Communities of Interest

A community of interest (or practice), is a group of people who share the same interests and who come together to network and to share knowledge, information and best practice.

They exist inside and outside of workplaces. In workplaces they often form around specific role types. For example, larger organisations might find that cross-divisional communities form in relation to specific role domains such as project management, marketing or finance.

These role types typically also have communities of interest outside of work, most commonly through their trade bodies and associations.

Learning More

You might also be interested in facilitation and team building, or world cafes, lightning talks, birds of a feather meetings or fishbowl meetings.

Communities of interest can be especially powerful in larger organisations, when individuals with specialist skills can find themselves isolated in divisional silos. They may also be helpful at an industry level when they span across multiple organisations.

Overall, we think they’re useful things that build capabilities, relationships and networks within specific areas of knowledge. We think organisations can benefit from supporting them.

Sources and Feedback

This post is a stub and has been informed primarily by our experiences over our careers and does not reference any specific sources.

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