Social Media

What is Comments?

Comments track the number of user responses on posts or content. They help indicate audience interaction and discussion levels.

Full FormComments
CategorySocial Media
UnitCount (number)
Higher IsBetter
FORMULA

How to Track and Measure Comments

Comments measure how many users actively respond to content. They indicate deeper engagement than likes. More comments usually mean stronger interaction, helping understand audience opinions. It supports content and community analysis.

Simple Example

If your post received 420 comments this month

total comments = 420
Discussion
420
Comments
Strong
Interaction

Marketing Platforms that supports Comments

These platforms provide the data needed to measure or calculate Comments in Two Minute Reports.

Frequently Asked Questions

Comments are the most valuable organic social engagement because they require significant effort, create public conversations that attract others, generate user-generated content, and provide direct feedback and insights. Unlike passive likes, comments reveal what audiences think, questions they have, objections they raise, and language they use. Comment threads extend content reach as platforms show activity to networks of commenters. Each comment creates opportunity for brand-audience relationship building. Comments indicate stronger interest than likes—users invested enough to type responses. They help content rank better in platform algorithms (especially LinkedIn and Facebook). Comments with questions reveal content gaps to address. Negative comments identify product issues, service failures, or messaging problems. Positive, detailed comments serve as testimonials. Comment quality matters more than quantity—thoughtful discussions trump emoji reactions.
Posts get likes without comments when content is inspirational but doesn't invite discussion (motivational quotes), informational but complete (comprehensive guides leaving nothing to add), entertaining but superficial (funny memes), or too safe/uncontroversial to spark debate. Extremely polished, professional content can feel intimidating—audiences feel they have nothing valuable to add. Content for general audiences lacks specificity prompting personal connection. Overly promotional posts get courtesy likes from loyal followers without engagement. Sometimes audiences are lurkers by nature (B2B LinkedIn communities often have 90% passive viewers). Timing matters—posts published when audiences are busy get quick likes, few comments. Lack of question or discussion prompt gives no clear reason to comment. Brand personality being too corporate and serious discourages casual conversation. Caption being too long or too short both reduce comments—need enough context to spark thinking but not so much it answers everything.
Encourage meaningful comments by asking specific, open-ended questions in captions ('What strategy has worked best for you?'), sharing controversial or thought-provoking opinions (appropriate debate drives comments), telling stories with emotional hooks that prompt personal sharing, creating content with multiple perspectives inviting discussion, and responding thoughtfully to early comments to show you're listening (people comment when they expect engagement). Avoid generic questions like 'What do you think?' which generate low-quality responses. Use polls and fill-in-the-blank prompts to lower comment barriers. Share vulnerable, authentic content people relate to personally. Spotlight community members, creating incentive to participate. Discourage spam by setting comment filters for keywords, requiring manual approval for first-time commenters, and promptly deleting/hiding spam to signal community standards. Thank thoughtful commenters publicly. Feature best comments in future posts. Build community where quality discussion is norm through active moderation and tone-setting.
Maximize comments by being consistently conversational and authentic in brand voice (people comment on people, not corporate speak), responding to every comment within an hour to encourage others, asking questions that invite story-sharing (not yes/no questions), creating content from follower perspectives rather than brand-centric, hosting AMAs and live sessions naturally generating questions, sharing behind-the-scenes content creating curiosity, and posting hot takes or unpopular opinions (carefully) that prompt discussion. Tag relevant users to bring them into conversations. Create comment threads yourself by replying with follow-ups. Share user-generated content, tagging creators—their networks see and comment. Build recurring content series people anticipate (Weekly Tips, Friday Questions). Recognize top commenters publicly, incentivizing participation. Use Instagram/Facebook Stories question stickers, then share responses prompting feed comments. Controversy and emotion drive comments—take stands on industry issues. Most importantly, treat comments as beginning of relationships, not metrics to track. Genuine community interest generates organic discussion.