We have a range of tools at our disposal when it comes to content-based link building research. You've heard of all of them, but it's not likely that you've used them in a complimentary fashion before, using one to back up the holes left by the others.
StumbleUpon
- I tried clicking Stumble all night and not doing the dishes but it didn't teach me much about niche content creation or its linking potential.
- Instead, you can browse words in any tag by right-clicking on the word. You can do this anywhere on the net. It's actually one of StumbleUpon's unsung fantastic features. Get as specific as you like, and remember that you don't even have to find a page with your desired keywords included in text. Run the word through a search engine and take the word off the search results page.
- The results of these stumbles aren't always fantastic, but if you stumble far enough, they offer an insight into how tough the competition is within StumbleUpon for any particular keyword. There is really no such thing as the "everyman's social media site": anyone who has enjoyed a lot of StumbleUpon traffic knows that 99% of them ride in on Firefox and the rest aren't using Internet Explorer, but the silent giant of the toolbar is as close as anything to a mass-market, general social site.
- Be sure to check the submissions page of the URL you've stumbled to. This is available either via the "speech bubble" icon next in the toolbar to the right of "Send to" and to the left of "Channels," or by typing in https://www.stumbleupon.com/url/(url-of-page). If page after page appears blank, aside from the information left by the submitter, the niche is likely completely untapped within StumbleUpon.
- People seem to confuse Del.icio.us (or, delicious.com nowadays) as being a more civilised Digg, but its role as a bookmarking site makes it much more useful for researching quality content, as opposed to easily-digested, front-page news. As I highlighted two weeks ago, linkable content exists on a spectrum and each different type of content has its uses. For the purpose of true content-centric link building, referencing bookmarked pages is far more useful than seeing what someone chose to Digg or even Stumble.
- Studying Del.icio.us (damn it, do I have to call it Delicious? Was I the only person on the Internet who liked the dots?) for non-tech content shows you what techy people find appealing. This is so important for "boring" industries. A large percentage of the world's workforce aren't social media participants, so content with which you plan to attract links has to be created with the online world in mind. Delicio.us (see, I compromised) is a goldmine of such content.
Linkscape and Yahoo! Site Explorer
- Again, as I showed in graphic fashion in a blog post a couple of weeks ago, link building with content is not about how popular it became, but how popular a search engine sees it as being. Let's ignore for a second the fact that the more advanced search engines probably can acknowldge a range of social factors. Pretend that we're living in the Orthodox Church of SEO and that link popularity and passed PageRank are the only relevant metrics. Link numbers matter. Research the pieces you've found in Yahoo!'s larger index, and then use Linkscape to analyse what those links mean.
- Line up the metrics for each page. Spreadsheets are tops for this. I adore spreadsheets. You're attempting to find out which pieces of content achieved a balance between gross link popularity, popularity passed, trust passed and eventual strength. This includes removing the nofollowed social media mentions, including comment links. Has anybody ever linked to one of your sites in a popular Digg comment? Holy crap, that can be as bad as the Digg effect itself, but Google ignores the link as though it were a javascripted pop-up on a spammy lyrics site.
- Because Linkscape reveals 301s, 302s and meta refreshes, you can follow a piece of content's PageRank trail (or lack of one; you'll see people do silly things). If you tried to reach an old piece of linkbait and saw that you were 301 redirected elsewhere, you should first decide which level of bait and switch you consider this redirection to be on. Then take the resolving URL to Linkscape and see a) how many other pages were redirected to this page, and b) whether many people link to the page, thinking their links point to the removed content. No one really knows whether the bait and switch deceives a large number of people. Have a look at this before you try it. It's likely that the more technology-centered crowd will notice a cheeky redirect.
- Take a look at the anchor text. Look to see if people have actually adopted a site's badges if the content provided one. Linkscape will report on whether the link is an image and will provide alt text, so patterns in badge adoption are blatantly easy to see. This is also a good way of determining which badges people like and which they avoid, although the simple rule is: pretty = high adoption rate; ugly = fail.
- It's SEO, right? So what happened in the search engines? Do people ever actually take sites that obviously create on-topic linkbait and see how it's worked for them in terms of ranking for their competitive keywords?
- If you've analysed Yahoo!'s and Linkscape's data and acknowledged which pieces of content appear to have been the most successful, you should see that reflected in search results. Using the rank checker can help simplify the process.
- Of course, you will have to take into account previous domain strength as well, and no tool can do this for you with a couple of clicks. However, detailed analysis of linkbait usually results in you seeing one or two smaller domains ranking surprisingly well after a devastatingly well-composed, well-executed linkbait campaign.
Like many others, I too am stoked about that StumbleUpon feature. Seriously ... you have no idea how happy that makes me.
Welp ... off to find some interesting stumbles on 'sports field drainage' ...
GREAT POST JANE!
