Increasing Interactivity on Your WordPress Blog

Increasing interactivity on your blog leads to more subscribers and increased traffic. This can be done with a combination of good content, plugins and the correct settings. Allowing and encouraging comments on your blog is the easiest way to grow it into a community-like atmosphere and keep people coming back to read and possibly continue the conversation. Setting up your WordPress blog to easily allow commenting on posts is the first and easiest step, writing the right type of content to entice comments is the hard part.

First to allow commenting on your WordPress blog check your settings. From the dashboard go to Settings or Options. Within the general settings look for the Membership settings. Make sure the box is not checked next to Users must be registered and logged in to comment. I don’t know about you but if I need to register on a blog just to comment I will probably not take the time. While there I suggest not checking the Anyone can register box, unless you want people to register to post on your blog.

Next click the Discussion menu and make sure the Allow people to post comments on the article is checked. I also would not check the Comment author must fill out name and e-mail as well as the Comment author must have a previously approved comment boxes. People want to see their comments immediately and waiting for them to be approved will reduce the chances of them making any more comments.

For your own good I would hold or moderate any comment with more than two links in it. Actually two or more links in a comment is a sign of a spammer, so be sure to have a good comment spam plugin. Akismet works pretty well for most but if it is letting some comment spam get through then try another like Spam Karma.

The WordPress plugins I suggest are for follow up on comments, one is Comment Relish, that sends a commenter a “Thank You” email for the comment. Another WordPress plugin is Subscribe To Comments, that will subscribe the commenter to the posts comments and send them an email when a new comment is made on a post they have commented on. There are other plugins available for polls and such but I have found that comments and the discussion on posts are what get most people coming back.

Now that you have your settings ready you have to try to encourage the actual comments and subscribers. This is the hard part for most including me. As of late I have reduced my posting here considerably due to burn out, bloggers block and other obligations. I try to encourage discussions with my WordPress Guides and people sometimes have questions about the instructions I post. How you encourage the discussion on your posts is up to you. You can flat out ask questions, or post something controversial, like a political or religious opinion. Joining and contributing to forums that are related to your blog is another way of increasing traffic. Just be sure to put a link to your blog in the forum signature.

Now that I have shared how I try to encourage interaction on my blogs how do you do it?

If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!

4 comments so far

Change Old Wordpress eMail Address In Database

So you have neglected your old WordPress blog and and now you want to dust it off and start blogging once again. But you have forgotten the username and password and the email address associated with the blog is no longer active. So when you try the ‘Lost Your Password’ link on the WordPress login page the new password is getting sent into oblivion. Well there are ways to fix this and one is to reset the password in your database and that can be cumbersome and confusing. This WordPress guide will show you how to change the email address in the database associated with your WordPress Guide.

Read this article ->

Change the Date of a WordPress Post Edit the Timestamp

If there is ever an occasion that you want to change the date of a WordPress post there is an easy way to change timestamp of a WordPress post.

Read this article ->

Installing WordPress Multiple Times On The Same Site

Installing WordPress multiple times on the same site is real easy. There may be times you want to have two different installs of WordPress on one domain. You can install WordPress on the root of your domain, on a subdomain or in subdirectory or on all of the above. These however, will function as completely separate blogs.

Read this article ->

When To Find The Right WordPress Theme

Finding The right WordPress theme is one of, if not the only thing most new bloggers thing about. I often get a total newbie blogger that wants me to setup WordPress for them that is completely and totally focused on the theme. While the look of your blog or site is important, the first thing to focus on, for those new to WordPress is if you are going to stick to blogging.

Read this article ->

Blogging To The Lowest Common Denominator

The saying goes “there are no stupid questions” OK if there are no stupid questions then what about the questions asked by stupid people? What are those supposed to be? And how do these people actually grow into adulthood without sticking themselves in the eye with a knife because nobody told them otherwise?

Read this article ->

Add Stationary Content To Main WordPress Front Page

Adding static or stationary content to the front page of your blog can be done two different ways. One is to use the static front page option. and another is to just add your text or HTML code to the index file. This WordPress guide will address the latter.

Read this article ->

Change Static HTML Page Into A WordPress Page

If you are converting a static HTML site into a WordPress site and want to convert the pages into WordPress pages it can be done. However the new WordPress pages would need to be made manually one at a time. If there is just text content on the pages it is pretty easy. But what if you have images mixed within the content? This can get tricky. This WordPress guide will show you how to copy an existing HTML page and make it into a WordPress page.

Read this article ->

« Previous PageNext Page »