| date | "2026-02-07T00:00:00.000Z" |
| created | "2026-02-07T00:00:00.000Z" |
| name | community-culture |
| version | 1.0.0 |
| description | When the user wants to define, shape, or evolve their community's culture, values, norms, or identity. Also use when the user mentions 'community culture,' 'community values,' 'belonging,' 'community identity,' 'community norms,' 'community vibe,' 'inclusive community,' or 'community personality.' For moderation and rules, see moderation-governance. |
| tags | ["promotions","community-culture","skill"] |
Community Culture
You are an expert in community culture design and development. Your goal is to help users intentionally build a culture that makes members feel belonging, shapes behavior without heavy-handed rules, and becomes the community's strongest asset and moat.
Before Starting
Check for community context first:
If .claude/community-context.md exists, read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task.
Gather this context (ask if not provided):
1. Current Culture
- How would you describe the community's culture in 3 words?
- What behaviors do you see that you love?
- What behaviors do you see that concern you?
2. Aspirational Culture
- What kind of community do you want this to be?
- Who do you want members to become through participation?
- What should this community feel like to a new member?
3. Context
- What's your community type? (professional, creative, product, interest)
- What's the demographic/psychographic mix?
- Any cultural challenges you're navigating?
What Culture Is
Culture is the unwritten rules that tell members "how things work here." It's:
- How people treat each other when no one's moderating
- What gets celebrated and what gets ignored
- Who gets elevated and why
- What's tolerated and what's rejected
- How conflict gets handled by the community itself
Culture isn't what you write in your guidelines. It's what actually happens.
The data: Communities with explicitly defined and enforced cultural values retain members 40% longer than those without (CMX research). Stripe's internal culture of "written communication first" has been adopted by communities like Indie Hackers and Y Combinator's Hacker News — both known for high-quality discourse. The strongest communities have NPS scores 20+ points higher when members can articulate the community's values without seeing them written down.
The Culture Stack
Layer 1: Values (What We Believe)
3-5 core values that define your community. Not corporate platitudes — specific, actionable beliefs.
Weak values (too generic):
- "We value respect"
- "We believe in excellence"
- "Community first"
Strong values (specific and differentiating):
- "Strong opinions, loosely held" — we value passionate debate with openness to being wrong
- "Show your work" — we share process and struggles, not just polished results
- "Generosity > gatekeeping" — we share knowledge freely, no information hoarding
- "Real talk" — we give honest feedback, even when it's uncomfortable
How to find your values:
- Look at your best moments — what was happening? What behaviors made it great?
- Look at your worst moments — what was violated? What felt wrong?
- Look at who thrives — what do your best members have in common?
- Ask founding members: "What makes this community special?"
Layer 2: Norms (How We Behave)
Norms are the day-to-day behaviors that express values. They're more specific than values and more organic than rules.
Examples:
| Value | Norm |
|---|
| Generosity | When someone asks a question, people share resources and personal experience, not just links |
| Real talk | Feedback threads include honest critiques alongside encouragement |
| Show your work | Members share failed experiments alongside successes |
| Strong opinions | Debates stay focused on ideas, people tag their statements as opinions |
How norms spread:
- Founders and early members set norms through their own behavior
- Leaders model norms consistently
- Positive norm-following gets recognized and celebrated
- Norm-violating gets gentle redirection (not punishment, at first)
Layer 3: Rituals (What We Do Together)
Rituals are repeated activities that reinforce culture and create shared identity.
Culture-building rituals:
- Welcome ritual (how new members are greeted — this sets the tone)
- Celebration ritual (how wins are celebrated — what gets celebrated defines what's valued)
- Conflict ritual (how disagreements are handled — this is the real test of culture)
- Transition ritual (how members move up or move on — acknowledges growth and contribution)
See engagement-programs for detailed ritual design.
Layer 4: Language (How We Talk)
Every community develops its own language — inside jokes, terminology, phrases that signal belonging.
Elements:
- Terminology: Specific words for community concepts (member levels, programs, events)
- Inside references: Shared jokes, memes, or stories that create belonging
- Communication style: Formal vs. casual, emoji usage, tone
Don't force it. Language evolves naturally. Your job is to notice and amplify it.
Layer 5: Identity (Who We Are)
The strongest communities give members an identity — a sense of "I am part of [community]."
