This past Tuesday night (and, eventually, Wednesday morning), Rand and I sat down and "wrote" a post that we were quite sure was rather amusing. Admittedly, posting to a widely read SEO blog after getting little sleep and consuming three beers and two cocktails isn't advisable. We were, however, relatively sure that we were on to something good.
And we had. We had stumbled onto a linkbait idea that hadn't been done before and that people seemed to enjoy. As of right now, the post has received 2489 diggs in just over twenty-four hours. It went hot while Rand and I were flying back from Long Beach, where we'd attended SMX Social Media. When we'd boarded the plane, the post had 150 Diggs. When we checked it again after arriving back in Seattle, it had 1800.
I'm a bit of a linkbait snob now, so although I was pleased with this result, I didn't find it all that groundbreaking. It wasn't nearly as astonishing as a recent incident where one of Rebecca's old posts from Drivl received 8448 diggs eighteen months after it was written. We were only disappointed that it didn't manage to crack 10,000.
What I'm really saying is that 1800 or 2400 diggs wasn't something we hadn't seen before. I closed my SEOmoz and Digg tabs and headed off to Facebook. A couple of people had written to me about the post, but Jeff Coyle's message, asking "Did you notice Google Trends?" caught my eye. Immediately, I knew what must have happened.
To maintain my faith in humanity, I want to guess that some of the thousands of people who searched for our terms did so out of curiosity as to what Google really returned. I'd hate to think that the 83,000 people Digg sent were all lazy enough not to read our short introduction.
After we had taken a good look through the Google Trends results, we tried to objectively think about what they meant. The first conclusion we came to was about the nature of social media in general. We've always believed that linkbait traffic is the most fickle of all. Whilst we still pretty much believe this, we were quite incredulous at how many Digg (and perhaps StumbleUpon) visitors took the time out of their digging and stumbling to open Google and search for our phrases. That is dedication on a level rarely seen from these two sources.
If I'd known that this was going to happen, but did not know how how popular each phrase would become, I would have guessed that the phrases I'd actually linked to ("number of horns on a unicorn", "what time is it in sydney" and "what is the answer to life the universe and everything") would have done a lot better. All people had to do was click through from the post. I won't go as far as to say that social media visitors aren't as fickle and mindless as we originally thought, but I could never have predicted that enough people would perform searches to influence something as universal as Google Trends.
It amused us no-end that the Rick Astley term beat out "cure for fever" and "i know kung fu" to be the most popular phrase. I like to think of this as us Rick Rolling the Internet. Its related searches also must have confused the hell out of most observers:
There might be an interesting inconsistency in this logic, however, as people who visit images aren't usually exhibiting very long attention spans. What was so compelling about our images that cut down the bounce rate and prompted people to head for Google?
The explanation is probably related to what we always tell people about linkbait: the best content, and the content that will show the most astounding results, isn't just interesting for a few seconds. It prompts people to do something. I dislike using widget bait as an example right now, as we're not entirely sure how the debate about such tactics will end, but one of the great things about quiz bait and widgets is that they make people do something. They elicit action, rather than a "Back" click. In hindsight, our post obviously invited action, albeit action on someone else's site.
Another thing we did well was not to make it too obvious that our results were fake. If we'd posted an enormous disclaimer at the beginning, letting everyone know the nature of our post, I doubt we'd have seen the Google Trends results. Perhaps our phrases still would have sneaked into the top 100, but never into the top five. As an aside, the stupidity of Digg was made readily apparent when people started reporting our post as inaccurate. Yes, the title is (deliberately) misleading, but a simple click-through would have calmed diggers' accuracy-obsessed nerves. We also would not be the first people to have enticed click-throughs in this manner.
Actually, I've been spending a lot of time on Digg lately and I'd argue that, contrary to the stereotype, quite a large number of Digg users are pretty damn intelligent. Sure, you still get the YouTube-esque users and the endless memes, but Diggers are smarter than you may think. As soon as I saw Rand's submission, I knew that a lot of Diggers would have a bone to pick with it because the title and description weren't very good. They were a bit misleading, and Diggers hate that.
Also, I'd argue that a ton of Diggers did in fact skip your intro paragraph and scrolled straight to the images, especially if the post was submitted to the PICS section (after all, a picture is supposed to speak 1,000 words, right?). I'm not as frequent a user as a lot of other folks, but I still receive a ton of shouts and look at a lot of content on Digg, so I'll admit to definitely skimming through content a number of times.
Disagree. Avg Digger is either A) crazy dumb or B) crazy gullible. In my experience, they're rarely the latter.
I'm afraid I'm with Rebecca on this one Rand. There's a lot of people who will smite down the uneducated masses if they get a bee in their bonnet about it. I've seen stuff hit the homepage and get the usual raft of idiot comments, only to have them all turned grey by non-idiots downmodding them.
It won't happen on most stories, but stuff that you'd consider as being sensitive etc, the brighter ones tend to police well, which shows there must be some non-idiots there. They just aren't as vocal most of the time.
