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Are Blog Comments Dead? | Justin Levy

Justin Levy

Justin Levy Marketing and Social Media Home About Archives Contact Disclosures Newsletter Speaking Are Blog Comments Dead? Written on July 30, 2010 by Justin Levy in blog , community , facebook , interactions , social media , twitter 23 Comments - Leave a comment! Sometimes the comments are even better than the post.

Comments 220
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The Death of Blogging: Part 271

Ari Herzog

The fallacy of such reports by UMass Dartmouth is while the trend may be true for corporate blogs, it’s definitely not true for consumer blogs. He does write, “There’s no doubt that the blogosphere remains strong, at least for now. Recent comments Recent comments. Connect on LinkedIn today.

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The Death of Blogging: Part 271

Ari Herzog

The fallacy of such reports by UMass Dartmouth is while the trend may be true for corporate blogs, it’s definitely not true for consumer blogs. He does write, “There’s no doubt that the blogosphere remains strong, at least for now. I grant the Daily News editor that the news is not all grim. Connect on LinkedIn today.

Alltop 136
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How Transparent is Too Transparent?

Socialized

Setting aside literal definitions, what does “transparent&# mean? Comments about the company’s finances are regulated by FASB and the SEC. Everyone’s talking about transparency, but not many companies are really doing anything about it. There’s a reason for that, of course. Only an idiot is 100% transparent.

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What we can learn from blog firestorms.

Akamai Marketing

THEN it happens: SLAM BAM a snarky comment or worse, an outright attack. I’ve been watching closely as over the last couple of weeks two incidents on different blogs have caused an outright fury in the blogosphere, dividing a typically supportive group (bloggers) on different sides of the fence. They go cutting edge.

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Busting Facebook’s Most Widespread Myth

Convince & Convert

This reach is called “organic”, which means that it only records the views which result through no action of a friend (such as like, share, or comment). Organic reach only records views which are not the result of a friend’s action (such as like, share, or comment). The views that are a result of actions are recorded in “viral” views.

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Fetching Friday – The First Resources Mashup of 2010

Kikolani

Top 7 reasons people don’t return to comment on your blog. Stop earning money with my comments. How to get more exposure in the blogosphere. Do you comment on long or short posts ? Why comments build community on a blog. The definitive guide to sticking to your New Year’s resolutions.

Mashup 101