Identity elements:
- A clear "we" ("We are builders/creators/operators/learners")
- A common enemy or challenge ("We're fighting against [problem]")
- Shared mission ("We believe [industry/topic] should be [vision]")
- Visual identity (logos, colors, swag that members wear proudly)
- Stories of origin and transformation ("When we started... and now...")
Building Culture Intentionally
Start With Founders
Culture is set in the first 30 days by the first 30 members. Choose founding members whose behavior you want replicated.
Questions for selecting founding members:
- Would I want 100 more members who act like this person?
- Does this person naturally embody the values we want?
- Will they set the right tone without being asked?
Model It Relentlessly
The community team's behavior IS the culture. If you want generosity, be generous. If you want vulnerability, be vulnerable. If you want directness, be direct.
Members watch how leaders behave more than what leaders say.
Recognize What You Want to See
The behaviors you celebrate become the behaviors people replicate.
Recognition framework:
- Call out specific behaviors, not just outcomes ("I love how you gave detailed feedback on that draft" not just "great job")
- Make recognition public so others see what's valued
- Vary recognition methods (public praise, DMs, badges, features)
Redirect What You Don't Want
Before you enforce rules, try gentle cultural redirection:
- "In this community, we typically [desired norm]. Would you mind [specific ask]?"
- "Great enthusiasm! We usually keep self-promo in #promotions though."
- Tag a positive example: "Check out how @member handled this — that's the vibe we aim for"
Culture as Scale
Culture is how communities scale without losing their soul. Rules don't scale — there are always edge cases. Culture scales because members self-police based on internalized norms.
Signs of strong culture:
- New members adapt to norms quickly
- Members correct each other (politely) without moderator intervention
- People say "that's not how we do things here" as self-regulation
- The community feels consistent even as it grows
- Members describe the community to outsiders using the same language
Signs of weak or eroding culture:
- Norms are inconsistent (different behavior in different channels)
- Long-time members are disengaging
- Moderators are constantly putting out fires
- New members can't figure out "how things work"
- Members describe the community very differently from each other
Culture health benchmarks:
| Metric | Weak Culture | Strong Culture |
|---|
| New member norm adoption time | >30 days | <7 days |
| Member-initiated corrections (vs. mod-initiated) | <20% | >60% |
| Cultural consistency across channels | Members describe culture differently | Members use same language |
| Moderation incidents per 1K members/month | 15+ | <5 |
| "Would you recommend this community?" score | <30 NPS | >60 NPS |
Named examples: Y Combinator's Hacker News maintains culture at 10M+ monthly readers through a combination of flagging systems, guideline enforcement, and a culture of intellectual rigor that self-replicates. Indie Hackers' culture of "building in public" became so strong that the term entered mainstream startup vocabulary. Dev.to's culture of inclusive, beginner-friendly technical content differentiates it from Stack Overflow despite covering similar topics.
Evolving Culture
Culture isn't static. As communities grow and change, culture needs to evolve.
When to Evolve
- Community has outgrown its original norms
- Demographic shift in membership
- Community purpose has shifted
- Cultural problems are systemic, not individual
How to Evolve
- Name the change — be explicit about what's shifting and why
- Involve the community — culture imposed from top-down doesn't stick
- Grandfather gracefully — respect old culture while introducing new norms
- Be patient — cultural change takes 3-6 months minimum
- Lead by example — embody the new culture before asking others to
Inclusion and Belonging
Culture determines who feels welcome. Intentional inclusion means:
- Visible diversity in leadership, speakers, and featured members
- Multiple ways to participate (not just the loudest voices)
- Active invitation (reach out to quiet members, not just respond to active ones)
- Safe disagreement (people can dissent without being punished)
- Zero tolerance for exclusion (address microaggressions, not just obvious violations)
Task-Specific Questions
- How would members describe the community's culture today?
- What's one behavior you wish every member exhibited?
- What cultural challenges are you navigating right now?
- Do founding members still set the cultural tone?
- Has the culture shifted as the community has grown? How?
Related Skills
- moderation-governance: For enforcing cultural boundaries
- member-onboarding: For transmitting culture to new members
- community-strategy: For aligning culture with strategy
- ambassador-program: For ambassadors as culture carriers
- crisis-management: For when culture is tested by crisis