[00:00:04.040] Hi there everyone, [00:00:04.800] My name's Brad Rook, and I am a senior solutions [00:00:07.160] consultant with the customer experience team here at Igloo Software. [00:00:10.680] And I have the pleasure of helping people be really wildly successful [00:00:14.200] with their digital workplace. [00:00:15.360] That's my role. [00:00:16.080] That's my job. [00:00:16.920] And I'd like to welcome you [00:00:18.320] to today's session on the evolution of the community manager. [00:00:22.400] Through today's session, we're going to look at the evolution [00:00:24.480] of the community manager as a functional role [00:00:26.480] within the corporate structure. [00:00:28.200] It's a role that's evolved as the way we work has evolved [00:00:30.920] and will continue to evolve as we do moving forward. [00:00:34.360] But first, let's get into a little level setting. [00:00:37.320] Let's talk first about your digital workplace [00:00:39.920] it's a digital representation of your organization as igloos. [00:00:43.200] CEO Mike Burrough once put it, [00:00:45.120] organizations should take as much pride in their digital workplace as they do. [00:00:48.880] The lobby of their physical headquarters. [00:00:50.720] That's a big statement. [00:00:52.200] That pride should be evident in the creation and management [00:00:55.200] of an impactful, engaging and useful community [00:00:58.320] and the community manager's role is to architect that, to support it, [00:01:01.920] and to ensure others are enabled to support them in these tasks. [00:01:04.920] So looking at the slide, I've asked the question, [00:01:07.760] Who is your community manager? [00:01:09.280] And that's what we're going to talk about today. [00:01:10.800] We're going to look at that evolution, who that person was [00:01:14.040] and who it should be now, because certainly we've got some ideals [00:01:18.160] that we were aspiring to, but it hasn't always been this way. [00:01:21.480] So let's talk about a little bit of history first. [00:01:24.520] So looking at kind of that pre 20, 20 period, what we see [00:01:27.360] first off is the digital workplace [00:01:29.240] is mission essential, but it's not yet mission critical. [00:01:33.000] It was a nice to have, but the in-office component that we didn't have that [00:01:36.400] total reliance on digital tools, we still had those in-person interactions [00:01:40.760] and physical documentation to augment that experience to back things up. [00:01:44.520] And as a result, the digital workplace, as I mentioned, it was a nice to have [00:01:48.320] it didn't necessarily represent the full employee experience in the workplace. [00:01:53.160] That digital workplace was maintained by a digital workplace manager, [00:01:56.280] but that was rarely a dedicated position it was even more rarely a community [00:02:00.240] or group. [00:02:01.640] This individual or people [00:02:04.560] or committee often had competing priorities within the organization [00:02:08.120] if there was a committee or group, the focus might be spread across [00:02:11.160] several business areas, not just that of the digital workplace. [00:02:14.560] So there wasn't as much maybe laser focus on the digital workplaces [00:02:18.360] as might have been ideal. As we'd like to see. [00:02:21.240] The digital workplace itself might have faced the entire company, [00:02:24.840] but usually it sat within the siloed part of the organization like h.R. [00:02:28.800] Admin or i.t. [00:02:30.240] This limited scope meant that some of the areas of the organization [00:02:33.280] might be underrepresented if they were represented at all [00:02:35.800] within the digital workplace. [00:02:36.960] Not everybody saw the physical manifestation of the digital workplace. [00:02:41.680] We also had a more singular focus on a singular corporate goal or purpose [00:02:46.880] it might be used for communications, it might be used for knowledge management, [00:02:49.840] but other aspects might live elsewhere, again, being backed up by a lot [00:02:53.040] of those physical realities that we had in the physical office. [00:02:56.280] So that's the way things were. [00:02:57.680] We had kind of a decentralized model and looking at the digital workplace and, [00:03:01.800] and maybe a person or a group that might have had part of their focus [00:03:06.400] being the digital workplace, but rarely that that that dedication. [00:03:10.600] So what happened next? [00:03:11.640] Well, I think we know moving forward [00:03:15.040] 20, 20 hit and the digital workplace [00:03:18.200] almost overnight went from mission essential to mission critical. [00:03:22.560] Everyone suddenly needed all the things. [00:03:24.520] And there's that shift to work from home [00:03:26.000] made in office conversations and resource finding a rare element. [00:03:29.240] We saw that happen. [00:03:31.040] We also saw a really great reliance on digital tools [00:03:34.480] and I mean great in the sense of scope, not great thumbs up [00:03:38.480] because we saw a spread of the digital ecosystem. [00:03:41.200] This created a lot of digital noise and a fracturing of informational chains [00:03:44.760] as employees started to rely more on applications of their choosing. [00:03:48.360] This presented a security risk to an organization as well, not just that [00:03:51.760] fracturing of the organizational change [00:03:54.000] depending on the application was being used. [00:03:56.040] So we saw some security risks coming in, but moreover, we saw knowledge [00:03:59.600] being dispersed to a lot of these self-serve applications. [00:04:02.640] A lot of employees were starting to bring into the ecosystem [00:04:05.600] through their cell phones, through their home networks, that sort of thing. [00:04:10.280] But yet the digital workplace became or becomes [00:04:13.560] a central hub for the corporation [00:04:15.080] pretty much overnight, with the focus on now on the organization as a whole, [00:04:18.920] the purpose of the digital workplace has changed, [00:04:21.360] and with that increased profile, we start to see increased challenges [00:04:25.200] the digital workplace manager becomes very, very important very quickly, [00:04:29.160] and they often get overwhelmed [00:04:30.560] by the demands for requests being made at the position. [00:04:33.520] We see a spread of the digital workplace pages, spaces and channels being created [00:04:37.440] at volume four for myriad purposes, but often for those under-represented [00:04:41.880] aspects of the organization which now don't have a digital home yet. [00:04:45.960] Everyone wants, as it says on the slide, everyone needs, everyone wants [00:04:49.760] all the things new departments want a piece of the digital workplace. [00:04:53.440] We've got that digital spread but we also see with that engagement [00:04:57.840] challenges. [00:04:58.600] We saw huge engagement at the beginning of the pandemic period. [00:05:01.680] We saw obvious upticks in communications in collaboration, knowledge management, [00:05:06.160] that sort of things, things you would expect. [00:05:08.280] But we also saw a huge social aspect. [00:05:11.040] This is that personal touch was taken out of the office [00:05:14.360] and people tried to make up for that with with photos of their new workplaces, [00:05:18.120] with photos of their new work companions in the forms of pets, spouses, children, [00:05:22.040] that sort of thing. [00:05:22.920] And a lot of sharing that took place in kind of that first month, [00:05:26.520] 60 days of the pandemic period. [00:05:29.160] But then just as quickly we saw a drop off. [00:05:31.560] So now organizations have started paying attention [00:05:33.760] to their digital workplaces and how things are performing. [00:05:36.320] And we've got a huge spike followed by a huge drop off. [00:05:38.960] So the digital workplace [00:05:39.960] manager is seeing challenges along the lines of justification. [00:05:43.600] How do we deal with that digital burnout? [00:05:46.200] How do we keep the digital workplace engaging and purpose suited [00:05:49.880] throughout this period? [00:05:51.600] So keeping the digital workplace relevant [00:05:53.920] during the pandemic and beyond has become that challenge, that focus. [00:05:57.720] And we start to see with that an emergence of new elements as well, [00:06:01.760] requiring a new way of looking at things new relationships, new contributions. [00:06:05.720] We saw diversity, equity and inclusion take off, and rightfully [00:06:09.440] so during this period. [00:06:10.920] We saw those representations starting to be built into the digital workplace. [00:06:14.640] We saw that representation I mentioned with the quote off [00:06:17.160] the start of the corporate lobby [00:06:18.920] This is your physical headquarters manifested into a digital environment. [00:06:23.240] We start to see a lot of resources being built out, things like wellness [00:06:26.520] centers, really helping employees resource and deal with the new reality of work. [00:06:31.320] And we start to see these things being created en masse. [00:06:33.840] These are new focuses for the digital workplace, [00:06:36.920] and consequently the position of the digital workplace [00:06:40.160] manager has now become one of much greater focus in some cases. [00:06:44.120] Digital workplace managers, as I mentioned, became overwhelmed, but [00:06:47.160] this was also a time of great growth and renewed focus. [00:06:50.200] We started to see things like creation of governance committees to help [00:06:53.600] really monitor what was being created in what was going into the digital workplace, [00:06:57.840] but also monitor what was going out that output, what was being communicated [00:07:01.440] to the employees and what digital workplaces were being used for. [00:07:04.600] We saw resources being allocated more than ever [00:07:07.320] before to the digital workplace manager, sub administrators, [00:07:10.440] content