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~ Version 3.0 ~
Welcome
"I've got big goals, but nobody seems to understand what the hell I'm talking about."
The frustration tenses your muscles.
"Maybe Im just talking to the wrong people...but I dont know who else to talk to or where to find them."
Zoom ahead into a future where you've managed to find people who are interested in your community. Now you have a new problem. People chime-in and agree with you, and sometimes even suggest their own ideas. But when the time comes for rubber to meet the road, you're the only one taking action. You second guess yourself, thinking:
"I don't want to go through all of this hard work if nobody else cares enough to pitch in or show up."
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It feels like youve been through hardest parts, but you still dont have much to show for it as youd hoped. You've exhausted your best resources to get this community started, but very few (if any) of your attempts have felt like the successes youd envisioned. Doubt and anxiety set in.
"This might be my last chance to get this right. If it doesn't work, I don't know what else to do."
"This is a lot of fun, but I don't know how long I can maintain the momentum."
You feel a hint of burnout after a successful event, as you shuffle across the room, getting the room ready for tomorrow. You wish to yourself that someone would have stayed to help tidy up, even if it was only just so you had someone to talk to about how great the event was. But youre known as the person who gets things done. Specifically, people know they can come to you for help. Every time you meet, you greet them with a smile and they smile back... right before they ask for your help with something.
Sometimes, it feels like nothing could get done without me having a hand in it.
Welcome
When the community was younger, people seemed to care more about how they could help each other than how others could help them. People have learned that being a member of your community means access to bountiful resources, but the once-vibrant relationships between members has dulled in the face of a new what can you do for me? attitude.
I love helping people, but Im starting to feel like people take more than they give. It feels like some people only show up when they need something.
Theres no time to rest and feel bitter. New communities are forming every day and if you miss a beat you might start losing members to competing groups. You scramble to create more events. Better events. More things for people to interact with and to participate in. How many more times can you raise the bar? You reassure yourself that things have been working out so far... but anxiety sets in when you realize that youre not entirely sure why things work out, or if theyll keep working out your way.
"I wish I knew why some of the things I do for the community work out great, and why other things dont. I feel like I just keep getting lucky."
Breathing a tired sigh, you start to wonder if anyone else notices that you've been playing it safe. You dont want to lose the magic you know the community is capable of, but you know that you cant keep doing the same things to get there. You take a moment to be completely honest with yourself:
"I'm tired and not as excited as I used to be. But I'm afraid to change the formula. I've worked too hard to risk it all."
Welcome
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The skills and habits needed to successfully communicate with, organize, and lead the people in a community towards a common goal are some of the hardest to learn without a lifetime of trial and error. Without these skills and habits, you find yourself spending too much time convincing and reminding. You spend a lot of time guessing and worrying. You spend more energy fixing than making. And even when you do feel the win of a success, its too easy to misattribute factors of your success. Success isnt repeatable unless you know why you succeeded.
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Community Participation
How can you tell which farmer has been working in the fields and which one has been napping in the barn? The working farmers have dirt covering their boots, not just on the soles. Being on a mailing list and paying a monthly membership is like being the farmer whose boots only have dirt on the bottom. When you observe your community, you want to be able to see and measure the growth of participation amongst your members.
Community Connections
How many contacts are in your address book? How many of them have you spoken to in the last year? How many in the last month? Who in that list would you call or email if you needed something? Who in that list would you take time out of your day to spend time with even if there wasnt a specific reason? Community connections, like participation, are only measurable when they are active. This network is alive. True relationships trump wider networks. Your member roster, Linked-in groups, spaces, events or discussion lists facilitate connections, but its you that must do the work to maintain them. Its up to your community members to maintain those connections for themselves, with your help and facilitation. You want to be able to see and measure the growth and persistence of these connections between your members.
