Posts Tagged ‘SMO’

How To Appeal on Digg

If your site’s content has been Dugg, there’s a big chance that your traffic rates have skyrocketed. This social media bookmarking site has been around for a while, and its influence hasn’t really abated. If you want your content to travel further than your pages, you need to know how to make your site’s content appeal to Digg users.

Knowing what it takes to be Dugg is a part of social media optimisation, and it’s a good idea to discuss it with your search engine optimisation firm. You can consult our experts at SEO Consult about SMO. There are some basic tips that may well come in handy if you want to attract the attention of Digg’s user base:

• Feature Digg buttons on your pages. It’s a basic step, but it needs to be taken

• Become a top Digg user. This is a difficult suggestion to follow through on. Having a top Digg user on side is a huge bonus, and it’s worth courting one if you can’t become one yourself. The way in which the ranking of the user affects the articles they Digg is far from understood. What is clear is that it has some effect on the positioning of the article on Digg’s home pages. This relationship was once a little clearer as Digg displayed the ranking of its top users, but this was perceived as a threat to Digg’s integrity and the system was changed. Now, you’ll have a little more trouble calculating the clout of individual Digg users, but clout does still count for something

• Choose the right topic. There are many unknowns about Digg. One thing that is easy to know is exactly what is popular with Digg users. Digg’s users are mainly tech types, and technical information has been the most successful on Digg’s pages since forever. A second category is weird stuff, which is a little harder to define but just as popular. It can pay to make regular checks on Digg’s most popular topics and make note of trends as they come up

• Form a list. Lists are hugely popular on Digg, which is one of the reasons they’re such a favourite of the SEO community. Digg’s home pages have been plastered with lists from just about day one. It is thought that lists appeal because they are, in a way, guaranteed content. Users know simply from the title that there are going to be a certain number of tips, and that reading the article will take a specific amount of time. This has massive appeal for the time-pressured internet user

• Keep it short. To judge from the articles that appear top in Digg’s listings, one thing Digg users seem to hate is clicking through lengthy articles. Most Digg users don’t spend a lot of time on a page while assessing whether it should be Dugg or not. Make it easier for them by keeping everything nice and short

• Talk about Digg. Digg users love to talk Digg, and mentioning the site makes them feel more at home

What’s Your Social Plan In 2010?

Things are still developing in the social media, and the search engine optimisation industry waits at the side of internet marketers to see what will happen. Last year was a very interesting year for user patterns and social media networks, but on the whole there is a feeling of anticipation for 2010. The commentators are sitting and waiting, but it remains to be seen exactly what will happen.

Part of this comes from the slow snowball effect that the social media has. Big things seemed on the cards for social media optimisation in 2009, but the things that happened were relatively small. Businesses began to get some success with their Twitter and Facebook campaigns, but for businesses that only started their campaigns mid-2009 the results were nothing like the viral sensations that early predictions had led the industry to expect. Businesses that started their campaigns earlier, at the start of the trend on each site, enjoyed much greater success, jumping on to bigger and bigger things. What this shows is that exploiting the opportunities presented by the social media takes time and patience.

The recommended plan of attack

There are no absolutes with social media optimisation, and certainly no average path that every site should take. There are too many variables involved to describe the optimal plan, no matter how hard some experts have tried. Not only do you need to consider which social media sites hold interest for your target users, you need to take your business personality, resources, scheduling availability and SEO plan into account.

What you do need to consider is exactly what you want from social media optimisation. Do you simply want to augment your SEO plan? Do you want to reach a target user group that is proving difficult to locate in the search engines? Do you want to engage in a deeper relationship with your site’s users? Or do you perhaps want to build your reputation within your industry? Every goal can provide you with a workable plan, and you can talk to us at SEO Consult about matching strategies to goals. The trends in the industry will also provide you with some direction.

Where to look for trends in 2010

Strangely enough for internet phenomena, the place to track the changes in the social media seems to be the real media. While the internet seems like a world of its own, it’s important to remember that internet users are all real-world people with real-world influences. One of the interesting things about 2009 was how influential traditional media sources were in driving user groups to various social media sites, and it’s entirely possible that this evolving trend will continue in a similar direction.

This means that a site that wants to be in the know needs to watch more than one area. Just as you need to scan the business pages as well as blogs and business sites to keep ahead of the game, scanning the daily newspaper will be an important research task. The good news is, a morning coffee and paper reading session can justifiably be seen as ‘work’ time.