As of today, I do-follow

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Photo by foshie

I’ve decided to change my comment links from no-follow to do-follow.

If you don’t know what this means, I can sum it up like this: Most often, when you leave a comment on a blog, that’s it. Even though your comment has a link to your website, Google won’t recognize that link, and you get no reward.

Conversely, with do-follow, you can leave a comment on my blog and I’ll reward you by sending you a tiny little bit of Google juice (that’s a good thing!). Now obviously a do-follow link is something other bloggers want, so while I’m expecting a few more people to comment, I’m also expecting a lot more spam.

Because I moderate all comments by people on my site, this means I spend time reading what you have to say. So in exchange I expect you to play by the rules. Here they are:

  • Links to offensive sites. If you wouldn’t let your kids look at your site, I don’t want to know about it.
  • Scraper site links. If you’ve decided that stealing content from other people just to make money, you don’t deserve my links. In fact, you deserve to be shot at dawn.
  • General spam. I’m opening up my comments to do-follow in order to start a conversation. So posting a comment that reads ‘great post!’ doesn’t really do much for me. If you want to get published, write something worth reading.
  • Very few parents name their kids “Make money online now!”, so don’t try keyword sniping in your comments. Unless you publish your real name, you won’t get my link.

So the question is, do you have anything to say?

2 comments. Join the club.

Do you have the guts to interact with clients online?

Imagine a world where clients tell you exactly what they’re thinking. In this world, your clients don’t hold back. They give you hell when you let them down. And they praise you (sometimes) when you do things right. If you’re at all interested in building a great company, this should sound like a great idea?

Now imagine that this supplier/client interaction takes place online, where anyone can see it. A quick search on Google will show exactly what people think of your company and your products. Not so keen any more, are you? Traditionally business people haven’t seen any point in airing dirty laundry. They try to fix problems with clients quietly, making sure nobody else hears about it. But things have changed since the birth of blogging. People who feel like ranting just rant. And if you’re not around to fix their problem as soon as they hit the ‘publish’ button, you’re probably going to take some serious flack.

If you’re a small business owner or manager, I recommend this approach. Instead of hiding from your clients online, give them an outlet. Start a company blog and ask your clients to give you feedback. You’ll need to be on your toes to keep things under control but it’s actually quite enjoyable once you get started. And your new blog will help your company in a number of ways. For example:

  • As the company blogger, you can become a bit of a personality with your clients and suppliers. People like to hear a human voice.
  • Sure your blog will attract some negative feedback from clients. But negative feedback can be harnessed and turned around into great PR if you deal with problems quickly.
  • Publishing blog posts helps you get information out to your marketplace faster than your sales reps can.
  • Building a community of clients online gives you instant permission to market to them (just don’t overdo it).
  • Most blogging software has built-in systems to help you spread information, monitor feedback and gather the thoughts of your readers.

A good place to start is to research your competitors. Some of them may already be blogging. If they are, watch how they interact with their audience. You’ll soon see patterns emerging, like the number of RSS subscribers they have, the average number of comments each blog post attracts, the topics they write about and the tone of the writing.

If your competitors are blogging, join them. If they aren’t, start now before they do and get the advantage of being the first person in your industry with the guts to grow your business through public interaction.

No comments yet. Be the first.

How to get more blog comments

If you’re a regular Copyblogger reader, you’ll know that yesterday’s guest post by James Chartrand made mention of a really simple way to improve interaction with your blog visitors.

The premise is that finishing your post off with an open-ended question, rather than just a statement, gives your reader a reason to interact with you, hence attracting more comments and helping you to build your online community.

Told you it was simple, didn’t I? (not much of an open-ended question, but I’ll work on it…)

One comment so far. Your turn.

About me

Welcome to thinkdave.com, owned and managed by Dave Wilkinson.

I have been building and managing small business websites since 2003. I have an academic marketing background and 9 years experience as a business-to-business marketing manager.

I am a self taught web designer with a passion for helping small business owners grow their businesses online. Read more…

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