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Online Community Tips

Get online community management tips to help your association, membership organization, or scientific society increase member engagement.

Posts about External community software:

Online Community Outreach From a Distance

Kristina Toscano Apr 22, 2020 12:47:29 PM
Online Community Outreach From a Distance

     

     During this time where many of us are working from home, there is a heightened need for online presence in order to attract people to your organization. Community outreach is an important aspect to all businesses, and we wanted to share some pro-tips we have learned through building an online community platform. Here are some tips for connecting with people as business moves online!

1. Search hashtags and keywords 

If you want to access people who are posting and interested in a certain topic, search for keyword hashtags on social media. By doing this, you are narrowing down your target audience to those who could be potential partners in your business or members of your organization. The hashtag feature is used widely on the Breezio platform in order to categorize posts and discussions by topic and key words.  

The Future of Business

Kristina Toscano Apr 7, 2020 6:44:31 PM
The Future of Business

We are thinking of all those affected by the novel coronavirus and sending huge “thank you’s” to those essential workers who are working tirelessly to keep our communities safe and healthy. It is the responsibility of individuals to be cautious and thoughtful of others during this time so that we can work to “flatten the curve” and prevent future devastations. 

Building Community for Associations the Lean Startup Way

Picture of Karen McCord
Karen McCord Sep 18, 2018 11:31:30 AM
Building Community for Associations the Lean Startup Way

Need a community platform that allows you to get started quickly, then adapt as your community grows? Experience Breezio


In his bestselling book, The Lean Startup, Eric Ries makes the case for  getting new products into customers’ hands faster. He advocates for a Minimum Viable Product (MVP) approach, starting lean instead of investing time and money perfecting a product that may end up being of little or no interest to customers. Ries’s methodology starts with launching the MVP and using it to learn what the market actually wants, then continually iterating based on that learned intelligence. This “build-measure-learn” feedback loop saves both time and money, enabling lean startups to get a product to market quickly and customers to help shape the solution that meets their actual needs, rather than needs founders think they have.