How to Grow Your Blog By Nurturing Your Community

Nurture your blog

There’s been much written about what makes a good blog community. Some of the smartest and best bloggers around have all shared their views, and they all make great points.

So I’m not going to talk about that today.

Instead, I’d like to offer some ideas on how you can best engage your blog community once you’ve started to grow one.

The great news is, with social media it’s never been easier to really connect with your readers and visitors. And since I’m a big believer that even just one single regular reader or subscriber is a community, then even if you’re a new blogger hopefully this will help.

It Doesn’t End with the Comments

One of the most immediate ways for any blogger to engage his or her community is via the comments section. After all, this is where you should be spending the majority of your blogging time (yes, much more than the actual blog writing itself).

Yet so many bloggers invite comments, answer them, then that’s it. This is the equivalent of just having your voicemail on and never taking calls. To really engage, try some of the following:

Valeria Maltoni frequently emails her commenters (manually – no auto-email program) to thank them for their comments. A great personal touch.

Twitter is a great way to continuously engage your blog community. Offer the option for commenters to leave their Twitter ID’s, and thank them via Twitter for their comment (with a link to the comment itself).

If you see a particularly great comment, why not ask the author to guest post and expand on their views? What better way to engage with someone than offering them the chance to engage further with the community itself?

Lead and Be Led

In his book Tribes, Seth Godin suggests that everyone has the capacity to be a leader. The same goes for your blog community – while you’re essentially “the leader” because it’s your community that people are becoming part of, why not offer everyone the chance to be a leader?

  • Always ask what your community would like to read about. This doesn’t mean you have to lose your own voice, but it does mean you can offer one for so many others.
  • Introduce polls to see what your community is thinking. This could be something as simple as a “Did you like this post” thumbs up or down, to a fully-fledged poll on the topic being discussed and what parts connected.
  • Consider adding a forum where your community can engage not only you but your other community members too. This is simple to do as well – just set up a Ning community, for example, and link to it.

These are just some of the immediate ways you can start to engage your blog community. There are many more, and ones that may be better suited to you (Google Friend Connect, for instance, also offers a hugely effective way for your community to engage each other).

The main thing is that you engage and really converse with the community that’s making your blog what it is. Otherwise, you may as well just have a static website.

And where’s the fun in that?

image: JarkkoS


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About Danny Brown

Danny Brown is an award-winning marketer and blogger. His blog is recognized as the #1 marketing blog in the world by HubSpot. Danny is also the author of The Parables of Business and the upcoming book Influence Marketing: How to Create, Manage and Measure Brand Influencers in Social Media Marketing.

  • http://about.me/jenniferlmacdonald Jennifer MacDonald

    Danny thank you for the tips.

    I really like “offer the option for commenters to leave their Twitter ID’s.” I think that is a great way to not only say thank you but get more publicity for your blog.

    • http://dannybrown.me Danny Brown

      Hey there Jennifer,

      Cheers, and glad you enjoyed the post. It’s funny – I just changed over the comments section last night from Livefyre back to the native WordPress comments, so I could use the likes of CommentLuv Premium, that uses the Twitter link option as well as some other cool features.

      Seems it was just in time for your comment! ;-)

      Cheers!

      • http://dr1665.com Brian Driggs

        I’m trying out the Twitter link this time, but I have to mention I just left a reply in a comment thread on my own site – powered by Disqus, by the way – and thought it was a nice touch to be able to link out to someone on Twitter as easily as typing a name in-line. (Pretty sure LiveFyre did that as well, but I can view/comment on Disqus via Blackberry.) ;)

        Here’s a poseur for you, mate. Rather than install yet another plugin on the WP site (or deal with limited functionality test driving a free version), I tried running a poll on our Facebook page. Pretty much a 1% take rate. Sound at all right to you?

        We’re also making regular efforts to ask our readers about themselves. In some respects, it’s akin to data mining (we might source new stories this way), but we’re really that interested in making our readers know how much they really matter in the world. Don’t have a number for it handy, but suspect we’re less than 3% take rate, relative uniques.

        Finally, we’ve got the forum in place, have what I feel is an excellent foundation for “gamification” through graduated ownership and perks, have seriously spent minutes marketing it, almost have it hidden behind a landing page, and still managed to pick up a couple new members. What are you thoughts on marketing such a community? Put a spotlight on it and sell it, or let the truly curious, genuinely dedicated readers (those who “get it”) find it and help us mold it as a sort of perk?

        Like me Twitter profile says, “Modifying car culture is more fun than modifying cars.” Cheers.

