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viernes, 29 de septiembre de 2023

The Ultimate Guide to Community Management

When businesses invest in community management, they transition from an everyday brand to a human brand — one that cares deeply about the people who support them, work for them, and interact with them.

Download Now: 3 Community Management Templates [Free Kit]

Businesses build communities — or implement community management tactics at their companies — to build authentic relationships among their audiences, both external (customers, followers, etc.) and internal (employees, vendors, partners, etc.)

And it works. Marketers say that having an active online community is key to success in 2023, and at the time of our Consumer Trends Survey, 1 in 5 social media users joined or participated in an online community in the past 3 months.

Let's dive into the details of community management and how you can implement it for your brand.

What is the purpose of community management?

Community management has become increasingly popular and recognized by all types of businesses — however, it's still largely undefined.

So, what makes it so special? Why should your business adopt it? To answer those questions, let's cover some main reasons why community management is critical to your success as a brand today.

"Brands need to hire community managers because they're the tone, voice, and human element behind your brand," said Krystal Wu, former social media community manager at HubSpot.

Community management allows your business to:

  • Obtain feedback and gather ideas from your customers and audience members through real conversations.
  • Provide support for audience members, fans, and customers when they need it.
  • Increase brand and product awareness among your target audience.
  • Learn about your customers and what they want, expect, and need in terms of content, products, services, and support.
  • Build one-on-one and one-to-many relationships between audience members and your brand.
  • Boost customer interactions, conversions, and sales.
  • Provide value to your customers beyond a product or service.

It's important to note community management is a broad industry — these are just some of the things community management allows your business to do.

Community management is also an umbrella term; there are many forms that live beneath it. Let’s review the different types to help you determine the best focus for your company.

 

 

Types of Community Management

There are seven main types of community management. Some are behind a screen and require no face-to-face interaction; some involve in-person interaction with you and your teams. The easiest way to review the different types is with the SPACE model.

The SPACE Model represents different types of community management — this way, you can better understand what works for your business. It stands for:

  • S: Support Community Management
  • P: Product Ideation, Innovation, and Feedback Community Management
  • A: Acquisition and Advocacy Community Management
  • C: Content and Contribution Community Management
  • E: Engagement (External or Internal) Community Management

Let’s take a look.

Important note: This section is an overview of just a few of the many types of community management. We've also provided a couple of examples of each.

Customer Support / Success Community Managementcommunity management: customer support

Image Source

The first type of community management is customer supper and success. It can often be in the form of:

  • A forum
  • An FAQ document
  • A community website

A forum, typically a question-and-answer community-based discussion board, is a great way to connect with your community, answer questions, and give community members a chance to chat and interact with each other. You can also ask for customer feedback on the channel.

Within the forum, you might share FAQ documents for community members to self-help and get quick answers to commonly-asked questions.

A customer success platform or software can help you create a branded website or landing page for your community members where you can focus on supporting them. Here, consumers can help themselves (and each other) communicate with your teams, locate necessary resources (like a knowledge base), and review your FAQ document.

A tool like Vanilla Forms can help you create and customize a community forum, FAQ document, or site page with your relevant branding, and you can manage conversations and create a space where customers can provide you with ideas.

Best For:

This type of community management is ideal for companies with in-depth product lines, like a software company, so users can communicate about tips, tricks, and issues they may run into.

For example, HubSpot’s Developer Forum is a customer support community for users looking to build on the software. Developers can stay connected with the company, other developers, and the resources they may need for working on the platform.

Product Ideation, Innovation, and Feedback Community Management

community management: product ideation Spotify

Image Source

Product ideation, innovation, and feedback is a proactive and reactive type of community management, where you create a safe space for customers and your target audience to share feedback and thoughts about how you can innovate and improve upon your products and services.

You can ask people to complete surveys or participate in in-person feedback discussions, or even organize user testing for people to take part in. For example, you might host a focus group at your office to get customer feedback on how you can enhance your product or service after people use it.

Best For:

This type of community management works for all companies — asking for feedback from real customers and users on innovation opportunities is critical to success. But it's especially useful for consumer-oriented SaaS companies, where bugs can sometimes spiral into a reputation management issue.

Spotify's community forum is a great example. There, users can not only discuss music, but submit product ideas for the Spotify team to review.

Acquisition and Advocacy Community Management

community management: advocacy glossier

Image Source

Acquisition and advocacy community management allows you to interact directly with people excited about your business, including your leads, customers, brand ambassadors, and brand advocates.

These members will help you build brand awareness and promote your products and services through word-of-mouth, affiliate programs, and social media. A common way to create this type of community is to implement an acquisition and advocacy program like a brand ambassador initiative.

Glossier, for example, has an affiliate program where micro-influencers and bigger influencers can use Glossier products and promote them in their profiles. This then works as an acquisition model by turning affiliates into customers, and then having those customers acquire more customers on Glossier's behalf.

Best For:

This type of community management is great for delighting your top brand advocates and keeping them at the center of your flywheel. You’ll also promote brand loyalty, increase awareness, and build long-lasting relationships with your biggest supporters.

Content and Contribution Community Management

community management: content and contribution directory

One unmissable type of community management is content and contribution, where you allow the community to contribute content on any given platform. This can include marketplaces, crowdfunding, user groups, and user-generated content.

Whether it's allowing customers to create a listing on one of your websites, to write guest blog posts, or to create user-generated content on your brand's behalf, content and contribution can help your customers feel seen and important.

That can, in turn, increase customer loyalty and retention.

These communities typically have a designated team that ensures all user-generated content is appropriate, follows company guidelines, and meets site requirements.

Best For:

You'll want to use a content and contribution model if you have the resources in place to create contribution websites or if you plan to manage your community primarily on social media.

It's also a great option for companies with contributed content at the core of its products, business model, or other assets. For example, companies like GoFundMe and Airbnb create value through the people who join their sites and use the platform to share fundraisers or rental properties.

But it doesn't have to be so direct, either. For example, HubSpot has a solutions directory for agencies to sign up on — completely free. This is one of the many communities HubSpot maintains, and the best part is that it's for agencies that could end up using HubSpot for its customers.

If your community will primarily be located on social media, then you can use a content and contribution model by pushing out a user-generated content hashtag. For example, stationery brand Mark + Fold has a hashtag on Instagram titled #mymarkandfold.

Engagement (External and Internal) Community Management

External engagement is a type of community management that provides customers and supporters with a sense of belonging that leads to a stronger connection to your brand in a space outside of your business. A common type of external engagement is social media management (more on this below).

There's also internal engagement community management. Companies today are learning the value of creating strong internal communities among employees, partners, vendors, and suppliers. It can bring internal contributors together, connect them with like-minded individuals, and create a sense of belonging, support, camaraderie, and inclusion in the workplace.

Strengthening internal relationships can also boost morale and overall happiness, employee retention. For example, many companies, including HubSpot, use platforms like Slack and Slack channels to improve internal engagement and communication.

Best For:

Virtually any company can create an external engagement community management with the help of social media.

As for internal engagement, almost every business can participate in this type of community management because it only requires community building within the office and may include software you already use (like Slack) or the formation of interest groups among your fellow employees.

What is Social Media Community Management?

Social media community management is when your business engages with your audience on social media, whether on your own profiles (like a Facebook page) or pages you build solely for creating a community (like a Reddit forum or a Discord group).

For example, HubSpot's Instagram page is an interactive and engaging space that promotes brand awareness while creating a community of followers with a shared interest (HubSpot). HubSpot’s social media community managers ensure people are noticed and treated like humans, not just numbers, and create opportunities for followers to engage with branded content and fellow followers.

Social media community management is probably one of the most essential types of community management. It's easy to implement, because all you need to do is:
  • Sign up on any social media platform;
  • Gain followers, some of which will naturally be your customers; and
  • Interact and engage with your followers.

You might actually be doing that already. This type of external engagement is great for companies looking to improve brand awareness while creating one-to-many relationships with fans, customers, and followers.

Why is social media community management important?

Companies of all shapes and sizes would benefit from managing a social media community. Here's why:

  • It humanizes your brand. Social media is your chance to show off the human side of your business. By engaging in real conversations, replying to comments and messages, and being authentic, you can connect on a personal level with your audience.
  • It boosts brand visibility and awareness. By actively managing your social media community, you can tap into a massive online audience and spread the word about your brand. Engaging with your followers through likes, comments, shares, and shoutouts not only gets your name out there, but also fosters a positive brand image.
  • It cultivates loyalty and advocacy. By consistently delivering social media content, listening to your community's feedback, and being there for your followers, you'll create a tribe of loyal customers. The best part: loyal customers become your biggest advocates! They'll refer your brand to other buyers, ultimately improving your bottom line.
  • It's a goldmine of insights and feedback. Social media is a treasure chest of customer information. Through social media community management, you get a front-row seat to your audience's preferences, pain points, and feedback. These valuable insights can help you improve your products or services, tweak your marketing strategy, and cater to your audience's needs.
  • It drives traffic and conversions. By organically engaging with your audience on social media, you have plenty of opportunities to lead them to your website, blog, or landing pages. Tossing links into your social media posts and comments doesn't sound like a lot, but it can be quite effective as a first touch for conversions.

Community Management vs Social Media Community Management

Now that we've covered social media community management, you might be wondering: What's the difference between the two? Aren't they basically the same thing? Well, not quite.

Community management refers to the process of building and nurturing a brand's community across multiple channels and mediums. This involves creating a sense of belonging, facilitating communication, and fostering relationships among your customers, fans, and followers — on and off social media.

On the other hand, social media community management focuses specifically on managing and engaging with your brand's community on social media platforms. It's all about crafting compelling social media content, monitoring comments and messages, responding to customer inquiries, and fostering meaningful interactions.

Why use both community management and social media community management?

Now, you might be thinking: But why do we need both? Can't we just focus on social media community management? These two practices are actually complementary to each other, and here's why:

  • The power of community management lies in creating a cohesive and engaged community across multiple channels. You'll want to think beyond social media platforms for general community management. Forums, online communities, and even in-person events can cultivate a sense of belonging and expand your reach.
  • A well-managed community fosters trust and loyalty among your customers. Community management allows you to actively engage with your customers, address their concerns, and provide valuable content and support. Social media community management plays a crucial role in this process, but it's not the only ingredient.
  • Your community members are an absolute goldmine of feedback and insights. If allowing you to interact with customers wasn't enough, community management allows you to gather valuable information about their needs, pain points, and preferences. This knowledge can be used to improve your products, fine-tune your marketing strategies, and provide a better overall customer experience — and that can't only be done on social!

We've reviewed the main types of community management and how they can add value to your business. Now, let's cover the ways you can actually get started building a community management strategy so you can start reaping its benefits.

How to Build a Community Management Strategy

As you can see, there are several types of community management and ways to implement them at your company.

Let's take a look at how you can get started.

1. Choose a community management channel.

The first thing you'll want to do is choose a channel or platform where you'll manage your community. This may be an existing channel, such as a social media site, or a custom platform, such as community.yourdomain.com.

