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	<title>Web Savvy PR &#187; How To PR</title>
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		<title>Web Savvy PR Tip #4 Comment Before You Link</title>
		<link>http://websavvypr.com/online-pr-tip-4-comment-before-you-link/marketing-pr-and-social-media-strategies/pr-tips/admin/2009/02/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Feb 2009 20:27:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>CathyLarkin</dc:creator>
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Do You Think before you link? After you Think &#8211; Commenting before you post a link can be a great online PR tactic
This is a part of my how to series on Twitter.com: #WebSavvyPRTip 4: Think B4 U Link: Commenting on a post B4 you link 2 it can be a good PR strategy.  [...]


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<h2><strong>Do You Think before you link? </strong>After you Think &#8211; <strong>Commenting before you post a link can be a great online PR tactic</strong></h2>
<p>This is a part of my how to series on Twitter.com: #<a href="http://search.twitter.com/search?q=%23WebSavvyPRTip" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" title="Search Twitter for &quot;WebSavvyPRTip&quot;">WebSavvyPRTip</a> 4: Think B4 U Link: Commenting on a post B4 you link 2 it can be a good PR strategy.  <a title="click for more Web Savvy PR Tips" href="http://websavvypr.com/category/pr-tips/" target="_blank">http://websavvypr.com/category/pr-tips/</a> 4 more</p>
<p>Before posting the link of <strong>someone else&#8217;s good blog post</strong> to a <strong>social networking or social bookmarking site</strong> (like Twitter, Digg, Delicious, Facebook or other such sites) &#8211; <strong>think</strong>. If it is a post that <strong>fits the interest of your audience</strong> (readers, customers, clients, friends) <strong>consider commenting on the post <span style="text-decoration: underline;">before</span> you link to it</strong>. Then your audience gets to see you <span style="text-decoration: underline;">sharing </span>your POV, hence expanding the reach of your brand or company, and also gets exposed to a great blog post that may be of interest to them.</p>
<h3>Now, this strategy will have it&#8217;s detractors, and can be misused.  Hence my &#8220;think before you link.&#8221;</h3>
<p>First &#8211; be sure it is a <strong>topic you are interested in</strong>, your readers are interested in, and that your comment can a<strong>dd something to the conversation</strong>. Feel free to comment on any blog you want, but if you are looking to expand the reach of your brand &#8211; by using this technique: <strong>by commenting, then posting the link on a Social Networking site in which you have built a communit</strong>y<strong> </strong>- choose wisely. Be thoughtful/selective about the posts to comment on and link to. Is it in your area of expertise? <strong>Will it help find new readers/clients</strong>? Will it look like you are trying to horn in on someone else&#8217;s territory. This may sound cold, or calculating, <strong>but done right, it is a  four way win/win situation:</strong> for you &amp; your audience, and for the blogger and his or her readers.</p>
<h3>The <strong>Pros</strong> of commenting on the right post before lining to it:</h3>
<ul>
<li>It <strong>creates opportunities for conversation</strong> &#8211; or engaging with people &#8211; and that&#8217;s the foundation of social networking.</li>
<li>It <strong>builds your brand</strong> (when you fill out the comment form on the blog &#8211; fill in your name or social media username and your website/blog URL).</li>
<li>It also <strong>establishes your credibility</strong> &#8211; allowing you to <span style="text-decoration: underline;">share</span> your expertise briefly, and exposes that blog&#8217;s readers to your point of view, as well as your own audience. <strong>Think share, not show-off.</strong></li>
<li><strong>It shares the love </strong>- the interactivity of comments are the solar power that makes this &#8220;social media electricity&#8221; work. It&#8217;s a part of what separates a static website from a dynamic blog. It&#8217;s also a way to &#8220;pay it forward&#8221; as they say.</li>
<li>It can help <strong>build a connection</strong> with another blogger, be they big-wig, newbie or just another blogger like us, or even with another person who commented on the post too.</li>
<li>Many folks have said that social networking sites are killing blogs &#8211; that people comment on Twitter and Digg, and not on the blog itself.  Sure it happens, <strong>but why not do both</strong> &#8211; I have seen them act <span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: &quot;Times New Roman&quot;;">synergistically </span>or work well <strong>together </strong>to move a client&#8217;s brand forward.</li>
