
Just kidding... Or not? ![]()
If you’ve been a regular reader of Traffic Generation Cafe for any length of time, you know where I stand on a DoFollow/NoFollow issue.
If not, let me refresh your memory:
In short, I think DoFollow is a great thing to uphold, ESPECIALLY for newer blogs. It shows to the community that you are a team player, promotes comments and discussions, even attracts new audiences.
Bu what about more established blogs? Blogs with lots of traffic and a huge potential for spam and loosing pagerank due to linking out?
When I started Traffic Generation Cafe in July of 2010, I had no idea that my blog would gain enough traffic to put me in the top 0.1% of most trafficked blogs in the world in short 5 months.
And so now I am faced with a decision: should I follow the way of the overwhelming majority of high-trafficked blogs and turn off the free flow of DoFollow links or go against the flow on this one?
As a matter of fact, I made a decision on this one a while ago, but I think my technique was misunderstood by some of my readers, which in turn prompted this post.
Take a look at this comment:
Hello Ana,
Thank you for the helpful information.
You asked for comments “love it or hate it” and so I am voicing a complaint. I prefer to post comments in the lower section, not on my Facebook profile. The problem is, you do not give us an anchor text link back for posting. Instead, you give yourself an internal anchor text link for our post. Our website is listed, but without a link, giving you the keywords for our website. The link we get is on a Gravatar, which has none of our keywords, so it is not a quality link. I do not know if you meant the comments to work that way or if it is the plugin and you did not realize it, but normally I would not comment on a blog that was not fairer about giving us better links back.
As you know, anyone can read a post and click away. It takes work to make comments. Those comments benefit the blogger and the audience. The commentor deserves at least a quality, anchor text link back.
Otherwise, thanks for the good articles.
This comment/complaint brings up 2 issues:
1. How do large blogs protect themselves, while still providing their readers with good backlinking opportunity?
2. Do commentators “deserve” a quality backlink for commenting?
Let’s start with the first one:
1. DoFollow vs NoFollow
I don’t think the above commentator has any clue that his question really goes to the heart of “Will Traffic Generation Cafe remain a DoFollow blog despite of its size?”
I did a lot of research into this issue hoping to find an alternative to keeping my blog DoFollow and yet somewhat protecting it from the flood of authority-leaking outgoing links.
And I did find it.
SEO Super Comments is a free WP plugin that gives you a great alternative to the way the comments are displayed on your blog.
Feel free to read more about it on your own, but let me quickly go over the advantages both the blog owner and their reader get from using this plugin:
For the blog owner:
- For each commentator a new dynamic page will be created, increasing the number of crawl-able, index-able, and most importantly, rank-able content.
- The old author link will now lead to the newly created page. The new page contains the author’s comment and their anchor-text based link, which is still DOFOLLOW on my blog.
- I reduce the number of PageRank draining links, while still providing my readers with a quality DoFollow link to their blogs.
- This plugin decreases my bounce rate, since most readers want to see where those links are leading to.
For the commentator:
- The newly created page presents commentator’s other comments - brands them better, might increase the amount of traffic they get.
- The URL link is do-followed, plus includes the original anchor text.
- Gives even more incentive to comment since now it’s not just for mere link, but for your own page on my blog.
So now when you see those strange looking links in my comment section, you know why.
Let’s now move on to issue number 2.
2. Link Entitlement
I don’t even know where to start here, so I want you to take over this one.
- Do you think blog commenting is a tid-for-tad kind of arrangement?
- Do you expect a quality link when you comment on other blogs, and specifically on my blog?
- Would you still comment if my blog was completely NoFollow?
- Why do you comment on my blog to begin with?
I need your honesty here. No sugar-coating allowed!

PS Before you run off and install the plugin on your own blog, let me tell you what I think about it: DON’T do it unless you have a high-trafficked blog like mine.
I would definitely recommend making and keeping your new or newer blog DoFollow - it will definitely promote your blog growth.
Make sure your readers know your blog is DoFollow. I would install What Would Seth Godin Do plugin (look it up in the WP directory) and say something like this:
“Welcome back. This is a DoFollow blog - you should definitely comment on this post and get a quality backlink to your blog!”
Simple and effective.
At later date, as your blog grows, you can always revisit your blog’s DoFollow status and decide what you want to do about.
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{ 82 comments… read them below or add one }
I meant to add, it has nothing to do with content really. Personally, I would coment here no matter what…just sayin’.
Ahhh… You actually like me, Dennis? Music to my ear!
Admittedly, I did not read all the comments; my apologies if this was mentioned…
At the very least, I find it highly unethical for a new blog to offer do-follow (or any such perks), allow the community to build them to super-star, then pull it away.
I am far from alone in this thinking as well.
Btw, many of the top blogs that do not offer it, never did.
You are actually the first one to bring it up, Dennis.
I agree with you: Do or NoFollow is like your niche - once you pick it, you stick with it.
Personally, I am not really planning on ever changing from DoFollow; I was just trying to modify it in a way that would potentially keep everyone happy.
I haven’t heard many complaints untill this one, so I think my commentators are still happy with me and I will stick with this strategy.
Ana
PS I am sure you are right about the “big” blogs. I do know many “big gurus” who suggest to start a blog with DoFollow and close it off at a later date.
Hi Ana,
Another interesting topic. I didn’t know about DoFollow or NoFollow until a few months ago. And my knowledge doesn’t influence my decision to comment or not.
I’m all about showing appreciation, sharing my opinion and giving credit where it’s due. I don’t even have the time to check whether a blog is a DoFollow or NoFollow. If I like what I read, I leave a comment. Period.
I will always comment on your blog, whether it’s a DoFollow or NoFollow. You share awesome content and you go an extra mile to help your readers and keep them happy
Great to hear about your decision to keep your blog a DoFollow. Keep up the good work!
Happy holidays!
Mavis
Mavis Nong~Attraction Marketing Online´s last blog ..Blog Traffic – Are The Famous Forums Dying
Thanks, Mavis.
I think it’s bloggers like you with the mentality of “I don’t even check if a blog is Do or NoFollow” who will succeed in the end.
When will people get that blogging is all about relationships and not links?
The more you spread your influence by commenting on other blogs, the more of it will definitely return back to you.
I think it was at least 6 months into blogging that I found out there was even such a thing as do-follow and no-follow. Honestly, the whole thing came as kind of a surprise. Knowing what I know now, it still has no effect on whether or not I comment on a blog. If anyone doesn’t comment on a blog because it’s not giving them enough ‘love’ or ‘seo juice’ then I think that person is, well, messed up. After all, aren’t we here to build community? I see a comment as a simple ‘Thank You’ to the blogger- pure and simple.
Thanks for the interesting read Ana.