Remember: You can always create a community website — it's not as hard as it sounds. All you need is a domain name and a forum software tool or a forum plugin (for WordPress websites).

Think about your target audience's demographics to determine the best option for your company. For example, you might choose to focus your efforts on TikTok if you have a young target audience, Instagram if you're going for a broad target audience, or LinkedIn if you're targeting a B2B crowd.

Or, if you'd like to collect user feedback, you might want to create a custom online forum on your website domain.

Learn everything you need to maximize engagement with a social media checklist.

2. Identify your audience.

Once you've chosen a community management channel, identify your audience on that platform.

By doing this, you'll be able to see the type of content your target audience interacts with on the platform, what they like and expect from the brands similar to yours, and who they currently engage with.

This research and information will allow you to begin thinking about how you're going to tailor the content your business creates to your target audience and your chosen platform.

3. Ask your audience what type of content they want to see.

In addition to identifying your audience, you should also ask them what they want to see to ensure you're creating and pushing out content relevant to them.

This will ensure you're going to be able to reach your audience with forum posts or social media content they want and are interested in.

Asking for this feedback and being open to suggestions also shows your audience you care deeply about their opinions and what they have to say. This will help you enhance your brand loyalty and advocacy, and create valuable interaction within your community (versus a one-way platform).

4. Determine how you'll identify your success.

Now it's time to determine how you'll identify your success. There's no right or wrong answer here — this is completely based on what matters to you and your company. Ask yourself, "what's ideal for my brand?"

Here are some examples of success identifiers you might choose to focus on:

  • Increase in forum sign-up or posts
  • Boost in audience members/ increase in followers
  • Number of conversation participants in a live chat or forum discussion
  • Amount of content shared or liked by your followers
  • Overall engagement (likes, forum posts, forum shares, mentions, hashtags, messages, comments)
  • Increase in brand awareness
  • Increase in customer satisfaction and retention
  • Traffic that's directed to your website
  • Boost in your sales and conversions

(We'll review how you can measure your community management success identifiers and metrics shortly.)

5. Set goals.

Like most things in business, setting attainable goals and stretch goals, is crucial when working to achieve your various objectives and measure your success.

However, if you're developing an entirely new strategy, this task might seem like a difficult one.

To get started, try running an experiment or two after you've determined how you plan on measuring your success.

For example, if you've decided that you're going to measure your success through overall engagement on a social media platform, you can run an experiment. Try keeping track of all engagement related to the content you produce and share on the social platform for a specific amount of time you've chosen (maybe 4-8 weeks to start).

When the experiment ends, average out your overall engagement (likes, shares, comments, mentions, hashtags, messages, etc.) and then use that number to create an attainable goal — and stretch goal if you choose — for your engagement over the next 4-8 weeks, and so on.

You can always update these numbers as time passes and you collect more data.

Throughout your experiment, you can also A/B test content to see what your followers like the best and choose to interact with most.

6. Post regularly and engage with your audience.

Success on online forums and social media platforms requires consistency in terms of your frequency of posts and engagement. You should determine how often you're going to post or reply to forum requests.

Stick to that plan so your audience members know you're reliable and start to expect to see your content. They'll come back to see your new posts, or engage with other members in the community.

Online forums and social media sites are a great way to develop close bonds and relationships among your brand and audience. Show your customers and followers that they aren't just a number and that they're heard by your company and employees.

"Like" their comments, upvote their forum posts, and respond to all questions, comments or concerns (even the positive comments that warrant a "Thank you!" or "Yay! We're so happy you're enjoying our free CRM!").

If you're primarily managing your community on social media, you can even follow back your biggest brand advocates — if you deem it appropriate — or interact with the content your followers share (whether or not it has a direct tie to your company) to show your support.

No matter how you choose to interact and engage with your community members, remember to be authentic and address each person as an individual.

By maintaining an authentic voice and presence on all of your community management channels, your brand will have a unique, human element behind it that feels trustworthy and personal to customers and community members.

7. Measure your results.

Now it's time to measure your results. Remember, when it comes to measuring your success for community management, you shouldn't always get hung up on the quantitative data — numbers don't always reflect all of your efforts or the sense of belonging you're creating for your community members.

Additionally, you rarely see immediate results when it comes to your community management efforts. Identifying your target audience, building a following, and learning how to reach your customers on different forums and platforms takes time.

To measure your results, decide on the method that works best for your needs, goals, and company. Here are a few ways to do this.

  • Social listening: Social listening is the process of monitoring your social media accounts to look for and keep track of mentions, customer feedback, keywords, and discussions related to your brand, products, services, and customers (even your competitors, too). You then take a deeper look at all of these things to analyze them and gain insight into what's working for your customers and followers, and what should be modified.
  • Platform analytics: Depending on the online platform you chose for your community management strategy, there might be a built-in analytics tool for you to measure your success in terms of variables specific to that platform. Examples include Twitter Analytics, Instagram Insights, and Facebook Analytics. Or, if you're using a forum tool, it will likely include engagement data for you to analyze and parse.
  • Analytics tools: If your platform of choice doesn't include an analytics tool, or if you're looking for deeper analysis, you might choose to incorporate another tool or platform to help you measure your success. Examples include HubSpot, Google Analytics, Meltwater Social Media Analytics, and Sprout Social.

Community Managers: How They Can Help Your Business Grow

If your business has the resources, you might want to consider hiring a community manager (or even a team of managers) to help you kickstart your efforts and community.

What is a community manager?

Community managers run your community management efforts. Depending on the community you build, you might require several community managers for different areas of focus.

However, there are some universal community management skills, no matter the role. Generally speaking, a community manager should have the following traits:

  • Has the ability to lead your community development and growth efforts.
  • Is highly customer-focused.
  • Can empathize with their members on forums, during in-person meetings, on social channels, on community platforms, and more.
  • Knows how and when to show empathy.
  • Is an authentic and detail-oriented person.
  • Can analyze and measure community management efforts and results.
  • Understands who you are as a brand and carries that image and voice — along with your marketing efforts — over to your community management strategy.

To bring us back to our previous example of external engagement community strategy, let's review the specific in-depth tasks of a social media manager.

What is the role of a community manager?

A social media community manager:

  • Maintains the voice of the brand in all posts and interactions.
  • Ensures all content being shared has a purpose and meets the expectations and needs of followers and the target audience.
  • Schedules, posts, and engages on all social content.
  • Creates, manages, and follows up with all contests, giveaways, and promotions on social.
  • Ensures community rules and guidelines are being followed by all community members.
  • Measures results of all content and work on social (and makes modifications when necessary).
  • Keeps up with industry trends and updates made to the platform at hand.
  • Knows what audience members want and need out of the shared social content.
  • Is authentic and knows when to say, "Thank you", "We're sorry", and "We support you".
  • Creates a safe space for followers and members to ask questions, get help, feel supported, share ideas, provide feedback, and solve problems.

Where to Find a Community Manager

1. Community Club

Community Club has just over 1,000 members that cater to anyone interested in the field, from community managers looking to network to brands seeking community management experts.

2. CMX Hub

CMX Hub is an online platform that serves community builders looking to grow in their careers.

On the networking side, the platform offers networking, education, and mentorship opportunities for aspiring and thriving community managers.

It’s also a designated job board for all things community management, so businesses can post job openings and easily find someone with qualifications that align to the role.

3. LinkedIn

If you're looking to hire a community manager or join a community management group, LinkedIn is a great place to start.

On LinkedIn, you can easily find local and global community managers who are open to work opportunities. If you're interested in becoming a community manager, you can visit user profiles to see what road other community managers took to get where they are today.

If you're interested in a community management group, there are also hundreds of LinkedIn Groups that serve that exact purpose. In them, community managers discuss updates in the industry, share advice, and even job opportunities.

4. Facebook Groups

On Facebook, you'll find hundreds of community management groups, each offering something different.

Some Groups are location-based, connecting community managers in specific states, cities, or regions while others are industry-specific.

Most of them allow community managers to network and discover new opportunities.

5. Upwork

Looking to hire a community manager on a contract or freelance basis? Consider Upwork.

On the freelancing platform, you can create a job post that outlines the project you're hiring for and the qualifications you need.

A survey from over 1,538 clients reveals that the online community managers on Upwork get an average rating of 4.7/5, indicating that most are satisfied with the pool of professionals available on the platform.

Community Management Tips for Social Media

We've already covered social media community management. If that's the primary way you plan to manage your community, here are a few tips to help you do it effectively.

1. Determine where your audience lives.

Instagram. TikTok. Facebook. LinkedIn. And the list goes on.

With so many social media platforms available to consumers, community managers need to identify where their target audience is most active.

The idea is you want to prioritize the platforms that will reach the most users and generate the most engagement, or you’ll speak to an empty room and waste time and resources. For instance, if you're targeting young adults, you may focus your efforts on TikTok and Instagram, which caters to a younger demographic.

2. Define metrics to track your progress.

As a community manager, measuring your success may be unclear, particularly because it's a relatively new industry. But there are many ways to gauge progress, like through looking at engagement, social mentions, and brand sentiment.

Engagement may look different from platform to platform, but likes, comments, shares, and replies are standard metrics to track.

You may also want to track how often your brand is mentioned and how that changes over time. That can suggest how far your brand is reaching. There's also qualitative data you can measure. When users do mention your brand, what are they saying?

This leads us to the next tip.

3. Monitor the conversations surrounding your business.

Social monitoring and listening are key parts of your community management strategy.

It helps you stay connected to your audience, figure out what resonates with them, and brainstorm content ideas.

For instance, say your clothing company hires a community manager. While monitoring conversations surrounding their brand, they realize that there is a lot of mention of your brand's sustainability efforts — something that hasn't been a key part of your messaging.

This discovery can inform future marketing efforts and help you generate even more interest in your brand.

4. Constantly engage your audience.

Building a community requires two-way engagement.

It's not enough to simply publish content; you also have to be reactive to your audience. This can look like:

  • Leveraging user-generated content.
  • Responding to comments, whether they're questions, concerns, praise, or something else.
  • Creating polls and surveys.

The more visible and engaging you are with your audience, the more trust you will build; from there, a community will flourish.

1. Set community rules and guidelines.

When it comes to anything related to your business, it's probably fair to assume you want it to represent you well and serve as an accurate portrayal of your brand. Your community is no exception. Therefore, you're going to want to set community rules and guidelines for all members and contributors (including your team members who are managing the community).

Depending on your type of community, how you go about setting your community rules and guidelines may differ. However, here are some examples of ways to create these guidelines to help you get started.

  • Create a written document with your expectations for the way all members are expected to communicate, behave, and contribute. Then, share that document with your team and community members when they join.
    • If you have a forum, FAQ document, or community website, you can also make this document available at all times to members there. If your community meets in person, review these details face-to-face and consider handing out a printed copy to set expectations.
  • Have a method for your team members to escalate any major issue within your community to the right person at your company so they can manage it appropriately.
  • Be sure to update your rules and guidelines as necessary (as your community grows, changes, etc.).

