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Playbook: How to Build New Participation Habits After a Community Migration

Playbook: How to Build New Participation Habits After a Community Migration
# Community
# Format: Playbooks

Once the new community is live, the real work is helping members return often enough, and clearly enough, for new routines to take hold.

May 28, 2026 · Last updated on May 11, 2026
Patricia Feitosa
Patricia Feitosa
Joshua Zerkel
Joshua Zerkel
Playbook: How to Build New Participation Habits After a Community Migration
A community migration does not end at launch. In most cases, that is when the harder work begins.
Once the new space is live, members start making a series of small decisions. Should I log in. Is there anything useful here. Do I know where to go. Is this worth my attention today. If those questions are hard to answer, people tend to fall back on old habits or drift away altogether. That is why post-migration adoption is really about habit-building, not just onboarding.
This playbook is for community leaders, marketers, and program owners who have already made the move and now need to help members build new participation habits. The goal is to make the new community feel easier to return to, easier to understand, and more worth revisiting over time. Patricia Feitosa spoke about this directly in her session. For her team, the migration only really began once members had to start adjusting their routines in the new environment.

Make the first steps obvious

After a migration, clarity matters more than completeness. Members do not need to understand the entire platform on day one. They need to know what to do first and why it is relevant to them.
That is why strong post-migration experiences start with clear entry points. Patricia described this as helping people understand where to go and why. Her team connected the new community to touchpoints members were already used to seeing, including the website, LinkedIn, Slack before sunset, and the newsletter. Instead of expecting members to remember the new destination on their own, they kept putting it in front of them through familiar channels.
A clear entry point should answer three questions quickly:
  • Where should I go
  • What can I do there
  • Why should I come back
This is especially important for senior or time-constrained audiences. If the value is not visible right away, community drops down the priority list. A member should not have to click around to understand the point of the experience.
In practice, that can mean featuring one obvious discussion, one timely event, one useful directory path, or one simple next action instead of presenting every option at once.

Reduce decision-making friction

One of Patricia’s strongest points was that members needed fewer decisions, not more. The more they had to interpret the new environment on their own, the more likely they were to disengage.
This kind of friction often shows up in small ways. A label does not make sense. A page has too many choices. The right action is technically available, but not easy to spot. Members may not say any of this directly. They may simply stop returning.
That is why habit-building after migration depends on simplification. Patricia shared a useful example from her own rollout. Early on, the team realized members did not really know what “forums” meant, so they renamed that section “discussions.” During events, they also made the audience, timing, and access path explicit so members did not have to figure out whether something was relevant to them.
To reduce friction after a migration:
  • Use labels members already understand
  • Keep navigation language plain and direct
  • Limit the number of actions competing for attention
  • State clearly who something is for and how to access it
  • Make return behavior feel familiar and repeatable
The simpler the path, the easier it is for a routine to form.

Use repetition to support new routines

New habits rarely form because members saw one launch email or one onboarding post. They form through repeated exposure, reinforced value, and a steady rhythm of reminders.
Patricia spoke candidly about this, especially with a senior audience. The issue was not capability. It was attention. Her members were busy, juggling many priorities, and community could easily fall off the list if it was not clearly and consistently in front of them. That meant the team had to repeat the value more than they initially expected.
This is where many post-migration efforts break down. Teams worry about sounding repetitive, so they pull back too early. But from the member perspective, reminders are often what make the experience usable. If the community is meant to become part of someone’s routine, it has to show up often enough to earn that place.
Useful repetition can take a few forms:
  • A recurring “what’s happening” update
  • A predictable newsletter section
  • Regular reminders tied to event series
  • Direct outreach to relevant members
  • Repeated prompts tied to one clear action
The goal is not to create noise. The goal is to make the community easier to remember. Consistency helps members build expectation, and expectation is often the first step toward habit.

Make the space feel active and worth returning to

Members are more likely to return when the community already feels alive. A quiet or unclear space creates doubt. An active, useful space creates momentum.
Patricia described this as visible activity. Her team kept content moving, highlighted discussions at the top of the homepage, and did direct outreach to remind people that something interesting was happening. That mattered because members were much more likely to engage if they could immediately see that the space was active and relevant.
This is an important post-migration principle. New habits form more easily when members do not feel like they are arriving too early. If they land in a space that looks empty, unfinished, or inactive, they may assume it is not worth another visit.
Visible activity does not mean constant volume. It means making value legible. Members should be able to see signs of movement:
  • Current discussions
  • Recent event activity
  • Useful content updates
  • Evidence of peer presence
  • Clear paths into participation
Patricia also noted that her team adapted based on what members actually valued after launch. They did not begin with a heavy focus on events, but they learned that events mattered deeply to this audience because networking was such a strong driver. That insight helped them keep shaping the experience around real member behavior instead of sticking rigidly to the original plan.

Build habits with consistency, not force

You cannot force members to adopt a new community routine. You can only make it easier, clearer, and more worthwhile for them to do so.
That is why consistency matters so much after a migration. Patricia talked about creating recurring event series rather than relying too heavily on one-off moments. A repeated format gives members something to recognize and return to. It lowers the effort required to decide whether to engage because part of the pattern is already familiar.
Consistency also applies internally. Teams need to reinforce the same story, keep entry points clear, and stay responsive to feedback as habits begin to form. Post-migration adoption is rarely a single campaign. It is a sustained period of observation, reinforcement, and adjustment.
A practical way to think about this is simple: every return visit is a small vote for the new behavior. The job of the community team is to make that vote easier to cast again next time.

Key takeaways

  • Post-migration adoption depends on helping members build new routines, not just teaching them a new platform.
  • Clear entry points make it easier for members to understand where to go and why it matters.
  • Simpler labels, fewer choices, and more direct paths reduce decision-making friction.
  • Repeated reminders and consistent programming help new habits take hold over time.
  • Visible activity makes the new space feel useful and gives members a reason to return.

FAQ

What happens after a community migration launches?

After launch, the focus shifts to adoption. Members need help understanding the new space, finding value quickly, and building return habits over time.

How do you encourage members to return after a migration?

Make the first steps obvious, reduce friction, repeat the value clearly, and create visible activity that shows the community is alive and worth revisiting.

Why do new participation habits take time to form?

Members are balancing community against many other priorities. New routines usually require repeated reminders, clear value, and a consistent experience before they start to stick.

What helps a post-migration community feel active?

Visible discussions, timely events, current content, direct outreach, and recurring formats all help signal that the space is useful and active.
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