Crafting the Narrative: 3 Tips for Articulating the Value of Your Community
Building a sense of community and belonging is at the heart of any successful community strategy. These spaces are designed to foster connections, solve problems, and encourage members to help one another. However, while community managers excel at cultivating engagement, many struggle to clearly articulate the value of their work to executives, especially in the B2B space. Often, it’s due to a lack of the right tools or simply not knowing what data to gather and how to present it effectively.
Here are three tips to help you better tell your community’s value story:
1. Collect Data from the Right Sources
Most community platforms offer solid insights into what’s happening within your community, including key indicators of its health. But these aren’t the only tools you should rely on to show the value of your community.
Your community doesn’t exist in a vacuum—it’s part of your company’s larger digital ecosystem. You’ll want to see how it interacts with your website, knowledge base, ticketing systems, and more. To get that full picture, you need data.
Here’s where you can start:
- Google Analytics: It’s free and gives you a global view of traffic sources. More importantly, it can help you understand how your community influences other digital properties like your company website, knowledge base, and ticketing systems.
- Marketing automation tools: If your marketing team is tracking website behavior, make sure that tool is integrated with your community too. It can help you build customer segments, track content preferences, and get a deeper understanding of member behavior.
By integrating these tools, you gather the data needed to understand the full scope of your community’s influence on other parts of your business. Even if you don’t act on the data right away, start collecting it now so it’s there when you need it.
2. Focus on Metrics That Align with Business Goals
Once you’ve got the right data flowing in, the next step is measuring what really matters. Sure, community health metrics like post volume or engagement rates are useful, but they don’t always resonate with business leaders.
To connect community success and business impact, focus on metrics that align with your company’s KPIs. Consider metrics like:
- Number of online reviews generated by community members
- Number of questions answered by community members (vs. support staff)
- Customer satisfaction of community members compared to non-members
- Average contract value of community members compared to non-members
- Content consumption of community members compared to non-members
Every company’s KPIs will differ, so it’s important to tailor your metrics accordingly. The key question to ask: “What do we expect from our most engaged customers that could impact our business goals?” Focus on where connections, loyalty, and a sense of belonging translate into measurable business outcomes.
Too often, community managers rely on reporting health stats alone, assuming executives will connect the dots between community engagement and business value. Don’t leave that gap—show them how member appreciation turns into tangible outcomes, like answering customer questions or leaving positive reviews.
3. Get Help with Analytics
Before jumping into data collection and measurement, make sure you have the right support in place. Data analysis can get complex, so if your company has someone dedicated to it, bring them into your community reporting process.
Your main job is to ensure they have a clear list of community members. If you’re fortunate enough to have SSO or another way to track members automatically, great—just make sure that connection is in place.
In the best-case scenario, your analytics partner can help dig into the data, uncovering insights like how community members are more likely to renew contracts, leave positive reviews, or engage with your content. These details make it much easier to tell a comprehensive community story.
If you’re struggling to get support or access to data, it will be tough to show the real value of your community. No matter how many positive comments or stories your community generates, it’s the hard data that makes the case.
And if help isn’t available, empower yourself to learn. Even basic data skills will give you a better understanding of your community’s impact and help you speak the language of the business.