skills/frameworks/framework-community-trust/SKILL.md
Applies the Like-Know-Trust (LKT) framework to social media strategy, producing a sequenced trust-building plan that maps content types, community activity, and conversion tactics to each stage of audience relationship development. Invoke this skill when a client has low conversion despite reasonable reach, when a brand is new or rebuilding reputation, when promotional content is underperforming, or when a strategic layer is needed to explain *why* content should be sequenced in a particular order before selling. Particularly relevant in East Africa where relationship-based commerce means trust must be earned before purchase.
npx skillsauth add peterbamuhigire/social-media-skills framework-community-trustInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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SKILL.md; do not skip mandatory steps or required fields.references/ directory is added later, treat its files as the deeper source material and keep this SKILL.md execution-focused.Ask for all of the following before generating any deliverable:
The Like-Know-Trust (LKT) framework describes the sequence a stranger must travel before becoming a paying customer. It is not a funnel — it is a relationship arc. Skipping stages does not accelerate conversion; it destroys it. Cite: Bodnar and Cohen (2012) — the LKT model maps closely to their social media buying cycle, in which value must be given before a sale is ever attempted.
Like is the first stage. Before an audience will pay attention, they must find the brand worth following. Content at this stage is entertaining, practically useful, or emotionally resonant — it does not sell. A brand that opens with "buy from us" before establishing likability is asking for trust it has not yet earned. In East Africa, where word-of-mouth and community reputation carry enormous commercial weight, a brand that is not liked is not shared — and a brand that is not shared does not grow organically. Like-stage content creates the conditions for everything that follows.
Know is the second stage. Once the audience likes the brand, they want to understand it. This means sharing who the business is, what it stands for, how it works, who is behind it, and what it believes. Behind-the-scenes content, founder stories, values posts, and FAQ content all move audiences through the Know stage. A critically important commercial consequence of the Know stage is reduced price sensitivity: audiences that know a brand are buying a relationship, not just a product. This dynamic is especially pronounced in Uganda and the wider East African market, where consumers routinely pay a premium for businesses they personally trust.
Trust is the third and most commercially consequential stage. Trust is not declared — it is demonstrated through consistency, proof, and risk reduction. Social proof (reviews, testimonials, case studies), third-party endorsements (press coverage, certifications, awards), guarantees, and transparency all build trust. Only when trust is established does selling become natural and welcome rather than intrusive. In markets where online fraud and quality inconsistency are live consumer concerns — as they are across East Africa — the Trust stage is not optional. It is the gate through which every conversion must pass.
Apply this diagnostic to every new or existing client before recommending a content strategy. Score the audience on each signal. Identify where the strongest signals cluster — that is the current dominant stage. Identify where signals are absent — those are the gaps to close.
LKT Stage Diagnostic
| Audience Signal | Like | Know | Trust | |---|---|---|---| | Follows or engages with content passively | ✓ | | | | Tags friends in posts | ✓ | | | | Shares content to their own feed or stories | ✓ ✓ | | | | Comments and asks questions | | ✓ | | | Searches for the brand by name | | ✓ | | | Sends a direct message or WhatsApp enquiry | | | ✓ | | Submits a quote request or booking form | | | ✓ | | Purchases without additional reassurance | | | ✓ ✓ | | Recommends to friends unprompted | | | ✓ ✓ ✓ | | Complains openly and expects resolution | | | ✓ (high expectation = high trust) |
Interpretation: A brand with high reach and engagement but low conversion is typically stuck at the Know stage — audiences are aware and interested, but have not yet accumulated sufficient proof to act. Apply Trust-stage content to close this gap. A brand with strong conversion but poor organic growth is typically bypassing Like-stage content — it is selling to existing customers but not recruiting new audiences.
Map every piece of content to one LKT stage before publishing. If a content calendar has no Like content, the brand is not growing. If it has no Know content, the brand is not deepening. If it has no Trust content, the brand is not converting.
Like Content
Know Content
Trust Content
Apply the 10-4-1 rule (Bodnar and Cohen, 2012) as the practical LKT content mix for any active social media channel:
For most East African clients who currently over-post promotional content, adopting the 10-4-1 rule requires a significant structural shift in how they think about social media. Frame this shift clearly: audiences in Uganda are becoming more sophisticated and demonstrably less responsive to promotional content. They follow brands for value — not for advertisements. The 10-4-1 ratio creates the conditions of trust that make the 1 promotional post welcome rather than ignored.
Generate a sample 15-post content sequence using the 10-4-1 ratio, mapped explicitly to the client's current LKT stage and target conversion goal.
