Online Brand Communities: Understand What Drives Customers

Growing up in a small rural town, the common interests of which to base my community were limited, circumstantial, and mostly geographic.

“We ride the same bus to school and have the same teacher? Wow, we have so much in common!”

But today, with the invention and dissemination of the Internet, people from all corners of the world are able to form communities based on whatever truly interests them and are no longer restricted by what geographically limits them.

Organizing niche online communities is a new frontier in business and marketing. The academic world is exploring and conducting research on this topic and the coming results are sure to give a better understanding of the phenomenon that so many of us are already participating in.

The Journal of Service Management published an article titled Managing Brands and Customer Engagement in Online Brand Communities. I found the article to be eye-opening and encourage anyone interested in working with online communities to read the full paper here.

Getting Started With Online Brand Communities

Brand communities existed before the advent of the Internet. These are communities formed by brand-customer engagement. You’ve probably participated in some level of a traditional brand community, be it as simple as a loyalty program at a movie theater or a sports car club.

Naturally, an online brand community occurs when that brand-customer engagement happens online. Social media made this abundantly possible and marketing teams have been more and more creative in using these tools to further their online brand communities.

To meet the needs of customers in this customer-brand online engagement, it is helpful to understand what drives a customer to engage in the first place.

The review of online brand community research found that there are three main “drivers” that push customers across the threshold from not engaging to being part of the online brand community. These are:

1. Brand-related Drivers
2. Social Drivers
3. Functional Drivers

Let’s take a closer look.

BRAND RELATED DRIVERS

There are two kinds of brand-related drivers; the first being brand identification or when a person has a personal identification with the brand. This is when your customer feels that your brand is part of who they are.

Think of a musician who would say “I play a Fender guitar and it is my passion and livelihood, it is who I am!” The musician is driven to participate in the Fender online brand community because it is a space with other passionate Fender enthusiasts to share and reaffirm their identity.

Then there is the brand’s symbolic function. A customer may be driven to engage with an online brand community if they believe in what the brand stands for. I personally am a fan of the Rubik’s Cube. It’s a symbol for logic and more broadly intellect.

In either brand-related driver, the motivation is within the customer because of their devotion to the product.

SOCIAL DRIVERS

When I lived in Washington, D.C., one of my favorite events was the National Book Festival. I was “driven” to attend the festival each year because of the social benefits.

There, I could browse recently published books and participate in the author’s Q&A session. Attendees would chat while waiting in signing lines which was a great place to get recommendations for similar books.

This, of course, was a traditional brand community (the brand being the National Book Festival) but the social drivers are the same for online brand communities as well.

Customers are motivated to engage with online brand communities to receive social benefits. In the example above these would be the exposure to new books, the Q&A session, and more book recommendations.

There’s also the social identity that comes along with participating in a brand community either on or offline. Customers who engage in your online brand community can be driven to receive the affirmation that they are part of a larger whole.

FUNCTIONAL DRIVERS

How many times have you seen an advertisement to get 10% off your next purchase just by “Liking” the companies Facebook page or following them on Twitter?

Have you ever logged into Microsoft’s support community for assistance in animating your power point presentation?

Did you spend time reading reviews of the last big product you purchased online?

All of these are examples of functional benefits that drive customers to engage with your online brand community. By offering something of value to your consumer, they are likely to engage and in turn contribute to the community with their insight and promotion of the product.

What is Driving YOUR Customers?

But, let’s not get ahead of ourselves here.

Before you ask something of your customers, ask yourself, or better yet, ask your customers, if they are driven to participate in your online brand community because of the brand-related drivers, social drivers or functional drivers, or maybe a little of each?

Understanding what is driving their engagement, will help you determine how you can better meet their needs.

Again, to read the full paper, Managing Brands and Customer Engagement in Online Brand Communities, click here. Or check back next week to read about the next section, outcomes.

Color Your Group Chat Experience

RumbleTalk group chat is highly customizable. It’s a favorite among web designers and non-experts alike. In this post, we will show you three areas of customization to color your group chat experience.

Why is customization important? Simply put, this ability to design the chat box appearance will make the chat look and feel like it belongs in the website you add it to.

But before we get into the nitty gritty let’s take a step back.

If you are looking for the fastest way to color your group chat experience, we have ready-to-use skins available. If one of these almost suits your design, you can adjust a skin using the admin panel “advance design” option.

For more advanced options, we offer the ability to design via CSS. You can read more about CSS design options here.

I could go on and on about all the different types of customization RumbleTalk offers, but instead I’m going to stay on topic. Like I said before, we’re talking about three areas of design customization:

  1. User name + Text Color
  2. Message Backgrounds
  3. Default Guest Icons

Below is a snapshot of the RumbleTalk group chat customized by our customer.

customized group chat

Changing User Name + Text Color

The user name and text color settings are changed in the advanced design settings menu under “User Colors”.

In this menu you can choose up to 16 colors to be rotated between users, sorted by name.

Here’s how it works:

  • If no color is chosen, the default color, black, will be used.
  • If one color is chosen, all users names and text will be in that one color.
  • If more than one color is chosen, the user names and text will alternate between the multiple colors.

Changing Your Message Background

First, let’s get on the same page: by message background we mean the color that appears in each speech bubble behind the text.

