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Bloggers: Don’t make visitors log in before commenting

Don’t you  hate it when you visit a blog, read a post, love the topic, and even before you get to the end, you know what comment you’re going to add?

Then you reach the bottom of the post and you see this:
   
Log in box at Fast Company blog

   
That’s what happened to me just now when I read the article 10 Ways to Amplify a B2B PR Campaign by Wendy Marx at Fast Company’s blog. I love her list! She invited comments. And I had four more ideas I wanted to add.

Sorry, but I’m not hanging around to log in because I can’t remember if I have a Fast Company account. I’d have to dig around for my login name and password. If I don’t have one, I’d have to register. And that’s way too much trouble.

So instead, I’m criticizing the magazine and its dumb policy here.

Media outlets, by the way, seem to be the worst offenders. Many newspapers, which are dying, force the few visitors they have left to create an account before commenting at their blogs or websites. I’m a former newspaper editor. Before I left the business 17 years ago, I was appalled by the “screw you” attitude and awful customer service that permeates the industry.

 

My Ideas for Publicizing Your Publicity

Here’s what I would have written at the Fast Company blog. These ideas work for any PR campaign, not just B2B:

  1. When you’ve gotten national publicity, let your local newspaper, weekly newspaper or business journal know by submitting a press release. Go one step further. Pitch yourself and offer to explain how you got national publicity. 
       
  2. Ditto for your college alumni publication.
       
  3. Speakers, photocopy the article, with permission, and add it to your handouts.
       
  4. Write a letter to the editor of the newspaper or magazine that just wrote about you. Discuss one or two points the reporter didn’t include, or elaborate on a specific issue within the overall story. You get in front of the same audience twice!  If readers missed reading the original article, they’ll see your name and company name in the letter.

Those are my ideas. Add yours to the list. Or explain why you think media outlets and others have idiotic policies that make readers log in.

 


A Tool That Can Help You

My Special Report #13: How to Recycle Your Publicity, has many more ideas on this topic. It was updated a few months ago. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

by Joan Stewart on May 22, 2012

Filed Under: Content Creation Tagged With: Blogging

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Marva Dasef says

    May 22, 2012 at 10:54 am

    I like when I don’t even have to fill in the required Name and Email as I did above. Where’s the Click an ID? Mine should automatically be Google, although I have a wordpress identity too. So this blog has included a layer to hold off comments despite the topic.

    And blogs with Capcha? Most people find them very hard to use and the characters unreadable. I don’t include them on my blog because it’s annoying and I don’t want to stop anybody from speaking their mind.

    I’m notified of every comment made, so I can head off Spam as it occurs.

    Reply
    • Joan says

      May 22, 2012 at 11:18 am

      Marva, you make an excellent point. I’ll look for a plug-in that allows a “Click an ID.” See? You CAN teach an old dog new tricks.

      Reply
  2. Sara says

    May 23, 2012 at 4:14 am

    You raised valid issue, this happened quite often with me, after reading whole blog thoroughly at the end I came to know that I have to be logged in for commenting… this not only annoys but also prevent user to visit that blog again due to un necessary requirement of sign up.

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Book Marketing & Promotions Links from around the web, 5/25/2012 | 30 Day Books says:
    May 25, 2012 at 10:28 am

    […] 6. Bloggers: Don’t Make Visitors Log In Before Commenting  – The Publicity Hound […]

    Reply

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Publicity expert Joan Stewart, a PR mentor aka The Publicity Hound, works with small business owners who need free publicity, and with PR pros who tell their clients' stories to the world. She shows you how to establish your credibility, enhance your reputation, position yourself as an expert, and sell more products and services. To receive her free DIY publicity tips twice a week, subscribe here. See all the ways you can work with Joan. Or contact her and ask a burning question about PR, self-promotion or social media.

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