Marcus Sheridan-The Sales Lion´s last blog ..7 Ways You Can Learn to Write Like You Talk
Hi Marcus,
That’s very nice of you. You are right, we are here to build community so leaving a comment for the sake of building relationship is absolutely great.
Have a wonderful time,
Ana
Ana Hoffman´s last blog ..5 Traffic Generation Strategies I Stay Away From
Hi Ana,
Wow, I was just expecting to pop in and see what’s new and here I see such a fascinating post, I’m still here long after I planned.
Not only was the post extremely interesting, but these comments have been educational as well. I have to say a big Thank You to both you and many of your commenters!
I wouldn’t say that I “expect” anything, although knowing I’m getting a link back does inspire to me leave a comment on posts I may not otherwise.
Yes, if yours became a nofollow I’d still comment because you always share so much value in every single post. On top of that, I like YOU and I like to say hi when I stop by.
Thank you for maintaining your “dofollow” status, and for keeping your standards so high. I appreciate all you do.
Susanna
Susanna Hess´s last blog ..Strategic Branding for Women in Network Marketing
Hello Susanna,
Nice to have you around. Knowing that a site is a dofollow can definitely inspire anybody to leave a comment, but it’s really up to the blogger. If I think that the blog is worth my comment then I go for it even if its NoFollow.
Happy Holidays,
Ana
Ana Hoffman´s last blog ..5 Traffic Generation Strategies I Stay Away From
I’m of the opinion that its a win win situation for you and your commentators. I think people would have more reason to leave a comment if your blog is dofollow.
If its nofollow, you would still get people commenting but probably not as many, so I think you have made a good decision to remain dofollow. For a newbie, i think dofollow is very important.
Hi Ruth,
Yes you are right. For a newbie DoFollow is important because it can definitely brings traffic to the site which is a must for every blogger. By doing this, you’re site will be promoted and people will get to know that your blog actually exist.
Thanks for the comment,
Ana
Ana Hoffman´s last blog ..5 Traffic Generation Strategies I Stay Away From
I used SEO Super Comments in the very beginning and took it off I think either because someone was complaining, or because I thought it wasn’t going to help the commenting situation.
I will probably reinstall it in the New Year. I’m also probably going to kiss Keyword Luv goodbye.
To answer your second question, I don’t think commenters “deserve” a quality link back to their websites. I think that mentality comes from the IM movement where people assume that you’re desperate for comments, and their desperate for links, and so you both are doing a favor for each other.
I’ll keep my blog dofollow and keep comment luv but I have already started being very picky about whose comments get approved and whose don’t. It’s not about linking page rank; I really could care less about that. It’s about maintaining quality overall.
Good post, Ana.
Tia´s last blog ..10 Things I Learned In 2010 About Article Marketing
Typos on “their” and “linking.” Their should say “they’re” and linking should say “leaking.”
Hopefully it makes more sense now!
Hi Tia,
Thanks for coming. Of course I agree that quality content and site as a whole is still the most important thing to be consider, although quality links are also great.
Ana
Ana Hoffman´s last blog ..5 Traffic Generation Strategies I Stay Away From
I thought about installing SEO Super comments on my blog. But now, your review reassured my decision about the plugin. I’m definitely installing this plugin. It’s really hard to make a decision like yours until I’m getting the same traffic. I guess I’ll have to do the same once I get more traffic.
Kevin´s last blog ..What’s Your Favorite Web Hosting Service – Hostgator Review
Hi Kevin,
I just realized that the more traffic you get and the more popular your website has become, decisions also become harder in many ways. Still, it’s all worth it.
Thanks for dropping by,
Ana
Ana Hoffman´s last blog ..5 Traffic Generation Strategies I Stay Away From
Hi Ana,
I made my blog Dofollow, and really don’t have any plans to change it. I thought about it in the beginning and it was a philosophical. My thought was that I didn’t want my blog to be all about ME. I wanted my blog to really focus on helping out my readers. So I looked for things to implement, such as my job board, so that I could feel like I was helping others get jobs and make money online. (I won’t lie, these are also affiliate programs, but I focused on picking programs that give value, rather than just the most profitable ones. Many of the programs I recommend are actually free.)
Anyways, after I did that, I felt like it didn’t fit with my overall philosophy to stay nofollow, so I changed to a dofollow blog. That way, I’m giving link love back to my visitors. Based on that, I don’t think I’d change away from dofollow, even if it affects my ranking, as I want to stay within my philosophy.
I do try to moderate out spam links. Although, people are getting pretty clever about spam. At some point, I may tighten up my moderation policy on spam, as I currently err on the side of approving comments when I’m not sure if they’re spam or not. I think I can protect my rankings somewhat by moderating my comments more carefully.
As for what I pay attention to when I visit a site, I try to look for good content. However, I must admit that what attracts me to good content most of the time is commentluv. I tend to find blogs a lot of times by surfing through comments. So when I see a commentluv blog title that catches my eye, I’ll visit that blog and many times end up leaving a comment. I don’t really pay attention to whether the blogs I visit are dofollow or not. I just try to comment when I read something interesting.
Richard´s last blog ..How to Implement a Donanza Job Board on Your Blog
Hello Richard,
What you are doing is absolutely fine, it’s actually great because you are trying to help others at the same time,you benefit from it so it’s a win win situation. As blog owners we are in control of our site and yes we need to really be careful with other comments because of spams.
Commentluv is indeed very attractive in any blogger’s eyes. I also do the same especially when I was just starting and I think it really helped me along with other methods I used.
Thanks for dropping by,
Ana
Ana Hoffman´s last blog ..5 Traffic Generation Strategies I Stay Away From
Hey Ana,
I love the new comment plug-in. I clicked on Evelyn’s name from above (random, hi Evelyn) and it too me here: https://trafficgenerationcafe.online/dofollow-traffic-generation-cafe/?cid=17547, that is nice. It shows here comment and her past comments. I like that. Does that benefit you? Her? or Both?
And as for no follow, I still comment if I feel compelled enough to. Or I am trying to get my face and/or name out there for recognition, if they allow it. Or if I am trying to produce a relationship with the blogger. I like the blogger community so I do feel compelled to comment often if I have time.
I just started commenting on your blog but have been reading it for a while now. Keep up the great work!
I forgot to ask. Are you able to make the links in the comments open in a new tab or window? That is such a nice feature. I know you do it a lot in your blog.
Allie´s last blog ..Open Your Blog with a Strong First Post
Welcome to the blog, Allie!
I do think both I and my commentators benefit from having the new commenting plugin: I have fewer links out and my commentators get a whole lot more exposure through having a newly created page just for them
Of course, anyone can still follow them to their blogs from those pages as well.
As far as opening those links in a new window, I haven’t considered it.
Do you think that’s something you, as my blog reader, would benefit from?
Thanks for your feedback - much appreciated!
