Blogging: Why Does My Blog Receive too Few Comments?

We can see if a blog is successful by taking into account various metrics: traffic, subscribers, back links etc. Another great way to see if a blog is developing a nice active community is to see how many comments the articles usually receive.

As bloggers, we love writing ‘for someone’ and having you comment on our articles gives us an instant feedback on our content and also allows us to understand how our audience is viewing our work. So, it’s absolutely normal for any blogger to really love seeing comments being made by their readers and to aim to get as many comments as possible from the community. But why do some of our blogs receive no comments or too few?

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Here are some possible reasons why your comment section is pretty bare:

1. You have no traffic (or it’s too low to matter)

It’s all about math. A 10 visits/day blog will be able to receive some comments (if it does receive them) and a 1k visits/day blog will surely attract more activity. When you start a blog or get more serious with it (my case), you’ll go from some dismal traffic to better numbers in time and you’ll probably notice that, as soon as your traffic picks off, more people leave comments.

Solution: make the math work in your favor, grow that traffic and you’ll increase the number of comments your readers leave.

2. Your articles don’t attract attention

When people enter your blog, they usually do it on the home page and start from there. If the articles they see don’t grab their attention, they probably won’t read the content and, not having read it, won’t comment. It doesn’t necessarily mean your content is bad, maybe they don’t find what they were looking for.

Solution: post quality content and make sure your articles solve a problem/offer some good information. It’s also wise to build your traffic as much as possible naturally, by doing good SEO and promoting on similar niche blogs. This way your visitors are already interested in your content and it’s easier for them to communicate, if the articles solve their needs.

3. Not all articles will get comments

As you post constantly for a while on various topics, you’ll notice that some of your articles don’t get any comments, while others have hundreds. How is this possible? Some articles are just not gonna attract too much attention. I have seen in the past that book reviews or anything pretty ‘complicated’ didn’t get me too much attention from my readers, while writing about something more frivolous or simple got me a ton of them. Some of my ‘serious’ work seemed to go unnoticed, while an article about why I think prostitution is wrong, or how I am pro-choice (or anything similar) would draw a lot of activity.

Solution: there isn’t much you can do about this. As long as you post good meaningful content, you’ll see different results and it’s normal. Instead of making your blog just a collection of ‘silly’ posts to get the audience crazy, focus on providing good useful content and understand that each article will behave differently.

4. You make them register accounts, you use Disqus and other comment plugins

I cannot understand for the life of me why would bloggers use this crap. WordPress has an amazing comment system in place itself and it had it like this for YEARS. All you need from your readers is their name, URL and email, plus their comment. That’s all. Why would you make your readers register on your site? 99.9% of the potential commenters will not bother register or read your articles again.

A blog is not a forum. We don’t want to have 300 accounts set up just to comment. I personally monitor over 120 blogs and do it daily. And I have just started building myself a nice bookmark collection with some blogs I love reading/commenting on. Do you really think I would register an account on them all? Is it worth my time?

I don’t comment via Disqus or similar plugins. I don’t have accounts there, I don’t need them. Yet another hoop I need to jump through just to post a comment. As mean as this sounds, it makes me leave the blog and not return anytime soon.

Solution: keep it simple. Don’t use Facebook comments, don’t ask people to register on your blog, don’t use Disqus. Leave WordPress alone to handle your comments, believe me it does a great job on its own.

5. You use captcha. And sometimes it doesn’t work

Speaking of hoops I need to jump through to leave a comment: there are many bloggers who feel the need to use a captcha with their comments, so that they prevent spammers from posting. In my opinion, the comment system needs to be as simple as possible to entice people to communicate via your community. Anything ‘extra’ will annoy them and make them waste time. Captcha is something else they need to take care of, sometimes they cannot see the letters properly and sometimes the wonderful system itself doesn’t work. This means after they have wasted precious minutes creating a meaningful response, said response won’t get posted, because the anti-spam plugin ‘caught a cold’. Not fun at all.

Solution: learn how to prevent spam and don’t bloat your blog with something that’s not gonna bring too much use. I have been blogging for more than 6 years and received tens of thousands of comments. I never had any spam comment get published without my approval and the ‘screening’ takes me 2 minutes. I can spare 2 minutes/day for you and not have you fill in a captcha field.

