Colleen Young, a Community Manager for SharingStrength | FortesEnsemble, a bilingual portal and community for women with breast cancer, provides this guest post on effective Community Management in healthcare. You can follow Colleen on Twitter @SharingStrength .
More and more healthcare organizations and companies are embracing social media tools and building online communities. Effective community management takes a collaborative team effort to develop strategy, policies, metrics and measurements. But who do you want as the forward-facing personality — the community manager (CM) — fostering, encouraging and facilitating your healthcare community?
To help me articulate the most important qualities of a good CM in healthcare, I teamed up with two colleagues: Christine Stewart, Community Animator at CareToKnow.org and Leah Williams, Community & Social Media Manager at Breast Cancer Care. Here are our thoughts.
A great CM in health care should:
While I’ve stressed the importance of listening in other posts, I want to underline that a CM must be an listener. Members should know that you are there and that they can reach out to when necessary.
“Friendly and approachable: When people discuss personal healthcare issues, they need to know that the person managing the community will listen to them, has their interests at heart and will try to make the community a safe and supportive place.” LW
“If the community is not interested in the content you are producing as a CM, or if they are not contributing the content you expected them to, you need to thicken your skin. Put aside expectations … and be flexible. It’s about staying motivated to find what works and what will inspire the community to take shape on its own.” CS
When CM join a conversation, it is imperative that they do so in a tone and literacy level suited to the community. They need to write clearly, succinctly and stay focused on the needs of the community.
“Insight and empathy: Managers of healthcare communities need to have some insight into what might be going on in people’s lives so they can respond appropriately, make sensitive moderating decisions and communicate in an appropriate tone.” LW
“Judgment, balance and a keen sense of fairness: Combined with insight and empathy, these are the bedrock of decision-making for CMs in healthcare. They must weigh a number of complex factors and keep in mind the bigger picture of the community whilst balancing the details of the relationships involved. They must also consider the long-term implications of their decisions. One of the key areas where these qualities are required would be knowing when and how to intervene (or participate) in a discussion.” LW
A CM connects people with people and quality health information. Being able to collaborate and network beyond your community’s membership broadens the community’s knowledge and expands their access to resources.
“Outreach and knowledge brokering skills: You don’t need to be a clinician or healthcare expert… you don’t need to know everything, but you need to know who does!” CS
“Limitless source of humility and perseverance: There’s a lot of heavy lifting required to get a new community going, particularly in healthcare where you are faced with additional challenges regarding privacy, professional or provider boundaries, and creating a space that is safe and welcoming. When it comes to engaging health professionals and researchers, time can be a challenge too.” CS
People want the person guiding their community to understand them, recognize their needs and to engage with them honestly and free of bias. The CM has to be passionate about the community and facilitate exchanges, allowing the community to flourish.
“A CM must be caring, person-centered, trustworthy and determined. These are actually Breast Cancer Care’s corporate values, but apply particularly to the position of CM.” LW
“Put your heart into it. A good CM knows that you have to invest in getting to know your community members. It’s important to stay in touch and engage them as contributors, not just joiners. Send personal, not automated messages. Welcome each new member to the community. Recognize, and respond to, contributions. Let your own personality come through. The Care to Know Centre is founded on a collaborative approach focused on client engaged and family centered care. This begins with a collaborative approach to understanding and honouring the patient experience at all points of care.” CS
What would you add to the list?
Christine Stewart is the CM at CareToKnow.org, a social network for two-way health knowledge exchange, support and conversations. Created by Saint Elizabeth Health Care, the community is designed to connect individuals, family caregivers, professionals, researchers, organizations and policy stakeholders across Canada.
Leah Williams is the CM at Breast Cancer Care, a UK charity supporting people affected by breast cancer. As well as printed information, a telephone helpline and web resources, Breast Cancer Care manages an active online forum where people affected by breast cancer share experiences and information and support each other.