creators, resources from other departments. [00:07:13.320] We saw the realization of the digital workplace manager as a dedicated position, [00:07:17.800] and the digital employee experience is a key driver for the organization. [00:07:22.000] And overall we saw an understanding of the place, the digital workplace [00:07:25.840] within the organization, within that corporate structure. [00:07:30.000] So moving to today and looking beyond what have we learned? [00:07:33.000] Well, first off, we see customers are more advanced on the maturity scale. [00:07:36.040] They're building on the lessons they learned during the previous few years. [00:07:40.120] We're seeing the community manager [00:07:41.520] as a dedicated position with supporting resources. [00:07:44.640] We're seeing more of an emergence of steering committees, [00:07:47.600] of which the digital workplace manager is an important part. [00:07:50.720] We're seeing challenges somewhat with the stop [00:07:53.360] start with back to work, with hybrid, with work from home. [00:07:56.720] We're seeing essentially more workforce spread [00:07:59.760] and that's changing somewhat the focus of the digital workplace, but making it [00:08:03.960] no less critical, the idea that people can work from anywhere in a lot of cases. [00:08:08.040] So we've still got now multiple dispersed employees [00:08:11.640] that are needing to have that central focus where [00:08:14.400] that source of truth where they get their information. [00:08:17.360] So the digital workplace manager has seen that elevation in in importance [00:08:21.520] and they're starting to see things like champions, sub administrators, [00:08:24.960] as I mentioned, co-managers content creators to help with the load. [00:08:28.640] They're not just an entity of one or a small committee [00:08:31.520] this is starting to branch out. [00:08:33.000] And the digital workplace manager is a very important focal point in that spread. [00:08:38.840] We're seeing significant contributions continue from other departments, [00:08:42.000] but we're not just opening the door. [00:08:43.440] We're having these committees in place to ensure [00:08:46.440] that just because we build it doesn't mean they'll come. [00:08:49.280] We want an embracing of strategy and justifying the space [00:08:52.560] allocated, not just saying that, OK, well, you need it. [00:08:55.800] We're going to build it. [00:08:56.680] So we're seeing some backing for the digital workplace manager [00:09:00.480] in controlling that spread of the digital workplace. [00:09:04.320] We're also seeing a rise of digital employee experience [00:09:07.800] and content strategist roles. [00:09:09.520] We're starting to see some of these specialist roles take off. [00:09:12.400] And what that's leading to [00:09:13.880] is that if I were going to write a digital workplace manager job [00:09:16.960] description now, it would have significantly changed from something. [00:09:20.400] I would have written last year or a couple of years ago. [00:09:23.640] Bottom line, the digital workplace manager should be a dedicated position [00:09:27.360] within the organization with the appropriate supports in place [00:09:30.600] to ensure the digital workplace achieves its purpose [00:09:33.560] within the organization, supporting the digital employee experience [00:09:37.080] and creating that lasting impact for the organization. [00:09:42.360] So circling back to the question, who is your community manager? [00:09:45.960] If I'd asked that a while back, [00:09:47.800] the answer might have been very different as we explored your digital workplace. [00:09:51.480] Your community is a critical part of your organization. [00:09:54.280] It needs the resource allocation to ensure it realizes its potential [00:09:58.560] and serves the organization as well as it possibly can. [00:10:01.560] Your community manager should be a dedicated role with supports [00:10:04.720] and processes in place to ensure the community is well maintained, relevant. [00:10:09.040] And as I mentioned, impactful. [00:10:11.640] So with that in mind, we've added some resources to this package, [00:10:14.600] including a draft of a digital workplace manager job description, [00:10:18.240] a candidate competency matrix highlighting [00:10:20.800] the traditional roles best suited to become community managers. [00:10:24.160] We've attached a planning workbook [00:10:25.640] to help align the role to the realities of your digital workplace. [00:10:28.720] And finally, we've attached a resource matrix. [00:10:31.200] So there's a lot of good stuff in this package and I hope you'll find it useful. [00:10:34.880] As always, folks, [00:10:36.000] if you have questions, please reach out to us here at Igloo Software. [00:10:39.360] This is what we do. [00:10:40.400] Digital workplaces are our game. [00:10:42.480] We are very, very happy to help and we hope to hear from you. [00:10:45.800] Until then, folks, take care. [00:10:47.280] And as I like to say, igloo on.