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Home Insider Blogs Jonathan Saar's Blog Facebook’s Impact on Multifamily Part III- Engagement or Participation?
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Apr 20
2011

Facebook’s Impact on Multifamily Part III- Engagement or Participation?

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Posted by: Jonathan Saar

Tagged in: Social Media , Facebook

The Golden Fleece for most of us on our Facebook pages is interaction of some sort.  It shows that what you post is of value to your page members and it gives you a sense of accomplishment for your efforts.  There has been a lot of semantics over whether its engagement or participation though? 

I had the chance to finish reading the Brains on Fire book while I was away and they brought this same topic up.  Many of their points helped me with a clearer definition for myself.  We all start out with participation in one way or another.  People will “Like” our posts or even provide a comment or two.  That is indeed participation.  Engagement takes things to the next level.  Engagement to me is where that participation channels out to offline measures or spins into different conversations on other platforms.  Your Facebook page is a conversation tool.  It can be a meeting room so to speak.  The challenge is work hard enough and be consistent enough in order for those conversations to go from participation to engagement.

How can this apply to apartment communities?  When I asked Geno Church at is seminar on how people are the killer app would apply to our industry, he simply said it should be easier since we are dealing with people.  In Geno’s words it has been and always will be about the people we deal with.  Once that rings true with us then it becomes an easier path from participation to engagement. 

So what practical items can we focus on?  Find your brand advocates.  Focus on those who participate regularly on your page and feature them in some way.  Look for those who have a voice and make it louder for them.  Talk less about yourself and more about your residents.  How cool would it be to hear offline from one of your residents: “Did you see the conversation we had last night on Facebook about such and such?”  As the Brains on Fire book highlighted, the vast majority of the conversation about your community is happening offline.  It’s a fact.  However you can bridge the gap between offline and online conversations if you treat the online conversation exactly as you would in an offline format.  If you have something interesting to share, do not just post it; tell us why it is of value.

Some of these tips you probably have heard before since there are a lot of great examples of communities who do a great job at this already.  The sky is the limit with your Facebook page.  The amount you put into your page will be tantamount to the results you will see.  Not only that but the amount of effort offline you put into your community will really tell the story on how well your Facebook page will work and become a tool to bring your community together.

This can be a touchy subject of semantics over words but I would love to hear your thoughts on the topic.  Do you think it is important to have a long term goals with your page?  Is there really a difference between participation and engagement?  Please share any of your thoughts in the comment section below.

Original Post

Written by Jonathan Saar~~The Training Factor


Comments (2)Add Comment
4658
written by Peter Jorde, May 09, 2011
Very thought provoking topic and one that I can relate to. With Facebook, twitter, linked in, blogs (sometimes several of each)the true devotes of social media can find it all too easy to lose themselves in the media. I can easily spend hours or days posting, tweeting, responding and DMing with almost nothing tangible to show for it. But on the occasions that I sincerely answer a question or reach out to help someone looking for something, I find it almost an effortless process to build an on-line relationship of friendship and trust. It's amazing how fast it can happen if you put your authentic (great word) self in the way and let the relationship develop. It's a lot more satisfying too. smilies/smiley.gif
679
written by Jonathan Saar, May 09, 2011
Peter thanks for sharing your experience. It is one I have heard often. The more you reach out to help people the more the overall experience improves. It can be a challenge to get out of the banner and pop up mindset when using these tools but when you invest in real conversation the long term benefits are substantial. Thanks for stopping by.
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