<li>Everyone likes good comments on their blogs, it. <strong>But be sure it is a &#8220;good comment.&#8221;</strong> <strong> </strong>I suggest <strong>not </strong>writing a throw away comment like &#8220;great post&#8221; (although I enjoy getting these on my blog too, and they are fine for the new or shy person commenting early on, but that is under-utilizing the potential power of comments )<strong>. Good comments add value to the conversation; they move it forward.</strong> That is, they provide <span style="text-decoration: underline;">useful information</span> that either <span style="text-decoration: underline;">expands on the original post</span>, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">provides additional info on the idea</span>, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">confirms the original post with additional info</span>, or provides a <span style="text-decoration: underline;">different POV on the subject</span> among other things. <strong>Think &#8211; would you like to see a comment like this on your own blog, might it get more people to engage here, on this blog?</strong></li>
<li>If more folks did this, <strong>it might increase the interactivity on many blogs</strong>. If you have gotten used to the 140-160 character limits on Twitter (and Facebook/Linked in Status updates), it gives you a chance to briefly expand on an idea.</li>
</ul>
<h3>The <strong>Cons </strong>of commenting on a post before linking:</h3>
<ul>
<li>You can be seen as a <strong>Comment SPAMMER</strong> That is &#8211; <strong>don&#8217;t comment something bland and put a link to your own site</strong> &#8211; that&#8217;s the basic definition of  <strong>&#8220;Comment SPAM.&#8221;</strong></li>
<li><strong>Your comments are &#8220;searchable&#8221; via Google</strong> <strong>&amp; Yahoo</strong>- your comments can show up when a <strong>prospective client searches for your name/company</strong>- make them count.  If you tear into a blogger with a different POV than yours, it can come back to haunt you. That client seeing your venting may decide they don&#8217;t want to work with someone like that; or by being taken out of context; or by starting a &#8220;flame war,&#8221; a series of comments back and forth that begins to remind you of the schoolyard when you were ten. <strong>Intelligent healthy debate &#8211; builds your brand integrity</strong>, peeing matches are just that.</li>
<li>Think &#8211; <strong>would you like to see a comment like this on your own blog? </strong>Or is it the equivalent of the guy who comes to the party and talks so loudly about his own &#8220;stuff,&#8221; that people start avoiding him. Don&#8217;t be the blow hard.</li>
<li><strong>Read the other comments on the blog post,</strong> be sure you are not duplicating what others have said already, or if you are weighing in &#8211; reference other comments above &#8211; to show you read them, and are not a spammer.</li>
<li><strong>As your brand&#8217;s audience grows</strong>, if you ONLY comment on blogs where it is sure to <strong>drive traffic back to your site </strong>- that is a kind of link bait or comment SPAM- and can diminish the quality of your brand in your own audience&#8217;s eyes, or in that of a prospective customer, and that blogger.</li>
</ul>
<h3><strong>So &#8211; Think before you Link, and Comment First if Appropriate:</strong></h3>
<ol>
<li>Comment on appropriate blog posts in ways that expand your brand, and add value to the conversation;</li>
<li>Then post the link to your favorite social media or social networking site (How to do this effectively may be fodder for another post);</li>
<li>Don&#8217;t forget to <strong>check the blog&#8217;s comment stream</strong> <strong>later </strong>(many allow you to sign up to receive e-mail when more comments are made). Someone may be trying to <strong>engage you in further conversation</strong> &#8211; that&#8217;s when you know you&#8217;ve hit the right note. <strong>Don&#8217;t be a hit-and-run commenter.</strong></li>
<p><strong></strong></ol>
<p>Feel free to share your @<a href="http://twitter.com/twitter" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" title="View twitter's Twitter Profile">twitter</a> name or Twitter link when commenting on my blog. That does not equal spam for me; It helps further opportunities to connect.</p>
<p>By Cathy Larkin, www.WebSavvyPR.com, find me on <a title="find me on twitter a social networking site" href="http://twitter.com/CathyWebSavvyPR" target="_blank">Twitter</a>; I am an online and traditional PR consultant, with 18+ years of Public Relations experience, and a social media guide. I help individuals and small businesses find the right strategies and tools for their business to expand the reach of their brand. I can help you: create a blog  or add one to your existing website; learn to use social media tools and social networking software to get the word out about what you do; and help you reach out to traditional media outlets to tell your story. 484-802-7576, See my blog for other social media sites I am on and how to contact me.</p>


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