Strategy: Micro-Communities
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Use when
- Guides a consultant in designing and activating a niche community strategy for a client — covering Facebook Groups, WhatsApp Communities, LinkedIn Groups, and private forums that serve the brand's audience rather than broadcasting at them. Invoke this skill when a client wants to build a owned community space, shift from page-based broadcasting to community-centred engagement, improve customer retention through belonging, or generate leads through trust networks.
- Use this skill when it is the closest match to the requested deliverable or workflow.
Do not use when
- Do not use this skill for graphic design, video production, software development, or legal advice beyond the repository's stated scope.
- Do not use it when another skill in this repository is clearly more specific to the requested deliverable.
Workflow
- Collect the required inputs or source material before drafting, unless this skill explicitly generates the intake itself.
- Follow the section order and decision rules in this ; do not skip mandatory steps or required fields.
- Review the draft against the quality criteria, then deliver the final output in markdown unless the skill specifies another format.
Anti-Patterns
- Do not invent client facts, performance data, budgets, or approvals that were not provided or clearly inferred from evidence.
- Do not skip required inputs, mandatory sections, or quality checks just to make the output shorter.
- Do not drift into out-of-scope work such as code implementation, design production, or unsupported legal conclusions.
Outputs
- A structured markdown document, plan, playbook, or strategy ready for client-facing or internal use.
References
- Use the inline instructions in this skill now. If a directory is added later, treat its files as the deeper source material and keep this execution-focused.
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Required Input
Ask for all of the following before generating any deliverable:
- Client business name and industry — e.g., "Kampala Bakers Ltd — food and beverage"
- Country/city — default Uganda/East Africa if not specified
- Primary audience — who would join this community, and why would they join? Be specific about demographics, shared interests, and motivations
- Business objective — what should the community achieve? (customer retention, lead generation, product feedback, brand advocacy, or a combination)
- Moderation capacity — how many hours per week can the client or their team dedicate to moderating and posting in the community?
- Existing community — does the client already have a Facebook Group, WhatsApp group, forum, or informal community? If yes, describe its current state (member count, activity level, problems)
- Platform preference — Facebook Group, WhatsApp Community, LinkedIn Group, or private forum? If the client is unsure, apply the decision framework in Section 2
Section 1 — Community vs Audience
A brand audience receives content passively. Followers on a Facebook Page, subscribers to an email newsletter, viewers of a YouTube channel — the brand broadcasts and the audience consumes. The brand controls what is posted, when it is posted, and who sees it. Growth is measured in reach and impressions. The relationship is one-directional.
A community is a group of people with shared interests who interact with each other, not only with the brand. The brand facilitates; members generate value for one another. A question posted by one member is answered by five others before the brand responds. A success story shared in the group inspires three more members to try something new. The brand does not fully control the conversation — and that is precisely what makes the community credible. Growth is measured in engagement depth, member retention, and peer-to-peer interactions.
Why this distinction matters for East African clients: in Uganda and across East Africa, community is not a marketing tactic — it is the cultural norm. People trust networks, referrals, and shared group membership far more than brand advertising. A Ugandan consumer is more likely to act on a recommendation from someone in their WhatsApp group than on a sponsored post. A brand that builds a genuine community earns a level of trust that no advertising budget can replicate. The POEM model (Chaffey, 2024) classifies community as Owned media, but a thriving community generates Earned media — peer-to-peer advocacy — at scale.
Section 2 — Platform Selection
Apply this decision framework to select the right platform. If the client has expressed a preference, validate it against the criteria below before proceeding.
| Platform | Best For | EA Suitability | Moderation Load | Monetisation Options |
|---|
| Facebook Group (public) | Discovery-led communities, broad topics | High — Facebook has the widest reach across all EA demographics | Medium | Facebook Stars, paid subgroups |
| Facebook Group (private) | High-trust communities, exclusive access | High | High | Paid membership |
| WhatsApp Community | Operational, high-engagement, mobile-first | Very high — WhatsApp is ubiquitous in Uganda and EA | Very high | Not native — link to external offer |
| WhatsApp Group (single) | Small, high-trust groups under 1,024 members | Very high | High | Not native |
| LinkedIn Group | Professional/B2B communities | Medium — LinkedIn penetration is lower in EA outside formal sector | Low–medium | Lead generation |
| Telegram | High-privacy, tech-savvy audiences | Low–medium in EA outside the tech sector | Low | Paid channels |
| Private forum (Circle, Mighty Networks) | Premium, paid communities | Low — requires strong existing brand equity to justify sign-up | Low | Subscription revenue |
Selection rules:
- If the client's audience is broad, consumer-facing, and based in Uganda, default to Facebook Group (private) for trust or Facebook Group (public) for discovery
- If the client needs high-frequency, mobile-first communication with a small trusted group, use WhatsApp Community or a WhatsApp Group
- If the objective is B2B lead generation or professional credibility, use LinkedIn Group
- If the client has an existing loyal audience willing to pay for exclusive access, evaluate Circle or Mighty Networks
- Never recommend a platform the client cannot moderate at the required load — a dead community is worse than no community
Section 3 — Community Strategy Design
Produce all five elements below for the client. Each must be specific to their business, audience, and objective.