I agree with you Rand regarding gullibility or stupidity.
I actually think the fact so many people mistook it as a real search query result is funnier then the post itself.
Forgot to add, someone should Digg this page as "Rand Declares Digg Users Gullible or Stupid" and see how it goes.
Rand as much as you and Ciaran seem to dislike the Digg user Rebecca is right. Digg users are pretty intelligent its mainly the way they choose to go about things that gives them a bad name.
Re: The Intelligence of Diggers
If ever there was a validation of the phrase "Everything Is True...to an extent"; this is it.
Like any community, there are highly intelligent people, remarkably ignorant people - and everything in between. My personal experience with Digg suggests that the ratios vary somewhat by the category. Technology, World & Business, Science - more heavily intelligent. Entertainment, Offbeat, Extreme Sports...mmm...not so much.
Great point, Sean, and I agree with you. I'm just getting a bit exasperated by the general "All Diggers are dumb" claim. If you spend a decent amount of time participating on the site, you'd know that it's not true. Plus, I'm a digger, and I'm not dumb. :D
Rebecca - one thing I will say (and that makes me surprised to see you defending attributes of the Digg crowd) is that they are disgustingly mysognystic. It's practically sickening to read through the comments they've left about you and Jane on that site. I think I have a hard time seeing past that.
I fully agree with that. You can't read through half the comments without someone just making some stupid "would you tap that" comment at other posters pics. This isn't to say that this represents the majority of diggers, but there are definately just some incredibly ignorant males who really like posting comments...
@ Rand,
I think what Rebecca's taking issue with is the over generalization, that you are making - and have just made again by saying "the Digg crowd is disgustingly mysogynistic". If I were to subscribe to your statement, knowing that you yourself participate in Digg, it would leave me with no choice but to assume you are a woman hater.
That's not a fair statement, is it? I also participate in Digg from time to time (submitting, voting and commenting). I'm not a woman hater.
Sean - I resent the suggestion that Rand & I are making sweeping generalisations.
What do you take me for? Some 15 year old, Steve Jobs worshipping, Star Trek watching, would vote for Ron Paul if I was old enough, pre-pubescent (which is why I'm a virgin), acne ridden, would have been friendless if it weren't for the internet, probably got bullied at school, geeky little Digg fan?
How dare you sir?!
Ciaran -
Gawd no! I thought you were 16.
I'm actually 20-12; I've decided to invent a new form of numbering so that I never have to mention the 30 word again....
Rand, I really think what you see on Digg is a vocal minority. There are lots of responsible, reasonable people on Digg. I will admit that I find myself on there less and less due to that vocal minority unfortunately.
But if you look at the shear weight of numbers, its a very loud, minority that makes sweeping generalizations easier. :-)
You're honestly surprised? Again, I think that you're making sweeping generalizations. Sure, lots of guys on Digg crack sexist jokes, but I have a pretty thick skin and it doesn't personally offend me. The comments that are obviously not jokes are the ones I thumb down if they do happen to offend me. I've met plenty of SEOs who make comments as bad (or worse) than what I've seen on Digg, but I certainly don't find them to be "disgustingly misogynistic."
Really? Maybe I'm being a pussy Brit, but I've never seen the types of comments I've seen on Digg on any search related forum. That said, none of those are as big as Digg so I'll accept that they haven't had the chance to build up the level of idiocy that Digg has.
Like I said, Digg obviously isn't all dumb little frat-geeks, but there sure are a lot of them and the ones that aren't need to do a better job of shutting the rest of them up.
I didn't mean in forums, I meant in person.
This is starting to sound a bit like the discussion in Europe about the intelligence of Americans. Maybe it's just because there are so many of them that we so often hear and see the idiocy America has ;) How powerful some of them are (with out naming any particular president person) also helps fuel that reputation.
On the other hand, most Americans I know personally are very intelligent and do not reflect the stereotypic image that is portraited in Europe.
I don't hate Digg users.
I dislike idiots who react to something they don't like by resorting to intensely personal insults, or posting personal contact details; I dislike people who's response to a story of two kids being kidnapped is to post a picture of a bear, with a name that goes beyond tasteless, saying "I'll find them"; I feel something between pity & contempt for people who are such sheep that they post information that they know might get the site they profess to love shut down.
I realise that not everyone on Digg is stupid; some of the intelligent ones even work for me. The problem is that the vocal minority give the site a bad name, and seeing as it's meant to be a site where the community moderates itself, that says more than even the dumbest of comments.
I don't know that I'd classify Digg users as 'dumb' as it were, although I would say they tend to be frenetic, fickle, less-than-thourough, and extremely reactionary.
What I'm most amazed by is that so many folks who are internet savvy enough to even use Digg, didn't recognize that Jane's 'shopped results don't look anything like actual one-boxys!
The ones who comment are dumb. They might be in a minority (they have to be; post gets 2500 diggs and 206 comments so there are a lot of quiet diggers).