2. Check on your community regularly.

No matter what type of community you manage, check on its members and the type of content being shared.

Whether it's related to your brand ambassador program, forum, Facebook account, or community website, it's your job to ensure everything is running smoothly — that people are receiving the support they need, their questions are being answered, and they feel a sense of community.

3. Be authentic.

You need to be authentic while managing any type of community. When your customers, fans, followers, and leads come to your community, they should immediately know it's yours based on different factors like your branding and voice.

And no matter the type of interaction, being genuine and human is crucial whether or not you're behind a screen or face-to-face. After all, one of the main reasons you're creating a community is to make sure your members feel valued.

4. Listen to your community.

Since community management requires so much thoughtful interaction with members, listening is crucial. Whether it's social listening, reviewing your forum and FAQ pages regularly, or responding to in-person and online feedback, listening is how you'll improve your community to the best of your ability.

It also shows your audience and members you value their opinions, hear what they have to say, and care about their experiences within your community.

5. Show appreciation to your followers.

A large part of managing a successful community is showing appreciation for your members. This will help you build brand loyalty and trust between you and your members.

It also shows your members how much you value their time and commitment to your brand — remember, some of your community members are most likely also some of your most invested, supportive, and loyal fans, followers, and customers already.

To ensure you're showing appreciation when necessary, you can try the following tactics depending on the type of community you have.

  • Interact with all new community members as soon as they join — say, "Thank you and welcome!" and ask them what you can do to make their experience a great one.
  • Pay attention to who your biggest community contributors are (keep a document with their names, emails, etc.). This way you can send them swag or give them a shout-out for simply being awesome.
  • Invite your ambassadors and brand advocates to your office to meet your team and give them a behind-the-scenes look at your operation.
  • Keep an eye out for mentions, keywords, and hashtags, on your forum, social media platforms, community website, and more so you're able to engage with those people to show your appreciation and the human element behind your community.

6. Maintain your brand voice at all times.

Similar to what we said about the importance of authenticity, maintaining your brand's voice at all times is critical when it comes to community management. This is a large part of what makes your community unique as well as ensures your community is identifiable to your members and audience.

No matter how many people are working in your community, make sure they understand your brand voice so they can help you maintain it throughout all interactions, engagement, and content.

One way to make this a simpler process is by tying your community back to your company's marketing goals and/ or collaborating with your marketing department. It'll keep your messaging and interactions focused as well as push you to maintain your brand voice.

7. Explore new ways to engage your community.

You always want to be engaging your community — but what happens if there are changes in your industry, your company's products or services are drastically updated, or your members request new types of content?

To keep your community up to date, always explore new ways to engage your members, whether that's online or in-person (depending on your type of community). You can also engage members as soon as they join to continue learning about your audience, what they want from you, and what made them join your community — this will also help you learn about new ways to interact with them.

At this point, you may be wondering how to get all of this work started — where to begin with your community management strategy efforts at your company if you haven't done any work related to the field before.

A common first step businesses take when spearheading their community management plan and strategy is to determine whether or not they want to hire a community manager.

8. Set up a spam control process.

Spam can be anything from bot-created comments and posts to disrespectful and hurtful comments from real-life people. And the last thing you want is for your community to be bogged down by spam messages and content.

Leverage the spam tools that your software might have or devise your own spam filters to ensure community members have a safe experience.

9. Take action when necessary.

An important part of being a community manager is protecting the community you monitor, from creating spam filters to banning people who don’t follow the rules.

You always want the people who genuinely want to engage in discussions with your business or topics related to your business to feel safe, so take action to ensure that they do.

Whew! That was a lot of information — but, you should now have a better understanding of why community management is so important, how it can help your business grow, and how you can get started on your business's strategy.

Start Building Your Community

Community management is a new, yet powerful, industry. By implementing a community management strategy at your company, you'll be able to create a safe place for your customers, fans, employees, and followers to collaborate, provide you with feedback, bond, and learn.

This will help you build brand loyalty, increase conversions and sales, and show the people who matter most to your success a human side to your brand that they can relate to.

So, get started by reviewing your options for types of community management to incorporate at your company, developing a strategy, and determining whether a community manager is the next hire you need to make.

Editor's Note: This post was originally published in May 2019 and has been updated for comprehensiveness.

Blog - Content Mapping Template



from Marketing https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/community-management-expert-advice

When businesses invest in community management, they transition from an everyday brand to a human brand — one that cares deeply about the people who support them, work for them, and interact with them.

Download Now: 3 Community Management Templates [Free Kit]

Businesses build communities — or implement community management tactics at their companies — to build authentic relationships among their audiences, both external (customers, followers, etc.) and internal (employees, vendors, partners, etc.)

And it works. Marketers say that having an active online community is key to success in 2023, and at the time of our Consumer Trends Survey, 1 in 5 social media users joined or participated in an online community in the past 3 months.

Let's dive into the details of community management and how you can implement it for your brand.

What is the purpose of community management?

Community management has become increasingly popular and recognized by all types of businesses — however, it's still largely undefined.

So, what makes it so special? Why should your business adopt it? To answer those questions, let's cover some main reasons why community management is critical to your success as a brand today.

"Brands need to hire community managers because they're the tone, voice, and human element behind your brand," said Krystal Wu, former social media community manager at HubSpot.

Community management allows your business to:

  • Obtain feedback and gather ideas from your customers and audience members through real conversations.
  • Provide support for audience members, fans, and customers when they need it.
  • Increase brand and product awareness among your target audience.
  • Learn about your customers and what they want, expect, and need in terms of content, products, services, and support.
  • Build one-on-one and one-to-many relationships between audience members and your brand.
  • Boost customer interactions, conversions, and sales.
  • Provide value to your customers beyond a product or service.

It's important to note community management is a broad industry — these are just some of the things community management allows your business to do.

Community management is also an umbrella term; there are many forms that live beneath it. Let’s review the different types to help you determine the best focus for your company.

 

 

Types of Community Management

There are seven main types of community management. Some are behind a screen and require no face-to-face interaction; some involve in-person interaction with you and your teams. The easiest way to review the different types is with the SPACE model.

The SPACE Model represents different types of community management — this way, you can better understand what works for your business. It stands for:

  • S: Support Community Management
  • P: Product Ideation, Innovation, and Feedback Community Management
  • A: Acquisition and Advocacy Community Management
  • C: Content and Contribution Community Management
  • E: Engagement (External or Internal) Community Management

Let’s take a look.

Important note: This section is an overview of just a few of the many types of community management. We've also provided a couple of examples of each.

Customer Support / Success Community Managementcommunity management: customer support

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The first type of community management is customer supper and success. It can often be in the form of:

  • A forum
  • An FAQ document
  • A community website

A forum, typically a question-and-answer community-based discussion board, is a great way to connect with your community, answer questions, and give community members a chance to chat and interact with each other. You can also ask for customer feedback on the channel.

Within the forum, you might share FAQ documents for community members to self-help and get quick answers to commonly-asked questions.

A customer success platform or software can help you create a branded website or landing page for your community members where you can focus on supporting them. Here, consumers can help themselves (and each other) communicate with your teams, locate necessary resources (like a knowledge base), and review your FAQ document.

A tool like Vanilla Forms can help you create and customize a community forum, FAQ document, or site page with your relevant branding, and you can manage conversations and create a space where customers can provide you with ideas.

Best For:

This type of community management is ideal for companies with in-depth product lines, like a software company, so users can communicate about tips, tricks, and issues they may run into.

For example, HubSpot’s Developer Forum is a customer support community for users looking to build on the software. Developers can stay connected with the company, other developers, and the resources they may need for working on the platform.

Product Ideation, Innovation, and Feedback Community Management

community management: product ideation Spotify

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Product ideation, innovation, and feedback is a proactive and reactive type of community management, where you create a safe space for customers and your target audience to share feedback and thoughts about how you can innovate and improve upon your products and services.

You can ask people to complete surveys or participate in in-person feedback discussions, or even organize user testing for people to take part in. For example, you might host a focus group at your office to get customer feedback on how you can enhance your product or service after people use it.

Best For:

This type of community management works for all companies — asking for feedback from real customers and users on innovation opportunities is critical to success. But it's especially useful for consumer-oriented SaaS companies, where bugs can sometimes spiral into a reputation management issue.

Spotify's community forum is a great example. There, users can not only discuss music, but submit product ideas for the Spotify team to review.

Acquisition and Advocacy Community Management

community management: advocacy glossier

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Acquisition and advocacy community management allows you to interact directly with people excited about your business, including your leads, customers, brand ambassadors, and brand advocates.

These members will help you build brand awareness and promote your products and services through word-of-mouth, affiliate programs, and social media. A common way to create this type of community is to implement an acquisition and advocacy program like a brand ambassador initiative.

Glossier, for example, has an affiliate program where micro-influencers and bigger influencers can use Glossier products and promote them in their profiles. This then works as an acquisition model by turning affiliates into customers, and then having those customers acquire more customers on Glossier's behalf.

Best For:

This type of community management is great for delighting your top brand advocates and keeping them at the center of your flywheel. You’ll also promote brand loyalty, increase awareness, and build long-lasting relationships with your biggest supporters.

Content and Contribution Community Management

community management: content and contribution directory

One unmissable type of community management is content and contribution, where you allow the community to contribute content on any given platform. This can include marketplaces, crowdfunding, user groups, and user-generated content.

Whether it's allowing customers to create a listing on one of your websites, to write guest blog posts, or to create user-generated content on your brand's behalf, content and contribution can help your customers feel seen and important.

That can, in turn, increase customer loyalty and retention.

These communities typically have a designated team that ensures all user-generated content is appropriate, follows company guidelines, and meets site requirements.

Best For:

You'll want to use a content and contribution model if you have the resources in place to create contribution websites or if you plan to manage your community primarily on social media.

It's also a great option for companies with contributed content at the core of its products, business model, or other assets. For example, companies like GoFundMe and Airbnb create value through the people who join their sites and use the platform to share fundraisers or rental properties.

But it doesn't have to be so direct, either. For example, HubSpot has a solutions directory for agencies to sign up on — completely free. This is one of the many communities HubSpot maintains, and the best part is that it's for agencies that could end up using HubSpot for its customers.

If your community will primarily be located on social media, then you can use a content and contribution model by pushing out a user-generated content hashtag. For example, stationery brand Mark + Fold has a hashtag on Instagram titled #mymarkandfold.

Engagement (External and Internal) Community Management

External engagement is a type of community management that provides customers and supporters with a sense of belonging that leads to a stronger connection to your brand in a space outside of your business. A common type of external engagement is social media management (more on this below).

There's also internal engagement community management. Companies today are learning the value of creating strong internal communities among employees, partners, vendors, and suppliers. It can bring internal contributors together, connect them with like-minded individuals, and create a sense of belonging, support, camaraderie, and inclusion in the workplace.