3.1 Community Purpose Statement
Write one sentence answering: "This community exists so that [audience] can [do/achieve/experience something specific]."
The purpose must be member-centric, not brand-centric. "This community exists to promote [Brand]" is an audience, not a community.
Example: "This community exists so that Ugandan women entrepreneurs can share practical advice on running a business while raising a family."
Test: Read the purpose statement aloud. If it could be replaced with "follow our page," reject it and rewrite.
3.2 Member Profile
Define the ideal member precisely. Vague member profiles produce communities that are useful to no one.
Include:
- Demographics (age range, location, gender if relevant)
- Professional or life stage context
- Shared problem, interest, or aspiration
- What would motivate them to join and stay active
Example: "Ugandan women aged 25–45 who own an SME with 1–5 employees, have been operating for at least one year, and are looking for peer support and practical business advice — not inspirational content."
3.3 Member Value Proposition
State three specific things a member gains from this community that they cannot get anywhere else. Generic answers ("connection," "support") are not acceptable.
Example:
- Access to other vetted business owners in the same sector who share real numbers and real challenges — not curated highlight reels
- First access to the client's new product launches, promotions, and free resources before the public
- Monthly Q&A sessions with the brand founder or invited expert, exclusive to community members
3.4 House Rules
Every community must have written house rules published in the group description and pinned as the first post. Adapt the template below to the client's community:
- Introduce yourself when you join — tell us who you are and what brought you here
- Share your knowledge and experience freely — this is a giving community, not a selling community
- No spam, unsolicited promotion, or advertising without prior admin approval
- Treat every member with respect — no harassment, personal attacks, discrimination based on gender, religion, ethnicity, or any other characteristic
- Do not share false or unverified claims, particularly regarding health, finance, or legal matters
- Tag the admin if you see a post that violates these rules
- Consequences: first offence → admin warning via private message; second offence → post removed; third offence → permanent removal from the group
3.5 Community Content Rhythm
Communities require consistent content from the admin, especially in the first three months. Apply this weekly rhythm:
| Day | Post Type | Example |
|---|
| Monday | Opening question or weekly prompt | "What is your biggest challenge this week? Drop it below — let's help each other." |
| Wednesday | Educational post, how-to, or resource | A short tip, checklist, or article relevant to the community purpose |
| Friday | Celebration post | Member spotlight, wins of the week thread, or a success story submitted by a member |
| Daily | Active moderation | Respond to all member posts and comments within 24 hours; welcome every new member personally |
In Month 2 and beyond, reduce admin posts to three per week minimum once member-generated content is sustaining the feed. Never drop below three admin posts per week in the first six months.
Section 4 — Community Launch Sequence
Follow this week-by-week launch guide. Adapt timelines only if the client has a compelling reason.
Week 0 — Pre-Launch Setup
Set up the group with a complete description, cover image direction (brief for designer), and house rules. Write the welcome post before a single member joins. Identify the founding members — these are 10–20 people the client knows personally, respects, and trusts to set the culture. Founding members are not random followers; they are selected.
Week 1 — Soft Launch
Invite founding members personally via direct message — not a mass broadcast. Post the welcome message. Publish five posts this week to fill the feed before other members see it. Ask founding members to introduce themselves. A community that launches to an empty feed dies immediately.
Week 2 — Activation
Post one question designed to generate replies (not likes). Respond to every comment within 24 hours. Send a direct message to any member who joins but does not post: "Welcome! Tell us a little about yourself and what brought you here." This single action dramatically increases early engagement.
Week 3–4 — Growth Push
Begin promoting the community externally: post about it on the brand's Facebook Page, send a WhatsApp broadcast to existing contacts, include a link in the email newsletter. Continue daily moderation without exception. Highlight founding member contributions publicly to set behavioural norms.
Month 2 Onwards
Post a minimum of three times per week. Spotlight one member per week. Run one Q&A session or live discussion per month. Begin tracking member growth, post engagement rate, and the ratio of admin posts to member posts (the member-post ratio should increase steadily — aim for 60% member-generated content by Month 4).
