Blog Commenting - Is it Becoming Obsolete?

On any given day, my blog comment spam filter throws more than 500 spammy blog comments into the digital trashbin.

I go through the remainder, and too a whole bunch more in as well. These are typically with the sender’s “website” listed as a squidoo lens with the lens title something along the lines of “/instant-money-bonanza” or “/5second-millionaire” and inevitably leads to a spammy/scammy page with a $27 ebook teaching you how to make $1,000,000 in your sleep, while sipping a margarita.

Right…

So if so many blog comments are ending up in the trash, especially if you have a vigilant editorial team checking the comment moderation queue, is it even worth taking the time to submit one?

puzzled

Let’s expand this a little wider and include forums and social networking/conversation sites like Facebook, Twitter, MySpace and even Yahoo! Groups too.

The primary goal in social marketing is to establish trust, credibility and competence.

You need to be able to give out information that is reliable, accurate and shows what you’re talking about.

On a social scale, submitting a comment about viagra, or free pron! or anime hentai, particularly on a scrapbooking blog is going to be way off topic. The only solution is to delete this digital trash.

On the other hand, if you’re submitting a comment like “Nice work” or “Good job” or “Great post”, aside from feeding the author’s ego, it does nothing to stimulate the conversation.

What’s the person supposed to do?

Say “Thank you” ? It’s still the end of the conversation.

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Now here’s where I may detract from other bloggers and writers…

I feel even as a reader, given the interactive and dynamic nature of the Internet, it is your responsibility to continue the conversation…

Huh?

That means if you’re choosing to participate in the conversation, you should strive to add some value to it - give a contrasting opinion (especially if you think the writer is wrong), cite how what’s being written about has been proven in the real world, give an example of how you’ve used, or failed to use a principle or technique being shared.

Even a one-way medium like Sam Harrelson’s Affiliate Fortune Cookie podcasts (famous for their 22 minute duration) give an opportunity to interact through the blog comments section.

It’ll be interesting to see readers start doing their own audio rebuttals or responses.

[Shawn Collins already features an opportunity to post a video response to his video blogging on his Affiliate Tip blog]

Likewise, YouTube fanatics have been recording numerous video responses to each other, especially with popular threads like the  Cris Crocker-Britney Spears tirade. [CONTAINS EXPLICIT LANGUAGE]

That particular clip has clocked up 1,957 video responses at last count.

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The bottomline in social marketing:

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