- We're definitely more likely to publish posts that demonstrate your expertise on a particular topic, niche, sector, etc. This doesn't mean we won't publish beginner-level posts--it's just that a well-written post that reflects the author's savviness is more likely to be published and could also end up being promoted onto the main SEOmoz blog.
- A lot of posts we published linked to SERPs and websites as references and examples, included screenshots, and incorporated bullet points and numbered lists. These posts reflected the extra effort the author went into researching his post, as well as his desire to share something interesting with readers.
- We often receive submitted posts that are nothing more than a concise, basic SEO question. These questions likely won't get published because YOUmoz is a user-generated blog, not a forum. If you have an SEO question, it's better to post it in our Q+A Section (if you're a premium member) or at www.cre8asiteforums.com, www.highrankings.com, forums.searchenginewatch.com, or other SEO forums. You can, however, pose or bring up questions in your YOUmoz posts. Good questions to ask might be those that are complicated, illustrate an interesting side of SEO, webdev, conversion strategy or online marketing, and are thought-provoking and encourage a discussion.
- Submitting a spam post is just absurd. We don't blindly publish everything that's submitted--each post is reviewed and edited before it's published. It's a waste of time to write a three-sentence blurb about your site's services and drop about eighteen links, because this post will never see the light of day.
- You don't have to stick strictly to SEO topics. We have a variety of blog categories (business tactics, web design/development, etc), and you can write about anything that fits within these topics. However, try to keep your posts on-track. Cold remedies, recipes, and other posts that clearly lack relevance won't get published.
- It's okay to promote yourself at the end of your post with a short blurb (a couple of sentences should suffice) on who you are and your website. We'll likely formalize the author bio portion soon.
- We try to space out the publication of YOUmoz posts, so if there are ten or so posts sitting in the submitted queue, we'll publish a few at a time in order to give our readers some breathing room. Therefore, don't get all riled up if you submitted something a few days ago and still haven't received word as to whether or not it's been approved--we're just being strategic (and sometimes swamped with actual client work).
If you have any questions about YOUmoz submissions or about the process that I haven't addressed in this post, feel free to ask them in the comments.
P.S. I forgot to mention that we also won't publish duplicate posts, so if you submit something that has appeared on your blog or on another site somewhere, then sorry, we won't publish it (even if it's really good).
As a new YOUMoz contributore, I just want to say that I think this is a great idea! Thanks for expanding the virtual walls of SEOMoz to allow new voices to be heard. I'm sure that great things will come of it.
In the meantime, I wish you much success with this and with your new site as a whole (which I also really like).
All the best,
Moshe
I recently posed the question to Rand as to why SEOmoz has a forum. I was fairly sleepy at the time, and actually now, looking at it, I can see something I'd missed before:
In many ways, SEOmoz IS a forum. It's just one in a truer sense of the word.
It's not a forum where anyone can come and post anything (although you can, it just won't nec. get posted). It's a forum where someone posts a question, or a train of thought, or an idea, and then thousands of people read it, and the some people comment on it. Ideas are thrashed out, decisions are made, and something like the truth emerges.
SEOmoz: Not so much Blog 1.0 as Forum 2.1
Thanks for the tips Rebecca. I've really enjoyed the YOUmoz posts. There have been some really good posts there and in some ways it gives us a chance to interact more with each other. I think I've been able to connect more with other members commenting there than on the main blog. Possibly because there are less comments overall per post and there's a smaller group of people consistently commenting on that side of the site.
I think YOUmoz also provides a vehicle for discussion of topics that might not be mentioned on the blog and it's offered some interesting counterpoint to some of the posts here.
Rebecca - You should link to some of your favorite, almost-made-it-to-the-blog submissions in this post. I'd also like to say that we're thrilled with all the user participation at YOUmoz - there's a lot of very smart people leaving encouraging and helpful comments there every day and we're in your debt.
Lastly, if your recipe or cold remedy is good enough, funny enough and relevant enough to the world of the web, we might just have to let it slide through :)
I agree with Rand - you should definitely link to some of your favourite YOUmoz posts.
Now, do you prefer cheques in dollars or will pounds do?
;)
I agree - why not all of the SEOmoz staff give a top five list of their favourites? It would encourage the contributors and promote revisiting to articles that have since been buried by new submissions.
I'm working on putting that together...
Awesome :)
Like I said, do you prefer cheques or cash?
I'm suffering from information overload and don't have time to keep up with Youmoz.
I like the idea of a "roundup post" that highlights the best Youmoz articles.
I second that.
Just wanted to say "Thank You" for publishing my posts - I hope they were well received! I think that YOUmoz is a great idea, and hopefully it will become a long-term success story as a way to create a collaborative SEO community.
