WebProNews Video Alert
WebProNews News Feeds
    WebProNews Web
Search Jayde:  
Low Rate eCommerce & Retail Plans

"MySpace" Most Searched Term In 2006
Google Reveals More About YouTube Plans
New Google Penalty Revealed, And It Sucks
AOL Wants To Play Show & Tell
Wikio Receives $5.3 Million In Funding

Immortal Computing Is A Little Creepy...
China To Have The Largest Internet Population
Google Images Cleans Up Its Act
Wikigate '07 - Much Ado About Nothing
Bidding On Top Ad Spot A Waste of Money?

More Top News
BLOG TALK
Become a WebProNews blog partner.
What is it with These Recruiters?
Why BBC Doesn't Use Flash (Video)
Vista - Will it Increase Feed Reading?
Google NY Starting Speaker Series

YouTube Nofollows Most Outgoing Links
Google's Policy on No follow and Reviews
Decision-making Speed Matters to Customers
Social Proof as a Marketing Tool


More Blog Talk

WebProNews Video Blog View All Videos
Gearing Up For Mobile Search
Gearing Up For Mobile Search
When talking about search engine optimization, one immediately associates the practices are leveraged toward the traditional realms of web search. Many are predicting, however, that the “next big thing” in search may be the acknowledgment that users are spending less time in front of PCs, and are instead utilizing mobile devices to search and surf the web.

There are estimates floating around that put mobile users somewhere around the neighborhood of 300 million by 2010, give or take a year or two. While the prediction-based statistics may not be necessarily exact, the rising trend in mobile usage is impossible to deny.
Recent Videos
SEO Copywriting: Benefit or Compromise?
SEO On The Cheap: Social Communities
Yahoo!'s Panama Impresses
Linkbait: New Term for Old Tactics?
The Importance of Analytics
More Videos...

Sugar Dave Utter Thursday, January 25, 2007

Social Media Too Sweet For Websites

There's a reason why every single news article you read today, whether at the New York Times or on an individual blog, has one or more links to submit that article to a social media service - the publisher wants the massive traffic a Digg or a Reddit can deliver.

Editor's Note:  There's a debate over the benefit of massive short term traffic hitting one's website. Kim Krause Berg agrees with Matt Bailey that it's a "sugar rush" with little lasting benefit. Rand Fishkin and Andy Beal disagree. What do you think of your linkbait visitors from Digg, Reddit, Slashdot, etc? Let us know at WebProWorld.

But like that big bag of sweets collected in a Trick or Treat bag on Halloween, too much of something good may not be good for you in the long term.

Kim Krause Berg's take on social media and the marketing people do to get it indicates that a slavish devotion to getting Slashdotted or hitting the Del.icio.us Popular list may leave a site publisher with the same empty feeling one might get from overindulging on October 31st.

She cited some research on social media performed by SiteLogic's Matt Bailey on the Digg Effect and other heavy inbound social media traffic. Those visit boosts just don't translate into real value, according to Bailey:

Social Media provides a "sugar-high" approach to building links, much less an online business. It provides a lot of traffic, very fast. However the vast majority of that traffic is not engaged, rarely stays for more than a few seconds and can sometimes be rude.

Comparatively, good external links provide traffic that will view multiple pages - typically many more than social media traffic.

For a search engine marketer, social media traffic can be a proof that they know how to build quick attention for a site. However, beyond that shot of traffic, what is there to show? For those in the SEO business, there is not much else, traffic sells. For businesses that make their living on and off the web, traffic like this is not helpful.

Low Rate eCommerce & Retail Plans

Without brand reinforcement and conversions, one-off traffic doesn't have the same value as that which is developed through external site links. Kim noted this correlates with her observations.

