Improve Google Rankings using Facebook
When Facebook launched the ability to embed Facebook comments on third-party websites, a lot of publishers saw it as a great advantage: not only would it improve traffic by exposing their content to others on the social network, but Facebook’s “real names” policy would also cut down on trolling and bad behavior. And some newspaper and media sites have seen a big traffic boost from implementing Facebook comments – including mainstream media companies like Los Angeles Times, which has credited Facebook with improving its web results and Huffington Post. It’s worth remembering however that Facebook is not the cure for bad comments, and that handing over comments means relinquishing control over something important.
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Using Facebook Comments
Many small businesses have utilize Facebook comments to their business blogs. In recent months, it was confirmed that Googlebots, or the spiders that crawl web pages, are now reading Facebook comments on websites just like any other text content and the more interesting part is that you can also search the text of these comments using regular Google search.
When you leave intelligent comments on your industry-related blogs, Facebook could know who carries a high reputation on certain type of content. Seeing the possible implications of Facebook commenting, as a blogger, one should think of the advantages it has been proven of. It can certainly add value to readers as the comments become more meaningful for group of readers related on Facebook. Commenting on all relevant Facebook posts may be very time-consuming, and you may think of hiring a Social Media manager who can work on your behalf.
Facebook as a commenting platform offers a huge tool to create and maintain reputation for any professional or business site. You may not want to add Facebook Comments to your blog, but, you can certainly use Facebook Comments to comment on other blogs which you like.
Real names can also exclude valuable viewpoints
Facebook and Google+ both pursue a real-name policy. Although removing anonymity (or pseudonymity) can remove some of the trolling and flame-wars that consume comment threads, it also risks removing opinions and viewpoints that would never be expressed if the commenter had to put their name on it.
Choosing Facebook Comments for Search Rankings
Integrating Facebook comments can provide a traffic boost for publishers and other websites, simply because the social network is so huge. In fact, in case of the Huffington Post, it has credited Facebook integration with generating a huge amount of traffic and comments – the site said that within just a few months of implementing Facebook Connect logins, it saw the number of comments almost double and traffic from Facebook climbed by 500 percent. This kind of boost is like a reward that the network uses to convince publishers that Facebook comments are worth offering.
The bottom line of is that business websites will benefit from the traffic and authority that Facebook offers with comments.