6. You’re on Blogspot or WordPress.com

Until recently WordPress.com were a pretty nice solution for many bloggers. Now they have lost their mind and messed with the comment system on their hosted blogs. This means that I cannot post under my regular email address (that also works nicely with Gravatar), since it would force me to enter my account on WP.com, which I don’t want to do. So, if I don’t want that to happen, I need to use another email address, which doesn’t have my Gravatar, since that would mean putting the email address in connection with my WP account etc. Blogspot was always one of the most horrid systems for someone who wants to comment and many bloggers have no clue how to set it up.

So, if I don’t blog on these free platforms it’s harder for me to post a comment and also use the URL field.

Solution: get your own self-hosted blog. It’s cheap and you can have great control over the entire platform. Not to mention you’d cater to even more bloggers/commenters.

7. You don’t allow your commenters to set their URL in comments

I am not talking about them posting links in the comment section, but to be able to fillΒ  in the URL field on the comment form. This means that, once someone clicks on their name, they’re taken to the commenter’s blog. It’s almost like a signature and a nice way for your readers to also DISCREETLY promote their blog.

You’ll probably think that people shouldn’t care abut this, but the reality is that MANY of your readers are also bloggers and find the feature to be useful. I personally let ALL my forum members use a signature and blog commenters fill in the URL field. Why? Because it’s my small way to give back to them for taking the time to read my articles and also provide their meaningful feedback.

Solution: let your readers use this feature. Don’t remove it, don’t ask them to pay for it, don’t make it hard. Your blog won’t suffer from this, but your readers will surely love the fact you have their interest in mind, too. Not to mention you can always click on their links and find some pretty interesting blogs for you to read.

8. There’s an aggressive clique in your community

I have seen this problem from time to time on few of the blogs I used to comment on. Some readers who were always commenting (which is not a bad thing per se) and almost formed a clique. Anyone new would be made fun of and sometimes even cursed at. As a general rule NO ONE comes to your blog to be abused, so having commenters attack others won’t make your blog popular for much time.

Solution: enforce good behavior on your blog. Anyone can contradict you or other readers, but they are not allowed to become disrespectful or aggressive.

9. You don’t seem to care about the comments posted on your site

While I don’t think one should reply to each and every comment readers leave on their blog, ignoring your community is not the solution. You’ll get some comments that really don’t need any response from yourself, but there are some that would warrant more explanation or an answer.

Solution: make your commenters feel welcome and appreciated. Tell them ‘welcome’ if they’ve posted for the first time, agree with them (if it’s the case) or respectfully disagree with their point of view. Seeing you active in the comment section too, will make your readers feel more appreciated and they’ll have an incentive to keep on ‘wasting’ time in your community.

10. You don’t approve their comments

One sign of a totally inactive blog is to keep comments unapproved for days (yes, I am now speaking again from experience, there were times I ignored the blog for weeks and it didn’t help my readership rise, if you know what I mean). Your commenters love to see their contribution appears on the site in a timely manner. Sure, they might not expect you to approve their comments in 2 minutes since they have posted, but keeping them wait for days/weeks will probably send them to more active blogs.

Solution: make time for your readers’ comments. Log into your blog admin panel at least daily and approve the new comments / reply to them. This will make your community feel appreciated and will encourage them to keep on contributing to your blog.

We all need to understand that a successful blog cannot exist without a nice active community around it. Make commenting easy for your readers, be active and nice, don’t make it difficult for them to leave a reply. With an increased traffic, constant blog posting and taking care of your community, you’ll see more comments as time goes by and your blog will become more successful.

What are the reasons you think people might not comment on blogs? What measures have you personally taken to increase your commenters’ involvement on your blog?

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Cheryl Zhao
Cheryl Zhao

Cheryl Zhao, a financial expert, has been a part of our team for five years. After earning her MBA from MIT Sloan School of Management, she worked as a real estate broker before turning to blogging. Cheryl’s extensive knowledge of the housing market and trends, coupled with her passion for financial literacy, makes her blog posts an essential read for anyone considering becoming financially independent.

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37 Comments

    • Hello, Clarrise, welcome to DB. From now on your comments should appear un-moderated.

      Other 2 issues I came across with captcha (the questions/answers don’t always work – let’s say I myself messed up sometimes and people couldn’t use it πŸ˜€ and there are also some image captchas, where you have to drag the pieces and sometimes they don’t work either).

