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Thrive Themes is a successful WordPress company that focuses on conversions. All of their WordPress themes and plugins were designed to help convert visitors into long term subscribers and customers.
Their flagship product Thrive Leads is rightfully regarded as one of the best email list building solutions in the WordPress world, however the product that stands out for me is Thrive Comments.
Thrive Comments can transform your WordPress comment area into an interactive community. It will greatly increase engagement on your website and help you change one-time commenters into long-term followers.
In this article, I would like to show you how you can use Thrive Comments to enhance your WordPress website.
What Can Thrive Comments Do For You?
Thrive Comments enhances every aspect of comments. It will improve the design of your comment area, make commenting simpler for users, encourage engagement, and help streamline moderation.
The plugin builds upon WordPress’s comment system. It does not replace it. So in the event of deactivating Thrive Comments, all comments will remain on your website.
Just like the default commenting setup, you can allow guests to submit comments or request that everyone creates an account on your website. The plugin also allows you to integrate Facebook and Google to make logging in simpler for users.
Thrive Comments allows users to be notified of new posts and new comments. Another feature I love is that readers can choose to sort comments by newest, oldest, or top rated.
Where Thrive Comments excels is conversions. The plugin has a feature called “Post Comment Actions”.
Post comment actions let you select what happens after someone has submitted a comment. You can display a thank you message, encourage them to share your article, display related posts, and redirect the user to the URL of your choosing,
If Thrive Leads is also activated on your website, you can encourage the user to opt into your email list.
The threaded design that is used in Thrive Comments ensures that everyone can read through a large number of comments easily.
A voting system is available for comments too and staff can have badges next to their name. If the voting system has been enabled, readers can sort comments by the top rated comments.
The badge feature can be used to validate top commenters. For example, you can display a unique badge next to users whey they have reached a certain number of comments.
Users can also share individual comments so that they can direct others to a specific comment on your website. This is a fantastic way of driving more traffic to your website and encouraging others to take part in the discussion.
Another way that Thrive Comments helps is moderation.
The plugin adds many tools to help you manage comments. You can select which comments do not need a reply and you can delegate comments to specific staff. For example, if someone asks a technical question in the comment area, you could delegate the comment to the head of your IT department.
Thrive Comments also provides reports about your comments to help you analyse comment activity.
As you can see, Thrive Comments gives you a host of tools to help you increase the number of comments on your website and reduce the time it takes to manage comments.
It’s a versatile solution that gives you many configuration options.
Let’s take a closer look at how it all works.
How to Install & Setup Thrive Comments
Thrive Themes uses a product manager to manage the installation of all of their WordPress plugins.
This can be downloaded from the Thrive Themes member area.
The product manager can be installed on your website in one of two ways.
The first option is to extract all files from the zip file and upload the thrive-product-manager directory to the /wp-content/plugins/ directory on your website. You can upload files using a free File Transfer Protocol (FTP) client such as FileZilla.
A simpler way is to just upload the zip file to your WordPress website directly.
You can do this via the “Upload Plugin” feature which is located at the top of the “Add Plugins” page in your WordPress admin area.
Once you have activated the product manager plugin and connected your Thrives Themes account, you can install any Thrive Themes plugins and themes you have purchased.
The whole installation process is managed through the Thrive Themes product manager.
Once Thrive Comments has been installed and activated, it will be displayed in your Thrive Dashboard. This page will also show any other Thrive Themes products you have activated.
Underneath the “Installed Products” section is “Thrive Features”. This lets you access a user access manager, API connection manager, smart site global field manager, and a notifications manager.
Whilst the notification manager is listed here, it is not used by Thrive Comments.
The access manager lets you define which usergroups can and cannot access specific Thrive Themes products. Whilst this useful, it is fairly limited as you can only give usergroups full access to all functionality or remove access completely. It would be better if you could define exactly what permissions each usergroup, and specific users, should have.
The API manager can be used to configure reCaptcha and connect to social media services and email marketing services.
Email marketing services are well supported. There are dozens of applications available for integration such as Aweber, Campaign Monitor, and InfusionSoft. Email delivery services such as Amazon SES and MailGun are also supported together with webinar software such as Zoom.
A WordPress account can be connected, but social media support is limited. At the moment Thrive Themes only supports Facebook, Google, and Twitter. These are the largest social media services online, though I would like to see others supported.
Thankfully, Thrive Themes does listen to its customers.
If you need to connect to a service or application that is not there, you can request for integration support to be added via the Thrive Themes API Integration Request form.
Smart Site lets you define global fields. There are company fields such as address and phone number, legal fields such as privacy and terms and conditions, and social media fields such as YouTube and Instagram.
New fields can be added and assigned to existing field groups or to new field groups. For example, you could add a new field group for sponsors.
The Thrive Dashboard menu also lists a general settings page and the Thrive Comments configuration area (which we will discuss in the next section).
In general settings you can disable the “Powered By Thrive Comments” message, though you may want to keep this as Thrive Themes let you enter your affiliate ID so that you get paid for any referrals you generate.
Facebook App and Facebook admins can be defined here together with your website’s Disqus forum name.
Throughout the Thrive Dashboard area you will see a support login button, notification bell for Thrive Themes notifications, and a love heart that lets you share Thrive Themes to Facebook, Google, and Twitter.
The support login button does not create a new support ticket. You will need to do that directly on the Thrive Themes website. What it does allow you to do is grant access to the Thrive Themes team so that they can help you with any active support issues you have.