Ana
Well Ana,
It’s your decision entirely and I think going nofollow is best for your blog’s ranking but bad for a part of your community.
Why I comment on your blog?
Well, for some time now I wanted to learn about internet marketing, and I arrived on your blog via an other blog that recommended you for traffic generation tips, also he was mentioning something about how important traffc generation is and all that so I arrived to your blog, read that post, commented and left. Only to arrive back the second day from an other recommendation so I subscribed to your feed since then.
I am not going to lie, while learning and reading all I think I need to be an internet marketer, I left a comment with one of my current websites.
If I think the article will benefit me, I will be here nofollow or dofollow.
Good luck to you!
Alex@Jocuri´s last blog ..Luptele pe hovercraft
Hello Alex,
I have decided to stick on DoFollow because as you’ve said, it will not be good for my community and for many other reasons.
Thanks for subscribing to me feed.
Have a blessed day,
Ana
Ana Hoffman´s last blog ..5 Traffic Generation Strategies I Stay Away From
Hi Ana,
hm, no sugar coating allowed…no need for sugar coating. I read the original comment you are quoting here on Facebook and I asked myself why this guy was so…Ok, not quotable…
Really cool answer of yours.
People who have certain “expectations” when doing this or that on social media will have a hard time when it comes to building their business or whatever their purpose might be.
I would always comment on a well-run blog regardless if it’s DoFollow or not. Yours is definitely a well-run one because you take the time to answer any comment at least briefly and your content is great: Stuff I don’t easily relate to in agreeable atmosphere.
Thanks for sharing your insights. I will inform my readers that my blog is a DoFollow-blog.
Take care
Oliver
Oliver Tausend´s last blog ..Your Life Is Like An Apple
Hello Oliver,
Well I think there are times that we encounter bloggers who have questionable purpose. As for me, I will just do my thing and try to make it better.
It is always great to inform your readers that your blog is DoFollow. This will make them come back.
Thanks for the comment Oliver and Have a Joyful Holiday,
Ana
Ana Hoffman´s last blog ..5 Traffic Generation Strategies I Stay Away From
Anna I don’t believe it’s the commentators right to receive a backlink as it’s really more of a privilege. It’s sort of when someone comes to visit in your home. Is it their right that yo give them a cup of coffee and cake? Not really but you do it out of common courtesy.
When it comes to dofollow I allow it not because it’s their right but because I want to reward people who take the time to read and comment on my blog. I don’t believe it leaches anything from my blog as it’s been dofollow since it’s conception and it’s still attained a PR4, and that’s with hardly any SEO or keyword research.
I tried that plugin and I found it did strange things to my blog and so I threw it out.

Sire@ Blogging Guru´s last blog ..Why The List Hater Has His Very Own List
Hi Sire,
Thanks for sharing you personal opinion on this matter. You are actually right, if we share something to our readers, it’s like a gift or reward not an obligation.
Have a great day,
Ana
Hey Ana
You already know my position on DoFollow and Page Rank. I think people think too much about it
Personally I want my link back to be on the post I commented on not on a “personal” page.
The reason : I post comments on posts that interest me and are usually related to my blog. The post has keywords in it that again relate to my blog.
So not only do I want a link back with my keywords but I also want a link back from a keyword rich post.
I am so greedy
I would still comment even though your blog might be 100% NoFollow, however I reserve the right to make fun of you for putting too much emphasis on Page Rank
Peter
Peter Fuller MBA @ Home Business Solutions´s last blog ..Is Network Marketing an Illegal Pyramid or an Equal Opportunity Business
I know, I know… I don’t always walk the walk, do I?
YOU can make fun of me all you want, Peter; you earned the right.
I get your point about having the link from where you placed it and not where I want it to be. You do still get the CommentLuv link from that page though, so don’t be greedy.
Ana
Ana
True enough re the CommentLuv Link, I guess I thought you were going to phase that out.
Peter Fuller MBA´s last blog ..Is Network Marketing an Illegal Pyramid or an Equal Opportunity Business
I am definitely sticking with CommentLuv - I think it’s great and very helpful.
And again a great post.
I would be way less polite to the person that asked about the link. I understand a lot of us comment for the links, but I see one more opportunity when it comes to commenting and links-or-no-links, I will keep commenting.
First of all, most bloggers from blogs I comment on check out my blog and leave a comment in return.
Maybe it is not a link that person is asking for but I am sure grateful to all those people that come and comment on my blog.
Not to mention that I can see (most of) them actually reading the post.
So even if I don’t see CommentLuv or other ways of linking, I will still comment.
I love your new idea about the plugin, to keep it do-follow while protecting your page rank.
Brankica @ Italy travel´s last blog ..Wanna blog better Top 5 blogs to learn from
Hi Brankica,
I’m glad you feel that way. It’s good that you are still leave comments even to NoFollow.
Thanks for coming again,
Ana
Ana Hoffman´s last blog ..5 Traffic Generation Strategies I Stay Away From
Hi Ana,
I have no criteria when it comes to me adding a comment on someone’s blog. If the blogger produces a quality post and it was very helpful/informative, then I will oftentimes leave a comment. If I don’t leave one, I will do my best to share the post with others on Twitter/FB/SU.
I offer CommentLuv on my blog and like promoting that CommentLuv community, just like Ileane and Patricia have mentioned. I like to reward those who are a are regular commentators and supporters by offering CommentLuv as well as Top Commentator..which are both DoFollow links.
I have recently started following your blog and the reason I am following you is because you produce quality content that is very helpful to me. Sometimes I may not comment, but I do my best to share with others whenever I can.
Do what you feel is best for your blog. It doesn’t matter what you decide to do, if you decide on NoFollow, it won’t stop me from commenting. But if your content goes south, then that’s another story. Some how, I know your content will always be helpful.
Take care,
Evelyn
Evelyn´s last blog ..Health Editor of BizChickBlogs 2011
Hi Evelyn,
I’m glad you find my blog helpful. I love it whenever readers think that my post are of good quality, I think all of us does.
Anyway, I guess I’d better stick with DoComment.
All the best,
Ana
I do often think that I deserve a link for commenting. I don’t comment on blogs that don’t give me one UNLESS I absolutely love the blog and content. I have about a handful of those blogs in the fitness niche and less in the internet marketing niche. If you went to no follow, I’d still comment because I learn from you.
Susan@Home Workouts´s last blog ..Astaxanthin Benefits & How It Can Help You Lose Weight
Hi Susan,
Thanks for commenting. Yes I might do the same. I prefer dofollow blogs, but I don’t mind commenting if I really learned something from a post and I want to share my opinion.
All the best,
Ana
Ana Hoffman´s last blog ..5 Traffic Generation Strategies I Stay Away From
Ana, you’re asking questions I’ve been mulling over in my head for a while now as I have a blog at alexa 36k that requires the same thing be asked.
