Diving into a community head first can be intimidating for some people, even though it may be second nature to you and me.
Sometimes it’s much easier to stay in the background and lurk, enjoying the community with no real commitment.
It’s the lurkers sometimes, who contribute to that valuable “time spent” stat community managers often covet and it makes sense to consider lurkers when you’re developing features for a new online community.
I don’t believe that every action should require registration, and learned from experience that it can take a lurker up to six months to finally bite the bullet and jump on in. I specifically remember an e-mail from a member and a blog from another indicating that they’d both been hanging around for months.
By the time they did sign up, they knew which groups they wanted to join, which members they’d like to connect with and understood the community culture as well. Lurkers are also less likely to create a new profile and abandon it, never to return. They already view your community as a destination and that’s a beautiful thing.
By locking everything down, you don’t give people a chance to dabble, and sometimes you have to have a little taste before completely committing.
So as you think about ways to engage the community, do consider the lurkers. Include polls and other interactive features. Host live chats that allow guests to sign in, and publish snippets of your member newsletter in a blog post or forum so they can see what they’re missing.
This is an important audience, so be sure to show the lurkers a little love.











5 comments
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January 7, 2011 at 2:24 pm
Don’t underestimate the power of lurkers | SiliconANGLE
[...] [Cross-posted at Online Community Strategist] [...]
January 10, 2011 at 6:12 am
Jerome Pineau
Lurkers are the 5th column of many communities. The problem with them, IMO, is you can’t wedge them nicely into stats and ROI figures and so it’s like telling management they have “imaginary friends”
– They dont “get it”.
January 10, 2011 at 9:46 am
Angela Connor
You raise an excellent point, Jerome and I love the “imaginary friend” analogy. My advice is mainly for community managers. If you know they’re out there, there are things that can be done to work towards converting them to members. I just think it’s a segment that’s easy to ignore. I’, with you on a great majority of management “not getting it.”
January 17, 2011 at 5:38 pm
mikepascucci
Thanks for this information Angela, great stuff. If you are heading down to SXSW, make sure to check out our panel (Mike Pascucci, Heather Strout, MArk Wallace & Jim Storer) on this exact topic – http://schedule.sxsw.com/events/event_IAP6626. We hope top see you there.
Mike Pascucci
@mikepascucci
January 18, 2011 at 4:11 pm
Angela Connor
Hey there Mike: Thanks for letting me know about the panel. I probably will not be attending but I hope you all do a great job informing the masses on the importance of lurkers and how to wrap their heads around leveraging their presence.