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LEVERAGE
SOFTWARE’S COMMUNITYCONNECT PLATFORM
Hosted Solution for Customer-to-Customer “Matchmaking”
By Matthew D. Lees, June 21, 2007
NETTING
IT OUT
Online
communities can be dynamic environments for solving problems, strengthening
relationships, extending brand reach, fostering innovation, connecting customers,
and more. While a community is much more than the technology that supports
it, it’s tough to build a lasting, vibrant community without the right
tools. As customers’(and your own!) demands for features and capabilities
increase, the importance of having a good platform—and the expertise
of the company behind it—only increases as well.
Leverage Software
was founded in 2003 with the express purpose of improving customer-to-customer
communication. Its primary product, CommunityConnect, is a community platform
that is built around its matchmaking engine. It comes “out of the box”with
an intuitive, user-friendly interface that offers a broad, if not especially
deep, feature set that includes member groups, discussions, blogs, chat,
private messaging, scheduling, and matchmaking.
A hosted service,
CommunityConnect requires little or no technical expertise to configure and
manage. Its templates, syndication engine, and Web Services APIs allow for
relatively easy extensibility for those with the resources, the inclination,
and (perhaps) the need to go beyond the basics.
CommunityConnect
currently supports over 150 communities, ranging in size from 300 to 50,000
members. These include InfoWorld’s “ITExec-Connect”and
Salesforce.com’s “Connect On Demand”communities.
CommunityConnect’s
price tag puts it in the running for most organizations. Some improvements
are certainly warranted—we’d particularly like to see better
search functionality and reporting tools—and much is reportedly in
development, with Version 5.8 to be released soon. But we do recommend CommunityConnect
as a platform best for supporting focused, topic-based communities for which
connecting with other members is a core requirement.
EVALUATING
LEVERAGE SOFTWARE’S ONLINE COMMUNITY PLATFORM
Building
a Community Using Leverage Software
To build a successful
online community—whether your members are looking primarily for answers
to questions, for fellowship, for opportunities to interact with your brand,
or for fun—it is crucial to match your business goals to the platform
you use.
While your long-term
goals should be large, your community will likely start out small. (In fact,
it’s almost impossible not to start out small.) In this
regard, the technology platform you use should comfortably support the needs
of your small nascent community. But the platform should also be able to
grow with your community in terms of both functionality and technological
infrastructure.
This report applies
our online community evaluation criteria[1]
to the CommunityConnect platform, from Leverage Software. Keep in mind that
we have developed our criteria to evaluate platforms for enabling any type
of community, whether the focus is on service and support, developer collaboration,
social or professional networking, and so on (or, what is typically the case,
some combination of the above). Solutions that we analyze have often been
optimized for just one of these specific uses. Leverage Software’s
online community platform, CommunityConnect, has been built primarily for
small- to medium-sized communities for which networking and matchmaking are
fundamental. These are online communities in which members expect to have
focused conversations around specific topic areas, and to meet and connect
with other community members. Professional-Peer Communities (or Communities
of Practice), for example, fit this bill.
OVERVIEW
OF LEVERAGE SOFTWARE
Leverage Software
was founded in 2003 by Mike Walsh, CEO, and Joe Kleinschmidt, CTO. It was
developed in response to the poor company-to-customer and peer-to-peer communication
and collaboration that Mike Walsh observed while managing a boutique software
consulting firm.
Leverage Software’s
products are its CommunityConnect and EventConnect platforms. The platforms
have similarities, with EventConnect enabling communities that are specifically
related to events such as conferences. If your company wants to surround
customer events with online communities for pre- and post-conference engagement,
you might want to consider adding EventConnect to your evaluation. However,
this report focuses on the CommunityConnect platform (which does have some
event-specific capabilities, such as scheduling), for an apples-to-apples
comparison of online community services.
Online communities
running on CommunityConnect range in size from 100 to 100,000 members. A
typical community is on the order of 2,500 members.
Leverage Software’s
clients are found in a variety of industries (see Table A), clustered primarily
in high-tech, media, service firms, and associations. Clients include Apple,
Microsoft, Hewlett-Packard, Oracle, Salesforce.com, The New York Times, Time
Warner, Ziff Davis, InfoWorld, The American Marketing Association, and the
Institute for International Research.
Select
Leverage Software Technologies Customers
(Please download the formatted PDF for the table at http://www.psgroup.com/detail.aspx?ID=832.)
Table A. Leverage Software’s customers cluster primarily into four
market segments: associations, high-tech, media, and services.
In April 2007,
Leverage Software made it easy to purchase CommunityConnect by offering a
Web-based 15-day free trial of its Enterprise Edition for up to 300 members.
Standard services offered in this package include “Visual Social Networking”(see
Illustration 1 for the People Map from Salesforce.com’s “Connect
On Demand”Community), personal profiles and community contact management,
calendaring, private messaging, community search, and RSS and email notifications.
Optional features at no additional cost include group collaboration with
file sharing, live chat, polls, and blogs.
