How To Recover Your Online Community From Slow Growth


The first thing to do is figure out whatโ€™s gone wrong. If your community is dwindling before your eyes, the hardest thing to do is patiently try and uncover the cause. Our natural instinct is to launch into โ€œgrowthโ€ mode, using hacks and tips from internet gurus or throwing money at the problem. 

Instead, take a step back. Use analytics or careful observation and discussion with your colleagues, and try to assess where things went wrong.ย 

  • Do you have high quality members? 
    • When new communities launch, they usually take a โ€˜quantity over qualityโ€™ approach with new members. Perhaps you need to weed out the bad seeds, cultivate the good ones, then create a more engaged (and therefore attractive) community. 
  • Is your community manager up to the job?
    • If your community doesnโ€™t have a clear focus with a passionate manager always driving discussion, stagnation is normal. 
  • Do you truly welcome all new members? 
    • Itโ€™s amazing how quickly an open community can morph into an Old Boys Club. If new members feel shunned or dismissed, itโ€™s no wonder theyโ€™re not hanging around. 

And it could be a hundred other factors. Try to get under the skin of your own community and identify potential problemsโ€”then try and fix those! And the best way to do this is toโ€ฆ

Get feedback from your members

Itโ€™s astounding how many community owners and managers are afraid of asking members what they want or why theyโ€™re not engaging with the community. Their answers ARE the problems youโ€™re facing

One-on-one conversations where you guarantee anonymity tend to work best. You donโ€™t want a bunch of yes-men or fence-sittersโ€”you want to create a dialog where members can honestly tell you what is and isnโ€™t working for them. We personally guarantee the answers WILL surprise you. There are always things you never even considered. If youโ€™re worried about your community, make speaking to your members your first priority. 

Implement solutions one-by-one

One of the biggest mistakes you can make is implementing 3-4 potential solutions at once. How will you know whatโ€™s working and what isn’t?

For example, you might think that youโ€™re not engaging your members enough intellectually and that maybe youโ€™ve been unclear on the direction and value of the community. 

If you start initiating thought-provoking, complex discussions and introducing a razor-sharp focus on the core value of the community, you might get a big uptick in engagement or retentionโ€”but you wonโ€™t really know why. Try one thing, assess the results, then try something else.

Try these common fixes

Itโ€™s always best to identify a specific problem, but lifeโ€™s not always so easy. If youโ€™re feeling stuck and canโ€™t put your finger on whatโ€™s hurting your communityโ€™s growth or new member retention, here are a few staple fixes you can attempt. These are all best practices for community growth and, even if things are going okay, they might help you accelerate growth even faster:

  1. Introduce gamification elements
  2. Evaluate how you create discussions
  3. Consider how you integrate new members
  4. Use data to see if you have an engagement problem

Finally ask yourselfโ€”is your slow growth actually a problem? 

One situation to consider is that, in isolation, gaining fewer new members is not necessarily a bad thing. If those members are well qualified and engaged, this might be brilliant news. If engagement and discussion within the community are both high and youโ€™ve got high levels of participation, then your community is probably doing better than most. 

You want more members in our online community; we all do. But remember that your biggest priority is always your existing members and their activity. So if you can avoid viewing the problem in a vacuum, you might realize slow growth isnโ€™t such a bad thing after all. 

What’s your experience?

Brought to you by PeepSo Team Matt Jaworski
I am a professional nerd with **over fifteen years of experience** in the field of Open Source web development. Before [PeepSo](https://PeepSo.com) I was a contractor and have helped build successful businesses around the world, including USA, UK, Germany, Indonesia, and Malaysia. A couple of years leading up to founding PeepSo, I was involved with JomSocial โ€“ a social networking extension for Joomla. Stepping up from the role of a contractor to a business owner, I became [PeepSo](https://PeepSo.com) founder and Chief Technology Officer. I strive to build beautiful, fast, and functional software that **empowers users to build their own digital tribes with full autonomy and freedom** often not available on mainstream social networking media. In 2023 we spun off a new company to launch [Awedesk](https://awedesk.com) – a complete ticket-based client support solution for WordPress. I also created [ListoWP](https://LIstoWP.com), a modern to-do plugin for WordPress which is now evolving into a project management tool.

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