New month, some new branding for this series, and of course a new community to analyse.
Today, we're diving deep into the community strategy of the world's favorite toy brand. Read on to learn how Lego gets it right when it comes to independent fan communities, UGC challenges and co-creation.
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Lego has two main target demographics: kids and adult fans. Their website has a "kids zone" and a website for "grown ups", each with its distinct marketing, tone, look and features.
Similarly, Lego adapts its community offering to both of their target audiences:
If you want to get started with segmentation, most are based on:
Brands looking to build a community often forget to check if they already have one. Sure, not every brand generates a 'Lego' level of enthusiasm, but there are way more organic communities out there than you'd think (search for local groups, hero product fan pages, discount groups for grocery brands...)
Lego fans have been forming clubs and forums for 30+ years. The brand has been very smart in finding those existing communities and amplifying them.
Example: the Lego Ambassador Network is for admins of recognised communities or major content creators. Members can host meetings with other fans, talk with organizers worldwide.
Here, Lego gets to centralize feedback from hundreds of communities, share knowledge between community organizers, push local and branded events.
Focus on super users
Notice how the Lego ambassador platform had “53 members online” when we took the screenshot? This is key for us at TokyWoky. It's not just about engaging thousands of fans globally. The most powerful communities come from having a direct line to your most engaged ambassadors and empowering them to make the biggest impact.
Another way Lego brilliantly leverages existing communities is through acquisition. The brand acquired BrickLink last year, the biggest online community for adult fans of Lego.
The community has 1 million+ members, a highly engaged discussion forum and a successful online marketplace with 10,000+ sellers in over 70 countries.
Here, Lego gets to have a hand in the successful marketplace, source insights, get product ideas and generate UGC from people posting their creations.
Best practices when it comes to existing fan communities:
One thing we always look at in this series, is how brands generate community UGC at scale.
This is something the Lego team truly excels at. They build incredible momentum by framing it as creative and original challenges catering to specific segments of their audience.
The brand systematically reposts the best contributions to get even more engagement, and often get great press from it (meaning more brand and product exposure).
Here's a few examples:
Lego is also best in class for co-creation (Read our Glossier episode for another great example).
The concept is simple: people create a set they’d like to have built. When a set gets 10,000 upvotes from other customers, it gets made.
It’s the best (and risk-free) way for Lego to develop new products that will appeal to customers (similar to what Reebok recently did).
How to get started on co-creation with your customers:
Read more: how brands are turning loyal customers into brand advocates at scale
Thanks for reading! Tune in next month for a new episode. In the mean time, contact our team if you have a community project or read:
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