My post was well thought out and IMHO was not spam. If spam takes over an hour to create then I am not spamming correctly ;-).
My post was more about how to write for youmoz in order to make your post get to the main blog. Think of it as a guideline which is what was written on this post. Except I did this first ;-).
I was not trying to get my YOUmoz post on the main blog but just youmoz. So IMHO I am not sure why I was denied.
Rand - this is joe whyte. I would love to hear your thoughts on this. We have spoke a few times about this topic and I was honestly just trying to help and not spam anything.
Can you enlighten me on why my youmoz post was denied?
I like YouMoz, it gives a different voice on lesser topics that all you fine SEOmozzers don't have time to write. Come on Rebecca, how much more important are the clients then us? I mean really. j/k. I hope to post some more relevant articles in the future. I think it was a great idea for SEOmoz to do. Thanks!
Thanks, Rebecca. That's a big help to those of us who want to participate and "give back" to the community a bit but who aren't full-time SEOs.
Aaron has some thought-provoking points of view on the Youmoz venture and I would be interested to see you address some of those areas (although I have no doubt that that is already in preparation!).
In particular, when he talks about people leveraging your brand value, how you go about reconciling quality control with the necessity to encourage users. And (something that Aaron didn't mention) if you had considered the concept of a group being its own worst enemy.
I did keep an eye on Youmoz when it was first introduced, and even had a half-written contribution, but I must admit I now tend to use the "promotion to the main blog" as a filter.
That is an interesting discussion.
No love for SEW forum?
Poor Frank :) I'll edit the post for you, amigo!
Such a great guy.....
Hey, we don't want to piss off our NY subway guide, do we? ;)
Thanks for taking the time to address this topic. You definitely answered some questions for me.
I really enjoy the YOUmoz section because it gives people who may not be regular bloggers a place to share and contribute without the pressure of maintaining their own blog.
youmoz is a great idea.
but if you have accepted posts in queue, why do you advertise?
I'm not sure I know what you mean...
I think that this is the bit that has confused him
I assumed that he meant if you've still got stuff lined up to be published, why are you asking for more stuff...
The queue isn't always that full. Sometimes we have seven or ten posts waiting, and some days we have zero or one. Plus, not all of the posts in the queue will get published--some of them get denied, for whatever reason.
A couple of questions:
1) Can we at some point in the future publish our YOUMoz posts on our site? I.e., I understand that we can't publish posts from our site onto YOUMoz, but what about the opposite (after some reasonable period of time has passed)?
2) What are the restrictions for the bio section? Can we plug a product or service that we offer? What about try and get people to sign up to an email list? It would be nice to know what's acceptable and what's not.
All the best,
Moshe
1. We'd prefer that you not publish your YOUmoz posts on your site due to copyright violations and duplicate content issues.
2. We're working on creating fields you can fill out with specific information (e.g. your name, what you do, your site's URL) that will automatically appear along with each YOUmoz post you author. In the meantime, you're probably fine with writing a little blurb about you that doesn't seem overtly salesy or unnatural.
I am happy you guys finally made this post.
I put one together for you guys on my own blog about about utilizing YOUMOZ to gain leverage and traction for yor own SEO company.
I pretty much laid out some POSSIBLE things you guys might look at in regards to placing a YOUMOZ post onto your main blog.
Check article here (I know its a no follow ;-P )
Not sure why it got denied from YOUMOZ completly though ;-)
I think the problem is that you're using YOUmoz as a vehicle to promote yourself with that article, without actually saying anything particularly new or interesting. Sorry if that sounds harsh, but what it basically says (to me at least) is "Get your story on a high traffic site, and you'll get a lot of traffic to your site."
True, but we know that anyway. I could write an article saying the same on Digg, and it wouldn't get posted. Not because it's not a good article, but because this is the wrong place for it. People already know that. You need to put a more interesting spin on things like that.
This is actually a shard of what I was referring to above when I mentioned people leveraging brand value.
But there are also a lot of interesting facets to YOUmoz (I have to spell it correctly for once) involving group interaction, partial democratisation of the voice and brand, and the growth and direction of communities.
Perhaps I'm misunderstanding what you are saying, but isn't this a win-win situation? After all, SEOMoz get's more user involvement and free content, and the person who submitted the article gets visibility and (potentially) traffic. Furthermore, YOUMoz is separate from the main blog (unless they decide to promote a particular post) so peopel can continue to enjoy the main blog as they always did. Finaly, there is quality control so SEOMoz can ensure that the posts maintain a minimum standard. What then is the negative side?
[NOTE: This is a real question].