Postmortem on my Comment Challenge

On the 11th of November, I challenged myself to comment every frontpage post for the rest of November. The result? Well, I failed a lot. But I also commented far more than I usually did. And I think from both my successes and my failures, I found some nuggets interesting enough to share with you.

Good days can be worse than bad days

If you had asked me before hand when I expected to fail, my first answer would have been on bad days—days where I’m overworked, or too busy, or depressed. And indeed, there’s probably a couple of such days in my failures. But good days, days where I just relaxed with friends and my girlfriend, are also time sinks, and I usually realized too late that I didn’t read the LW posts you wanted to read.

So any commenting habit should probably be safeguarded from both good and bad days, by being either short enough or having a specific scheduled time for it.

A single chunck is too much for me

I began this challenge by choosing an hour each day for reading and commenting every frontpage post. But it was just too big a time commitment to me. Worse, I noticed that because it was that big, it felt tiring, and I pushed it further and further, until it was the last hour of the day and I was not in top form.

My solution was obvious: read and comment one or two posts at a time. I don’t forbid myself to go on a LW binge, but it’s not a requirement either.

Not enough commenting guidelines

When introducing my challenge, I wrote:

Just a “I really enjoyed this post, even if I had nothing else to say” is useful feedback. So is “I’m not sure why, but I had trouble connecting with the arguments of the post”.

That’s certainly true for me. But while commenting on other posts, I sometimes felt like this type of feedback was not enough for the post in question. It usually happened with technical posts and AF posts.

The authors of these posts probably appreciate such feedback, if this post querying LW authors is any indication. But this nagging feeling remains. And I’m pretty sure it’s correct in some instances.

What’s the solution? Ideally, everyone would explain what kind of feedback they’re interested in. And we already have a mechanism for that: moderation guidelines! Maybe it’s misguided, but I believe that having a sentence or two clarifying the kind of feedback wanted in your post will tremendously help people to comment. If it becomes a community trend, we will all know where to look for this information, and it will be available for almost every author.

I’m starting it myself, in hope that more will follow. You can find my guideline when you comment, but here it is anyway:

Any feedback (positive or negative) is appreciated, as long as it’s respectful and contains at least one sentence about the post itself.

Start more discussions

My reason for challenging myself was that I feel like my posts don’t have enough discussion going on in them—not even discussion telling me how misguided I am. Yet it took me more than a week to realize I was part of the problem: my comments always gave closed feedback instead of starting a discussion. Or put another way, I saw each post as a finite product to judge, instead of a jumping board for discussions.

This brings me to my new commenting habit, replacing this challenge: I will write a comment starting a discussion every day. I don’t have to comment everything that way, because I still value pure feedback, and it would make me comment less. But still, I want to make LW a place where I discuss important ideas with smart people, and it’s mostly my fault if I don’t feel it’s completely the case now.

Conclusion

I’m glad I challenged myself that way. I read new posts, found new ideas, and understood a bit more about the difficulties of commenting on LW. I’m interested in any feedback you have, be it on my takeaways or on my flurry of comments this month (Did they annoy you? Were they helpful?)