My blog is fully dofollow, including the commentluv link (something plugins like lucy’s linky love don’t properly do on most blogs), keywordluv, commentluv and twitterlink comments.
Let me apologize in advance if this sounds abrupt, I’m fighting a migraine and this issue has been a hot topic for me so I had to jump in regardless…
At the end of the day… our blogs are our homes… and the visitors our guests. How welcome we make those guests is certainly up to us.
However, in my gut I feel, there is something intrinsically *rude* in building a weekly house party inviting all of our friends over and giving them free reign to use the pool, showers, pool table, and eat the chips… and then later after their very presence has built our blog (party) to where it stands, telling them they may no longer do those things… as though we are now too good to share our toys when our ranking came on their shoulders in the first place. Sure we can ask them to clean up after themselves (parties are messy and bigger parties are more messy) and leave better comments… we can ask them to chip into the cost of the party (bigger parties are more expensive) and help us out by clicking aff links, donation buttons, and syndication/share buttons to enable us to get enough traffic to offset the “expense” of our toys… but darnit we gotta be really darn careful that it isn’t our FRIENDS whos fingers we catch in the door when slam it and take our toys away, least we become another that became too good to hang out with the locals and forgot where we came from.
The day we forget those that gave us our rank - is they day we’re “just another problogger” and not a friend.
Regarding SEO Super Comments, its a great plugin and I used it extensively. I however turned it off when I discovered that something in my robots.txt file was causing the /cid links to get no-index status … wow, talk about stealthy link killing. Once I have time to assess the issue with my robots.txt then that plugin is certainly going back in place. (In fact I run several of Prelovac’s plugins and enjoy them) You appear to have the same bug. When I open all of these cid links and then open SEO Doctor (also by Prelovac), I see that the page is noindex. Meaning the comments are being dropped into the ether as far as Google is concerned. Screenshot: http://ow.ly/i/6BAo/original (actually you appear to have this occurring within your comment page structure, so it appears that /comment-page-1/ is a non indexed. Something to look into.
* Do you think blog commenting is a tid-for-tad kind of arrangement?
Yes, and no. Tit-for-tat exists regardless of the do-follow status, IMHO. Sometimes the give is in superbly moving content that helps the reader enough they feel inspired to comment. Sometimes its a piece that doesn’t inspire them yet the seo assistance is enough to draw them to comment.
Is there a lot of sense of entitlement run rampant… yes. Is that exactly a bad thing, not really as long as the commenter is leaving a quality comment that builds on the original post and/or making use of those social media syndication buttons to help us out.
How deep does this tit-for-tat run? So deeply that some of my favorite blogs out there are not only DF/CL/KL/TLC enabled but also “I comment back” blogs meaning when I comment there, they almost always return with a comment on my blog. I honestly wish I could find enough hours in the day to maintain that pace although I do try to make sure I visit my regulars. It builds an incredible sense of connected community.
* Do you expect a quality link when you comment on other blogs, and specifically on my blog?
* Would you still comment if my blog was completely NoFollow?
I had not known prior that your blog was DoFollow, but having just learned this you’ve been added to my short list of DoFollow blogs to keep an eye on. This means the likelihood of me commenting is a lot higher than if you were not there both because I monitor those blogs for stuff I can comment on and because it benefits me more. Without Dofollow you have to not only write content that moves me but have enough of a call to engagement that I overcome the standard desire to be a lazy reader.
Would I comment if you were nofollow - if the piece struck me, sure, but the frequency drops due to less SEO gains.
* Why do you comment on my blog to begin with?
Today I’ve commented because this is a discussion that needs had within the community as more and more of these dofollow blogs take off like wildfire.
Reading the thread here, I see that odds are I’m going to sound like a jerk when I say that I read blogs for two reasons… which produces different behavior.
1. Recreation & Education: I surf to surf some days and other day because I need a piece of information. These are honestly not days I comment a lot. I tend to read, absorb, thing and enjoy and not bother with comments. Lazy? Yup like many people. I do usually hit the tweet button though when I find good stuff because its fast but still helps.
2. LinkBuilding & Community Building: Commenting on others blogs serves me in two ways … SEO value and community building value particularly when coupled with a Tribe Syndication Alliance team. (A rather extreme version of pre-arranged tit for tat, if you like, more so than even just a Blog Alliance which is its older sibling and relates more to commenting only).
Blog commenting is one of my methods of traffic generation and given the high value of links from Dofollow blogs you can bet your buttons that I will go the extra effort to figure out how to write something useful on all but the worst posts on a Dofollow/Keywordluv/Commentluv/TLC blog…. whereas if I have to strain my braincells many days a nofollow blog is just not worth the effort and time it takes.
If I have an hour to get in some blog commenting, and we can generalize and say that Dofollow links are worth 10x what nofollow links are, then my time is best spent bookmarking and visiting Dofollow blogs particularly those that are approximately in my niche.
Sure, I sometimes take the time to comment on a nofollow blog if the content was good or the blogger sounded like they had a real need for feedback (sounded stuck/troubled/etc) or if they are a new blogger I’ve not yet had time to assist in getting to dofollow status and sometimes just because I’m bored, or if they are on my TSA team for the week (Different than if they’re on my other tribe teams where it is easier to give them an education on dofollow) but these really are exceptions for me as commenting is part of a larger strategy for me and I try to maximize my time investment.
Case in point is that I almost never comment on many of the big problogger classed blogs because they tend to be in the education/recreation class for me, although sometimes I will just to get a link if I can get in before comments are a million miles deep.
For me, part of staying dofollow was recently putting a pretty detailed but blunt commenting policy in place that lets me feel less guilty about being down right aggressive in spam management.
When I think about what it is that drives me to want to back out of Dofollow… its fear and nothing more. I see no benchmark that says I’m hurting and my metrics are moving backwards. Everything still points to forward momentum. Sure maybe not as fast as it could be if I went to NoFollow but that question comes down to how greedy am I to shut the doors on friends fingers after having skyrocketed out of nowhere. I have not had trouble ranking for keyword combinations I’ve worked on, I’ve not had trouble getting listed in organic search, my alexa is still dropping albiet slower now as I get higher, my name recognition is way up, my income is up, and I’m still able to help my friends and fans at the same time. My gut tells me to ask for more than that is greedy.
If a blogger wants to reduce the odds I’ll comment, all they need to do is stay nofollow… want to further reduce it, skip commentluv… want to DESTROY it… use Disqus or another system that forces me to waste time logging in and most of those systems also eat my links.
So … um… yeah… after writing a novel for you I guess its safe to say I’m pretty passionate about the whole darn topic and have really had to do some soul searching myself to keep my head together as my traffic has increased. I’ll probably have this same argument with myself all the way to the top but I hope someone gives me a kick in the pants if I short change my foundation readers.
