Comments are dying

We’re shifting away from social on social media

Shaun Nestor
2 min readJan 18, 2021

Recently, a number of websites I followed either removed their comments section or announced their intent to do so.

Frequently noted as the reason for removal included a lack of engagement, a lack of civility, a change in reader habits, or — as they were originally designed — comments not adding to the conversation.

Geekwire writes,

Over the years, we’ve seen that kind of engagement decline and readers choose to connect with us (and each other) via social media, newsletters, email and our events. We’ve observed our own habits as readers change, as well. After much discussion and consideration, we’ve decided to focus on engaging with you through these other outlets, and we have removed the comment section from articles.

When the web was in its infancy, the comments section was an extension of the article. Readers were welcome to contribute their own perspective to the topic and further the conversation. As social media began to grow in influence, publishers shared their content on social media platforms to boost exposure. With that, the conversations shifted to those platforms and we, in general, stopped visiting the original article.

Social media, as it does, began tweaking algorithms and dramatically reduced the exposure those shared articles received. Less exposure meant less engagement. Less engagement lead to publishers being forced to pay companies like Facebook and Twitter to share the content that used to live on their own website.

Like paying burglars to steal your own furniture.

Comments, and the underlying community, are now controlled by the social media platforms (LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter) and receive the attention they deem appropriate. This adds a layer of disconnect between the author and the customer.

Brands, especially small ones, would be best served by taking back control. Encouraging engagement on your own site, within you own domain. Foster a community of like-minded supporters who are eager to add to the conversation. By hosting your content, conversation, connection, and community within your own platform, you can cultivate a deep relationship with your customers and clients. One that is self-pollinating, where the community becomes stronger as more people use it and contribute.

The conversations didn’t silence. The perspective didn’t disappear. The community didn’t evaporate.

But it did move.

It now lives on platform whose purpose is not aligned with yours.

And it is in your best interest to go get it back.

Read stories like these and more in my own community. I’d love for you to contribute your voice. Find out more here.

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Shaun Nestor

I help smart leaders and entrepreneurs who feel lost, overwhelmed, or frustrated by all of the challenges of running a business.