I find myself in Montreal, Quebec this week, spending time with my old friend, Guillaume Bouchard of NVI and some new friends from an organization called Alliance numériQC (French only, sorry Anglophones). Guillaume and I got to chatting over dinner about the new version of Digg and the more prominent version of the social linkbait marketer's worst enemy, the bury button:
You can see that the "bury" button now appears just below every story, as opposed to the old layout where you could select it from a list of items, including "OK this is lame" (though that tag never made much sense to me). The message I get from this is that Digg's editors are hoping that more people will "bury" more material - perhaps they feel that the quantity of stories is too high, or they'd like for more content that the young, geek-centric, anti-marketing crowd that participates heavily at the site is suspicous of to stay off the home page.
Apparently, from what I hear around the social world, it's working. And, sadly, it's not just Digg; Reddit appears to have similar issues (I'm not sure, but I'm guessing that SEOmoz might also be banned there - certainly hilarious that SELand is, though). So, with all this negative, anti-marketer backlash against linkbait promotion, what course can you take? Well, here's a few:
- Don't Make Your Linkbait Feel Like Linkbait
Despite these hurdles, we've had several big pieces hit the social media airwaves at Digg in the last couple months, but they didn't look like linkbait - they didn't appear to be crafted or created with the intent of getting on Digg, and while this may sound like a strange cat-and-mouse game, you really need to look at your linkbait from the perspective of an angry, pubescent, World-of-Warcraft-addicted anti-marketer. If it looks clean to that guy, you're in the clear. - Market to Important Bloggers Instead
Sure, when you pitch a piece to a blogger, they know you're trying to make linkbait, but guess what? If the content's great and it provides value to their visitors (and, most importantly, is relevant to topics they often cover), you'll do fine. - Leverage StumbleUpon
If a piece of content gets a ton of up votes at StumbleUpon, you can feel a little more confident about submitting it to the other social voting sites. StumbleUpon's audience can also be leveraged to help out with some of those votes, if you make it compelling and obvious that you'd appreciate their help in sharing the material. - Market over Email
I get a few emails every day begging for Sphinns, Diggs, Reddit bumps, etc. Some of these are good, but most are terrible. If you're going to leverage your network, tell them to be smart about how they reach your story and vote it up - don't provide a direct link to the Digg story page. Instead, ask them to check out the piece on your site and follow the Digg link from there. Those referral strings are going to look a lot more natural to the Digg editors. - Make it So Good They Can't Resist
Certain pieces of viral content are too good to pass up - just remember that you don't need to please everyone, you just have to make a small, passionate community really, really interested. Imagine the things you personally always spread around to your family, friends and coworkers - funny photos, videos, maybe politically leaning pieces, etc. - Pitch the Mainstream Media
It's easier than ever before to reach journalists at publications big and small, so go for it! You may not have nearly the success rate of a professional PR networker, who's had coffee with all of these journalists 6 times in the past month, but if your content is unique and up their alley, you've actually got a decent shot, and with hundreds of potential people to approach, the odds improve. Even better - when you hit the mainstream media with web content, the blogosphere and the social sites will often jump on the bandwagon.
Hopefully with these tactics in hand, you can continue to create and market great viral content. After all, the web is sorely in need of some good stuff, and by and large, there's just us SMMs creating it.
p.s. Guillaume, since you're such a good pal... I'll take you fishing :)
p.p.s. For those who may have seen the criticism that our quiz received around the SEO blogosphere, be aware that I modified or replaced about 10 of the questions that received the most heat - apologies that my quality control wasn't up to par - it's been a really @#$%ing tough week.
Top 5 reasons you didn't make the Digg Homepage:
5. You didn't bash 'The Man' (Microsoft, RIAA, Bush, Fox News etc.)
4. You didn't praise 'The Hero' (Apple, Firefox, Linux, open source etc.)
3. Your social network of Digg friends is too small to perform the Digg circlejerk
2. You have SEO in your headline or your username
1. Your headline isn't: [PIC] Schoolgirl armed with open source Firefox flamethrower incinerates 51 Microsoft supporters at Bush fundraiser.
Nice use of "circlejerk" in an comment. Bravo.
I had an even nicer use for that phrase come to mind yesterday. Hell, I had a domain name using that phrase come to mind yesterday. However, I'm making a conscious effort to ignore people who make this phrase pop into my head. I know this makes no sense if you aren't me...
yeah I agree - haven't ever seen 'circleJerk' used as properly as that - .rb
Lucas, you should submit a story using your last headline. I'm almost sure it would get to the front page instantaneously, even if it had no content!
If SEO ever lets you down, you've always got a career waiting at Engadget, Shor :)
Perfect. Next time I want to reference this post in front of a client I can just do a Google search for:
Site:seomoz.org circlejerk
Are you absolutely positive that's never been said here before? I will go see...
UPDATE
It has been done, but as two words.
New friends from an organization called what? WHAT? The NRA? The RNC? Friends of Plutonium? The Britney Spears Anti-Undergarment Awareness Squad? WHAT?
We're all in the dark. I blame the Canadians.
Shouldn't #5 and #1 be swapped? :)
I was on the Digg homepage 2 days ago which is quite a surprise on a site that focuses on SEO, but I know you guys have been on aswell.
Great post
I had a really shit week last week Rand. I hope yours shapes up to be better by the end. Mine didn't. Good luck.
i loved the quiz rand. i thought a few questions were worded a bit dodgily and made it a little difficult but over all i learned a lot, and got taken down a peg or two!
Rand: You're a francophone? Nah.......
Not francophone, but francophile from my perspective...
Montreal is a horny place to visit and people talk about hot sex more than SEO.
Rand, great job on the quiz bait. It worked. I am sure you would agree, it isn't conclusive, nor truly definative of one's skills. For example, I can (and do) make plenty of money and have lots of success in SEO without ever knowing what the #1 search engine in Japan is. It's not my market, and I have plenty to keep up with in the US market. So things like that (IMHO) make it less than ideal.
Be encouraged, you are still da' man (not "the man") :)
Great post, Rand. I agree on all the people getting their panties in a bunch over your quiz. I personally did rather poorly because it was like taking the SATs again and I never took the time to read the questions thoroughly on those test either.
And is it just me, or has the stuff on Digg's homepage gotten crappier and crappier as of late? SPAM ruins everything.....
I just wet myself Rand. Great article I was so close to hitting that magic digg homepage this weekend with:
https://www.seoco.co.uk/blog/2007/09/08/5-reasons-why-the-new-digg-interface-rocks/
I was in the hot on upcoming on the homepage, they were letting it go, but then I got buried by the users.
Hope the week calms down for you Rand.
I've not yet seen the heat the kick ass quiz got, but I'm about to go looking for it :)
Pitching the mainstream media is something that is often overlooked IMO. I have had some decent success by finding writers and reporters who cover related subjects. If I find a writer who has an article or two that is relevant to what our site provides I will send them an email just asking them to check out what we are doing. Obviously you have to be careful to avoid pushing the marketing angle too hard. I simply try to plant the seed by saying something about the article they wrote and then asking them to check out our site when they get a chance since it is relevant to what their article was about. Many times nothing happens but just getting a few of them to mention you or write about you can be a huge win.