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Puzzle
Me This: Connecting Women to One Another, Part 2
BY Andrea Learned | 5-22-2001
In
Part 1, I took a "puzzler's" look
at connecting women to one another. I gave a couple of examples
of healthy networks that seemed to develop organically, forming
around mutual interests. In this second part, I had planned
on examining some of the more well-known women's community Web sites,
with the puzzle analogy in mind, but I have been so intrigued by
this particular site, womensforum.com,
that I decided to linger there.
My hope
is that by the end of this article, all of you online marketers
facing teeny-tiny budgets and tearing out your hair will thank me.
For what, you may ask? For reminding you what can be accomplished
by returning to the basics of puzzle building.
Here
goes...
I had
the chance to talk recently with Jodi Turek, president and cofounder
of womensforum.com, and was wowed by the large-scale collaborative
connecting of online women entrepreneurs that is taking place. These
women don't merely root for one another's businesses through cross-promotion
and content sharing; their sites, as a group, offer big-name advertisers/sponsors
unusual and powerful ways to reach women consumers.
It all
started in 1996, when 13 small women-focused online businesses --
mainly home-based and fueled more by passion than by any significant
income potential -- joined together to share leads and to cross-promote.
Today, womensforum.com is made up of more than 100 "partners" (notice
that they are not referred to as "affiliates" or "Web properties")
and is going strong, and the entrepreneurs who run them go out of
their way to help one another. Because the starter pieces were so
strongly linked -- practically glued together in mutual support
-- the thriving master puzzle has seamless integrity.
womensforum.com
is all about connecting women entrepreneurs and leveraging their
noncompetitive human nature to create something special and powerful
for their online businesses and their consumers.
A womensforum.com
visitor may frequent one partner site for help with her teens and
may end up on another partner site about financial planning or women's
health. So now we see not merely the puzzle edges of the womensforum.com
partner businesses fitting together across mutual business interests;
we see a massive 3D interlocking structure, including powerful relationships
with consumers, developing as well.
So, yes
-- the altruistic mission of womensforum.com is indeed the glue
that joined the 13 original sites based in various locations and
across many industries. And that glue continues to hold as these
online business owners, none of whom would have described themselves
as "entrepreneurs," have been able to leverage opportunities and
build an incredible community. They share content, cross-promote,
swap ideas, and generally support one another through email, discussion
groups, and even, occasionally, small "real-time" gatherings across
the country.
womensforum.com
has certainly become a place "where women hang out"; and with every
new customer, more partners sign up, and more advertisers hope to
join the community.
What,
specifically, is different about womensforum.com? Here are some
things:
- The
community provides content created by amateur writers, yes, but
these women (and a few men) are all experts in their respective
fields and know their topics first-hand.
- The
community of womensforum.com partners, as a whole, forms long-term
relationships with advertisers who fit their standards, not just
any brand willing to pay the fee. (February's "Valentine Diva"
campaign sponsored by BMG Music is a powerful example of the highly
customized advertising relationships possible with this model.)
- womensforum.com
has not spent a dime (that's right!) on advertising. Witness the
mind-boggling power of tapping into how and where women connect
to one another rather than trying through ads to drag women over
to your site to check out your brand.
- And
(fanfare here...) womensforum.com partners, even those in the
same channel, are not competing, but collaborating. They know
each other, drive traffic to one another's sites, share content,
and offer business and personal support. womensforum.com partners
encourage and inspire each other to make connections with outer-edge
puzzle pieces, finding even further strength in numbers.
Before
you suspect that I've been paid to write this piece, I will allow
that womensforum.com may look like just another site with multichannels
to appeal to all women. After all, aren't women online getting more
savvy and heading for the "boutique" or specialty sites because
they've become experts in searching for exactly what they need?
Yes. But even the most branded women's communities have been criticized
for trying to be everything for all women -- and have been slow
to figure out what to do about it.
But,
somehow, each of the mini puzzle sections that form womensforum.com
is thriving on its own, all the while together forging ahead toward
master puzzledom through great relationships and collaborative synergies.
Who'd
have thought that noncompetitive mutual support could be so innovative?
Keep an eye on womensforum.com as it makes further progress in the
"supersizing" of a puzzle of connections.
©
2001, ClickZ, Inc., all rights reserved, used by permission of ClickZ.
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