Community Building

Below are just a few ways you can add community building into your day-to-day life.

Sending cards and gifts

Everyone loves getting snail mail from friends and family. Itā€™s usually unexpected and reminds you someone is thinking of you. Holidays and birthdays are great excuses, but any day of the year will work. Gifts can be small, too - I once mailed hot chocolate packets to my cousinā€™s kids, and they arrived on a perfect snowy day!

 

Hosting gathering and workshops

I love creating experiences for friends - whether itā€™s a simple dinner party, a chocolate tasting, a beer tasting, or a movie night, it can be so fun to create a space for someone to escape their real life for a while. Recently, Iā€™ve started hosting workshops as parties as well - you can bring in a guest host who knows more on a subject that you and your friends want to know more about.

Writing quarterly email updates

My friend Justin gave me the idea to write email updates to friends periodically. I took the idea and ran with it and it has become my quarterly email newsletter to the people with whom Iā€™m the closest in life. This gives me an opportunity to connect with those people at least four times a year and whether they respond with one sentence or an equal-sized novella, it always makes my heart happy.

Being transparent

While this is not a super tangible thing, it is incredibly important in community building. In order to build trust, someone needs to start by giving a little, then the other person gives, and you grow from there. I have found that my transparency - about both positive and negative things - has been appreciated both with friends and in the workplace.

Introducing people to each other

This is one of my all-time favorite things to do. When I find two friends who have something in common, I make a mental note to connect the two if the opportunity ever arises. You can introduce people in person or through an email, but I always recommend getting an opt-in from both parties before sending the initial email to avoid awkwardness.

 
  • Introducing Different Groups of Friends ( post / podcast )

Masterminding conferences

I feel so privledged that this is something Iā€™ve gotten to do multiple times in my life. I learned a lot from these experiences - I recommend starting with your intended output and backtracking into how to get there, what resources you will need, and who can help give your guests a one-of-a-kind experience.

Asking icebreaker questions

Every party I ever host, and almost every meeting I facilitate, has an icebreaker question involved. While people roll their eyes at first, itā€™s usually the only opportunity to give every attendee a chance to speak individually, and who doesnā€™t love answering questions about themselves? (Tip: Give shy folks a heads up about the question.)

Listening actively

A second not super tangible thing, but an equally important part in community buliding. This is something Iā€™ve been working on in recent years - being present - not thinking about the next thing Iā€™m going to say, and not thinking about where I want the conversation to go, but rather hearing something for what it is. (Tip: Try coloring during meetings if you consistently find yourself distracted by your inbox.)

Sharing knowledge

Each time you bring people together, theyā€™re gathered around a common idea or a common thought, so why not just start with the knowledge? Crowd-sourcing information and reporting back efficiently and effectively on what youā€™ve found makes everyone smarter and can open the door for new conversations to be had.

Developing a personal RM tool

Iā€™ve worked hard to develop a personal relationship managing (RM) tool. Itā€™s currently a combination of a few sites and documents, but it helps me store everyoneā€™s contact information, recent communciations, and how I know people in one location. Currently a use a combination of Google Contacts, Google Sheets, and Postable and contains both people from my personal and professional worlds. Iā€™d love to hear how you keep track of it all.

Creating a stay in touch plan

Nothing can happen (consistently) without a plan in place. Each year I review my personal RM tool to see who I want to be staying in better touch with throughout the year, how I stay in touch with people, and who I should reach out to just to see how theyā€™re doing. By making this plan I have something to benchmark myself against all year.

Memory keeping

One of my favorite ways to build community is to build systems to keep memories. I have 1000s of photos, boxes of old cards and letters from friends, and a small binder for all of the paper accoutrements acquired during each friendā€™s wedding. Iā€™ve found that this is is a great way to connect with people later - when you pull up an old memory you can connect people to a prior time, place, and feeling.

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