié Moyal

Clarity Expert

If people are saying they would pay then ask them to. The question is what are you offering in the paid version that they can't get for free and is it worth paying for. You don't want it too look like a cash grab. You also want to make sure you're not asking people to be the first at the party so make sure you have some key members signed up and active first. Consider giving them free access if it means others will buy in

Answered over 10 years ago

David Spinks

CEO, CMX Media

You'll want to get the right names in there first to make it more compelling to people. Offer free membership to influencers that your potential customers want access to or look up to. You may also want to offer a steep discount or free membership to existing members and just start charging future members. This way your existing members feel special, they'll keep the community active and future members will get more value for their money since there's already an active community going on. There are a lot of other little tricks and things you can do to get the community started on the right foot, but those are two simple things you can consider starting with.

Answered about 10 years ago

Joy Broto

🌎Harvard Certified Global Corporate Trainer🌍

The best initial move to ensure it is not a ghost town would be to incorporate different types of Freelancing under one roof. E-learning has rapidly grown in both popularity and business impact. Photography freelancers typically specialize in one of the following photography niches. Because videography is such a specialized field, many companies and organizations opt to outsource the following freelance videography services.
Besides if you do have any questions give me a call: https://clarity.fm/joy-brotonath

Answered almost 4 years ago