I can’t switch to many of the “x comments for dofollow” because they tend to not be coded correctly to handle the commentluv link. I was using them before I went full dofollow and have never looked back.
The one thing I HAVE seriously looked at was a “dofollow whitelist” that would have to be hardcoded (someone has the code on their site for use) as no plugin exists for it currently, that would let us whitelist our “regulars” by hand and protect them from nofollow. Of course this is tedious, time consuming, annoying, and likely to fail to match the “term” the minute they change keywords on us. Also as with the plugin, the code I found did not look like it would handle the additional comment link that commentluv creates.
I’m interested to see where you go with this Ana. I fully understand the weight of what is on your shoulders to keep the blog moving forward. I know that the choices are not easy. I hope that if you decide to retreat to nofollow that you adequately document your existing avg comments per month, average increase in comments per month and comments per post and then track them for several months after the change allowing for time for your blog to be removed from various individuals list of dofollow blogs. You give some great value here and I have no doubt that you”ll continue to thrive no matter which way you go. As I tell my readers on my blog, sometimes I do things that I would not advise them to do, because I can afford the penalty if the test backfires. You’re in that situation, you have the slack in the rope to see whether the relationships you’ve built over time and the SEO work you’ve got in place is strong enough to carry you when the DoFollow step-stool is removed. You’ve certainly got some hard decisions on your plate girlfriend and I don’t envy em.
With Love,
Kimberly
Kimberly Castleberry´s last blog ..Is it Ethical to use PLR Content in your Online Business
Wow, Kim - migraine or not, this is one of the best comments I’ve ever received.
Let’s see, where to start… Let’s start with the party analogy.
I see where you are going with it. However it can be argued that the party already cost you a pretty dime, you showed everybody a great time - are you to give your guests a gift to go as well?
As you very well know, blogging is never easy. It takes hours to nurture an idea into a post that would help your readers. You also provide your readers with a forum of sorts - in the form of comments - to get to know you and other readers, to network, build relationships, bring traffic back to their blogs. To me, I am always happy to jump in knowing that I’ve already benefited by simply reading the post.
Plus, we still benefit from NoFollow links. Moreover, Google expects us to have a fair share of them to make our link building look natural.
Secondly, thank you for pointing out the problem with my SEO Super Comments. I wonder if this is a common problem; I would consider contacting Vladimir regarding the issue. Will have to add it to my never-ending to-do list. If you find a solution before I do, let me know.
You are certainly right about us, bloggers, encouraging our readers to comment every way we can. With that in mind, why would we decide to make our blogs NoFollow? Makes no sense.
I am with you as far as why I read other blogs. 1. for information and I don’t usually comment. 2. for link building and then I do seek out DoFollow blogs. 3. One more way I comments is when I visit my readers blogs as my way to say thank you for visiting mine; in that case, I always comment.
I am glad you mentioned that you used to offer DoFollow links after a certain number of comments and it didn’t work; one less thing to consider.
In the end, I have no intention to turn off DoFollow any time soon; hopefuly, never.
I definitely see the huge benefit both for my blog and the community around me to stick to DoFollow. Now if I can only fix the darn SEO Super comments.
…
I greatly appreciate your guest post within post
, Kim; I truly appreciate your opinion and can’t believe I haven’t spend more time on your blog. And now I know - look forward to learning from each other in the future.
Ana
Ana, I understand much of your challenge. I just wanted to add my two bits although many of our friends ‘above’ me have hit the nail on the head.
I am not all that up on DoFollow/NoFollow as you likely may know… and anything I have learned is because of you.
I found you… at one point and grasped the quality of your posts and I am so very pleased to have met you as a person. Whether you blog was NoFollow/DoFollow would not make one scrap of difference to me.
When you taught me the little I know about DoFollow - I looked at this a generous un-asked for bonus. I do not believe that we ‘deserve’ as a ‘given right’ a link just for commenting. (and so you know I am sure that ‘most’ of us regulars would agree).
As for my blog, it too is DoFollow but naturally the traffic is not comparable ((yet))
- but I would much prefer to have a comment from someone who enjoys the content - and I am sure you feel the same.
Ana, I feel it’s upto you whether to continue Do or NO… You deserve the traffic you have - and anybody who chooses not to enjoy and learn from your work is missing out and doing themselves a great injustice.
I feel what you teach far outweighs a link back. Their traffic is not your concern, responsibility or intention really. Your focus is on providing quality content - which you do well and deserve every bit of traffic you earn and you should be in no way held accountable for ‘link juice’ as you have called it.
for the record, I comment on people whom I like, learn from and enjoy as new-found friends. Period.
I’m a little miffed at that comment you displayed. Perhaps he or she should actually put some work in rather than look for a free ride on the backs of people like you who have worked for it. (was I saying that with my outside voice?) oops! ~Jayne~
Jayne Kopp´s last blog ..Do You Make a Difference
Hi Jayne,
Thanks for your uplifting comment. I realized that in this business or even in other aspect in our lives, we will encounter people as you have described. We can’t totally avoid them, but you are right, their traffic is not our concern, so I will continue to do what I am doing which is providing quality blogs for people like you who truly appreciate a blogger’s hard work.
Have a wonderful time with your family this holiday season,
Ana
Ana Hoffman´s last blog ..5 Traffic Generation Strategies I Stay Away From
Hi Ana,
If you thought that spammers were pulling your blog into the Google “sandbox”, you sure would be justified to take measures. You aren’t taking time away from your familoy and fun for nothing. You deserve the rewards for your hard work! I can’t say that I know much of anything about the difference between quality and poor quality links. I know you say that links are the most important factor in your ranking. I just like that little heart that comes on when I make a comment. I’m going to try to put that on my blog, too. I’ll keep reading your blog, and I probably won’t know the difference. Doing what you suggest is putting a spark into my blog. And I am sure you’ve heard that it only takes a spark to get a fire going.
Lou
Lou Barba´s last blog ..PAR FOR THE COURSE72 plus 20-000-000
Hello Lou,
Thanks for the encouraging words. I appreciate you for that. Every dedicated blogger deserves a reward for working really hard.
All the best,
Ana
Ana Hoffman´s last blog ..5 Traffic Generation Strategies I Stay Away From
Ana:
Here is how I see it, and it is quite similar to Dwayne. Now before I make anyone faceplant their keyboard…it’s just my lil ole opinion!
As for the “deserving” factor, I feel that goes to the blog owner. In this instance..you. Whether your blog is do or no follow I will comment because of the information and knowledge you bring to the table. You should be rewaded for the hard work you put into your posts.
I will also comment no follow blogs due to the value of the content provided. I look at commenting as yes, ways to build links, but more importantly a way to engage fellow bloggers and interact with the community.