    • Hello, Laurie. GREAT IDEA. As bloggers we do need to be ‘out there’ and contribute on our fellow bloggers’ articles with good meaningful comments. This helps us get some well ‘targeted’ traffic and we get involved into the community.

  1. I love getting comments…though I don’t get much traffic, I think people comment because I comment on their blogs. I do find some comment plugins make it difficult to comment. I find some sites have no comments but it seems they are not looking to get comments…maybe they have a different goal in mind…

    • One of the best ways to increase your traffic/readership is to spend time on other blogs and comment there. This way you get people interested in your project and, once they come, if they like it, they’ll be back again πŸ˜‰

  2. Like you, I avoid any blog that uses Disqus or otherwise makes me jump through hoops just to leave a comment. I also agree that sometimes the fluffier articles get the most comments. Sometimes I publish a long, researched article that barely makes a blip…but then a short post about nothing gets a ton of activity. You never really know what will click with your readers.

    • Hello, Mike. Yeah, the ‘fluff’ sometimes gets more action, but at the end of the day we also need to stay true to ourselves and still strive to provide insightful articles. As long as the more researched articles don’t mean a drop in readership, we’re doing OK πŸ™‚

    • I finally got off my lazy pregnant behind and started doing some more work. I talked about really putting some effort into it weeks ago, but I’m now finally at the point where I can get more involved. Fortunately it starts to show πŸ˜‰

  3. I loathe captcha codes. It seems to be especially bad on Blogspot blogs. I used to respond to every single comment on my blog but have gotten a little lazy lately. I am trying to get back into the groove of responding to the majority of them. You’re spot on with this post.

    • Many people who use Blogspot don’t dare make too many settings. Same goes with some bloggers who are on wordpress.com. The 2 systems are easy to use and many don’t know how to tweak the settings.

  4. I agree with having to sign up to comment on other people’s blogs its a pain in the ass. I try to respond to everyone as they took the time to read my post. I always return the courtesy and check out their blogs because everyone’s time is valuable.

  5. I never understood why would people use Disqus or have others register when they want comments to be posted on their blog and they don’t already have millions of monthly visitors. Making it easy for your readers to post comments is the best way to get them. If you worry about spam, install anti spam plugins and monitor your comment section. A blog that is alive with many comments gives a better impression to the readers and I think that’s something one should aim for.

    • The spam is really not such an issue on a blog, if you know what to set. I personally never used any anti-spam plugins and never had any issues anyway.

  6. I would say the main reason is that the blogger doesn’t comment on other blogs. Bloggers love to enter into discussions, so letting the other bloggers know you are around by commenting on their sites will attract comments yourself. Comments aren’t typically an important metric, though.

    • It’s clear the comments are a metric in themselves, but it does help show how much of a community a site attracts and for some advertisers, a ‘sticky’ site is a good place to promote in, since the readership appreciates the site and probably what the site sells.

    • Oh, let’s say it doesn’t always work for me either. And sometimes the entire feature is messed up, so, even if you do put the right characters in, it will either give an error or just not submit the comment.

  7. Being fairly new to the blogging community, I found this information quite helpful. And yes, it does feel good when someone not only takes the time to read what you may have spent hours creating, it is icing on the cake when they leave a favorable comment.

    • Well, as long as you keep on writing good and engaging articles, the comments will come. Not to mention people to comment on older posts, so the article that might seem now ‘barren’, can get more comments in few months time.

    • I’m all for simplicity and keeping everything as basic as possible. Helps with the loading times, saves you future troubles (if the plugin is no longer supported etc.)

  8. LOL! I completely agree, Dojo. I have left sites in frustration because I wanted to leave a comment on a post that I thought was fantastic but I couldn’t figure out their commenting system. I don’t like SPAM either but when you make jump through hoop after hoop to leave you a comment – I’m not exactly feeling the same love I did five minutes ago! πŸ™‚

    • So true, we do need to make it easy for our readers to leave their comments on our blog.

      Don’t know if I welcomed you yet, if not, happy to see you here πŸ˜‰

  9. Well, I haven’t had issues with spam (aside the occasional message that’s correctly marked as such), but the check “click here if you aren’t a spammer’ is easier for someone to use than write some captcha codes

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