I ESPECIALLY LIKE THE IDEAS REGARDING STUMPLEUPON, I NEVER REALLY GOT TO EXPLORING THAT GROUND BEFORE.
PS: HAPPY CAPSLOCK DAY! ;)
DEFINITELY LIKING THE DOTS. AND SPEAKING OF DELICIOUS, I'VE STARTED USING IT FOR MORE OF MY SEARCHES WHEN I'M LOOKING FOR WEB PROGRAMMING/SEO REFERENCE AND SUCH. BECAUSE ALL KINDS OF THINGS MAY RANK HIGHLY ON GOOGLE, BUT IT'S MORE LIKELY PEOPLE ACTUALLY BOOKMARKED THE BEST OF THE BEST.
(i feel evil for writing that in caps and must now revert to no capitalization for balance.)
It's certainly turned into an alternative search engine. I don't use it as much as I should... although I do use the highlight-keyphrase trick on StumbleUpon quite a lot.
Hm, the StumbleUpon toolbar thingy is an awesome tip; I have the knack of finding the most boring industries to work in, mind-numbing!
If only the mind-numbing industries wouldn't pay so much more than the interesting ones... Or, better said, if only the interesting industries would pay as much as the boring ones.
I wonder if anybody ever ran a study on the correlation between degree of boredom of any given industry and the salary levels...
Ranking top three for home financing versus ranking top three for funny stuff.
Seems sort of unfair, doesn't it? ;)
Yeah, that one up the top, xinc.net.au is one of my former websites. case in point.
Y.es. Y.ou a.re th.e on.ly pe.s.on wh.o lik.ed the d.o.t.s.
Edited because I missed CAPS LOCK DAY
I LIKED THE DOTS AS WELL. SHAME THEY'RE GONE.
GREAT TIP ON STUMBLEUPON, HAD NO IDEA YOU COULD DO THAT!
I know several people that need to read this now, as their niche is boring, boring, boring.
THANKS FOR THE POST JANE. I'M WORKING WITH AN IT FIRM RIGHT NOW HELPING THEM PROMOTE TELEPHONE EQUIPMENT -- IT DOESN'T GET MORE BORING THAN THAT! I WENT TO PRODCUT-SPECIFIC FORUMS TO SEE WHAT THE REAL GEEKS WERE TALKING ABOUT AND PLUGGED THOSE PHRASES INTO COMPETITOR SEARCHES ON LINKSCAPE AND Y! AND VOILA - I HAD WHAT I NEEDED.
I ALSO NEVER REALIZED THAT STUMBLE UPON COULD BE USED THAT WAY. THANKS FOR THE HELPFUL TIPS FOR COMING UP WITH IDEAS. I'M CURRENTLY WORKING IN A FEW INDUSTRIES THAT ARE EXTREMELY BORING, AND THIS HELPS
tHaNkS!
Glad I 'stubled upon' this post =) Kind of a cool idea that I had never thought off, this is a tad delayed from the post date but thanks nonetheless!
I, too, had never used the "StumbleThru" feature...until now! Good stuff. I'm about to embark on creating and promoting viral content for a "boring" industry myself in the next couple of weeks and several the points made in this post will be of great help!
KUDOS! THANKS FOR THE INFO! I ALWAYS SEEM TO HAPPEN ON AN IMPORTANT AND USEFUL NUGGET OF INFORMATION SPECIFIC TO MY CURRENT SITUATION IN YOUR POSTS, JANE! AND FOR THE RECORD, NO...YOU'RE NOT "...THE ONLY ONE ON THE INTERNET THAT LIKED THE DOTS..."! I miss Del.icio.us, too. :)
I check my links daily - guess I'm obsessive. I didn't know it was CAPSLOCK Day - thought you were yelling at me!
THANKS FOR THE POST JANE. THAT STUMBLE STUFF WAS NEW TO ME, WILL TRY IT OUT. ALSO ALOT OF OUR CLIENTS ARE IN BORING NICHES SO MAKING "EXCITING" LINKBAIT CAN OFTEN BE DIFFICULT
MY EYES ARE HURTING FROM ALL THE CAPS LOCK LOVE.
In other news, I'm glad you wrote about this. I do some SEO for a rather boring niche industry so I do appreciate the suggestions. Whenever I get discouraged I remembered that if a video about laboratory equipment can be cool, then anything is possible. Kudos!
i'm sad i missed all caps day too...would have been a great way to communicate with all of my boring clients in boring industries
Great Post, I agree too many boring niche's out there.
I think that most sites like stumble upon all have one feature that is great and makes it worth using, can someone please make a site to incorporate all the excellent features in one??? So many tools, not enough time!
ARGH!!! Missed the CAPSLOCK day for a bit, damn timezone...
I dont believe that any industry is boring, just that what people are doing is boring. Or more importantly, what people are allowed to do, is boring.