Strengthening internal relationships can also boost morale and overall happiness, employee retention. For example, many companies, including HubSpot, use platforms like Slack and Slack channels to improve internal engagement and communication.

Best For:

Virtually any company can create an external engagement community management with the help of social media.

As for internal engagement, almost every business can participate in this type of community management because it only requires community building within the office and may include software you already use (like Slack) or the formation of interest groups among your fellow employees.

What is Social Media Community Management?

Social media community management is when your business engages with your audience on social media, whether on your own profiles (like a Facebook page) or pages you build solely for creating a community (like a Reddit forum or a Discord group).

For example, HubSpot's Instagram page is an interactive and engaging space that promotes brand awareness while creating a community of followers with a shared interest (HubSpot). HubSpot’s social media community managers ensure people are noticed and treated like humans, not just numbers, and create opportunities for followers to engage with branded content and fellow followers.

Social media community management is probably one of the most essential types of community management. It's easy to implement, because all you need to do is:
  • Sign up on any social media platform;
  • Gain followers, some of which will naturally be your customers; and
  • Interact and engage with your followers.

You might actually be doing that already. This type of external engagement is great for companies looking to improve brand awareness while creating one-to-many relationships with fans, customers, and followers.

Why is social media community management important?

Companies of all shapes and sizes would benefit from managing a social media community. Here's why:

  • It humanizes your brand. Social media is your chance to show off the human side of your business. By engaging in real conversations, replying to comments and messages, and being authentic, you can connect on a personal level with your audience.
  • It boosts brand visibility and awareness. By actively managing your social media community, you can tap into a massive online audience and spread the word about your brand. Engaging with your followers through likes, comments, shares, and shoutouts not only gets your name out there, but also fosters a positive brand image.
  • It cultivates loyalty and advocacy. By consistently delivering social media content, listening to your community's feedback, and being there for your followers, you'll create a tribe of loyal customers. The best part: loyal customers become your biggest advocates! They'll refer your brand to other buyers, ultimately improving your bottom line.
  • It's a goldmine of insights and feedback. Social media is a treasure chest of customer information. Through social media community management, you get a front-row seat to your audience's preferences, pain points, and feedback. These valuable insights can help you improve your products or services, tweak your marketing strategy, and cater to your audience's needs.
  • It drives traffic and conversions. By organically engaging with your audience on social media, you have plenty of opportunities to lead them to your website, blog, or landing pages. Tossing links into your social media posts and comments doesn't sound like a lot, but it can be quite effective as a first touch for conversions.

Community Management vs Social Media Community Management

Now that we've covered social media community management, you might be wondering: What's the difference between the two? Aren't they basically the same thing? Well, not quite.

Community management refers to the process of building and nurturing a brand's community across multiple channels and mediums. This involves creating a sense of belonging, facilitating communication, and fostering relationships among your customers, fans, and followers — on and off social media.

On the other hand, social media community management focuses specifically on managing and engaging with your brand's community on social media platforms. It's all about crafting compelling social media content, monitoring comments and messages, responding to customer inquiries, and fostering meaningful interactions.

Why use both community management and social media community management?

Now, you might be thinking: But why do we need both? Can't we just focus on social media community management? These two practices are actually complementary to each other, and here's why:

  • The power of community management lies in creating a cohesive and engaged community across multiple channels. You'll want to think beyond social media platforms for general community management. Forums, online communities, and even in-person events can cultivate a sense of belonging and expand your reach.
  • A well-managed community fosters trust and loyalty among your customers. Community management allows you to actively engage with your customers, address their concerns, and provide valuable content and support. Social media community management plays a crucial role in this process, but it's not the only ingredient.
  • Your community members are an absolute goldmine of feedback and insights. If allowing you to interact with customers wasn't enough, community management allows you to gather valuable information about their needs, pain points, and preferences. This knowledge can be used to improve your products, fine-tune your marketing strategies, and provide a better overall customer experience — and that can't only be done on social!

We've reviewed the main types of community management and how they can add value to your business. Now, let's cover the ways you can actually get started building a community management strategy so you can start reaping its benefits.

How to Build a Community Management Strategy

As you can see, there are several types of community management and ways to implement them at your company.

Let's take a look at how you can get started.

1. Choose a community management channel.

The first thing you'll want to do is choose a channel or platform where you'll manage your community. This may be an existing channel, such as a social media site, or a custom platform, such as community.yourdomain.com.

Remember: You can always create a community website — it's not as hard as it sounds. All you need is a domain name and a forum software tool or a forum plugin (for WordPress websites).

Think about your target audience's demographics to determine the best option for your company. For example, you might choose to focus your efforts on TikTok if you have a young target audience, Instagram if you're going for a broad target audience, or LinkedIn if you're targeting a B2B crowd.

Or, if you'd like to collect user feedback, you might want to create a custom online forum on your website domain.

Learn everything you need to maximize engagement with a social media checklist.

2. Identify your audience.

Once you've chosen a community management channel, identify your audience on that platform.

By doing this, you'll be able to see the type of content your target audience interacts with on the platform, what they like and expect from the brands similar to yours, and who they currently engage with.

This research and information will allow you to begin thinking about how you're going to tailor the content your business creates to your target audience and your chosen platform.

3. Ask your audience what type of content they want to see.

In addition to identifying your audience, you should also ask them what they want to see to ensure you're creating and pushing out content relevant to them.

This will ensure you're going to be able to reach your audience with forum posts or social media content they want and are interested in.

Asking for this feedback and being open to suggestions also shows your audience you care deeply about their opinions and what they have to say. This will help you enhance your brand loyalty and advocacy, and create valuable interaction within your community (versus a one-way platform).

4. Determine how you'll identify your success.

Now it's time to determine how you'll identify your success. There's no right or wrong answer here — this is completely based on what matters to you and your company. Ask yourself, "what's ideal for my brand?"

Here are some examples of success identifiers you might choose to focus on:

  • Increase in forum sign-up or posts
  • Boost in audience members/ increase in followers
  • Number of conversation participants in a live chat or forum discussion
  • Amount of content shared or liked by your followers
  • Overall engagement (likes, forum posts, forum shares, mentions, hashtags, messages, comments)
  • Increase in brand awareness
  • Increase in customer satisfaction and retention
  • Traffic that's directed to your website
  • Boost in your sales and conversions

(We'll review how you can measure your community management success identifiers and metrics shortly.)

5. Set goals.

Like most things in business, setting attainable goals and stretch goals, is crucial when working to achieve your various objectives and measure your success.

However, if you're developing an entirely new strategy, this task might seem like a difficult one.

To get started, try running an experiment or two after you've determined how you plan on measuring your success.

For example, if you've decided that you're going to measure your success through overall engagement on a social media platform, you can run an experiment. Try keeping track of all engagement related to the content you produce and share on the social platform for a specific amount of time you've chosen (maybe 4-8 weeks to start).

When the experiment ends, average out your overall engagement (likes, shares, comments, mentions, hashtags, messages, etc.) and then use that number to create an attainable goal — and stretch goal if you choose — for your engagement over the next 4-8 weeks, and so on.

You can always update these numbers as time passes and you collect more data.

Throughout your experiment, you can also A/B test content to see what your followers like the best and choose to interact with most.

6. Post regularly and engage with your audience.

Success on online forums and social media platforms requires consistency in terms of your frequency of posts and engagement. You should determine how often you're going to post or reply to forum requests.

Stick to that plan so your audience members know you're reliable and start to expect to see your content. They'll come back to see your new posts, or engage with other members in the community.

Online forums and social media sites are a great way to develop close bonds and relationships among your brand and audience. Show your customers and followers that they aren't just a number and that they're heard by your company and employees.

"Like" their comments, upvote their forum posts, and respond to all questions, comments or concerns (even the positive comments that warrant a "Thank you!" or "Yay! We're so happy you're enjoying our free CRM!").

If you're primarily managing your community on social media, you can even follow back your biggest brand advocates — if you deem it appropriate — or interact with the content your followers share (whether or not it has a direct tie to your company) to show your support.

No matter how you choose to interact and engage with your community members, remember to be authentic and address each person as an individual.

By maintaining an authentic voice and presence on all of your community management channels, your brand will have a unique, human element behind it that feels trustworthy and personal to customers and community members.

7. Measure your results.

Now it's time to measure your results. Remember, when it comes to measuring your success for community management, you shouldn't always get hung up on the quantitative data — numbers don't always reflect all of your efforts or the sense of belonging you're creating for your community members.

Additionally, you rarely see immediate results when it comes to your community management efforts. Identifying your target audience, building a following, and learning how to reach your customers on different forums and platforms takes time.

To measure your results, decide on the method that works best for your needs, goals, and company. Here are a few ways to do this.

  • Social listening: Social listening is the process of monitoring your social media accounts to look for and keep track of mentions, customer feedback, keywords, and discussions related to your brand, products, services, and customers (even your competitors, too). You then take a deeper look at all of these things to analyze them and gain insight into what's working for your customers and followers, and what should be modified.
  • Platform analytics: Depending on the online platform you chose for your community management strategy, there might be a built-in analytics tool for you to measure your success in terms of variables specific to that platform. Examples include Twitter Analytics, Instagram Insights, and Facebook Analytics. Or, if you're using a forum tool, it will likely include engagement data for you to analyze and parse.
  • Analytics tools: If your platform of choice doesn't include an analytics tool, or if you're looking for deeper analysis, you might choose to incorporate another tool or platform to help you measure your success. Examples include HubSpot, Google Analytics, Meltwater Social Media Analytics, and Sprout Social.

Community Managers: How They Can Help Your Business Grow

If your business has the resources, you might want to consider hiring a community manager (or even a team of managers) to help you kickstart your efforts and community.

What is a community manager?

Community managers run your community management efforts. Depending on the community you build, you might require several community managers for different areas of focus.

However, there are some universal community management skills, no matter the role. Generally speaking, a community manager should have the following traits:

  • Has the ability to lead your community development and growth efforts.
  • Is highly customer-focused.
  • Can empathize with their members on forums, during in-person meetings, on social channels, on community platforms, and more.
  • Knows how and when to show empathy.
  • Is an authentic and detail-oriented person.
  • Can analyze and measure community management efforts and results.
  • Understands who you are as a brand and carries that image and voice — along with your marketing efforts — over to your community management strategy.

To bring us back to our previous example of external engagement community strategy, let's review the specific in-depth tasks of a social media manager.

What is the role of a community manager?

A social media community manager:

  • Maintains the voice of the brand in all posts and interactions.
  • Ensures all content being shared has a purpose and meets the expectations and needs of followers and the target audience.
  • Schedules, posts, and engages on all social content.
  • Creates, manages, and follows up with all contests, giveaways, and promotions on social.
  • Ensures community rules and guidelines are being followed by all community members.
  • Measures results of all content and work on social (and makes modifications when necessary).
  • Keeps up with industry trends and updates made to the platform at hand.
  • Knows what audience members want and need out of the shared social content.
  • Is authentic and knows when to say, "Thank you", "We're sorry", and "We support you".
  • Creates a safe space for followers and members to ask questions, get help, feel supported, share ideas, provide feedback, and solve problems.