        • http://dannybrown.me Danny Brown

          See, this is what I love about you dropping by, mate – you always bring a ton of great stuff, both to add and ask. :)

          Yep, Livefyre offers the tweet option, and Facebook too (you use the “@” option when commenting). I do like the functionality of replying via email; especially when on a mobile phone. ;-)

          These are some great initiatives you have in place (the 1% sounds like a more than decent uptake for Facebook). I really like the idea of letting the community shape what your approach is – although staying conscious of not letting your vision be swayed because your community wants it to go one way is always the trick.

          Though sounds like you already know that and have plans in place to work with that… ;-)

          Cheers, sir, always a pleasure!

          • http://dr1665.com Brian Driggs

            No trouble at all, Danny. For 2012, I’m going to be focusing on hybrid auto-social-KM-journalism business-type work. The last two years spent laying foundations for ecosystems is proving a good use of time. As Hannibal said, “I love it when a plan comes together.

            Appreciate the feedback on the 1% FB take. Good to know I’m not crazy. Still, if it would take a 1000% increase in FB traffic to stand a chance of seeing just 100 survey respondents, I’m thinking surveys might not be the best use of our time at this end.

            And who was it who suggested the social web broke down like so:

            1% create
            9% share
            90% consume

            If that’s truly the case, methinks it might be valuable to think about how to track the sharing of content. I can easily spot the 1% creating (engaging), but if I don’t have that additional 9% sharing…

            Know what I mean?

  • http://elephantseyegarden.blogspot.com/ Elephant’s Eye

    You left LiveFyre? We have CommentLuv again!

    I see ‘thank you for your comment’ as spam. I remind myself it is the thought that counts, it is meant well. But I prefer to thank, by clicking thru to the commenter’s blog, and finding a post on which I can leave a comment. Weave another thread on the WWW.

    As you said – spend most of your time leaving comments.
    Diana of EE

    • http://dannybrown.me Danny Brown

      Hey there Diana,

      While I’d definitely agree that automated thank you (like Thank Me Later, for instance) can be seen as spam, the manual options as sent by Valeria aere completely different. They’re very personalized and you can see she’s taken time to craft each email.

      Completely with you on ading value to other bloggers via comments, though – cheers! :)

  • http://www.thejackb.com Jack

    I have been really happy with the results I am seeing from Commentluv Premium. Has been an exceptionally good tool.

    • http://dannybrown.me Danny Brown

      Cheers, sir – looking to see what the analytics bring back re. social shares and spam filtering, etc. :)

      • http://www.thejackb.com Jack

        It has cut down on my spam. The social sharing seems to be growing but if nothing else I have noticed that the number of comments per post is growing.

        Comments are a funny thing. I don’t view them as being currency or give them as much credit for social proof as some do, but there is something to be said for them showing engagement.

        • http://dannybrown.me Danny Brown

          For sure, and I think that’s where the real benefit of comments come in. Not so much social proof as social interaction and fostering of ideas – and can never complain at that, mate.

  • http://www.seogeekster.com/ SEO Blogging | Kira

    Hey Danny, these are a bunch of useful tips. Thanks for sharing these with us. And so I’m planning to boost my online community promotion. I’ll keep this page. Thank you :-)

    • http://dannybrown.me Danny Brown

      Cheers, Kira, glad you enjoyed, and feel free to drop back and share your progress. :)

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  • http://www.mildredtalabi.com Mildred

    Great blog post – I’ll certainly be taking on board your advice on the Twitter front but more so asking interesting “commenters” to guest blog.

    I don’t get mass amounts of comments on my posts but they do get shared a fair bit. How do you think I can encourage the comments also?

    Thanks

    • http://dannybrown.me Danny Brown

      Thanks, Mildred, and glad you enjoyed. :)

      Comments are funny beasts – sometimes the lamest blog posts can get hundreds of comments, while the smartest words receive a handful (or less).

      Aaron Lee wrote a great post on trying to attract more comments here:

      http://bestbloggingtipsonline.com/attention-comments/

      Hopefully that helps and the comments begin to pick up!

      • http://www.mildredtalabi.com Mildred

        Thanks Danny, as you can see I’m learning fast – I didn’t have a gravatar at the time of my last comment, but now I do! Thank you for the link to Aaron’s article, I’ll definitely check it out :-)

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  • http://www.seo-specialist.in/ SEO in Bangalore

    Wow Its an absolutely a wonderful way to grow blog without SPAMS :)
    Cheers

  • http://bangalore.seo-specialist.in/Bangalore-SEO-Services.html SEO in Bangalore

    This is why I love the blogging community – because people like you are interested in “collaboration not competition” and they see the community as a web of chain links linked together in support of one another.
    Well done my friend – I stand in support of you.