Install
openclaw skills install @leooooooow/community-builderPlan, launch, and grow branded online communities on Discord, Facebook Groups, Reddit, or forums to turn buyers into loyal advocates who drive repeat purchases.
openclaw skills install @leooooooow/community-builderPlan, launch, and grow a branded online community on platforms like Discord, Facebook Groups, Reddit, or dedicated forums. This skill guides you through platform selection, community structure, content cadence, moderation frameworks, and engagement strategies that transform one-time buyers into loyal advocates who organically promote your brand.
| Decision | Strong | Acceptable | Weak |
|---|---|---|---|
| Platform selection | Data-driven choice based on audience demographics, engagement style, feature needs | Platform you personally use most | Default to Facebook Groups because it's easiest |
| Channel/category structure | 5–8 focused channels with clear purposes and progression logic | 3–4 basic channels covering major topics | Single general channel or 20+ unused channels |
| Launch size | Invite 50–200 hand-picked power users before public open | Open to full email list at launch | Wait until the platform has "enough" members |
| Content cadence | 3–5 admin-seeded posts/week with response SLAs defined | 1–2 posts/week with ad hoc responses | Post only when there's something to announce |
| Moderation system | Written guidelines, trained moderators, documented escalation paths | Basic rules posted, owner moderates | React to issues only as they happen |
| Engagement loops | Structured rituals (weekly threads, challenges, AMAs) tied to brand calendar | Occasional events when engagement dips | No recurring rituals; rely on organic conversation |
| ROI measurement | CLV comparison: community vs. non-community buyers tracked monthly | Engagement metrics only (likes, posts) | No metrics; "feels active" |
Clarify why the community exists beyond "to sell more product." The strongest ecommerce communities center on a shared identity or interest that the brand facilitates, not the brand itself.
Purpose archetypes:
| Type | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Interest hub | Community of practice around the hobby your product serves | Cycling gear brand → cycling training community |
| Outcome community | Members bonded by a shared goal your product helps achieve | Supplement brand → body recomposition community |
| Insider access | Behind-the-scenes, early product access, founder connection | Artisan brand → "founding members" with product co-creation access |
| Support network | Peer help and expertise, brand facilitates | Pet supply brand → pet health and training community |
Deliverable: One-sentence community purpose statement, primary audience persona, and secondary audience.
Match platform capabilities to how your audience already communicates.
Platform decision matrix:
| Platform | Best for | Weakness |
|---|---|---|
| Discord | Tech-savvy, younger audiences; async chat + voice + events | Learning curve; can feel empty without active members |
| Facebook Groups | Older demographics; existing Facebook users; SEO discoverability | Organic reach declining; algorithm can suppress posts |
| Reddit (subreddit) | High-trust peer discussion; strong SEO; self-moderation culture | Brand control limited; users hostile to overt promotion |
| Circle / Mighty Networks | Professional communities; gated paid communities; structured courses | Requires driving traffic; no built-in audience |
| Slack (free) | B2B-adjacent or professional audience | Message limits; feels like work |
After platform selection, design channel architecture with no more than 8 channels at launch. Each channel needs: a name, a one-sentence purpose, and a posting cadence.
Don't open to your full audience on day one. A cold empty community kills momentum.
Launch sequence:
Recurring structured content removes the blank-page problem and trains members when to show up.
Core ritual types:
| Ritual | Cadence | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Weekly intro thread | Monday | Onboard newcomers, surface new members to community |
| Featured member spotlight | Wednesday | Recognize contribution, model ideal behavior |
| Question of the week | Thursday | Seed discussion; low barrier to participate |
| Brand update / insider news | Friday | Exclusive content that rewards membership |
| Monthly challenge | Monthly | Participation spike; user-generated content harvest |
| Quarterly AMA with founder | Quarterly | Trust, transparency, loyalty signal |
Required documents:
Automated moderation:
Organic growth levers:
Retention mechanics:
Core metrics dashboard (monthly):
| Metric | Definition | Healthy benchmark |
|---|---|---|
| Active member rate | Members who posted/commented ÷ total members | >15% monthly active |
| New member retention | % of new members still active at 30 days | >40% |
| Content contribution rate | % of members who posted at least once | >10% monthly |
| Support ticket deflection | Support tickets before vs. after community launch | >20% reduction in 6 months |
| CLV delta | Average order value/frequency: community members vs. non-members | Community members >25% higher |
Inputs:
Community design:
90-day results:
Inputs:
Community design:
90-day results:
Launching too big, too fast — Opening to your entire list on day one creates a ghost town effect. New members arrive to silence and leave immediately.
Making it about the brand, not the interest — Communities where every post promotes a product feel like a mailing list. Center content on the shared interest your product serves.
No moderation plan — The first toxic interaction that goes unaddressed sets the community's culture. Have guidelines and response procedures before you launch.
Confusing activity with health — High post counts can mask one or two people dominating while the majority lurks. Track contributor diversity, not just volume.
Treating community as a marketing channel — Announcements-only posting trains members to ignore everything. The ratio should be at least 80% community value, 20% brand content.
Ignoring the onboarding experience — Members who don't post in their first 7 days rarely post at all. Design a specific first-week engagement trigger (welcome post, assigned buddy, first-post prompt).
No ROI connection — Without connecting community metrics to business outcomes (retention, CLV, support cost), community programs are the first cut when budgets tighten.
Over-moderating discussion — Removing posts that are mildly critical or off-brand trains members to self-censor. Authentic communities require some messiness.
Burnout from unsustainable cadence — Committing to daily posts is unsustainable. Build a content calendar and batch-create 2 weeks of seeds at a time.
Missing the transition moment — At ~300 active members, communities need structure that worked at 50 members to be redesigned. Plan for governance upgrades at growth milestones.