Tag Archives: books

Open Community offers social web approaches for associations (and more!)

My friends Maddie Grant and Lindy Dreyer have just launched Open Community, “a little book of big ideas for associations navigating the social web”. (I was fortunate enough to get to do cartoons for the book, which meant I got a sneak peek – and I was impressed with both the scope of their vision and the practical suggestions they have for their readers.)

And while those big ideas are aimed squarely at associations, there’s a lot here for businesses, governments and individuals – anyone who’s ready to take engagement with audiences to the next level. So as part of their virtual book tour, Maddie and Lindy are here on SocialSignal.com to answer a few questions for anyone interested in building community around their business.

 

Open Community: Little Book of Big IdeasHow did Open Community come about?

Lindy: So first of all, we want to say a HUGE THANK YOU to you, Rob, for creating the cartoons in the book.  They are so awesome, I know our readers will love them too!!

(blush)

Lindy: Maddie and I have talked to thousands of association executives who have voiced their frustrations about the social web – from the overabundance of tools and the disorderly experimentation of staff (and members!), to the lack of organizational support and the unwieldy processes for monitoring and managing social media, and that’s just the beginning. We decided to write Open Community as a way to address those frustrations and redirect the thinking about using social tools to build community online.

Maddie: It’s funny, I was just re-reading your recent blog birthday post looking back at the last five years of social media. All of the stages of business social media adoption that you talk about really resonated with me – our experience has been very similar.  And the stage we’re in now, where you mentioned that we’ve gone from “Why would I want to have these conversations?” to “How can I have better conversations?” – that’s exactly why we wrote the book: to distill all of this mass of information about social media back to the real crux of why we’re doing it and how to do it better.

Can you say a little more about the title?

Lindy: Here’s the gist. Your Open Community is your people who are bonded by what your organization represents and care enough to talk to each other (hopefully about you!) online. Connecting with and supporting your Open Community is really important, because if you don’t, someone else will.

Maddie: Yes.  In the book, we talk about five elements we’ve identified as being crucial to pay attention to as you’re building relationships with your Open Community – things like why it’s important to become a social organization, how to embrace the messiness of your “ecosystem”, how to engage your stakeholders the way they want to engage with you.  These things and many more will nurture and grow your Open Community.

I especially like the ability to embrace both a disciplined approach to the social web, and the messiness that an ecosystem entails. It’s one of the places where your advice can apply to non-profits, but also to businesses, government and individual people.

Maddie: Well, we see the book as a conversation starter–we hope tons of people will get the chance to read it, and think about how the concepts affect their organization.

Lindy: And we hope to gather lots of great stories about Open Community in action, which we’ll continue to share in many ways throughout the year. So here’s a question for all of you to consider… How is your business building community online? What’s your strategy for connecting with and supporting your Open Community? Is it working?

Thanks for coming by, you two… and for the opportunity to make a contribution to your book.

And if you’re interested, you can buy Open Community online, or learn more about the book at OpenCommunityBook.com.

Open Community offers social web approaches for associations (and more!)

My friends Maddie Grant and Lindy Dreyer have just launched Open Community, “a little book of big ideas for associations navigating the social web”. (I was fortunate enough to get to do cartoons for the book, which meant I got a sneak peek – and I was impressed with both the scope of their vision and the practical suggestions they have for their readers.)

And while those big ideas are aimed squarely at associations, there’s a lot here for businesses, governments and individuals – anyone who’s ready to take engagement with audiences to the next level. So as part of their virtual book tour, Maddie and Lindy are here on SocialSignal.com to answer a few questions for anyone interested in building community around their business.

 

Open Community: Little Book of Big IdeasHow did Open Community come about?

Lindy: So first of all, we want to say a HUGE THANK YOU to you, Rob, for creating the cartoons in the book.  They are so awesome, I know our readers will love them too!!

(blush)

Lindy: Maddie and I have talked to thousands of association executives who have voiced their frustrations about the social web – from the overabundance of tools and the disorderly experimentation of staff (and members!), to the lack of organizational support and the unwieldy processes for monitoring and managing social media, and that’s just the beginning. We decided to write Open Community as a way to address those frustrations and redirect the thinking about using social tools to build community online.

Maddie: It’s funny, I was just re-reading your recent blog birthday post looking back at the last five years of social media. All of the stages of business social media adoption that you talk about really resonated with me – our experience has been very similar.  And the stage we’re in now, where you mentioned that we’ve gone from “Why would I want to have these conversations?” to “How can I have better conversations?” – that’s exactly why we wrote the book: to distill all of this mass of information about social media back to the real crux of why we’re doing it and how to do it better.

Can you say a little more about the title?

Lindy: Here’s the gist. Your Open Community is your people who are bonded by what your organization represents and care enough to talk to each other (hopefully about you!) online. Connecting with and supporting your Open Community is really important, because if you don’t, someone else will.