For clients who need to build trust faster — new brands, businesses recovering from a reputation issue, or organisations entering a competitive market — apply these five tactics in sequence:
playbook-reputation-management/SKILL.md for the full review request protocol.Track LKT stage progression using these platform-native metrics. Report monthly and use movement across the table to determine whether content sequencing is working.
| Stage | Primary Metric | Secondary Metric | Target Direction | |---|---|---|---| | Like | Follower growth rate (%) | Reach per post | Increasing month-on-month | | Know | Engagement rate (%) | Comments as a ratio of total interactions | Increasing; comments-to-likes ratio improving over time | | Trust | Enquiry rate (DMs, WhatsApp, forms) | Conversion rate (enquiry → sale) | Increasing; conversion rate rising quarter-on-quarter | | Advocacy | Unprompted tags and referral mentions | User-generated content (UGC) volume | Increasing; track via brand mention monitoring |
When Trust-stage metrics plateau despite strong Like and Know numbers, diagnose the gap using the Section 2 diagnostic and introduce one or more Trust Acceleration Tactics from Section 5. When Like-stage metrics are static, audit whether the content calendar has drifted toward promotional-heavy posting and rebalance using 10-4-1.
Apply within the Trust stage of the LKT framework. Trust is not a single state — it is built through three simultaneous dimensions:
All three dimensions must be active for trust to build. Empirical chain (Rageh, 2026): transparency → trust (β=0.730) → commitment (β=0.525) → engagement (β=0.413). This means transparency produces trust; trust produces commitment; commitment drives engagement — in that sequence, not simultaneously.
The LKT framework's goal is not trust acquisition — it is commitment building. Commitment is the strongest predictor of online engagement (Rageh, 2026). Add Commitment as the stage beyond Trust in the LKT arc:
Like → Know → Trust → Commitment → Advocacy
Commitment-stage community members do not merely trust the brand — they defend it, recruit for it, and return regardless of price fluctuation. Strategy at this stage: recognise committed members publicly, give them early access and exclusive involvement, and create participation structures (polls, co-creation, feedback panels) that make them feel ownership of the brand direction.
Use this taxonomy to map community amplifiers before prescribing a community engagement strategy.
| Type | Reach | Action Probability | Investment Priority | |---|---|---|---| | Connected Catalysts | Broad | Low | Low — wide reach, shallow engagement | | Passionate Publishers | Medium | High content output | Medium — content volume, variable quality | | Everyday Advocates | Narrow | High | High — most underinvested type | | Altruistic Activators | Narrow | Maximum loyalty | High — deepest brand attachment |
Most community strategies over-invest in Catalysts (macro-influencers) and under-invest in Advocates and Activators (micro and nano advocates). The Fan Elevation System prioritises moving community members up the engagement ladder — from passive follower to Advocate or Activator. Identify Everyday Advocates through their unprompted brand mentions, peer referrals, and comment quality, then activate them through direct recognition and exclusive involvement.
Community trust strategies must be calibrated by generation. Do not apply a single trust-building approach across audiences spanning multiple age cohorts (Rageh, 2026):
Include this generational calibration as an audience segmentation layer in the persona work (see 03-audience-personas) when the client's audience spans multiple generations.
Consult these related skills when building the full client deliverable:
05-social-media-strategy/SKILL.md — the overarching strategy skill; use framework-community-trust as the trust-sequencing layer within the broader strategy10-content-pillars/SKILL.md — map LKT stages to content pillars once the diagnostic is completeplaybook-reputation-management/SKILL.md — required reading for the rapid review generation tactic in Section 5; contains the WhatsApp review request templateplaybook-ugc-strategy/SKILL.md — consult when Advocacy-stage metrics indicate an audience ready to produce user-generated contentKey references:
tools
Generates a foundational social media training guide for clients and their teams who are completely new to social media marketing, or who have been posting without any strategic understanding. Invoke when the user says "write a social media basics guide", "create a beginner training document", "the client doesn't understand social media", "start-here training", or when a client needs to understand social media before any strategy or content work begins. Distinct from training-client-team (operational handover of an existing strategy) and training-diy-content (content creation for self-managing clients). This skill covers what social media is, how it works, and how to approach it intelligently — the conceptual foundation that makes all downstream strategy work land.
tools
Generates a practical smartphone video production training guide for East African clients and content teams. Covers shooting, audio, lighting, framing, editing, and platform-specific formats using only a smartphone — no professional equipment required. Invoke this skill when a client or their team needs to produce their own social video content and requires a hands-on, jargon-free training document tailored to EA field conditions.
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Generates a complete DIY content creation handbook for clients who want to manage some or all of their own content after the initial strategy engagement. Invoke when the user says "write a DIY content guide", "create a self-managed content handbook", "the client wants to manage their own content", or when a handover guide is needed at the end of a strategy engagement. Output is a self-contained reference document — not a training presentation — that the client keeps and uses independently.
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Generates a complete 2-hour in-person training workbook for a client's internal team — employees who will assist with content creation or community management. Invoke when the user says "create a team training guide", "write a staff training workbook", "onboard our internal team on social media", or needs a printable workshop document for client employees. Output is a structured, print-ready workbook — not a presentation deck.