Rand Fishkin said on his SEOmoz blog that value exists in social media, and it is far more substantial than the sugar high Bailey perceived. To Rand, brands can be constructed with tasty linkbait:

Linkbait can build a brand - it built YouTube through the Lazy Sunday video and Zillow.com through their real estate home pricing system. Linkbait can help brands become more popular, like SEOmoz, SearchEngineLand, Shoemoney, Drivl, ArsTechnica, ReadWriteWeb and many others.

Linkbait can help sites and pages rank well at the search engines, by serving as a catalyst for inbound link popularity. Linkbait can even push you in front of the offline media, as has been the case for many folks in the tech world, specifically and folks like the red paperclip guy or the million dollar homepage guy.

Even Rand concedes that social media following linkbaits have limitations, lower conversions and click-through rates among them. Not everyone's experience with Digg has been of the drive-by variety. Andy Beal commented on Kim's piece how he has been impacted by Digg:

I've been on the homepage of Digg four times now. I agree that they're rude, rarely stay long and don't often engage. But, here's the trend. After each digg effect, my long-term traffic increases. Also, those diggers do tend to come back and often digg you again.

The lesson of the quick sugary rush of social media traffic might not be the short term issue of high traffic and low benefit (i.e. conversions and CTR). It could be a long term effect where Digg users whose comments and references to a site they find on Digg end up building higher quality traffic over time.

>>>Comments

About the Author:
David Utter is a staff writer for WebProNews covering technology and business.
WebProNews
Submit Article |  Contact WebProNews |  Visit iEntry  
From Linkbaiting To Widgetbaiting

Jason Lee MillerBy Jason Lee Miller
Staff Writer | WebProNews

The concept of linkbaiting has heretofore been an abstract one. Nick Wilson, CEO and senior strategist for social media marketing agency ClickInfluence, is one of the biggest proponents of the strategy while admitting it's "not an exact science." But maybe this year it will become more tangible with the advent of Linkbait 3.0, or as Wilson calls it, "widgetbaiting."

"The holy grail of linkbaiting in 2007 will be the widget," writes Wilson in a recent SearchEngineLand column. He knows a thing or two about creating a popular widget. Wilson's Performancing Blog Editor Firefox extension has been downloaded half a million times.

The evolution from linkbait to widgetbait probably owes a lot to broadband, and the success of interactive applications in recent months. In the beginning, linkbait was textual in nature, not only requiring tremendous creativity and writing/presentation ability, but also consistent pressure on the pulse of the Web. And that makes it more difficult, especially on a network now thriving on video and games.

 

About the Author:
Jason Lee Miller is a staff writer for WebProNews covering technology and business.

WebProWorld
  Search WebProWorld:  


Customize & preview your TV commercial
today - Click to get started

 

Redirects and Rankings

If you have a client that has more than one domain, but they are all the same website, how do you choose which one to use?

Or, say that there are 3 domains and the client wants a specific one to be the main domain and have the other 2 redirect into that one, but the one that he has chosen doesn't have the best results or many pages indexed. Will the redirects transfer most of the rankings to the main domain?

I also have another question sort of related. Say there is a website that has all of its pages in a subfolder. Will the pages loses rank if you take them out of the subfolder and put them in the root folder and repoint everything to the new locations?
...Share Your Comments
WebProWorld Discussions

Validation Problem?

Redirects and Rankings

GoogleUK Exiles Me

YSM Rant

AdWords Optimizer?

New Window or New Tab?




Advertising Newsletters Corporate Info Site Map Support
© 2007 WebProNews. An email newsletter.
, Inc. 2549 Richmond Rd. Lexington KY, 40509
All Rights Reserved. Terms under which this service is provided to you. Read our privacy policy. Contact us.
The WebProNews network includes WebProWorld, Jayde and WebProWire.
Archives About Us Advertise Site Map Submit an article WebProNews.com In Affiliation with WebProWorld.com In Allfiliation With Jayde.com eBusiness Enterprise IT Web Development Feedback Edit Your Jayde.com Listing. Get All Your Jayde.com Questions Answered Here