10 Tips for Attracting More Comments
ByAre comments important to you and your readers?
A great article by Chris Garrett on February 20, 2006 is still very pertinent today. In his article, Chris lists ten things that a blogger should keep in mind while writing a post.
If I know my readers, I bet you can find one or two more things to add.
As I read through the list, I found that there are things that I am missing. Anything to make us better at what we do is greatly appreciated, don’t you think?
Here is the list from Chris…
- Ask! - Ask for people to comment, you are more likely to get comments if you ask for them. Sometimes people do not know it is ok to comment. Just because there is a comment form does not mean people automatically feel worthy to post a comment. The higher the profile of the blog or the less the person feels they “know” the blogger the less likely they are to comment. By “giving permission” they will feel more entitled to comment.
- Seed - Like a tip jar, people sometimes need a hint, get friends to comment to start the ball rolling and you might open the floodgates. On some blogs people like to be first, on others there is a hesitation period where they do not want to expose their opinion to early.
- Ego - People like to talk about themselves, provide the opportunity. They might not be experts in the topic but we are all experts in our own experience and we all know what we like. You know the famous phrase about everyone having an opinion. Sometimes it is nice just to give people the opportunity to brag.
- Links - Blogger’s and webmasters are always on the lookout for link opportunities. They might not be your ideal kind of comment but they might encourage others that it is ok to feedback. Allow link drops in your blog comment settings and do not use nofollow so the link visibly has value.
- Hint - Open questions are the best to get great quality answers, ie. “What do you think?”, but they can be intimidating. If you struggle to get comments it might be easier to give simple leading ideas for what people should say, eg. “Do you agree?”, “Are you for or against?”. “Yes, no, me too” are not great responses but at least they are a sign of life!
- Restraint - Resist the urge to make your posts too complete if you want to receive community input. That’s one of the great things about top ten lists, you have to stop at 10! Don’t put everything into the post, especially if you know your audience has certain expertise they are bursting to share!
- Usability - Sometimes people don’t comment just because they can’t! Make sure the comment form is obvious and easy to use. Also do not take the visitor to a different site in order to comment. The very worst culprits for this are the hosted services that not only take you to another site, they use a popup to do it. Why not inflict actual pain while you are at it?
- Open - While a blog with a true membership is more valuable, if you are having difficulty getting comments open up your comment settings to allow comments with out registration. We can get away with requiring registration because we knew we would get the comments, consider carefully if your blog can get away with it too, many can’t.
- Topic - If you want to attract comments then you have to pick your subjects. Some subjects people just do not have an opinion on, others you can’t stop people talking about. Current affairs are good but it needn’t be contraversial, politics and religion get people talking but can also send your blog down a path you might not want to go down. Press peoples buttons. You can endlessly recycle some topics, others are shortlived.
- Observe - Note the topics people often comment on, there might be a trend. Just be observant. Be on the lookout for topics people comment on and write about them.
Not every single post needs to get a ton of comments but if your blog never gets a single comment, then it will look unpopular and start a downward spiral. Hopefully using some of these tips you will turn it the other way and create a positive community snowball affect.
Now it is your turn. What do you think of these tips? Have you any other ideas? What has worked for you? Is there a topic that consistently gets comments on your blog? Let me know!
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6 Comments
February 22nd, 2008 at 11:28 pm
I realize that I’m a family blogger and I’m not into blogging to make a living from it. That’s fine with me. I’m happy with my little niche.
That said, my Sunday Dinner meme that I do every week and the occasional recipe or childhood memory post that I do generally have the most comments and hits for me. Of course I know that wouldn’t work for everyone.
Have you made it back to Florida yet??
Love and hugs,
Diane
February 22nd, 2008 at 11:49 pm
Some excellent tips. Great post.
February 23rd, 2008 at 12:32 am
Yes I made it back
and thanks to you too Rodney…
I will try to do these tips myself.
February 27th, 2008 at 8:07 pm
Unfortunately, those first 2 points haven’t worked for me. I’ve found that the posts with the most comments aren’t ones I’ve asked on at all. I used to try it all the time, but it’s useless. The results have been the same with fake comments, and people can often tell who wrote them anyway.
Tips 3, 4, and 5 are absolutely awesome and I’d add that commenting on other blogs (IE while stumbling) can have a great effect. 6-10 are a little more obvious (PLEASE don’t make me register, because I won’t), but vital nonetheless
February 27th, 2008 at 10:44 pm
Good read. Things that make sense but not so obvious. Thanks!
May 21st, 2008 at 8:37 am
[...] Participating in the community, sharing insights, experiences, and expertise are all what makes social media an energetic and innovative tool for communicating. Commenting on blogs gives people the sense that you are passionate and knowledgeable about a topic, interested in reaching beyond promoting yourself and your brand/product/company, and genuinely interested in what they have to say. It also says that you are open to criticism and conversation. [...]