@paulbradshaw @BBCCollege interesting piece. to your final point, curation can be scaleable eg. if users are involved. Wikipedia?
— Sarah Hartley (@foodiesarah) July 3, 2014
What happens when people comment on your blog – but it’s not on your blog?
More often than not people now comment on a blog post by tweeting – essentially microblogging – their response.
Those comments can be valuable – but they’re lost to anyone reading the original post and, indeed, yourself, unless you can later find it through search.
In ye olde days of blogging, blogged responses could be automatically added to your comments section via pingbacks. But microblogged responses don’t qualify for pingbacks.
So why not add them manually: embed those tweets at the end of your article by pasting the link to the tweet. WordPress will automatically turn that link into an embedded tweet.
You can then subhead those embedded tweets as ‘Comments‘, or add an ‘UPDATE‘.
For two examples see the end of this post on Curation, aggregation and why news organisations can’t be ‘the next LinkedIn’. Or this post on capitalisation in UK headlines, updated with a response from Guardian Style: