A Minnow's Guide to Comment Curation

in #comments7 years ago

It surprises us here at CommentWealth how many post authors leave their comment threads uncurated. We're not talking about the type of “curation” that's rewarded monetarily here on Steemit. We're talking about the broader definition of the verb, to curate: “to pull together, sift through, and select for presentation, as music or website content.” (dictionary.com) Steemit authors often fail to curate their comments, to pull together and reward the most valuable comments for presentation at the top of their comment thread, and to move the spam and bot comments down to the bottom of the thread, where they belong. These are simple but crucial habits for successful Steemians.

Comment curation is something all minnows should learn how to do, in order to build their following and create community here on Steemit. And in fact, comment curation is one of the things CommentWealth tries to do for minnows until they learn to do it for themselves. But we've been surprised at how many dolphins and even whales fail to curate their comments! To respond to this need, we've put together a quick guide on how to simply and effectively manage your comment curation.

This doesn't necessarily mean, identify the comments being made by your friends or even your consistent followers. You may have several of those, and they may leave polite comments. But if a newcomer has taken the time to leave a thoughtful, detailed comment about a point you've made, revealing their own thorough comprehension of your work, upvote that comment first! That is the kind of interaction you want to reward and move to the top of your thread!

We call this type of thoughtful, detailed comment a "big" comment.

It stuns us to see big comments rotting on the bottom of someone's comment thread, while that post author is busy high-fiving and upvoting their friends who have offered nothing more than a “hey.” Whales are often guilty of this; fine, they can afford to be. Minnows can't.

Remember, the first comment you upvote always receives a higher payout than the upvotes you make later down the line (until the next day, of course). So upvote the most powerfully connecting comment interactions you receive first.

Middle comments are the polite ones that aren't as engaging or detailed, but that also deserve your attention. CommentWealth believes that anyone taking the time to comment on one of your posts deserves the reward of an upvote! Just make sure you're upvoting these polite, middle comments after your powerful comments, or you can upvote polite comments at a slightly lower percentage than your most powerful comments.

Not all bots are bad, and the ones leaving automated messages after upvoting your content deserve respect and rewards, too. But they fall below the humans who have taken the time to interact with your post. Upvote your bot comments last, or upvote them at a lower percentage, if you use a slider. One possible sliding scale might be to upvote your big comments with 100% upvotes, your middle comments with 75% upvotes, and your bot comments with 50% upvotes. But those numbers are entirely up to you – experiment to find what works best!

This is crucial and should go without saying. But this is the single-most important thing any Steemian can do to build community, relationships, and a loyal following.

How minnows handle spam has a huge effect on how their posts are received. We don't recommend that minnows flag their spam. As a newbie to Steemit, you don't need to start any flame wars and your voting power isn't high enough to make a flagging impact. Flagging is best left to larger accounts that have more voting power. In fact, one of the stated goals of CommentWealth is that we want to help minnows by flagging their spam for them, and this is an activity we'll begin when our account gets larger.

But there are things minnows can do in response to comment spam that can actually help their posts and their visibility on Steemit. Make sure you comment on your spam! The more comments a post has, the more likely others are to click on it, under the assumption that the post author is someone who engages with their readers and followers. So get your comment numbers as high as you can! And that includes commenting on spam.

You don't need to be rude. You can be funny and mock them. You can be polite and helpful, letting them know you have a low tolerance for spam. You can develop a spam policy that you copy and paste whenever a spam comment is left on your work. But however you choose to handle it, make the spam work for you by upping your comment numbers!

And there's one more thing to keep in mind: we didn't discuss comment curation in the sense of curation rewards here on Steemit. But when you build your presence here and engage regularly with your followers, curation rewards from comments can become as lucrative – if not more – than your curation rewards for posts!

If you follow these five steps and keep the ultimate goal in mind, you'll build a following here on Steemit that will propel your account into higher visibility and monetization. Do you have other ways of curating your comments? If so, please tell us in the comments! After all, that's where community happens.

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Thank you so much! As a newbie I have learned so much just in this one post! I, like several others have mentioned, simply upvoted in the order they were received. I didn't realize there was a strategy! Is there an amount of time I should appropriately wait before upvoting? Once a day?

Right now I don't have a slider, should I be upvoting every comment or being selective?

Also, just want to point out I just found the 'Replies' tab under my feed. I know most people probably know about this, but as a newbie it was a game changer in making it easier for follow my posts/comments!!

I'm following you now so I can learn more! Thank you!!

Probably best to reply as soon as possible.

I would say that since your voting power is not going to matter, voting on all (real) comments is a good way to show you read/acknowledge them. Once you get a slider, you can worry about being more selective.

Good point, @lexiconical! And happy to know the info is helpful, @fivepoints!

Thanks!