Where to Find a Community Manager

1. Community Club

Community Club has just over 1,000 members that cater to anyone interested in the field, from community managers looking to network to brands seeking community management experts.

2. CMX Hub

CMX Hub is an online platform that serves community builders looking to grow in their careers.

On the networking side, the platform offers networking, education, and mentorship opportunities for aspiring and thriving community managers.

It’s also a designated job board for all things community management, so businesses can post job openings and easily find someone with qualifications that align to the role.

3. LinkedIn

If you're looking to hire a community manager or join a community management group, LinkedIn is a great place to start.

On LinkedIn, you can easily find local and global community managers who are open to work opportunities. If you're interested in becoming a community manager, you can visit user profiles to see what road other community managers took to get where they are today.

If you're interested in a community management group, there are also hundreds of LinkedIn Groups that serve that exact purpose. In them, community managers discuss updates in the industry, share advice, and even job opportunities.

4. Facebook Groups

On Facebook, you'll find hundreds of community management groups, each offering something different.

Some Groups are location-based, connecting community managers in specific states, cities, or regions while others are industry-specific.

Most of them allow community managers to network and discover new opportunities.

5. Upwork

Looking to hire a community manager on a contract or freelance basis? Consider Upwork.

On the freelancing platform, you can create a job post that outlines the project you're hiring for and the qualifications you need.

A survey from over 1,538 clients reveals that the online community managers on Upwork get an average rating of 4.7/5, indicating that most are satisfied with the pool of professionals available on the platform.

Community Management Tips for Social Media

We've already covered social media community management. If that's the primary way you plan to manage your community, here are a few tips to help you do it effectively.

1. Determine where your audience lives.

Instagram. TikTok. Facebook. LinkedIn. And the list goes on.

With so many social media platforms available to consumers, community managers need to identify where their target audience is most active.

The idea is you want to prioritize the platforms that will reach the most users and generate the most engagement, or you’ll speak to an empty room and waste time and resources. For instance, if you're targeting young adults, you may focus your efforts on TikTok and Instagram, which caters to a younger demographic.

2. Define metrics to track your progress.

As a community manager, measuring your success may be unclear, particularly because it's a relatively new industry. But there are many ways to gauge progress, like through looking at engagement, social mentions, and brand sentiment.

Engagement may look different from platform to platform, but likes, comments, shares, and replies are standard metrics to track.

You may also want to track how often your brand is mentioned and how that changes over time. That can suggest how far your brand is reaching. There's also qualitative data you can measure. When users do mention your brand, what are they saying?

This leads us to the next tip.

3. Monitor the conversations surrounding your business.

Social monitoring and listening are key parts of your community management strategy.

It helps you stay connected to your audience, figure out what resonates with them, and brainstorm content ideas.

For instance, say your clothing company hires a community manager. While monitoring conversations surrounding their brand, they realize that there is a lot of mention of your brand's sustainability efforts — something that hasn't been a key part of your messaging.

This discovery can inform future marketing efforts and help you generate even more interest in your brand.

4. Constantly engage your audience.

Building a community requires two-way engagement.

It's not enough to simply publish content; you also have to be reactive to your audience. This can look like:

  • Leveraging user-generated content.
  • Responding to comments, whether they're questions, concerns, praise, or something else.
  • Creating polls and surveys.

The more visible and engaging you are with your audience, the more trust you will build; from there, a community will flourish.

1. Set community rules and guidelines.

When it comes to anything related to your business, it's probably fair to assume you want it to represent you well and serve as an accurate portrayal of your brand. Your community is no exception. Therefore, you're going to want to set community rules and guidelines for all members and contributors (including your team members who are managing the community).

Depending on your type of community, how you go about setting your community rules and guidelines may differ. However, here are some examples of ways to create these guidelines to help you get started.

  • Create a written document with your expectations for the way all members are expected to communicate, behave, and contribute. Then, share that document with your team and community members when they join.
    • If you have a forum, FAQ document, or community website, you can also make this document available at all times to members there. If your community meets in person, review these details face-to-face and consider handing out a printed copy to set expectations.
  • Have a method for your team members to escalate any major issue within your community to the right person at your company so they can manage it appropriately.
  • Be sure to update your rules and guidelines as necessary (as your community grows, changes, etc.).

2. Check on your community regularly.

No matter what type of community you manage, check on its members and the type of content being shared.

Whether it's related to your brand ambassador program, forum, Facebook account, or community website, it's your job to ensure everything is running smoothly — that people are receiving the support they need, their questions are being answered, and they feel a sense of community.

3. Be authentic.

You need to be authentic while managing any type of community. When your customers, fans, followers, and leads come to your community, they should immediately know it's yours based on different factors like your branding and voice.

And no matter the type of interaction, being genuine and human is crucial whether or not you're behind a screen or face-to-face. After all, one of the main reasons you're creating a community is to make sure your members feel valued.

4. Listen to your community.

Since community management requires so much thoughtful interaction with members, listening is crucial. Whether it's social listening, reviewing your forum and FAQ pages regularly, or responding to in-person and online feedback, listening is how you'll improve your community to the best of your ability.

It also shows your audience and members you value their opinions, hear what they have to say, and care about their experiences within your community.

5. Show appreciation to your followers.

A large part of managing a successful community is showing appreciation for your members. This will help you build brand loyalty and trust between you and your members.

It also shows your members how much you value their time and commitment to your brand — remember, some of your community members are most likely also some of your most invested, supportive, and loyal fans, followers, and customers already.

To ensure you're showing appreciation when necessary, you can try the following tactics depending on the type of community you have.

  • Interact with all new community members as soon as they join — say, "Thank you and welcome!" and ask them what you can do to make their experience a great one.
  • Pay attention to who your biggest community contributors are (keep a document with their names, emails, etc.). This way you can send them swag or give them a shout-out for simply being awesome.
  • Invite your ambassadors and brand advocates to your office to meet your team and give them a behind-the-scenes look at your operation.
  • Keep an eye out for mentions, keywords, and hashtags, on your forum, social media platforms, community website, and more so you're able to engage with those people to show your appreciation and the human element behind your community.

6. Maintain your brand voice at all times.

Similar to what we said about the importance of authenticity, maintaining your brand's voice at all times is critical when it comes to community management. This is a large part of what makes your community unique as well as ensures your community is identifiable to your members and audience.

No matter how many people are working in your community, make sure they understand your brand voice so they can help you maintain it throughout all interactions, engagement, and content.

One way to make this a simpler process is by tying your community back to your company's marketing goals and/ or collaborating with your marketing department. It'll keep your messaging and interactions focused as well as push you to maintain your brand voice.

7. Explore new ways to engage your community.

You always want to be engaging your community — but what happens if there are changes in your industry, your company's products or services are drastically updated, or your members request new types of content?

To keep your community up to date, always explore new ways to engage your members, whether that's online or in-person (depending on your type of community). You can also engage members as soon as they join to continue learning about your audience, what they want from you, and what made them join your community — this will also help you learn about new ways to interact with them.

At this point, you may be wondering how to get all of this work started — where to begin with your community management strategy efforts at your company if you haven't done any work related to the field before.

A common first step businesses take when spearheading their community management plan and strategy is to determine whether or not they want to hire a community manager.

8. Set up a spam control process.

Spam can be anything from bot-created comments and posts to disrespectful and hurtful comments from real-life people. And the last thing you want is for your community to be bogged down by spam messages and content.

Leverage the spam tools that your software might have or devise your own spam filters to ensure community members have a safe experience.

9. Take action when necessary.

An important part of being a community manager is protecting the community you monitor, from creating spam filters to banning people who don’t follow the rules.

You always want the people who genuinely want to engage in discussions with your business or topics related to your business to feel safe, so take action to ensure that they do.

Whew! That was a lot of information — but, you should now have a better understanding of why community management is so important, how it can help your business grow, and how you can get started on your business's strategy.

Start Building Your Community

Community management is a new, yet powerful, industry. By implementing a community management strategy at your company, you'll be able to create a safe place for your customers, fans, employees, and followers to collaborate, provide you with feedback, bond, and learn.

This will help you build brand loyalty, increase conversions and sales, and show the people who matter most to your success a human side to your brand that they can relate to.

So, get started by reviewing your options for types of community management to incorporate at your company, developing a strategy, and determining whether a community manager is the next hire you need to make.

Editor's Note: This post was originally published in May 2019 and has been updated for comprehensiveness.

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The Ultimate Guide to On-Page SEO in 2023

On-page SEO has the power to bring countless new visitors — and customers — right to your website.

Additionally, on-page SEO is also completely up to you: You get to establish what the topic and/or goal of each page will be. You get to decide on the target audience for that page. And you get to choose the target keywords and phrases you want to focus on.

Download Now: Free On-Page SEO Template

This can be intimidating and empowering at the same time. If you're unsure how to get started, we've built this on-page SEO checklist to help guide you.

Jump To:

Google's algorithm ranks your website on three main factors: on-page SEO, off-page SEO, and technical SEO:

  • On-page SEO refers to the page elements that enable search engines to crawl and index a page.
  • Off-page SEO refers to social sharing, external linking, and more.
  • Technical SEO refers to all the SEO elements not included in on-page and off-page practices, such as structured data, site speed, and mobile readiness — the more technical parts of SEO.

on-page seo vs. off-page seo

Note: This SEO "trilogy" isn't always divided into three clean sections; some of these SEO elements will overlap. You'll see how and why throughout this piece.

Why is on-page SEO important?

On-page SEO is important because it tells Google all about your website and how you provide value to visitors and customers. It helps your site be optimized for both human eyes and search engine bots.

Merely creating and publishing your website isn't enough — you must optimize it for Google and other search engines in order to rank and attract new traffic.

On-page SEO is called "on-page" because the tweaks and changes you make to optimize your website can be seen by visitors on your page (whereas off-page and technical SEO elements aren't always visible).

Every part of on-page SEO is completely up to you; that's why it's critical that you do it correctly. Now, let's discuss the elements of on-page SEO.


All on-page SEO elements fall into three main categories:

You'll see these elements divided into sections below.

Content Elements

In this section, we’ll focus on keyword research and how keywords should be incorporated into your content. We’ll also discuss the importance of including images in your content.

1. Keyword Research

The first step to creating high-quality content is choosing relevant keywords and topics. Conduct keyword research by searching Google for terms and seeing what surfaces for competitors and other websites. You can also use tools like Ahrefs, AnswerthePublic, and UberSuggest.

Also, read our Beginner's Guide on How to Do Keyword Research for SEO.

When doing keyword research, consider how your page content falls into the buyer's journey and visitors' search intent. This will impact how you will use your keywords and what types of content you will create:

STAGE IN THE BUYER'S JOURNEY SUGGESTED CONTENT/WEBSITE PAGES
Awareness Blog posts, video, homepage
Consideration Buyer's guides, case studies, about page
Decision Product demos, comparison tools, product or pricing pages, contact page

Now, it's time to write your page content or clean it up if you're currently auditing your on-page SEO.