Certainly the example of www.pikeplacefish.com should act as a shining light to those that think they work in a boring industry.
Everyone of the "boring" websites Ive worked on is boring because the people holding the purse strings don't have the imagination or balls to go outside the box.
Wow is it really international caps lock day? It took me a year to learn that del.icio.us was pronounced delicious.
I CANT MISS THE OPPORTUNITY TO COMMENT ON A POST WITH CAPS, FEELS A BIT WEIRD THOUGH. GREAT TIPS ABOUT STUMBLE UPON, JANE, I MUST GET GOING WITH SOCIAL MEDIA STUFF, I AM RUSTY HAPPY CAPSLOCK DAY
I liked the dots too. Still use them. Can't abide the CAPs, ugh! Great thoughts Jane as usual.
My main problem with the dots is that it took me a year from getting into SEO to learning how to write Del.icio.us with the dots accurately and without looking at the keyboard or backspacing.
AND NOW THEY WANT ME TO CHANGE.
I refuse.
I LIKED THE DOTS TOO...AND WHERE CAN WE JOIN THIS SEO CHURCH?
OKAY...I REALLY JUST WANTED TO SAY THANKS FOR THE POST. NEVER OCCURRED TO USE SOME OF THESE SITES THAT WAY. GOOD TIPS.
HAPPY CAPS LOCK DAY :)
I'D SAY 99% OF MY CLIENTS ARE IN BORING, UN-SEXY NICHES. IT IS SO HARD TO COME UP WITH FRESH IDEAS. I HAVEN'T QUITE GRASPED THE WHOLE LINKSCAPE THING YET, I NEED TO CATCH UP ON SOME POSTS. BUT I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE THE STUMBLEPON TIP. SOUNDS FUN AND USEFUL, I'LL BE DIGGING INTO THAT SOON. THANKS JANE!
i so hate caps.
I, too, hate the caps! You have no idea how difficult it was for me to write the second part of my comment in all caps. ;)
I'm thankful that Jane didn't write the whole post in all caps, as I might not have been able to bring myself to read it all and I'd have missed out on some very useful info.
THAT WAS MY FEAR... THANKFULLY, THIS COMMENT IS SHORT ;)
And it's hard to brain storm with them too and broach the subject of their niche being so boring. It's like saying their life's work is boring.
Isn't it? (Okay, capslock became too much for even me.) "So, your site's IA is great, and you've done a good job redirecting those useless domains... and your subdomain work is quite solid... and I like your PageRank sculpting, and your geo-targeting is just beautiful... but damn, I'm bored to tears with your content..."
Anyone who says they've never been there is lying ;)
I HATE CAPS TOO, BUT IS'NT THIS FUN? IT'S LIKE ALL OF THE BAD PARTS OF THE INTERNET SHOWED UP FOR A DAY.
I LOVE THAT STUMBLEUPON TRICK AS WELL. IT SURE BEATS WADING THROUGH TAGS WITHIN THE SITE :)
[edited for shameless self-promotion]
THANKS... VERY GOOD INFORMATION.
I LEARNED SOMETHING TODAY!
GREAT POST. SOME GOOD IDEAS THERE. THANKS
GREAT POST. AND ONLY YESTERDAY I WAS THINKING OF USING STUMBLEUPON TO SEARCH FOR LINK BAIT SITES/CONTENT, AND NEVER GOT TIME TO DO IT. BUT NOW I THINK I WOULD BETTER BE ADDING SOME OF MY CLIENTS ON STUMBLEUPON TO GET TRAFFIC FROM SEOMOZ MEMBERS WHO WILL NOW BE USING STUMBLEUPON A LOT. :)
BTW I STUMBLED UPON A GOOD FIREFOX EXTENSION "FIRESHOT" FROM THIS POST. :)
HAPPY CAPSLOCKING.
FIRESHOT IS SIMPLY FANTASTIC FOR SCREEN-GRABS. GLAD YOU FOUND IT!
I haven't used the stumblethru strategy before now. On trialling it, it didn't find an exact match for what I was looking for on first attempt - "Corsica Travel Blog" resulted in a showing a site on converting imperial to metric, origami, then a science journal. This I assume suggests I'd receive minimal competition if I were to submit such a blog to stumbleupon. Nice tactic.
Great post. And no, you're not the only one on the internet who did like the points in del.icio.us ;-)
PS: caplocks day is over ... at least in europe
I CANT MISS THE OPPORTUNITY TO COMMENT ON A POST WITH CAPS, FEELS A BIT WEIRD THOUGH. GREAT TIPS ABOUT STUMBLE UPON, JANE, I MUST GET GOING WITH SOCIAL MEDIA STUFF, I AM RUSTY HAPPY CAPSLOCK DAY
very nice and very interesting thanks