Thank you so much for this... just got here yesterday and luckily been pointed in the direction of some very valuable resources... thanks for putting this together!

Can I just ask...

How does one go about getting a 'slider'?!

Thank you!

Hart Floe
<3

After reading this I went through my last 7 days of posts and did exactly what you suggest. Of course it makes perfect sense. I had been doing it a bit but not in the most effective way as this post points out perfectly.
Sometimes common sense only becomes common sense once it's pointed out. Thanks for pointing out the common sense of this method.

I've been seeing the bots going about there business and doing a good job as far as I can see. I'll be joining your merry shoal today. So much good content and so little time. This is a great initiative and very helpful.

As a minnow, this post really does clarify a lot about curation for me. Bookmarked, upvoted and following.
Thank you!

You're welcome @oasis-in-arizona! We know how difficult it is for minnows to get going, and we want to be a help the way others were for us.

I truly appreciate your support!

Great tips and write up. I feel this is of paramount importance, especially to newcomers to the platform. In order to build your account, you need a loyal following. Spam comments will NOT do this. Concentrate on comments that add value, something incisive. And those who do the same to your posts, reward. Let's build a better community together. One grows, we all grow.

Thanks @gmuxx - one encouraging thing we've seen so far is that someone actually apologized for spamming, and another is trying to learn better ways to grow on the Steemit platform! It's one thing to fight spam, but entirely another thing to try to engage spammers and show them a better way.

It's difficult as a smaller user without the option to change the scale on my upvotes. If I upvote a lot of polite comments. I have no power to upvote powerful posts in my thread. I try to watch my replies window carefully, but it can be difficult to get replies wirtten to everything, especially when replies feel repetitive. And some of the comment bot like stuff... well, it's hard to tell.

Just remember, the more you comment, the better. There's nothing wrong with repetitive comments; if you have a spam policy you'd like to post every time you receive spam, it's expected that would be repetitive. If you want to say thank you over and over, that's repetitive, too, but perfectly acceptable!

Until you get a slider, you will need to budget your upvotes, but you'll probably do more community building by upvoting big comments than posts. The good news here is that you'll get relatively few big comments. But cherish the people who give them to you and reward them when you can. 😊

Thank you for your advice. This is definitely one of those articles that ought to be pointed out to new minnows repeatedly and often!! (Along with lectures that upvotes aren't like facebook likes and you need to use them sparingly and not on things over a week old) Because I am active on discord, I actually get big comments on more than one occasion, but you're right--my discord friends won't expect me to upvote them, as they know I'm a struggling minnow. I should focus on those outsiders.

These are some great tips, thanks. I try to keep an eye on my comments and upvote/respond as much as I see fit. It really helps too, engaging with people is one of the best ways to gather followers that are actually interested in you :)

Excellent advice. Thanks for sharing. I upvoted this and your other post on being a new minnow in this day and age. And now I have decided to follow you as well. I'm always trying to find what works.
I write fiction (erotic stories mostly) and I am preplexed to find some of my works earning 0.10 or 1.00 or something small, then a few posts hit 50, or 100. I can't figure it out. At first I thought it was that I added an evocative photo in the post, but that wasn't it either.
I guess I just have to keep trying. I have faith in steemit for now. I want to see how this pays out as my steem power, s l o w l y grows.
Be well,
Joe

Also wanted to add, that I have figured out on my own to respond to all commenters. I'm small enough to be able to do that. And I quite enjoy returning a thank-you or answering a question. To me, that's the easy part, and the rewarding part, too. Everyone should take the time to do that.
Only if, I had more comments to reply to.

You're right - even minnows can comment back and people who want to succeed in Steemit really should do that, as a minimum. If you like to write fiction, there's a fiction workshop over in the Minnow Support Project Discord channel. You can find out more about it here: https://steemit.com/fiction/@jrhughes/fiction-writers-wanted

When people tells me that it was a nonsense voting the comments with my current SP I always answer saying that I want the real comments to be in the top or sometimes I just want to push some comments up in some threads.

Now I will be able to show this post, so thanks for it!

Yes! One of the best things I have seen in a while!

I think curating your own comment stream is super important, and yet I often feel like I stand in some tiny minority for doing so. Really happy to see this post-- re-steeming for greater visibility!

Are you reading my posts and comments or is this idea just starting to become apparent to others at the same time? Anyway, Glad to see you spreading the good word and attempting to get people to actually do what this platform was designed for.

It must be synchronicity because no, we're not familiar with your account. But we'll definitely check out your work!

Thank-you. The good stuff is mostly comments on other people's articles, but there are a few good articles of my own buried amongst the games and contests.

If you (or someone you know) has issues with back pain, you can find a video that shows how you can probably avoid ever visiting a chiropractor again by scrolling all the way to the bottom of my blog list to the 1st or 2nd post I ever made on this platform.