The bottom line is that spammers have made blog practices change and that has to be addressed whether we like it or not. So, in order for your blog to sustain it’s stength and growth, you have to implement some of hose changed practices…we all know that and even eventually HOPE to have to change our own blogs to do the same.
I would comment your blog if it was do follow, no follow, shot fireworks, crashed my computer, or whatever! The value of your content can not be ignored and that deserves my almighty comment!! LOL…
Lisa@basic marketing tips´s last blog ..The One Question Every Blogger Should Ask Themselves
Lisa,
I REALLY appreciate your lil ole opinion - it wouldn’t be worth blogging, but for people like you!
I happened to share the same commenting outlook: DoFollow is great, but I will still comment for content and relationship sake.
As the editor of a fairly recent blog your suggestion seems well worth testing out. I hope it will be fairly straight forward to calulate the value of traffic increases versus the increased time spent in moderating comments. Now I have to go find the code to switch my blog comments over to do-follow. Thank you for the useful advice.
Randy Pickard´s last blog ..Measuring The Link Authority of New Websites With No PageRank
You are very welcome, Randy.
Just got back from your site - was really impressed with your content. Left you a comment; hope you would consider guest posting for me.
Ana
Ana - You bring up a good debate. I think it depends on who you talk to when it comes to do follow vs. no follow. I know for me, it is definitely a balancing act for the blog owner.
On one end you want to increase your blog’s readership and community, and on the other end you don’t want spam or loose pagerank due to linking out. For me as a I love do follow blogs but I would still leave comments on blogs that are no follow if the post really inspired me or if I can relate to it.
At the end of the day Ana, it’s up to you. If you feel like the SEO Super Comments can allow you to keep your blog do follow and still solve concerns like spamming and loosing pagerank to linking out then it’s definitely a win win situation for you and your commentators.
However, if you try out the plug in and it doesn’t really solve your growing concerns then do what you have to do and switch to no follow. I think you have a good, loyal community already and your content is good enough to still make people want to leave comments and join in the conversation. Just my 2cents.
John´s last blog ..Cheap Guitar Lessons
It does come down to the community around the blog, doesn’t it, John?
I do prefer to make comments on DoFollow blogs myself - after all, Google ranking is mostly about links and the best links do come from DoFollow blogs.
However, I am with you: blogging is all about great content and learning. If some people don’t feel my blog content is worth its salt on its own merit - do I really want to have them around?
After all, we are all after quality and not quantity and that includes our readership.
Your 2 cents are much appreciated, John!
Ana
Linking out to spammy and penalized sites is bad for both new and established blogs.
It all comes down to on whether or not you are able to maintain your blog hygiene with your newly achieved success and are able to control the target urls you are linking out to.
It also depends on whether you think that your traffic is self-sustainable on a certain lower level as some contributors may leave if you say good-bye to dofollow links.
On the other hand, if your success is largely based on your facebook comment circles that are not based on do-follow, the decision may be easier.
It would be interesting to see who falls out if I were to ever make my blog entire NoFollow, huh? You made me wonder, Andreas…:)
Not that I am planning on doing it in the future.
Good point on screening the commentors’ links: I don’t always do my due diligence double-checking that; I definitely need to.
Ana
I’m of the personal belief that it doesnt matter what the readers purpose is for making a comment is as long as their comment is relevant to the content, insightful, or genuinely appreciative of the information given in the blog post.
Before reading you last post I really had not given any real thought to the DoFollow/NoFollow and the affect it could have on SEO and page rankings. Thanks for the plugin suggestion
Robin Marks
Robin Marks´s last blog ..How To Become Black Belt MLM Tax Deduction Ninja…
Hello Robin,
You have a point in there because in the first place how will we know the real purpose of the readers for commenting. If there comment is relevant to the content, I assume they are paying attention and is really interested in the post.
Ana
I have been blogging for a few years and find that do follow/no follow does not make a difference on whether or not I will comment. If the blog is active and the content is good and…
If I can add to the conversation I will still get a benefit from it. Do or not if I am helping others the readers of the blog will occasionally follow through.
Taking part in conversations on other blogs is always valuable if you follow those rules.
Mike Paetzold´s last blog ..WordPress 31 getting closer
Hi Mike,
Thanks for sharing your own views on this topic.
Glad you came by,
Ana
Hi Ana
I tend to do similar to Ileane. As part of the commentluv community I like to support commentluv members. Although I have started visiting and commenting on other sites too now. When I first started blogging, I wanted to interact with a community and found that bloggers with commentluv were very helpful and encouraging of my small niche blog.
I don’t check if blogs are dofollow but when I first started I had friends who would share dofollow blogs for me to visit. Didn’t really understand it all, but loved networking and stayed to comment if I found the post helpful.
Patricia Perth Australia
Patricia@lavenderuses´s last blog ..At Lavenderuses Safety First Means…
I do think CommentLuv adds great value to ANY blog; you are so right about that, Patricia.
Whether a blog is Do or NoFollow, getting a CommentLuv link is always great; I tend to favor blogs who use the plugin as well.
Always appreciate your comments and presence, Patricia - your blog growth is definitely right behind you!
Ana
I think that moderated blogs with the KeywordLuv plugin are the happy medium. I read a lot of blogs in a day and I get very irritated by the mass of spam comments (just links or “thanks for sharing”). Google have already documented that links found within comments sections will carry less weight than they previously did and this is because of the spam. I think eventually comments won’t carry any weight and SEO and spammers will have to think outside the box.
I personally think there will be an increase in article theft where articles will be uploaded elsewhere and the link will point to the spammers. I think the size of the web will grow but the social aspect and quality may take a dip. I enjoy reading blog posts but it is important to also get a link back.
I hear your point, Tom.
Problem with KeywordLuv is that plugin itself is not necessarily DoFollow; you still have to enable DoFollow on your blog.
I definitely agree about the links from the comment sections. As a user, it is one of the easiest ways to get a link these days; however, from blog owner’s perspective, I am fed up with spam abuse.
Yes, sooner or later (probably sooner), Google will have to change the value it gives to comment links and then we all will have to rethink our strategies.
Ana
Ana,
I really appreciate your look at this dilemma. Before putting comment luv on my site I looked closely at this same question. Especially since the affiliate products I promote are also links out of my site.
I opted to go with comment luv for now and reward those who comment and cut back on my other out going links.
Also I have looked at some very big blog sites and found that they have very few out going links. Even their sales pages and thank you pages are on their sites. And they have plenty of internal links in their blog posts. So I am currently moving in that direction to balance out the do follow links.
Although I like being a part of the comment luv community and more that appreciate the backlinks I get from commenting on your site, it is not my criteria for commenting. I come to your blog because I always learn something. I also come because you have created a great community and I learn from them. I comment to acknowledge you and your readers, and I comment when I have something I can contribute.
