If someone comments on your blog post via Facebook, respond to their comment on Facebook. Simple. 5. Use Google Analytics, a stats-tracking application that provides detailed information about who’s visiting your blog, where they’re coming from, and what blog posts are getting the most ...
Submitted by Guest on Mon, 10/30/2023 - 15:15 Permalink Re: Meet all the Vendors at This Weekend’s China-CEEC Food... It was a big dissapointment about the food, really cannot understand why is difficult t check the recipe and to make a similar taste (doesn't need to be the ...
To broaden the options available for you to allow others to share their comments on your own blog posts, you have the ability to quickly turn on Disqus comments (available through Disqus.com).To set up Disqus comments either go to the Blog Settings button at the bottom of your blog, or ...
I comment too. Something in the original blog or a reader’s response stimulates my imagination or memory or my tiny little fund of logic. Something you write bumps into my brain, which bounces back with a “Yes, and…” Out comes a thought that builds on yours, ...
As most of you know, I do not delete comments as a matter of policy. Spam comments do get deleted as do some that are offensive (name calling, bad language, etc.) or useless (like "great post.") But I usually error on the side of keeping as many comments up as possible. Even th...
On the other hand, some artists handle stress by retreating to their studio to create new work or begin a new series. Other artists are wrapping their brains around career development projects that will be launched in the future – once the crisis has passed. As many therapists have pointed ...
Use Twitter to jump start your travel blog. Title some posts in the form of a question. Be controversial. Keep in mind however that generating discussions on your blog will take time and some patience on your part. Eventually you’ll learn with the ebb and flow of each post wh...
Long comment threads on blog posts are a mixed blessing. It is great to have stirred up such great community discussion. But anything beyond, say, 20 comments is beginning to get beyond what anyone is willing to actually read. What likely happens is people read the article, read the first...
Here’s one random observation - (almost) nobody comments directly on blog posts these days. It seems that all the conversations happen somewhere else - Reddit, HackerNews, Twitter, Facebook, you name it. My blogs always had commenting turned on, but I rarely got any comments, even on bl...
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