People
Map from Salesforce.com’s “Connect On Demand”Community

Illustration 1. CommunityConnect’s People Map helps members find
others in an interactive, visual, and fun way, using filters (checkboxes)
based on
member profiles.
Leverage Software
has close ties with Salesforce.com. One of its investors is also a leading
investor in Salesforce.com, and CommunityConnect can be found in Salesforce.com’s
AppExchange marketplace.
EVALUATING
COMMUNITY PLATFORMS
Evaluation
Criteria
Our framework
for evaluating online community platforms includes the following six top-level
categories (see Illustration 2):
•Capabilities
within a Community
•Community Participation
•Moderation and Administration
•Architecture
•Product Viability
•Company Viability
Online
Community Evaluation Framework

Illustration 2. This illustration shows the top-level criteria and their subcriteria
for our online community platform evaluation framework.
Requirements
from Key Customer Scenarios
As we do our evaluations,
we think in terms of Customer Scenarios—sets of tasks that customers
(or, more broadly here, stakeholders) would ideally like to do in order to
achieve desired outcomes. These scenarios become the foundation on which
our platform evaluation criteria are based.
We see five distinct
groups of people that become involved in your community, look to get something
out of their participation, and have a stake in its success. They are 1)
your customers, 2) community moderators, 3) community administrators, 4)
subject-matter experts, and 5) business sponsors.
Table B lists
Customer Scenarios for each group. In the third column, we assess how successfully
CommunityConnect addresses each of these scenarios.
How Leverage
Software Addresses Online Community Customer Scenarios
(Please download the formatted PDF for the table at http://www.psgroup.com/detail.aspx?ID=832.)
Table B. This table presents Customer Scenarios for five groups of key
stakeholders that are dependent on an online community platform (our online
community platform
criteria are derived from these customer scenarios). The third column contains
our assessment of how successfully Leverage Software’s online community
platform addresses each scenario.
CAPABILITIES
WITHIN A COMMUNITY
An online community
platform should support a variety of communication channels between and among
members and your company. It should make it easy for your customers to find
whatever they’re looking for. And it should provide a mechanism for
members to rate the value of the content they create, and for people to be
recognized for their contributions.
Our framework
contains four criteria for evaluating a platform’s community capabilities:
•Communication
Channels
•Collaboration Methods
•Search
•Reputation Systems
Communication
Channels
We informally
define a communication channel as “a medium for conversations.”A
robust platform lets community owners choose from a variety of communication
channels—discussion boards, blogs, chat, messaging, and scheduling—to
meet the needs of the community. Each channel has its own strengths and limitations.
A platform needs to provide at least one channel, but more offerings are
better, even if the community manager decides not to implement them all.
Our Take
on Leverage Software’s Communication Channels
Before addressing
communication channels, it’s important first to explain the framework
in which CommunityConnect’s communication channels exist.
CommunityConnect
enables communications both among groups of community members and between
individual members. The construct that enables communication and collaboration
is the group. Discussions are held within the confines of a group, files
are submitted to a group, and meetings can be scheduled for the group. Illustration
3 shows a selection of groups from InfoWorld Magazine’s “ITExec-Connect”community.
What’s different
and interesting about this construct and that of other community platforms
is that the community members create the groups, and, therefore, they create
the organization of topics. In most other communities, the community administrator
predefines how discussion topics are organized.
It’s easy
enough for a member to create a new group. The member who creates the group
is the owner and decides if the group is public or private. For private groups,
owners receive requests for group membership, which they can approve or disapprove.
For public groups, new members are added automatically when they join. Both
group owners and group members can choose to be notified via email or RSS
when there’s something new in the group (see section below on Notifications).
What’s not
so straightforward is determining whether or not a group already exists that
is similar to the potential new one. This is one of the disadvantages of
having a member-created organizational construct. So, if a member is interested
in a specific topic, she can simply create a new group on this topic, even
if one already exists. To check this first, she would either need to search
for appropriate key words that may be in the group’s name, description,
or content within, or scroll through the entire group listing (which is chronological
by creation date). Leverage Software reports that it is working to make this
process more intuitive.
DISCUSSIONS. As
mentioned above, discussions within CommunityConnect are associated with,
and found within, the community’s groups. On one hand, this provides
consistency, by aligning groups and discussions together. On the other hand,
it means that discussions are not centralized, the way they commonly are
in other platforms, with hierarchical category listings. This makes it more
time intensive to browse through discussions, especially across groups.
In addition, discussions
are linear; there is no threading of conversations. This limits the complexity
and scope of discussions and makes them more difficult to navigate. Members
do have several methods for finding and participating the conversations of
interest to them (i.e., via search and RSS and email notifications), but
we’d still like to see the option for threading discussions.
That said, the
discussion interface is crisp and clear, so conversations are easy to read,
rate, and add to. Social tagging features slated for an upcoming release
should help even more.
*Endnote*
1) See “Framework for Evaluating Online Community Platforms: How to Evaluate
Solutions that Enable Online Customer Communities,”by Matthew Lees, October
12, 2006, http://www.psgroup.com/detail.aspx?ID=761.
*Endnote*
This report
continues...
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