I would still comment even if you were totally nofollow.
Thanks for the tip on SEO Super comments.
Sheila Atwood@newbielifeline.com´s last blog ..The Weekend Web – Its Ethical
It truly is a dilemma for any blog owner, Sheila, and unfortunately some readers don’t get it.
After all, our blog are our businesses and as such we need to figure out what is the best way to run them.
I completely understand and share the idea of fewer outgoing links, especially as we expand and I think I figured out the perfect way to work on my goals and still keep my readers happy with this plugin.
I do appreciate your vote in favor of my blog; it’s great to know that all my hard work on this blog is simply appreciated for what it is and not for the backlink.
Ana
I read or try to read a lot of blogs and don’t always post after.. I try to post when I can contribute something not just a “thanks for posting” or at least say why it’s a thanks.
■Do you think blog commenting is a tid-for-tad kind of arrangement?
I think it’s great when people do comment on my posts which doesn’t happen that much, due to poor traffic, but that’s something for me to work on, when I have the time.
■Do you expect a quality link when you comment on other blogs, and specifically on my blog?
I comment first then wonder if it will do much for me. Not good I suppose when I’m working for others I do focus more on finding better links. But to me a link is a link, and a balance of do follow and no follow and high and low ranking links is better than overdoing the SEO .
■Would you still comment if my blog was completely NoFollow?
yes if I could think of something worth saying, and had stayed focused enough on the post to reach then end
■Why do you comment on my blog to begin with?
I guess the lure of the do follow did tempt me to begin, but I like your style, your posts, and the fact you respond to everyone.
As long as you keep writing the way you do I’ll keep trying to find something worthy of adding as a comment
Awesome comment, Pippa - you keep commenting like this and I can’t imagine you don’t get any traffic out of it.
Sounds like your outlook is similar to mine: would I love a quality DoFollow link? You bet. But I will still comment on blogs I like or for bloggers I like - after all, it’s not ALL about the links.
Glad to hear my blog is one of those for you!
I will keep writing, I don’t think I know how not to.
Ana
I really think that this is more of an issue for the blog owner than the commenter him/herself. To be honest I never did bother about any of this when commenting on a blog. People who comment for the sake of getting backlinks normally does not even leave something that adds value. IF this helps, I decided to make my blog both. Meaning that after a certain amount of approved comments, the link gets dofollowed and before that they are all nofollow. This encourages commenters to leave better comments and later rewarded while keeping away potential Spammers.
Anyway, I leave comments because I want to participate in the conversation or leave my opinion. Ultimately, who really knows how search engines treat this. I mean they change constantly their algos and maybe we should focus ourselves on “things” that are more important.
DiTesco´s last blog ..11 Must Have WordPress Plugins For Your Home Based Business
I don’t know how anyone coming to any blog would have a sense of entitlement to a DoFollow link, Francisco.
You brought up a great point as far as rewarding returning commentators: I never thought of lifting NoFollow after a certain numbers of comments.
Certainly another great way to do it.
Thanks for the input!
Ana
I would love to know how to do this. Is there a plugin that handles the count of the posts?
Brankica @ Italy travel´s last blog ..Wanna blog better Top 5 blogs to learn from
It’s a shame that the popular you get you need to make these kinds of decisions.
I’m mostly with Dwayne on this one. If the article moved me in such a way that I feel the need to comment, dofollow vs nofollow makes zero difference to me. I would appreciate the link, but it doesn’t make or break my experience.
It’s good to know about this alternative even though I’m nowhere near ready for it yet. thanks, much.
John Garrett´s last blog ..How to scan your linework for your comics with the Mustek Scan Express 1200 Pro on the Mac
It certainly is a shame to have spammers and abusers we have to protect ourselves from, John.
Thanks for always commenting on my blog; I do take it as such a great compliment!
As usual, excellent and very helpful post, Anna.
Regarding your questions, I’d say…
* Do you think blog commenting is a tid-for-tad kind of arrangement?
No. I know only too well how much work it may take to produce a valuable comment and the risk that we take as writers in having it rejected. But a blog is private property and the owner is always in the rightful position to discriminate. Having said that, I hasten to add that discrimination must be wise.
Some comments serve the needs of both the host and the author better than others. Those are the ones worth not only publishing but rewarding with some of your hard-earned link juice. Others are worth only whatever traffic they may attract through no follow.
Until there is a method to expedite the processing of one vs. the other, what makes sense is to opt for a common denominator of reward, which is the no follow option for both cases.
I think you’re being extremely gracious to share your juice with everybody, regardless of comment quality. I don’t believe in entitlements, except if there is a preexisting agreement between the parties. And that’s not the case with most blogs that offer open commenting.
* Do you expect a quality link when you comment on other blogs, and specifically on my blog?
If by quality link you mean whether I expect you to permit me to anchor-text from my comment to my site’s page, then yes, provided you’ve evaluated the comment as valuable to your readership. But there’s more to consider in this matter than just posting for the sake of getting some of your juice, just because you’re such a high PR scoring site.
We need to consider the content that is already on your page where I’m leaving my link.
If my site deals with starting your own business, as it surely does, but I’m leaving a comment with said anchor text at a page of yours that has nothing to do with this topic of entrepreneurship — in fact my keywords don’t even show up once on your page -, then who is to say that search engine algorithms will actually consider this link as fitting at your site as I’d hope it to be, since your content and mine are so far apart?
But if I had a site that complemented yours on the topic of traffic generation, then the search engine may consider that a far more worthy criterion for assigning to me more of that link juice for which your site is so well known.
Bottom line: I expect the best quality links only from sites that have to do closely with what my site deals with, and only if my host finds my anchor text non-intrusive and not too self-serving.
* Would you still comment if my blog was completely NoFollow?
Yes, I would, because you have enough traffic volume to enable someone reading my comment to visit mine site as a result, even if I’m not getting any juice from you.
* Why do you comment on my blog to begin with?
I comment on your blog for 2 reasons:
1) You’ve earned my comment
2) I’d feel honored if you’d publish my comment
Both reasons have to do with my admiration for your exceptional skill and perception, so that I’m willing to invest effort in you. You don’t waste my reading time and I gain lots of value from visiting your site.
My head is spinning from everything your comment made me think of.
Let’s start with this: I feel a bit like this is a one-way conversation since I don’t know your first name. I am not used to that; I usually know my loyal commentators and readers by name - I would love for you to fill in the blanks.
Secondly, it occurred to me that I can certainly make a rule to DoFollow comments after the commentator left say 5 comments on my blog. Of course, this way I encourage more consistent comments (hopefully), but it still doesn’t solve the issue of quality.