Maddie: Yes.  In the book, we talk about five elements we’ve identified as being crucial to pay attention to as you’re building relationships with your Open Community – things like why it’s important to become a social organization, how to embrace the messiness of your “ecosystem”, how to engage your stakeholders the way they want to engage with you.  These things and many more will nurture and grow your Open Community.

I especially like the ability to embrace both a disciplined approach to the social web, and the messiness that an ecosystem entails. It’s one of the places where your advice can apply to non-profits, but also to businesses, government and individual people.

Maddie: Well, we see the book as a conversation starter–we hope tons of people will get the chance to read it, and think about how the concepts affect their organization.

Lindy: And we hope to gather lots of great stories about Open Community in action, which we’ll continue to share in many ways throughout the year. So here’s a question for all of you to consider… How is your business building community online? What’s your strategy for connecting with and supporting your Open Community? Is it working?

Thanks for coming by, you two… and for the opportunity to make a contribution to your book.

And if you’re interested, you can buy Open Community online, or learn more about the book at OpenCommunityBook.com.

BC Book and Magazine Week starts April 22

Every year, BC celebrates one of our mostly unsung success stories: our surprisingly vibrant writing and publishing community. And soon, the province will be marking BC Book & Magazine Week 2006 with a slew of events from readings to dancing (really) to cabaret (again, really).

In Vancouver, much of the action will center on Main Street, which over the past decade has become a new focus for the city’s creative energy, rivalling Commercial Drive, which nonetheless remains our town’s uncontested funkiness epicentre. (I’m spending more and more of my time over there lately, in part because of the recent explosion of great cafés and free WiFi.)

So see you at one of the events. Meanwhile, you can follow developments at the BC Book and Magazine Week Blog, where you’ll find out about things like the MY BC photo contest. Better yet, the blog – still in its early days – is already shaping up to be a terrific round-up of BC publishing news big and small.

Coming soon: two Drupal book reviews

Early in your career using open-source tools, you’ll probably run up against the highly uneven quality and quantity of documentation.

With nobody actually getting paid by the programmers to crank out user manuals and training material, the job falls to volunteers and after-market publishers. Some programs – especially those a little longer in the tooth – have evolved a sophisticated library of materials suited for any level of expertise. Others are simple enough that they don’t need much anyway.

The gaps start opening up with highly complex software that hasn’t been around for years and years. Case in point: the Drupal content management system.

In some respects, Drupal is very well-documented. If you’re a hard-core coder, you’re in luck; Drupal’s underlying wiring is exposed for all to see, and the thriving Drupal.org online community posts various tricks and hacks. If you’re an absolute beginner looking for a very, very introductory tutorial, there are a number out there online – along with some very handy step-by-step guides for accomplishing specific tasks.

But if you’re a non-coder who wants to learn the system inside and out so you can create kick-ass Drupal web sites, you’ve probably had to pester Drupal-savvy friends, ask endless questions (and endure a certain amount of flaming) on Drupal discussion boards, and generally grope your way to an understanding of this powerful but occasionally quirky content management system. The efforts of volunteers and developers notwithstanding, we’ve all had to make do without anything you could call a coherent, comprehensive user manual.

Until now. Two new publications are on the scene:

Building Open-Source Communities book imageOne, Building Online Communities with Drupal, phpBB, and WordPress from Apress, offers insiders’ perspectives not just on Drupal but on phpBB, a bulletin board system, and WordPress, the blogging software that drives this site as well as roughly a kabillion others.

It’s available now and I’ve already read the Drupal section. You’ll see a more thorough review here in a few weeks once I’ve read the rest of the book but, for now, suffice to say that it’s great. It walks you through Drupal’s ins and outs, explains some previously-intractible concepts like taxonomy and provides something of a Rosetta stone for grasping the PHP functions that make killer theming possible. And throughout, author Robert T. Douglass employs an approachable writing style that should engage novices without exasperating more experienced users.

Despite the title, though, this isn’t a guide to creating online communities – at least, not in the sense I use the term. You can lay the foundations of those communities with the information in the book, but actually building living, breathing communities – or even just designing an optimal network of modules, navigation and content those communities can live in – requires a whole new level of discussion. That book has yet to be written; thank goodness this one has.

Building Websites with Drupal cover imageThe second book, Building Websites with Drupal, is still on its way from the people at Packt Publishing. It’s by David Mercer, a programmer, writer and editorial consultant. While the publisher’s site doesn’t yet have a sample chapter, the table of contents is certainly promising.

They’re shipping me a review copy, and you’ll hear more about it once they do – probably sometime next month.

(Incidentally, if content management is your game, check out Packt’s incredible library of CMS titles – including your full recommended daily allowance of open-sourcey goodness.)