As someone who does community management work, I see things that might not be there but are. 😀 (Inspired by my daily life when I have to read 1 or 2 hours of 💩 from the very beginning of the day.) 😀
Here are a few of them:
1️⃣ Hate comments instead of constructive criticism.
Having someone say: "your product sucks"... sorry, that really doesn't help me. Tell me what's wrong and, more importantly, WHY. Supplying a reason assures the other party that there is a fixable reason.
2️⃣ Commenting on things only at any cost, even if the comment doesn't say much.
Some people try to forcefully comment on something, just to create activity at any cost, but the comment doesn't go anywhere. ⤵️
The respondent, on the other hand, can't even have feedback on such a comment because doesn't have a clue what the author meant to say.
3️⃣ Using bots to create discussion.
This is what has been haunting me the most lately. It's fine to use modern technology to your advantage, but social networking is about being social, and personal, not robotic.
I don't care what ChatGPT thinks. I can find that site on my own. I'm interested in your opinion. If you don't have one on a given topic, you don't have to force it on yourself. (see point #2)
Instead:
✅ Join discussions that you are interested in.
✅ If you want to help, give constructive feedback with WHYs (you can use the "hamburger feedback method").
✅ Think for yourself and beware of "bot answers" as much as possible.
Yeah, it is hard to stick to these and each of us slips (we are humans).
We can practice it together. 🫶🙂
Sentrya