If you want to be a content creator, be one, don't be a beggar

How often do you see people spamming links and asking others to check out their website in the comments section of whatever social media side you're using? All the time.

Asking people to visit your website in the comments section is just wasting your time, the same time that you can spend to create content.

If you want to be a content creator, be one, don't be a beggar.

If you want to link to your site, at least make sure your link can actually help people. Otherwise it's no different stuffing flyers in someone else's hand and we all know where that flyer is going... into the trash.

You're not going to get any meaningful results by spamming links in the comments section, so you better don't waste seconds, days, months, your life doing so.

Don't know how to get people to. your site? Go read some internet marketing articles I've written over the years.

This article is part of the Internet Marking for Artists series that you can follow at https://www.parkablogs.com/tags/internet-marketing-artists.

Comments

Hi Teoh. I expect I've put links to my blog in comments on your website or on YouTube at some point. If I have, they're (touch wood) not begging comments that do nothing but ask people to check out my blog though. If I ever put a link in the comments, it should only be to a specific post that builds on the conversation where, for example, I've tried out the same technique as you or reviewed the same book. I hope that's OK - apologies if it's not. Feel free to call me out if you ever do see a begging comment from me. Keep up the good work.

In reply to by Steve Mills (not verified)

@Steve Mills
If your comments on Youtube actually talks about the video, it's alright to leave relevant links.

But some people just leave comments that have no purpose except to push traffic to their website/Youtube channel. The comment isn't even talking about anything mentioned in the video. Those are the comments I usually delete instantly.

Actually if someone leaves a comment talking about the video, then end with a link to his/her website, I don't mind that at all. I do visit the websites of my followers to see who they are and what they do.

I report those as spam. Probably doesn't do any good.

We did get one spammer using a hashtag inappropriately stopped but it took a year of reporting them. By "we" I mean the company whose name was the hashtag and us, their loyal customers.

You are not the only one who has this problem.
I have end up to the conclusion that such kind of comments are made by bot accounts. I don't think that there are people out there that spend their time to post so many and so irrelevant comments all around the web.

I am glad to hear that also art professionals do not enjoy such comments. I paint as hobby and I have a IG profile, of course I’m happy if people like my art, but as soon as someone writes “fantastic piece, check my IG…” I understand they just seek new followers and their comment on my art was probably not genuine.

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