[SMK] Social Media Knowledge

DIGITAL MARKETING NEWS

Swarm 2012

Question: What’s the collective noun for a group of online community managers?

Answer: 'Swarm'.

On the 13th and 14th September, Hub Melbourne hosted the Swarm Conference, a chance for practitioners and thinkers in the online community management sphere to get together, network and learn.

Some of Australia’s leading experts in the field and other international speakers highlighted the conference, including:

Laurel Papworth, who warned community managers to gear up as the front line warriors in the debate surrounding community management, regulation, representational democracy, brands and sales.

Craig Thomler presented the results of research to help answer the question of whether community management is a profession or task.

Maria Ogneva from Yammer provided her insights into taking a strategic approach to managing communities in order to help organisations thrive in change and be more adaptable to disruption.

Justin Isaf talked about community management on a mind-blowing scale at the Huffington Post, with 70 online communities to manage, 28 full-time staff moderating 10 comments per second, and a sophisticated artificial intelligence system.

A big focus of the conference was online community management as an emerging profession and organisational discipline.

The discipline is at an important stage of evolution as online community managers face questions and challenges around professional identity and recognition, demonstrating strategic value to organisations and the broader community, and having their work shaped by legislation and regulation.

Unsurprisingly given the current public debate, the topic of trolling came up many times. Swarmers shared their experiences of good practices for reading ‘digital body language’ and moderating difficult community members, and talked about ways to deal with sensitive topics.

Together, Swarmers developed insights into navigating the ‘community GPS’ – the health, culture and direction of online communities.

Another theme of discussions at Swarm was the dichotomous relationship between social media versus online communities, which are often confused as one and the same. There was a definite view that organisations need to define different purposes, aims and metrics for these two streams.

The language used by a profession is always an interesting insight into their identity and mindset, and some of the recurring words I noticed were passion, mobilisation, co-creation, social change, networks, collaboration and vision.

The metaphors for community that surfaced during Swarm such as ‘ecosystem’, ‘connective tissue’, and ‘DNA’ had a distinctive biological flavour that captures the visceral and human side to the work of managing online communities.

Check out the Swarm website and blog if you would like to know more. There’s an in-depth review of the conference, a Storify of the conference tweets, speaker profiles, conference papers and more.

And watch out for Swarm 2013.

Justine Hyde is a communications and information management professional with a senior management background in state government and professional services. She has a geeky passion for all things digital, social and community, with a soft spot for libraries. She writes a blog, hub & spoke.

Check out SMK’s upcoming industry leading training courses in: Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, Perth, Canberra, Auckland, Adelaide and Wellington.

Also, browse through hundreds of online social media video tutorials on eSMK Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube and more!!

Learn with SMK through November

Start your SMK: Digital Excellence 7-day free trial today and unlock unlimited, on-demand access to hundreds of hours of digital masterclasses, training courses and hands-on tutorials.

Your risk-free trial offers the perfect opportunity to expand and upgrade your digital intellectual property.

Each month SMK releases 30 hours of new and updated social media and digital marketing educational course content, ensuring you never get left behind – be it on digital strategy, tactics or implementation.

Alongside this, SMK offers live help and support weekly within the SMK Working Group. It might be a quick fix or the root of a bigger problem; either way, a problem shared is a problem halved. On a day-to-day basis, SMK’s team gives you hands-on support and fresh ideas.

Not to mention a shoulder to cry on, occasionally.

November's Courses, Live Help & Support Options

Live Member Clinics every Monday & Tuesday from 1 pm – 2 pm AEST

  • Live help and support from SMK’s team of analysts.
  • Book in to request a personalised discussion for 15 or 30m via Zoom within the Facebook Working Group.

Weekly Technical Labs: Meta Business Suite on Wednesdays from 1 pm – 2 pm AEST

  • Technical Labs explore the technological process and workflows related to key digital marketing activities.

Google Analytics 4, Data Analysis & Evaluation Masterclass on Thursdays from 10 am – 12 pm AEST

  • Module 1: GA4 Optimisation, Key Features, Tools & Reports
  • Module 2: Setting up GA4 Conversions & Understanding Analytics Events
  • Module Three: Analytics campaign tracking and report analysis
  • Module Four: GA4 report round-up, conversion attribution & visualisation

Influencer Marketing Masterclass: Organic, Paid & Commerce on Fridays from 10 am – 12 pm AEST

  • Module 1: 2024 Influencer Marketing Trends, Forecasts & Opportunities
  • Module 2: Organic Influencer Marketing Best Practices
  • Module 3: Optimising Influencer Campaigns With Social Ads
  • Module 4: Evaluation, Reporting and Influencer Commerce

Leave a Comment