2. Visual Content

Visual content — like images, graphics, and charts — play an important role in on-page SEO for several reasons.

Images can enhance the visual appeal and engagement of web pages. They help make content more scannable and easier to digest. Plus, optimizing images with alt tags (more on that below) can help drive traffic from image search results.

HTML Elements

HTML elements refer to the elements in your source code.

Note: To see the source code for any page in your browser, click View > Developer > View Source in the top menu.

3. Page Titles

Your website page titles (also known as title tags) are one of the most important SEO elements.

SEO page title tag

Titles tell both visitors and search engines what they can find on the corresponding pages.

To ensure your site pages rank for the proper intent, be sure to include the focus keyword for each page in the title. Incorporate your keyword as naturally as possible.

4. Headers

Headers, also known as body tags, refer to the HTML element <h1>, <h2>, <h3>, and so on.

SEO header tag

These tags help organize your content for readers and help search engines distinguish what part of your content is most important and relevant, depending on search intent.

5. Meta Descriptions

Meta descriptions are the short page descriptions that appear under the title in search results. Although it's not an official ranking factor for search engines, it can influence whether or not your page is clicked on — therefore, it's just as important when doing on-page SEO.

example of meta description

Meta descriptions can also be copied over to social media when your content is shared (by using structured markup, which we talk about below), so it can encourage click-throughs from there, too.

6. Image Alt-text

Image alt-text is like SEO for your images. It tells Google and other search engines what your images are about ... which is important because Google now delivers almost as many image-based results as they do text-based results.

That means consumers may be discovering your site through your images. In order for them to do this, though, you have to add alt-text to your images.

7. Structured Markup

Structured markup, or structured data, is the process of "marking up" your website source code to make it easier for Google to find and understand different elements of your content.

Structured markup is the key behind those featured snippets, knowledge panels, and other content features you see when you search for something on Google. It's also how your specific page information shows up so neatly when someone shares your content on social media.

Note: Structured data is considered technical SEO, but I'm including it here because optimizing it creates a better on-page experience for visitors.

structured markup

Site Architecture Elements

Site architecture elements refer to the elements that make up your website and site pages. How you structure your website can help Google and other search engines easily crawl the pages and page content.

8. Page URLs

Your page URLs should be simple to digest for both readers and search engines. They are also important when keeping your site hierarchy consistent as you create subpages, blog posts, and other types of internal pages.

page URL example

For example, in the above URL, "blog" is the sub-domain, "hubspot.com" is the domain, "sales" is the directory for the HubSpot Sales Blog, and "startups" indicates the specific path to that blog post.

9. Internal Linking

Internal linking is the process of hyperlinking to other helpful pages on your website. (See how the words "internal linking" are linked to another HubSpot blog post in the sentence above? That's an example.)

Internal linking is important for on-page SEO because internal links send readers to other pages on your website, keeping them around longer and thus telling Google your site is valuable and helpful.

Also, the longer visitors are on your website, the more time Google has to crawl and index your site pages. This ultimately helps Google absorb more information about your website and potentially rank it higher on the search engine results pages.

Download our free guide to Internal Linking for SEO.

10. Mobile Responsiveness

Google started favoring sites that are optimized for faster mobile speeds — even for desktop searches.

Mobile responsiveness matters.

It's critical to choose a website hosting service, site design and theme, and content layout that's readable and navigable on mobile devices. If you're not sure about your own site's mobile readiness, use Google's Mobile-Friendly Test tool.

mobile responsiveness tool

11. Site Speed

Whether viewed on a mobile device or desktop, your site must be able to load quickly. When it comes to on-page SEO, page speed counts big-time.

Google cares about user experience first and foremost. If your site loads slowly or haphazardly, it's likely your visitors aren't going to stick around — and Google knows that. Moreover, site speed can impact conversions and ROI.

Check your website's speed anytime using Google's PageSpeed Insights tool. If your website is movin' slow, check out 5 Easy Ways to Help Reduce Your Website’s Page Loading Speed.

Note: Mobile responsiveness and site speed are considered technical SEO, but I'm including them here because optimizing them creates a better on-page experience for visitors.

site speed tool

Now that we’ve covered the elements of on-page SEO, let’s dive into our checklist that you can use when optimizing individual pages on your website.

on-page SEO checklist

1. Make sure your keyword is in your URL.

Add your target keyword to your URL so users and search engines know what kind of content they will find on the page.

For example, imagine you own a hot yoga studio called ADYoga. You have a web page that includes videos of your classes. The keyword for this page is "hot yoga online classes" — so, you'd want to include that keyword in your URL. The URL for this web page may look like this: www.ADyoga.com/hot-yoga-online-classes.

Here are a few tips on how to write SEO-friendly URLs:

  • Remove the extra, unnecessary words.
  • Use only one or two keywords.

Use HTTPS if possible, as Google now uses that as a positive ranking factor.

2. Optimize your page title.

Craft a descriptive title that includes your target keyword and accurately describes the page’s content.

Here are some best practices for when developing a page title:

  • Keep it under 60 characters (per Google's update) to ensure that your titles display correctly. Although Google doesn't have an exact character limit, its display titles max out at 600 pixels. Keeping your titles at 60 characters or less ensures the title won't be cut off in search results.
  • Don't stuff the title with keywords.
  • Don't use all caps.
  • Include your brand in the title, i.e. "The Ultimate Guide to On-Page SEO in 2022 — HubSpot Blog".

Check out our free data-driven guide to writing effective page titles.

3. Use headers.

Organize your content with header tags to make it more scannable and search-engine friendly.

Be sure to naturally incorporate important keywords in your headers, but choose different ones than what's in your page title. Put your most important keywords in your <h1> and <h2> headers.

4. Include keywords in your body copy.

In addition to your URL, title, and headers, you'll want to add your keyword throughout your web page(s). Sprinkle your keyword throughout your content as well where it fits naturally.

While keywords are both helpful and necessary for SEO, it’s important to avoid keyword stuffing. This is when you excessively repeat keywords or key phrases in your content with the intention of manipulating search engine rankings.

Keyword stuffing can be detrimental to your website and web page's SEO. Not only does keyword-stuffing present a spammy and tacky reading experience, but modern search engines are smarter than ever — they've been designed to specifically monitor for (and penalize!) content that's unnaturally stuffed with keywords.

5. Incorporate images, graphics, and other visuals.

Add engaging and relevant visuals to your content to break up large blocks of text and make it more visually appealing. Visuals can also help drive potential image search traffic.

To optimize images for on-page SEO, ensure they are appropriately compressed for faster loading times, use descriptive filenames, and provide informative alt tags. By doing so, you can enhance both the user experience and the visibility of your web pages in search engine results.

6. Add a meta description.

Write a compelling meta description that summarizes the page’s content and encourages users to click through from search results.

Here's what makes for a good meta description:

7. Optimize visuals with alt-text.

We talked earlier about image alt text. You'll want to optimize your visual content this way — and be sure to include your keyword in your image alt text. It'll help with the page's SEO as well as offer the potential to rank in image search (e.g. on a search engine image results page or image carousel).

Here's what to keep in mind when adding image alt-text:

  • Make it descriptive and specific.
  • Make it contextually relevant to the broader page content.
  • Keep it shorter than 125 characters.
  • Use keywords sparingly, and don't keyword stuff.

8. Add internal links.

Help search engines discover and understand the relationships between different pages on your website by adding internal links to your content.

To add internal links to your content, you’ll need to:

  • Identify relevant anchor text. Determine the anchor text (the clickable text) that you want to use for your internal link. The anchor text should be descriptive and related to the content of the page you're linking to.
  • Identify the target page. Determine the specific page on your website that you want to link to. Choose a page that is contextually relevant and provides additional value or information related to the current content.
  • Place links strategically throughout the page. Aim for a reasonable number of links per page, ensuring they are contextually relevant and add value to the user experience. Avoid excessive linking, as it may be seen as spammy.

9. Add external links.

It may seem counterintuitive to include external links throughout your page considering we just covered multiple reasons why internal linking is so important for on-page SEO. However, external links are also important.

By externally linking to credible and trustworthy sites, Google will know your page is also credible and trustworthy. Not only does Google want to know your site is well-referenced, but your visitors do, too.

Now that you know how to make on-page optimizations for a single page, let's talk through the steps of auditing and improving your on-page SEO at scale.

If you've been in search of a solution for organizing and tracking the various on-page SEO elements, you're in luck. The HubSpot marketing team released an updated version of our On-Page SEO Template, an Excel document that allows you to coordinate pages and keywords — and track changes — all in one place.

Download Now: On-Page SEO Template

Header Image for free SEO template

In this section, we'll be using this template as a guide as we walk you through a checklist for your on-page SEO management, step by step. Download the template now and follow along.

Note: The fictional website "http://www.quantify.ly" will be used as an example throughout this post. It's simply meant to help you imagine how your own website will fit into the template.

1. Crawl your website.

Get an overview of all of your website pages that search engines have indexed. For HubSpot customers, our Page Performance tool (under Reports) will allow you to do this. If you're not using HubSpot, you can try using a free tool like Xenu's link crawler.

After crawling your site and exporting the results into an Excel (or .csv) file, there will be three key columns of data that you should focus on:

  1. The web address (a.k.a. URL)
  2. The page title
  3. The page meta description
Copy and paste these three columns into your template.

The URL should be pasted into column B, the page title into column C, and the description into column E.

on-page seo checklist crawl your website

2. Conduct an SEO audit and define your site architecture.

Now that you have a basic index of your site in the template, you'll want to organize and prioritize your web pages. Start by defining where within your site architecture your existing pages currently sit.

Do this in column A. Note whether a page is your homepage (ideally you'll only have one of those), a page in your primary (or secondary) navigation menu, an internal page, and so on.

on-page seo checklist: conduct an seo audit

3. Update URLs, page titles, and meta descriptions.

Review your current URLs, page titles, and meta descriptions to see if they need updating.

(This is the beauty of using a template to organize your SEO: You get a broad overview of the type of content you have on your website.)

on page seo checklist: meta descriptions

Notice how column D and column F automatically calculate the length of each element. The recommended length for page titles is anything under 60 characters. (And, actually, a quick and easy optimization project is to update all page titles that are longer than 60 characters.)

The recommended length for page meta descriptions is 155-160 characters. This is the perfect length to ensure none of the description is cut off by the ellipses. Make sure you're not too repetitive with keywords in this space. Writing a good meta description isn't tough, but it deserves just as much consideration as the page content itself.

(Note: For some sites, you may also have to update the URLs, but that's not always the case and thus was not included as part of this optimization template.)

4. Track keywords and topics for each page.

Think of your target keyword as the designated topic for a particular page. If you're using the HubSpot template, In column O, define just one topic per page.

on-page seo checklist: track keywords and topics for your web pages

By doing this, you'll be able to go more in-depth and provide more detailed information about that topic. This also means that you are only optimizing for one keyword per page, meaning you have a greater chance to rank for that keyword.