Section 5 — Monetisation and Business Integration
Map how the community generates measurable business value. Apply the ROI formula — (TLV − COCA) ÷ COCA (Bodnar and Cohen, 2012) — when reporting community returns to the client.
Lead generation: Pin a post in the group header linking to a lead magnet, free consultation, or exclusive offer. Members who enquire via the community are warm leads — they have already demonstrated trust in the brand. Track these enquiries separately from cold inbound leads.
Product feedback: Use the community as a free research panel. Post a poll or open question when testing a new product idea, pricing model, or service change. Members who contribute feedback feel invested in the outcome and are more likely to purchase.
Brand advocacy: Active community members recommend the brand in other WhatsApp groups and Facebook Groups — the most high-value form of earned media in East African markets. Track referral source data on new enquiries and attribute community-sourced referrals explicitly.
Paid community tier: For clients with strong brand equity, introduce a paid members tier with exclusive benefits: early product access, private Q&A sessions, premium downloadable resources. Use Circle.so or Mighty Networks as the platform. Price in UGX at a level accessible to the target member — test at UGX 20,000–50,000 per month before scaling.
Community-to-sales funnel: Map the member journey explicitly:
New member → Engaged member (posts or comments within 30 days) → Warm enquiry → Customer → Advocate
Track how many sales per month originate from community membership. Report this figure to the client monthly. A community that cannot demonstrate a conversion pathway within six months needs a strategy review.
Section 6 — EA-Specific Considerations
Apply all of the following as defaults when working with Ugandan and East African clients.
Platform priority: Facebook Groups are the dominant community format for scale in Uganda. WhatsApp Groups and WhatsApp Communities are the preferred format for high-trust, high-frequency communication with smaller audiences. Do not default to LinkedIn unless the client's audience is explicitly professional and formally employed.
Language: Large EA communities naturally mix English and Luganda, or English and Swahili, in their posts and comments. Do not suppress this. Mixed-language posts signal authenticity and belonging; correcting members' language register damages trust. The brand's own posts should maintain the tone established in the community purpose, but member language is member-led.
Mobile-first design: The majority of community members in Uganda access Facebook and WhatsApp exclusively on mobile. Design all community content accordingly:
- No PDF attachments — use typed posts or images with embedded text
- Break long posts into short paragraphs with line breaks between each
- Keep videos under 60 seconds; subtitle all videos
- Use voice notes sparingly in WhatsApp communities — some members cannot play audio in public
Religious and cultural sensitivity: Uganda is a religiously diverse country. House rules must explicitly prohibit discrimination based on religion, ethnicity, and gender. Avoid scheduling major community events or promotions on Sundays (Christian observance) or Friday afternoons (Muslim Jumu'ah prayer). Acknowledge national holidays and mourning periods — posting promotional content during a national tragedy is a reputational risk.
WhatsApp administration: Appoint a minimum of two admins for any WhatsApp group or community — never rely on a single administrator. Define the admin response time commitment in writing before launch (e.g., "Admins respond within 4 hours between 7am and 9pm"). Admin burnout is the primary reason WhatsApp communities fail in EA markets.
Quality Criteria
Good output from this skill meets all seven of the following standards:
- The community purpose statement is member-centric, specific, and clearly distinguishable from a brand audience or broadcast channel
- The platform recommendation is justified against the decision framework in Section 2, with moderation load considered against the client's stated capacity
- All five community design elements (purpose statement, member profile, value proposition, house rules, content rhythm) are produced and tailored to the client
- The launch sequence is week-by-week, actionable, and accounts for the founding-member strategy
- Business value is mapped with at least three monetisation or integration pathways and a defined conversion funnel
- A complete house rules template is included, adapted to the client's community context
- EA platform defaults, language mixing, mobile-first design, and cultural sensitivity considerations are applied throughout
References
Consult these related skills when building or extending a community strategy:
| Skill | When to Use |
|---|
playbook-community-management/SKILL.md
| Detailed day-to-day moderation playbook, escalation procedures, and community health metrics |
platform-whatsapp/SKILL.md
| WhatsApp-specific tactics, broadcast list strategy, and WhatsApp Community setup guidance |
platform-facebook/SKILL.md
| Facebook Group optimisation, algorithm considerations, and Facebook Page integration |
meta-social-listening/SKILL.md
| Monitoring community sentiment, tracking brand mentions, and identifying emerging issues before they escalate |
Academic references:
- Bodnar, K. and Cohen, J. (2012) The B2B Social Media Book. Hoboken: Wiley
- Chaffey, D. (2024) Digital Marketing: Strategy, Implementation and Practice. 8th edn. Harlow: Pearson
- Kotler, P. et al. (2023) Marketing Management. 16th edn. Harlow: Pearson