Customizing a message background is similar to changing text colors. Like in the users lists, the colors are rotated if more than one is chosen and you can choose up to 16 colors.

You can find this setting under the Message tab.

The result might look like this:

Group chat result

Changing Your Default Guest Icon

When customers log into your chat, an icon appears next to their name. Participants logging in with Facebook or Twitter will automatically have their profile picture as their chat icon. For guest users, a default icon is used.

Our default user image changes based on the skin you choose for your group chat.

You can customize this in your group chat to be whatever image you like, such as a simple company logo, as long as you are legally permitted to use that image.

You can also customize separate icons for web browsers and mobile browsers. Be sure to check out both settings.

Web CSS:

  1. Login to your administration panel
  2. Go to your chat’s settings
  3. Click on “Advanced design” (on the left navigation panel)
  4. Click on “CSS” (on the newly opened top navigation panel)
  5. Add the following content to the text area and save.
  6. Replace the URL with your image’s URL.
    It is highly recommended to use images in a secure location (https)


.guest-default-image {
background: url(“https://www.yourdomain.com/usericon.png”);
}

Mobile CSS:

  1. Login to your administration panel
  2. Go to your chat’s settings
  3. Click on “Advanced design” (on the left navigation panel)
  4. Click on “Mobile CSS” (on the newly opened top navigation panel)
  5. Add the following content to the text area and save.
  6. Replace the URL with your image’s URL.
    It is highly recommended to use images in a secure location (https)


.user-image,
.message-user-image {
width: 0 !important;
padding-right: 32px;
background-image: url(“https://www.yourdomain.com/usericon.png”);
background-repeat: no-repeat;
}

Group Chat Results!

We hope you like your newly customized group chat! If you hit any snags along the way, contact us at support@rumbletalk.com.

Do you have a suggestion for another topic we should cover? Feel free to contact us about that too!

Every Wednesday we’ll be posting a new technical help and explanations post here on our blog, so be sure to check back next week for more tips and tricks.

Until then, enjoy creating!

Does your business have multiple audiences?

Online businesses can improve community engagement by identifying and interacting with specific audiences visiting their website.

It’s not hard to understand that businesses have different types of customers, but far too often our online community is treated as one homogeneous group.

CHANCES ARE YOU HAVE MULTIPLE AUDIENCES

Think of who you expect to visit your website. Depending on the type of website you are managing, be it a promotional website for a product or service, a special interest blog, or a community center for dispersing updates and information, you are likely to have multiple audiences.

With few exceptions, your website will at least have new visitors and returning visitors. The wants and needs of these two groups can be drastically different. A new visitor is typically looking through a narrow lens to determine if the website is worth their time. They need obvious information quickly and efficiently. A returning visitor has already established trust with your brand and is likely to browse greater amounts of content.

And there can definitely be more audiences than that!

Many websites regarding professions will give general information about their subject for casual browsers and more technical information for those in that profession who use the site as a resource.

This model is also used for special interest sites are more.

dog website
Your website could be for dogs and for dog lovers. This is an example of multiple audiences.

Consider a website for dog lovers. There are people who want information on training their dog to sit, and people who want information on how to enter their dog for an agility show. Both love dogs and would enjoy pictures of cute dogs or dogs doing funny things.

However, without identifying the differences in the dog loving audience some visitors would be bored of rudimentary information and others would leave if the information was beyond the scope of their interest.

MULTIPLE AUDIENCES ARE GOOD FOR GROWTH

Engaging multiple audiences in one platform can be a challenge.

Ignoring these differences, even the best scenario only generates a fraction of the engagement the site could have if the two groups were able to engage in ways fit for them.

If you are trying to increase your website’s engagement, which I think we all are trying to do, consider categorizing your audience and communicating to specific groups as a top level priority.

Your online community is made up of real people, not just numbers. Ask yourself or your team who you are trying to reach.

  • What do your visitors want the first time they visit your site compared to the 100th?
  • What do field experts want compared to novices?
  • What does your website offer to engage other business owners to collaborate?
  • What “levels” of participation are recognized in the design of your website?

All of these are good places to start, but every website is different and so should be the categorization of your visitors.

 

WHAT WE DO FOR MULTIPLE AUDIENCES AT RUMBLETALK

multiple audiences
Some pegs are red, some pegs are yellow and some pegs are blue.

At RumbleTalk, we recognize our product is for business owners and online communities. However, not all visitors will fit this profile and we want to leave them with a good impression too.

For new visitors (including those that are unlikely customers) we focus on making our landing page easy to understand and memorable so that even if that one person doesn’t buy our service they are likely to recommend someone who may.

For our customers, we work hard to make our product user friendly and are constantly upgrading our technology to be more effective.

But wait, that’s not all! We’ve also designed our product to tackle this issue for our customers.

RumbleTalk chats have many great features, and among them is the ability to operate multiple chats on one website.

We understand that some websites face outward and seek open and public community building. Other websites face inward and offer community discussion as an exclusive benefit. Your website may be an umbrella for several topics, and need issue-specific communication.

RumbleTalk chats are capable of providing separate spaces for multiple audiences simultaneously.

Integrating one or multiple chats into your website may be the answer to meet the needs of your specific and separate audiences.

The first step is determining if you have multiple audiences. After that, we are here to help you create and engage with your customers.

THANKS

Thank you for reading and if you have a moment, let us know what you think.