I have detailed many settings in this section, however it is important to note that it only takes a minute to install Thrive Comments.
All of the options mentioned above can be adjusted later if, and when, they are required.
Configuring Thrive Comments
The main configuration page for Thrive Comments divides settings into eight categories: General Settings, Comment Conversion, Comment Sign-In, Customize Style, Voting and Badges, Notifications, Comment Moderation, and Advanced Settings.
At the right-hand side of the page is a preview of what comments will look like on your website. The icons at the top of the preview area can be used to switch between desktop and mobile previews. This is a useful feature as it allows you to see changes you make in real-time.
In the general settings category you can enable and disble Thrive comments across your website.
Other settings include requiring users to be logged in, breaking comments into pages, and enabling GDPR consent. You can also change the default sorting method for comments.
Comment conversion is one of the most interesting features of Thrive Comments.
When a person publishes a comment on your website, you can choose how you automatically respond to it.
The first option is to display a customised thank you message. The second option lets you do the same, but also lets you ask the commenter if they would like to share your article using the social media sharing buttons displayed underneath. The third option lets you thank the commenter and displays related posts underneath that they may be interested in.
The redirection option will send the user to a custom URL. You could use this to do a number of things such as promote your discussion forum, promote a competition, or send them to a recommended article.
The last option is an opt-in form. This is arguably one of the most effective conversion methods to use in your comment area as it will help you build your email list, however you need to have an active license for Thrive Leads to use this feature (a single license retails at $67).
Thrive Comments also lets you select a different response if the person comes back and publishes another comment.
The comment sign-in category allows you to permit guests to share their website URL.
Commenters can also publish a comment by logging in via Facebook or Google. To add this functionality, you will need to add a new API connection.
In the style customisation category you can change the accent colour that is used in comments, say whether avatars are displayed, and assign a default avatar image for those that do not have a Gravatar account.
This area also allows you to select the date format and decide whether individual comments can be shared. I think that comment sharing can really help push traffic to your pages so it is something I would keep enabled.
The Thrive Comments credit link can be switched on and off here too.
The voting system lets users vote comments up and down. Downvotes can cause problems during a discussion so if you prefer, you can only enable upvotes. Alternatively, you can disable the voting system.
Badges can also be assigned to moderators to help them stand out from everyone else.
You can also create your own badges and award them to commenters when they meet certain requirements such as a defined number of approved comments or featured comments.
Dozens of premade badges are available for selection. Alternatively, you can choose to upload your own custom badge.
Thrive Comments allows you to notify commenters using WordPress or a third-party email delivery service. I consider this an essential feature as external email delivery services can deliver more emails successfully as they are less likely to be marked as spam.
You will need to enter the API information for any email delivery service you use.
The notification email message for new posts and comments can be customised.
Thrive Comments gives you full control over the email subject and content. Several shortcodes are available that can be used in the email.
Thrive Comments lets you define which usergroups can moderate comments.
To prevent spam, you can manually approve comments and only approve comments from those that have already had comments approved.
Words and IP addresses can be entered in the fields below to automatically send comments to the moderation queue or to the trash. If used correctly, this can greatly reduce the amount of spam you need to manage.
Thrive Comments has a cool feature that lets you convert certain keywords into links. For example, you could change every reference to your website name to a link to your home page. You could also link “Contact Us” to your contact page.
Comments can be loaded in real-time and you can customise the labels that are used in the comment area. This is particularly useful for websites that are not published in English.
Lazy loading can also be utiised so that comments and avatar images are only displayed when they are in the user’s view.
Once you have familiarised yourself with the settings area of Thrive Comments, you will have a better appreciation for what the WordPress plugin can do.
I encourage you to tweak the settings until you have a setup that fits you and your website.
Moderating Comments with Thrive Comments
Thrive Comments does a great job of simplifying the task of moderating comments. At a glance, you can see pending comments, comments that need a reply, spam comments, and more.
Being able to delegate comments to staff members will help you signficantly reduce the number of comments you need to handle yourself.
Keyboard shortcuts can be used to manage your comments quicker and more efficiently.
The comments reports page gives you a great overview of your website’s community. It helps you easily see the number of approved comments you are generating, the amount of spam you are receiving, voting engagement, and more.
All of these statistics can help paint you a better picture of how your community is growing.
The front-end features of Thrive Comments may grab the headlines, but I believe that website owners will perhaps find themselves loving the comment moderation tools even more.
How Much Does Thrive Comments Cost?
Thrive Themes have adopted a sensible pricing model for their comments plugin.
There are no restrictions on features in any Thrive Comments license. Regardless of which license you purchase, you will gain access to all features and receive one year of support and updates.
A single license retails at $39. The five website license costs $47 and the 15 website license costs $97.
I believe the five website license is the safest bet for most website owners as it allows you to add Thrive Comments to another few websites for just $8 more.
All licenses come with a 30 day money back guarantee. This lets you get a full refund at any time within 30 days of buying the plugin.
Final Thoughts
I hope you have enjoyed this look at Thrive Comments.
I was thoroughly impressed by what the WordPress plugin can do. It greatly enhances the look of your comments, encourages engagement on your website, and makes the task of moderating comments simpler.
Those of you who are looking to grow your website’s community should take a closer look at what Thrive Comments can do for you.
Using/used Thrive Comments? Thoughts?