Keeping Users Interested

24 10 2008

Those of you who follow my personal blog already know that I am a fan of Joshua Porter and his Bokardo blog. I particular enjoyed the post from his archives where he discusses the usage lifecycle of a social web user. Today I would like to augment his excellent post with some additional thoughts.

The Interested user powers the social web. This possibility may be counterintuitive to most web site operators who have spent the last several years of their lives converting people into registered users. The reality on the social web is that only Interested and “Repeat” First Time users who are engaged with your web property are ever going to convert into Regular Users. From a social perspective, Regular Users are your “Mavens” or “Connectors” who have the highest probability for promoting your site, product, or service. They can move people from Unaware to Interested using simple tools like email, “share” buttons, etc. You can give them a lot more power than that, though, by enabling them to use their social connections to move people directly to the First-time User stage. Then, through repeated “First-time” use, you can increase the likelihood that that First-time User converts into a regular user. The key to this process is moving the “sign-up” stage to a later step in the process.

We all use gas stations or some similar service where the perceived value is pretty uniform and where there are a lot of places to go get the product or service. If you move to a new town and had to fill out an application form at every gas station, would you?

Along those lines, people who arrive at your web site via a social referral are basically arriving with an engraved invitation from the Maven or Connector in your community. They expect a key to the city, not a gate. In the best case, the Interested user has many of these invitations and would like to use each one to learn more about the product or service you provide. My advice: Let them. Use the social technology available today to welcome them with open arms and increase the chances that each and every one of those “Repeat First-time Users” will reach out to more and more of their friends, family, and colleagues to draw more and more of them in.





Social media as part of your strategy

17 10 2008

In the social networking boom of the last few years, the social networking sites have been really excited for people to build applications, widgets, gadgets, and thingamajigs. Why? Because all those sparkly things bring more visitors to the social networking site, contributing significantly to the growth of those properties.

But what about your business? What about your pet project? What about your charity? How do you tap into that same power of community?

The big social networking sites will continue to be important. They are the new destinations sites on the web, and millions of people turn to them first for information about their friends and acquaintances.Empowering people to use the power of their communities to achieve their own goals can be a tricky business when it involves projecting your identity into these large social web sites. There are distractions everywhere. The key is to find the right way to project your company, project, charity, etc. into that environment. The answer will be different for many people, but few people that I have been talking to are just worried about lots of people using their social application.

Most people will want to project enough of what they are doing to attract interest. Once the interest is there, it is a good thing to let it carry across into your web site by letting people use their social identities to access some limited feature set of your site. Basically, make it easy for them to “kick the tires”. Then, if they like what they see, they are much more likely to start a long-term relationship with you (mainly through registration and other similar “calls to action”). Tying into these large social networking sites effectively is the challenge of the day.








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