There are, of course, a few exceptions to this rule. Your homepage is a classic example. The goal of your homepage is to explain what your entire website is about, and thus you'll need a few keywords to do that. Another exception is overview pages like services and product pages, which outline what all of your products and services may be.

5. Establish value propositions for each page.

A very important next step, which is often overlooked, is establishing a value proposition for each page of your website. Each page should have a goal aside from just ranking for a particular term.

If you're using the template, you'll do this in column G.

on-page seo checklist: establish value propositions

6. Define your target audience.

Define your target audience — do you have a single buyer persona or multiple personas? Keep this persona in mind as you optimize your site's pages. (Remember, you are optimizing for humans, too — not just search engine robots.)

In column H of our template, you'll have the opportunity to define your page's target audience.

on-page seo checklist: define your target audience

7. Plan new page titles.

Now that you've documented your existing page titles and have established value propositions and target audiences for each of your pages, write new page titles (if necessary) to reflect your findings.

You can do this in column K of the template — and double-check each title length in column L.

on-page seo checklist: plan new page titles

People usually follow the formula of "Keyword Phrase | Context." The goal of the page title is to lay out the purpose of the page without being redundant. You should also keep the additional recommendations we made above related to titles.

8. Add new meta descriptions.

As we covered above, meta descriptions should be a short, declarative sentence that incorporates the same keyword as your page's title.

It should not reflect the content verbatim as it appears on the page. Get as close as you can to the 150-character limit to maximize space and tell visitors as much as possible about your page.

If you need to create new meta descriptions, do so in column M of the template.

on-page seo checklist: add meta descriptions

9. Review and edit page content as needed.

Good copy needs to be thorough, clear, and provide solutions ... so, be compelling! Write for your target audience and about how you can help them. Compelling content is also error-free, so double-check your spelling and grammar.

Aim to have at least 500 words per page, and format content to make it easier to read and digest with the use of headers and subheaders.

Columns P through R can be used to keep track of changes that you've made to your content or to note where changes need to be implemented.

on-page seo checklist: review and edit content on your web page

10. Incorporate visual content.

Content can be more than just text, so consider what kind of visual content you can incorporate into each page (if it adds value and serves a purpose, of course). Columns S and T allow you to note which visual elements need to be added. When adding an image to a page, be sure to include a descriptive file name and image alt-text.

on-page seo checklist: incorporate visual content

11. Add relevant links.

As mentioned earlier, incorporating links throughout your pages is a must, but it's often something that's easily overlooked.

Make sure that your anchor text includes more than just your keywords. The goal isn't to stuff in as many keywords as possible, but to make it easy for people to navigate your site.

You’ll want to regularly review your internal and external links to ensure they are still valid and point to the intended destination. Broken or outdated links can harm the user experience and SEO.

Use columns U through W to plan for these elements if you don't already have them, or to document how you'll improve them.

on-page seo checklist: add internal links

12. Optimize for conversions.

If you're also not optimizing your site to increase the number of leads, subscribers, and/or customers you're attracting ... you're doing it wrong.

Remember that each page of your website presents a conversion opportunity. That means every page of your website should include at least one call-to-action (CTA), though many pages may have multiple CTAs.

Columns X through AF allow you to plan for conversions.

Be sure that your site has a mix of CTAs for different stages of the flywheel.

(Note: The On-Page SEO Template refers to the stages of the buying funnel — top of the funnel, middle of the funnel, and bottom of the funnel. If you are a HubSpot customer, you can even use Smart Content to display these specific CTAs only to people in a specific part of the funnel.)

Also, as you add, edit, or update CTAs, be sure to note conversion rate changes in columns Z, AC, and AF.

on-page seo checklist: optimize your page for conversions

Put Your On-Page SEO to Work

Once you finalize your SEO plans, implement these changes on your website or pass them along to someone to implement for you. This will take time to complete, so aim to work on 5 to 10 pages per week.

Remember: SEO is not a one-and-done deal. It's something you should continually improve upon. You should treat this On-Page SEO Template as a living, breathing document that will help guide your SEO strategy for months (or years) to come.

Editor's Note: This post was originally published in October 2012 and has been updated for freshness, accuracy, and comprehensiveness.

download the free on-page SEO template



from Marketing https://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/33655/a-step-by-step-guide-to-flawless-on-page-seo-free-template.aspx

On-page SEO has the power to bring countless new visitors — and customers — right to your website.

Additionally, on-page SEO is also completely up to you: You get to establish what the topic and/or goal of each page will be. You get to decide on the target audience for that page. And you get to choose the target keywords and phrases you want to focus on.

Download Now: Free On-Page SEO Template

This can be intimidating and empowering at the same time. If you're unsure how to get started, we've built this on-page SEO checklist to help guide you.

Jump To:

Google's algorithm ranks your website on three main factors: on-page SEO, off-page SEO, and technical SEO:

  • On-page SEO refers to the page elements that enable search engines to crawl and index a page.
  • Off-page SEO refers to social sharing, external linking, and more.
  • Technical SEO refers to all the SEO elements not included in on-page and off-page practices, such as structured data, site speed, and mobile readiness — the more technical parts of SEO.

on-page seo vs. off-page seo

Note: This SEO "trilogy" isn't always divided into three clean sections; some of these SEO elements will overlap. You'll see how and why throughout this piece.

Why is on-page SEO important?

On-page SEO is important because it tells Google all about your website and how you provide value to visitors and customers. It helps your site be optimized for both human eyes and search engine bots.

Merely creating and publishing your website isn't enough — you must optimize it for Google and other search engines in order to rank and attract new traffic.

On-page SEO is called "on-page" because the tweaks and changes you make to optimize your website can be seen by visitors on your page (whereas off-page and technical SEO elements aren't always visible).

Every part of on-page SEO is completely up to you; that's why it's critical that you do it correctly. Now, let's discuss the elements of on-page SEO.


All on-page SEO elements fall into three main categories:

You'll see these elements divided into sections below.

Content Elements

In this section, we’ll focus on keyword research and how keywords should be incorporated into your content. We’ll also discuss the importance of including images in your content.

1. Keyword Research

The first step to creating high-quality content is choosing relevant keywords and topics. Conduct keyword research by searching Google for terms and seeing what surfaces for competitors and other websites. You can also use tools like Ahrefs, AnswerthePublic, and UberSuggest.

Also, read our Beginner's Guide on How to Do Keyword Research for SEO.

When doing keyword research, consider how your page content falls into the buyer's journey and visitors' search intent. This will impact how you will use your keywords and what types of content you will create:

STAGE IN THE BUYER'S JOURNEY SUGGESTED CONTENT/WEBSITE PAGES
Awareness Blog posts, video, homepage
Consideration Buyer's guides, case studies, about page
Decision Product demos, comparison tools, product or pricing pages, contact page

Now, it's time to write your page content or clean it up if you're currently auditing your on-page SEO.

2. Visual Content

Visual content — like images, graphics, and charts — play an important role in on-page SEO for several reasons.

Images can enhance the visual appeal and engagement of web pages. They help make content more scannable and easier to digest. Plus, optimizing images with alt tags (more on that below) can help drive traffic from image search results.

HTML Elements

HTML elements refer to the elements in your source code.

Note: To see the source code for any page in your browser, click View > Developer > View Source in the top menu.

3. Page Titles

Your website page titles (also known as title tags) are one of the most important SEO elements.

SEO page title tag

Titles tell both visitors and search engines what they can find on the corresponding pages.

To ensure your site pages rank for the proper intent, be sure to include the focus keyword for each page in the title. Incorporate your keyword as naturally as possible.

4. Headers

Headers, also known as body tags, refer to the HTML element <h1>, <h2>, <h3>, and so on.

SEO header tag

These tags help organize your content for readers and help search engines distinguish what part of your content is most important and relevant, depending on search intent.

5. Meta Descriptions

Meta descriptions are the short page descriptions that appear under the title in search results. Although it's not an official ranking factor for search engines, it can influence whether or not your page is clicked on — therefore, it's just as important when doing on-page SEO.

example of meta description

Meta descriptions can also be copied over to social media when your content is shared (by using structured markup, which we talk about below), so it can encourage click-throughs from there, too.

6. Image Alt-text

Image alt-text is like SEO for your images. It tells Google and other search engines what your images are about ... which is important because Google now delivers almost as many image-based results as they do text-based results.

That means consumers may be discovering your site through your images. In order for them to do this, though, you have to add alt-text to your images.

7. Structured Markup

Structured markup, or structured data, is the process of "marking up" your website source code to make it easier for Google to find and understand different elements of your content.

Structured markup is the key behind those featured snippets, knowledge panels, and other content features you see when you search for something on Google. It's also how your specific page information shows up so neatly when someone shares your content on social media.

Note: Structured data is considered technical SEO, but I'm including it here because optimizing it creates a better on-page experience for visitors.

structured markup

Site Architecture Elements

Site architecture elements refer to the elements that make up your website and site pages. How you structure your website can help Google and other search engines easily crawl the pages and page content.

8. Page URLs

Your page URLs should be simple to digest for both readers and search engines. They are also important when keeping your site hierarchy consistent as you create subpages, blog posts, and other types of internal pages.

page URL example

For example, in the above URL, "blog" is the sub-domain, "hubspot.com" is the domain, "sales" is the directory for the HubSpot Sales Blog, and "startups" indicates the specific path to that blog post.

9. Internal Linking

Internal linking is the process of hyperlinking to other helpful pages on your website. (See how the words "internal linking" are linked to another HubSpot blog post in the sentence above? That's an example.)

Internal linking is important for on-page SEO because internal links send readers to other pages on your website, keeping them around longer and thus telling Google your site is valuable and helpful.

Also, the longer visitors are on your website, the more time Google has to crawl and index your site pages. This ultimately helps Google absorb more information about your website and potentially rank it higher on the search engine results pages.

Download our free guide to Internal Linking for SEO.

10. Mobile Responsiveness

Google started favoring sites that are optimized for faster mobile speeds — even for desktop searches.

Mobile responsiveness matters.

It's critical to choose a website hosting service, site design and theme, and content layout that's readable and navigable on mobile devices. If you're not sure about your own site's mobile readiness, use Google's Mobile-Friendly Test tool.

mobile responsiveness tool

11. Site Speed

Whether viewed on a mobile device or desktop, your site must be able to load quickly. When it comes to on-page SEO, page speed counts big-time.

Google cares about user experience first and foremost. If your site loads slowly or haphazardly, it's likely your visitors aren't going to stick around — and Google knows that. Moreover, site speed can impact conversions and ROI.

Check your website's speed anytime using Google's PageSpeed Insights tool. If your website is movin' slow, check out 5 Easy Ways to Help Reduce Your Website’s Page Loading Speed.

