Rosie Sherry

I’m Rosie Sherry, I build communities and I'm the founder of Rosieland. AMA 🔥

by
I’m Rosie Sherry and I’ve been building communities for quite some time! I’m here to answer anything and everything I can about community building. Here are some of the things I’ve done: - I started back in 2006 with a local Girl Geek Dinner Meetup - I founded Ministry of Testing, an indie, 7 figure revenue and profitable community of practice for software testers. I handed this community over for someone else to run (I did not sell it). - I led the community at Indie Hackers for a couple of years - I started Indiependent, a small community for indie founders where people get kicked for inactivity - I’ve been writing about community at Rosieland (covering community growth, flywheels, Minimum Viable Communities, Community Discovery, and much more!) - I breathe, eat, sleep community Ask me anything about community, I can cover things like: - Tools to use, or not - Community on a budget - Community as a business - Minimum Viable Communities - Community Discovery - Community Growth & Flywheels - Building a sustainable community - Community trends - Why so many people are getting community wrong! I'll be answering questions on the 7th of September!
98 views

Add a comment

Replies

Best
Abhilash Sankaramanchi
Currently building a product community for Web3, any insights on Community Growth especially for early stage startups?
Rosie Sherry
@_abhitweets think in terms of community flywheels https://rosie.land/tag/flywheels/
Benjamin Lucas
good
Hi Rosie, what's the biggest driver of communities that's consistent and at the core of what you have observed since 2006?
Asmitha Rathis
Hey Rosie! I had a question on how you manage your communities. I wonder if you have issues with lots of questions and onboarding users into communities. We are currently helping community managers answer repetitive questions so they can spend their time connecting with users in a more meaningful way. Checkout QueryPal, we would love your feedback to see if it would actually be useful.