Here’s what I think about it: yes, every approved comment will get a DoFollow link from my blog. However, if it’s a poor quality comment, the commentator will never get any traffic or any connection with me. Of course, depending on why they came to my blog, that might be all they need. I can’t prevent that. I am all about cultivating a community feeling on my blog (otherwise, what’s the point of blogging?) and my readers are free to take it or leave it.
I certainly do appreciate the fact that you feel that the hours I take to produce quality free content on my blog deserve your comment!
Ana
Thank you for asking for my name, Anna. It’s Arturo.
>…it occurred to me that I can certainly make a rule to DoFollow comments after the commentator left say 5 comments on my blog. Of course, this way I encourage more consistent comments (hopefully), but it still doesn’t solve the issue of quality.
One way to address the issue of quality is to do more consistently as you did in this article. You listed 4 questions for us to answer as the standard for a qualified response. Although you certainly can provide a wide margin within which commentators can bask in their own opinions, you could likewise narrow it down to your given standard.
Example: “I’d like my readers to benefit from your *specific* views about DoFollow/NoFollow. So please answer these 4 questions and leave 1 summary opinion. I’ll be sure to approve the best answers, and those who contribute will benefit from lots of link juice from me!”
Basically you set the bar for quality by openly defining in advance what quality is for you and your audience at your site.
This is how you can level set expectations from the very get-go to generate a little (or a lot!) of competition for your approval and, in short, you end up producing more demand for your scarce link juice asset.
Then you can adjust the bar depending on how much feedback you receive one way or the other. If you get a lot of competing comments for your approval, you know that you’ve hit a nerve. If people don’t comment or leave mostly insipid remarks, you know you’ve bombed. Fine tune as needed then.
Hey Ana, you have answered some intriguing questions here by sharing that email and you have asked some even more thought provoking ones!
I’m not sure I understand all of these issues and I think you have to admit that they are pretty complex. Without getting too deep (maybe I’ll come back with a more in-depth answer after seeing some other comments) here’s my view:
I don’t consider nofollow or dofollow when commenting in general. I come back to this blog frequently because I always learn something and I love the blog audits, traffic generation tips and all the rest, including your wonderfully professional and gracious personality.
However, what I do really pay attention to on other blogs is CommentLuv. There are many times that I won’t leave a comment on a post because the blog owner doesn’t have CommentLuv installed. It’s nothing against them personally it’s more a goal that I set for myself to engage with members of the CommentLuv community. I even let some “iffy” comments through on my own blog simply because the person is a CommentLuv member (as long as they stay somewhat on track with the content of the post).
Now it’s very easy for me to see if any blog or website is NoFollow by using the SEO Site Tools extension. I just click a box, and all NoFollow links are highlighted in red. But I must admit, most of the time I leave it off.
What I find a total turn off is a blog owner that brags about how their blog is NoFollow and in the long run it’s better for them because yada, yada, yada. Do I even want to know why it’s better for them? If you want your place to be NoFollow, keep it to yourself because I’ll probably have that box on SEO Site Tools “unchecked” and we can all just get along very nicely.
So there you have it - CommentLuv entices me to comment, interact, engage…the whole 9 yards. It’s funny that all of my favorite blogs have CommentLuv installed anyway. FamousBloggers, DragonBlogger, BlazingMinds, NewBizBlogger, AskKim, JustKissie, iBlogZone, Tek3d, Kikolani, BloggingBookShelf (I can go on and on and it seems I’ll never run out).
When you think aobut it, I guess that doesn’t leave much time for NoFollow commenting does it?

Ileane´s last blog ..How to Install CommentLuv on Blogger
You are so right, Ileane - why it never occurred to me to even mention CommentLuv!
So DoFollow or NoFollow, my commentators still get a DoFollow link back to their blog.
Here’s one more thing I LOVE about CommentLuv: I think it’s potential to produce traffic back to your blog is even greater than your comment itself. I always end up paying attention to the blog post title ComLuv displays - some of them are quite catchy and I usually end up visiting that blog even if I am short on time.
Definitely, great benefit in that and I see how you make it your priority to comment on CommentLuv blogs.
I do greatly appreciate you visiting and commenting on my blog. I respect what you are doing for the blogging community, Ileane, and the impact you make and always appreciate your intelligent opinions on my posts.
Ana
Hey Ana,
Great job answering that email. Most bloggers would not post an email like that.
You found a good gem there for that free plugin.
To answer your question. You know generating a good link from a good blog is not easy to generate. That is why I like to give to bloggers that do offer Dofollow links. By syndicating their content with social bookmarks. It creates additional backlinks to the owners blog.
I don’t comment on blogs that are Nofollow. Unless they generate over 50 tweets on their post. That’s gives me a good indication they generate a good amount traffic.
Hope this helps out with what you are looking for.
Have a great day,
Josh
Josh Garcia@Generate Free Leads´s last blog ..Blogging Tips From Santa Claus You Don’t Want To Ignore
I completely understand that link building is extremely important for any website owner, Josh.
What I usually do is this: I have some blogs that I follow simply because I get a lot of value out of them and I do comment to connect with the owners. I also comment on blogs whose owners are my loyal readers - I always love to “reward” their commenting efforts with a visit to their blog. Doesn’t happen all the time as you can imagine, but I try.
Then I also do “link building campaigns”, where I specifically search out blogs to build links from. Of course, I still add value to the conversation, goes without saying.
I know you are huge on commenting, Josh, so it’s interesting to see your parameters for it.
Honored to be included!
Ana
Hi Ana,
Personally I agree in total with Dwayne but I thought I had better write more than “Ditto”!
~Marcus
Marcus Baker@network marketing Internet business´s last blog ..18 Ways to be More Likable on Facebook
From you, ditto wouldn’t sufficed, Marcus.
Thanks for mentioning the Seth Godin plug in. My wife made or blog do follow but did not announce it. We have a Joomla blog..wonder if there is something similar?
Thanks for the great info!
Jeff Padovani´s last blog ..Are You Using the Power of Bride Reviews
You are very welcome, Jeff.
If your blog is DoFollow, you certainly need to make sure your readers know it, and the plugin does exactly that for you.
Quite honestly, I know nothing about Joomla platform to answer your question… definitely worth looking into though.
Ana
I post commets because I appreciate the value I just consumed and I want the author to know that or because I have some value of my own to add. NoFollow or DoFollow makes no difference to my commenting decision.
As always Ana great info.
Chat soon
Dwayne Huggins@How To Make Money Blogging´s last blog ..Want To Know How To Get Your Blog Ranked In The Top 20-000 In The World In Just 6 Months
I do think similarly to that, Dwayne.
As you and I very well know, it takes hours to produce quality value-packed content; when I read something that interested me or added value or gave me an idea for my own blog - you bet I’ll let the blogger know, whatever the link!
Ana