Note: Mobile responsiveness and site speed are considered technical SEO, but I'm including them here because optimizing them creates a better on-page experience for visitors.

site speed tool

Now that we’ve covered the elements of on-page SEO, let’s dive into our checklist that you can use when optimizing individual pages on your website.

on-page SEO checklist

1. Make sure your keyword is in your URL.

Add your target keyword to your URL so users and search engines know what kind of content they will find on the page.

For example, imagine you own a hot yoga studio called ADYoga. You have a web page that includes videos of your classes. The keyword for this page is "hot yoga online classes" — so, you'd want to include that keyword in your URL. The URL for this web page may look like this: www.ADyoga.com/hot-yoga-online-classes.

Here are a few tips on how to write SEO-friendly URLs:

  • Remove the extra, unnecessary words.
  • Use only one or two keywords.

Use HTTPS if possible, as Google now uses that as a positive ranking factor.

2. Optimize your page title.

Craft a descriptive title that includes your target keyword and accurately describes the page’s content.

Here are some best practices for when developing a page title:

  • Keep it under 60 characters (per Google's update) to ensure that your titles display correctly. Although Google doesn't have an exact character limit, its display titles max out at 600 pixels. Keeping your titles at 60 characters or less ensures the title won't be cut off in search results.
  • Don't stuff the title with keywords.
  • Don't use all caps.
  • Include your brand in the title, i.e. "The Ultimate Guide to On-Page SEO in 2022 — HubSpot Blog".

Check out our free data-driven guide to writing effective page titles.

3. Use headers.

Organize your content with header tags to make it more scannable and search-engine friendly.

Be sure to naturally incorporate important keywords in your headers, but choose different ones than what's in your page title. Put your most important keywords in your <h1> and <h2> headers.

4. Include keywords in your body copy.

In addition to your URL, title, and headers, you'll want to add your keyword throughout your web page(s). Sprinkle your keyword throughout your content as well where it fits naturally.

While keywords are both helpful and necessary for SEO, it’s important to avoid keyword stuffing. This is when you excessively repeat keywords or key phrases in your content with the intention of manipulating search engine rankings.

Keyword stuffing can be detrimental to your website and web page's SEO. Not only does keyword-stuffing present a spammy and tacky reading experience, but modern search engines are smarter than ever — they've been designed to specifically monitor for (and penalize!) content that's unnaturally stuffed with keywords.

5. Incorporate images, graphics, and other visuals.

Add engaging and relevant visuals to your content to break up large blocks of text and make it more visually appealing. Visuals can also help drive potential image search traffic.

To optimize images for on-page SEO, ensure they are appropriately compressed for faster loading times, use descriptive filenames, and provide informative alt tags. By doing so, you can enhance both the user experience and the visibility of your web pages in search engine results.

6. Add a meta description.

Write a compelling meta description that summarizes the page’s content and encourages users to click through from search results.

Here's what makes for a good meta description:

7. Optimize visuals with alt-text.

We talked earlier about image alt text. You'll want to optimize your visual content this way — and be sure to include your keyword in your image alt text. It'll help with the page's SEO as well as offer the potential to rank in image search (e.g. on a search engine image results page or image carousel).

Here's what to keep in mind when adding image alt-text:

  • Make it descriptive and specific.
  • Make it contextually relevant to the broader page content.
  • Keep it shorter than 125 characters.
  • Use keywords sparingly, and don't keyword stuff.

8. Add internal links.

Help search engines discover and understand the relationships between different pages on your website by adding internal links to your content.

To add internal links to your content, you’ll need to:

  • Identify relevant anchor text. Determine the anchor text (the clickable text) that you want to use for your internal link. The anchor text should be descriptive and related to the content of the page you're linking to.
  • Identify the target page. Determine the specific page on your website that you want to link to. Choose a page that is contextually relevant and provides additional value or information related to the current content.
  • Place links strategically throughout the page. Aim for a reasonable number of links per page, ensuring they are contextually relevant and add value to the user experience. Avoid excessive linking, as it may be seen as spammy.

9. Add external links.

It may seem counterintuitive to include external links throughout your page considering we just covered multiple reasons why internal linking is so important for on-page SEO. However, external links are also important.

By externally linking to credible and trustworthy sites, Google will know your page is also credible and trustworthy. Not only does Google want to know your site is well-referenced, but your visitors do, too.

Now that you know how to make on-page optimizations for a single page, let's talk through the steps of auditing and improving your on-page SEO at scale.

If you've been in search of a solution for organizing and tracking the various on-page SEO elements, you're in luck. The HubSpot marketing team released an updated version of our On-Page SEO Template, an Excel document that allows you to coordinate pages and keywords — and track changes — all in one place.

Download Now: On-Page SEO Template

Header Image for free SEO template

In this section, we'll be using this template as a guide as we walk you through a checklist for your on-page SEO management, step by step. Download the template now and follow along.

Note: The fictional website "http://www.quantify.ly" will be used as an example throughout this post. It's simply meant to help you imagine how your own website will fit into the template.

1. Crawl your website.

Get an overview of all of your website pages that search engines have indexed. For HubSpot customers, our Page Performance tool (under Reports) will allow you to do this. If you're not using HubSpot, you can try using a free tool like Xenu's link crawler.

After crawling your site and exporting the results into an Excel (or .csv) file, there will be three key columns of data that you should focus on:

  1. The web address (a.k.a. URL)
  2. The page title
  3. The page meta description
Copy and paste these three columns into your template.

The URL should be pasted into column B, the page title into column C, and the description into column E.

on-page seo checklist crawl your website

2. Conduct an SEO audit and define your site architecture.

Now that you have a basic index of your site in the template, you'll want to organize and prioritize your web pages. Start by defining where within your site architecture your existing pages currently sit.

Do this in column A. Note whether a page is your homepage (ideally you'll only have one of those), a page in your primary (or secondary) navigation menu, an internal page, and so on.

on-page seo checklist: conduct an seo audit

3. Update URLs, page titles, and meta descriptions.

Review your current URLs, page titles, and meta descriptions to see if they need updating.

(This is the beauty of using a template to organize your SEO: You get a broad overview of the type of content you have on your website.)

on page seo checklist: meta descriptions

Notice how column D and column F automatically calculate the length of each element. The recommended length for page titles is anything under 60 characters. (And, actually, a quick and easy optimization project is to update all page titles that are longer than 60 characters.)

The recommended length for page meta descriptions is 155-160 characters. This is the perfect length to ensure none of the description is cut off by the ellipses. Make sure you're not too repetitive with keywords in this space. Writing a good meta description isn't tough, but it deserves just as much consideration as the page content itself.

(Note: For some sites, you may also have to update the URLs, but that's not always the case and thus was not included as part of this optimization template.)

4. Track keywords and topics for each page.

Think of your target keyword as the designated topic for a particular page. If you're using the HubSpot template, In column O, define just one topic per page.

on-page seo checklist: track keywords and topics for your web pages

By doing this, you'll be able to go more in-depth and provide more detailed information about that topic. This also means that you are only optimizing for one keyword per page, meaning you have a greater chance to rank for that keyword.

There are, of course, a few exceptions to this rule. Your homepage is a classic example. The goal of your homepage is to explain what your entire website is about, and thus you'll need a few keywords to do that. Another exception is overview pages like services and product pages, which outline what all of your products and services may be.

5. Establish value propositions for each page.

A very important next step, which is often overlooked, is establishing a value proposition for each page of your website. Each page should have a goal aside from just ranking for a particular term.

If you're using the template, you'll do this in column G.

on-page seo checklist: establish value propositions

6. Define your target audience.

Define your target audience — do you have a single buyer persona or multiple personas? Keep this persona in mind as you optimize your site's pages. (Remember, you are optimizing for humans, too — not just search engine robots.)

In column H of our template, you'll have the opportunity to define your page's target audience.

on-page seo checklist: define your target audience

7. Plan new page titles.

Now that you've documented your existing page titles and have established value propositions and target audiences for each of your pages, write new page titles (if necessary) to reflect your findings.

You can do this in column K of the template — and double-check each title length in column L.

on-page seo checklist: plan new page titles

People usually follow the formula of "Keyword Phrase | Context." The goal of the page title is to lay out the purpose of the page without being redundant. You should also keep the additional recommendations we made above related to titles.

8. Add new meta descriptions.

As we covered above, meta descriptions should be a short, declarative sentence that incorporates the same keyword as your page's title.

It should not reflect the content verbatim as it appears on the page. Get as close as you can to the 150-character limit to maximize space and tell visitors as much as possible about your page.

If you need to create new meta descriptions, do so in column M of the template.

on-page seo checklist: add meta descriptions

9. Review and edit page content as needed.

Good copy needs to be thorough, clear, and provide solutions ... so, be compelling! Write for your target audience and about how you can help them. Compelling content is also error-free, so double-check your spelling and grammar.

Aim to have at least 500 words per page, and format content to make it easier to read and digest with the use of headers and subheaders.

Columns P through R can be used to keep track of changes that you've made to your content or to note where changes need to be implemented.

on-page seo checklist: review and edit content on your web page

10. Incorporate visual content.

Content can be more than just text, so consider what kind of visual content you can incorporate into each page (if it adds value and serves a purpose, of course). Columns S and T allow you to note which visual elements need to be added. When adding an image to a page, be sure to include a descriptive file name and image alt-text.

on-page seo checklist: incorporate visual content

11. Add relevant links.

As mentioned earlier, incorporating links throughout your pages is a must, but it's often something that's easily overlooked.

Make sure that your anchor text includes more than just your keywords. The goal isn't to stuff in as many keywords as possible, but to make it easy for people to navigate your site.

You’ll want to regularly review your internal and external links to ensure they are still valid and point to the intended destination. Broken or outdated links can harm the user experience and SEO.

Use columns U through W to plan for these elements if you don't already have them, or to document how you'll improve them.

on-page seo checklist: add internal links

12. Optimize for conversions.

If you're also not optimizing your site to increase the number of leads, subscribers, and/or customers you're attracting ... you're doing it wrong.

Remember that each page of your website presents a conversion opportunity. That means every page of your website should include at least one call-to-action (CTA), though many pages may have multiple CTAs.

Columns X through AF allow you to plan for conversions.

Be sure that your site has a mix of CTAs for different stages of the flywheel.

(Note: The On-Page SEO Template refers to the stages of the buying funnel — top of the funnel, middle of the funnel, and bottom of the funnel. If you are a HubSpot customer, you can even use Smart Content to display these specific CTAs only to people in a specific part of the funnel.)

Also, as you add, edit, or update CTAs, be sure to note conversion rate changes in columns Z, AC, and AF.

on-page seo checklist: optimize your page for conversions

Put Your On-Page SEO to Work

Once you finalize your SEO plans, implement these changes on your website or pass them along to someone to implement for you. This will take time to complete, so aim to work on 5 to 10 pages per week.

Remember: SEO is not a one-and-done deal. It's something you should continually improve upon. You should treat this On-Page SEO Template as a living, breathing document that will help guide your SEO strategy for months (or years) to come.

Editor's Note: This post was originally published in October 2012 and has been updated for freshness, accuracy, and comprehensiveness.

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