It is important to have community guidelines. They are imperative for any online community. Members need to know what is expected of them and what types of behaviors are frowned upon or prohibited within the community.
I remember creating the guidelines for the community I manage. It was laborious but imperative. I scoured the internet for guidelines from other communities and then thought a lot about what kind of community I’d like to see take shape.
Writing such guidelines can make you feel as though you’re building an environment where all will be well. You think that people will refer to these guidelines and perhaps even follow them.
But having those guidelines in place does not make every call I make as a community manager, an easy one. In fact, I rarely go back to them when making tough decisions. Guidelines are a starting point. Interpreting those guidelines is how you become an effective community manager. The way you do that interpreting can make or break you.
This job is not about being a robot. It’s emotional and we are human.You can stare at the guidelines all day long and never get the answers you need when things get complicated. I know that many of my peers will argue the point and say that guidelines are guidelines. You follow them or you go. But it’s not that easy with me.
Let me illustrate why I feel this way: A few months ago a long-time member had posted several comments and even a blog or two that were directed at another member. The comments were mean and degrading. It was really out of character for her. Were those comments abusive according to the guidelines? Yes. I could have stopped right there, marked her comments and blogs as abuse and she would have lost her posting privileges, community profile, the works. In most cases, that should probably be the outcome.
BUT…I knew that her dog had just been hit by a car and died because she’d been blogging about it since the day it happened and it looked like she was responding to someone who had been taunting her about that. His comments, however, had NOT been reported as abuse so it all looked very one-sided.
I sent her an email letting her know that I was not going to dock her for the comments because I knew she was in an emotional state. But I also warned her that she must take control of her emotions because I would not do it again.
She responded with great gratitude and apologized profusely for allowing herself to get sucked in by someone else and for resorting to such antics. She said that she just couldn’t take it because she was feeling guilty about letting her dog run out into the street and his comments about her negligence pushed her over the cyber-edge. She did not want to lose her privileges.
For me, that was time well spent. I know it doesn’t scale, and that’s a real issue for me as the community grows, but that’s the kind of community manager I like to be. One who can empathize and know enough about the members to make a difference.
Guidelines don’t empathize.
You can.
This post was inspired by #CmtyChat, (created by Sonny Gill and Bryan Person) a weekly meeting of the minds where community enthusiasts chat via Twitter about all that ails us and then some.










13 comments
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July 6, 2009 at 1:47 am
8 idées pour bien démarrer la semaine | Manager une communauté
[...] Guidelines are important, but interpretation is key http://blog.angelaconnor.com/2009/07/05/guidelines-are-important-interpretation-is-key/ [...]
July 6, 2009 at 3:09 am
links for 2009-07-06 | burningCat
[...] Guidelines are important, but interpretation is key (tags: guidelines socialmedia) [...]
July 6, 2009 at 7:04 am
Martin Reed
Angela – I love it!
Guidelines will always be interpreted differently by different people. Just look as the US constitution as an example!
I would rather have guidelines that consist of about five bullet points that can be ‘all-encompassing’ rather than try to close the door to interpretation by listing every conceivable act that isn’t allowed (you’ll never win, and people just won’t read guidelines that are overly long).
But what many people may miss in your post is the fact that you knew this member in question. You knew that they had lost their pet and that could be influencing their behaviour. If the community manager or moderator wasn’t actively involved in the community, they wouldn’t know this and would risk coming down excessively hard on that member – possibly losing someone who is otherwise a fantastic contributor.
There aren’t any black and whites when it comes to managing communities.
July 6, 2009 at 10:37 am
Jill Biddington
Beautifully crafted Angela
So we might refer to ourselves as community managers but that word “manager” can be misleading also. It isn’t about command and control type management but a far broader notion of Leadership – one that leads by example and develops both the environment and the broad community, and the individuals with in it.
Yes I agree with Martin in saying the key was in knowing your community member.
I really find your contribution on community building to be both heartwarming and practical.
July 6, 2009 at 3:17 pm
Lisa Randolph
I think you definitely made the right decision to empathize with your community member. It makes a world of difference to know all angles of a situation before acting. The fact that you knew of her emotional state shows how much of an attentive community manager you are.
Thanks for sharing!
July 6, 2009 at 3:30 pm
Angela Connor
Thanks, Martin. You are right about the black and whites. that’s what you have to accept at the onset and many people can’t wrap their arms around the concept. Thanks again for the compliment.
July 6, 2009 at 3:34 pm
Angela Connor
Hi Jill! I think you’ve detailed a great addendum to our job descriptions. Thanks for taking the time to share your thoughts.
July 6, 2009 at 6:46 pm
Meri Walker
I’d like to help the community manager of a new Ning my neighbors are putting together. She has no experience managing a social network and doesn’t know where to begin to look for guidelines she could adapt for the group. The network is a group of people 60 and up who are very new to social networking.
What guidelines would you suggest for a group of “newbies?” Are there sites you think have a terrific set of guidelines they might adapt?
July 7, 2009 at 10:15 am
Angela Connor
Hi Meri: Sounds like your friend may have two jobs. Managing the community AND teaching the members how to use a community. it’ll be a learning experience for them both. When I first started, I read Martin Reed’s blog and Jake McKee’s. I still read them both. Check out Community Spark and Community Guy. I am also more than willing to chat via email. Angela-at-AngelaConnor-dot-com.
July 7, 2009 at 3:08 pm
Jill Biddington
Hey Meri,
An easy way would be to check out a couple of community based websites and read what they say about House Rules etc. I will have a look at some of my tags as there is a broad diversity – especially on some of the mental health support sites.
Maybe it would help to ask a couple of questions to help you frame your thoughts?
How do you want the community to engage with each other?
What are areas that won’t be tolerated? We have a stated comment on zero tolerance of racism, sexism, vilification and judging others.
What is the “feel” of the community that your neighbour wants to build?
Is it a support or an information sharing community or is it a network to decrease social isolation – what are the ways that the behaviours of the community members can demonstrate that assist this?
If you have a core group of the community that is already organised and it is moving to an on-line community you might ask them directly how they see the group operating now and then express it on site?
Best of luck
Jill
July 12, 2009 at 11:19 am
Recent Links at Fast Wonder: Online Community Consulting
[...] Guidelines are important, but interpretation is key [...]
July 14, 2009 at 11:33 am
Bryan Person
Great post, Angela, and so pleased that our #CmtyChat helped inspire it!
As I mentioned in the chat, community guidelines, but just as important is a smart community manager who knows not to bang members over the head with them.
See you at the next chat this Friday?
Bryan | @BryanPerson
July 14, 2009 at 11:43 am
Angela Connor
It’s on my calendar, Bryan!. I’ll be there. #cmtychat