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Community Empathy
Its natural for a group of people to have disagreements and misunderstandings. Empathy isnt the lack of these rifts, in fact, its quite the opposite. Community empathy takes place when members think about the community and the other members. This sounds deceptively simple, so dont be fooled. When someone puts himself in the shoes of another member in order to make a decision, thats member empathy in action. Nobody in the community, especially you the community leader, is exempt from the importance of this factor. This is why the first lesson has you take on the perspective of being a member rather than the role of being a leader. Empathy is the hardest factor to measure, especially over time, since so much of it happens silently. Instead, youll learn to recognize the halos of community empathy in action - and youll learn to encourage them. These three factors: participation, connections, and empathy are built into the core of The Community Builder Masterclass.
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1. Take-home Lectures
The lessons in this course correspond to four key perspectives, or points of view, that you'll learn and practice to use while becoming a Master Community Builder. The perspectives are interlocked, with each one building on the results of using the perspectives before it. Its common for your personal strengths to draw you closer towards a perspective you're already comfortable with. Similarly, youll likely try to resist another perspective that you know will challenge you. This feeling is natural, but its yours to manage. Your success will come from practicing & using all of the perspectives. The lectures themselves are delivered via PDF (like this document) and over email. You will receive email prompts and due-dates for completing the reading assignments. In the Masterclass, youll read the lectures on your own so that we can spend our time together on exercises & discussion.
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Tip: Take Real Notes Don't just read the lessons - print them out and take notes. Make highlights. Mark them up! Many PDFs have a wide right margin specially to give you room to take notes. And when you're done marking them up, snap them into a 3 ring binder for easy reference later. Get friendly with double-sided printing to save paper! This tip might sound strange, but the act of physically highlighting (with a marker, not a mouse) and writing margin notes will help you study. Your brain processes your own handwriting differently than you process printed text. As someone who hates his own handwriting, trust me, I wouldnt recommend this if it didnt work.
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You might encounter a lesson or a workbook and think, That doesnt apply to me. I already know how to do this part. This voice in your head is trying to sabotage you. Do not listen to it. Everything in this course is in this course for a reason. The lessons and workbooks in this class are interlocked, so skipping a workbook or not doing it completely because you already know the answer, is a sure-fire way to get lost or stuck in a later lesson. Youll complete the workbooks by a due date and then submit them to the classroom email list for review, discussion, and coaching. Skipping the discussion over each workbook or not submitting answers to the list not only hurts your learning experience, but it takes away valuable learning experiences from the other students enrolled. Unsure of your answers? Share your struggles with the group and well work through them together. Submitting something is better than submitting nothing. You might have breakthrough realizations that aren't specific to the workbook questions. Note those ideas while theyre fresh in your mind so that you can share them on the Google Group once youre done with the homework.
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Theres only one way to actually embed a routine in your brain as a habit, and that is practice. You need repeated and focused practice of the right routine in between your cue and your reward.
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The important thing to remember about creating and changing habits is that you must first identify your personal cues and rewards for your old routine. Only once you know your cues and rewards, you can practice a new routine between them until it becomes wired into your brain in place of the old routine. Your cues and rewards are personal to you, so we cant tell you what they are - but we can help you find them. That means that this isnt a kick back, read the lessons, do the homework, chat with classmates kind of class. Its rigorous, challenging, and sometimes frustrating. But the payoff is bigger than just community building.
Honestly, I didn't really know what to expect coming into the class, but...it's given me a totally different view on literally everything I'm doing. - Conrad Decker, September 2012 Alum
Just knowing what the process is wont help you when youre in the heat of community building. You need to put in the practice, and build the new habits in order to kick ass. Its not magic. Conrad put in a ton of work. You can too.
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4. Email Discussion
One of the most valuable components of this course cant be found in the lessons. It lies in the discussion which will take place in our email list during the course. The list is not for lecture, thats what the lessons are for. The list is yours for discussions, and you dont need to wait for one of us to start a thread about something you wish to talk about, share, discover, or explore. No points are awarded for attendance, your participation is key. The value you get out of the course is proportional to what you put into it. Think of this class as a community that you're playing an active part in building. This communitys purpose is learning together. So at ANY time, you can send an email to the Google Group with an idea or a question. Dont stress yourself out about impressing anybody - your participation is all we need to be impressed.
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Sweet.
Before we go any further, I want to welcome you to the Community Builder Masterclass. Any questions? Drop an email on the discussion list or email masterclass@indyhall.org