Hmm... I don't know whether to give thumbs or not because I agree with the second point, but definitely not the first.
There are a lot of diggers that refrain from commenting. With that said we tend to comment on what we feel passionate about and to Sean's point the level of intelligence varies by category.
There will always be little shit heads that say ridiculous things, but sometimes I'm that sarcastic person, too, because I all I really have the time for is a giant "FUCK YOU!" to Ben Stein's Expelled propaganda. Other times I'll write a thesis on the legality of endangered shark killings. It all depends on the subject, but if the piece is some random linkbait with a humor edge, of course it will receive an inflated number of moronic comments.
Yeah, some of us Digg, so that means they're not all neanderthals, I get that.
And yet when some little prick was posting the Moz's postal address, and encouraging people to ring Jane's mobile to 'spam' her ( I assume that's Digg-speak for stalk - bless the little ****ers, they've never had girlfriends so don't realise that won't get them laid), mine was the first down-thumb the comment got, despite it being hours old. Here's hoping I wasn't the only person to report the comment (or should I say comments, as there were more than one of them) as offensive.
Yeah, nice - God bless community moderation.
That quote got dangerously close to something Jason Gambert would say...
You can flag a comment as offensive--not sure if you knew that.
I did - I was just a bit disappointed that no one else seemed to have done the same.
Anyway - diggers, not all sexist idiots.
Just quite a few of them.
;)
Agreed, Ciaran - the fact that Diggers seem to universally support the most offensive comments and bury anything with humanity in it suggests that whatever stereotypes I'm making about the audience are validated.
Rebecca,
I agree. Skimming and looking at images only.
Most people on Digg browse stories, they don't read them in fine detail.
Brent
Goodness, that's not what I used to hear from you. Next thing I'll see is you joining Twitter!
I maintain that when you get a lot of people together, the average IQ drops.
I won't apologise for a misleading title. It garnered almost 100,000 click throughs: far less than it would have if we'd titled it, "Funny Google OneBox Results That Aren't Real But Would Be Sweet If They Were."
Everyone skims content but if I find something weird, I generally go back and read everything before I comment. Who reports stories as inaccurate before checking out whether it was a misunderstanding? Dummies, that's who.
If this isn't motivation enough for her...
Obviously it wasn't one or the other regarding the title. I think a better title could have been used, and "Funny Google OneBox Results That Aren't Real But Would Be Sweet If They Were" clearly wasn't the only other option.
So, I guess you can write off all the alcohol you two had that night as a business expense now?
The thing I takeway from all of this: The next time I want to come up with some decent link bait, I just need to tie a few on, stay up late and invite some blonde girl over.
Sir, if I could thumb this up one hundred times, it would be so.
No Vin, it just means that next time you do exactly that, you now have an excuse..
;)
Haha "No this was strictly business darling! Jane told me it was a good idea!"
That is AWESOME!
FYI - Hot Trends doesn't display the most searched terms, they display the terms that have sudden increases in queries.
https://www.google.com/intl/en/trends/about.html#2
I think this proves that Google trends isn't purely the top 100 searched for terms on Google for the day, but rather a combination of factors like the difference between today and that term's search history. Very interesting Jane.
Jane, this is really a great analysis! thanks indeed!
I'm proud to have been one of the first 10 or so people to Digg this. What an awesome post.
Now for the important question that we all want to know. How many of those Digg and StumbleUpon users converted and purchased SEOmoz PRO memberships? Over or Under 1?
HAHAHAHA! Well, we've never ever claimed that linkbait traffic converts. In fact it's absolutely lousy for that. It is great for links though. Not sure about the exact number, but Jeff did mention that he saw a huge link bump after this happened.
It's funny, I totally bypassed the blog post in question because the title didn't grab me. "Google Search Results Missing from Onebox" just didn't scream entertainment to me. Little did I know all of this was going on.
Can you Digg it?
I can Digg it.
What surprises me most about this is the fact that so many people seem to have spelled 'weeeelllll...' in exactly the same way (4e 5l 3.).
I actually had to zoom in on the page to count the l's, which means either I have bad eyesight, or many others had to do the same..
Yeah, I was thinking about this too - possibly it has something to do with the feature in Firefox to highlight some text, right click on it, and search Google in a new tab straight from the context menu. I certainly do that all the time, and it makes it a hell of a lot easier to 'do something' off the back of linkbait in the way Jane describes in the post.
Excellent analysis by the way Jane, so much more valuable for the moz community to follow up the original brilliant linkbait with this. Now, can we get this post to go as hot in Sphinn as the original one did in Digg?
Edit: Just noticed that it's alreday #1 Sphunn in 'What's New'/Upcoming! :D
The thing is, there was no text to highlight.
All information was image-only, so everybody must've manually typed it over. Furthermore, even though FF is picking up market share in de webdev community, in the 'normal' community, everybody is still using the dreaded IE. I estimated about 70-80% of these 2500 diggs to be made by IE users.
I should have mentioned the fact that there was no text to highlight in the post. People couldn't even copy and paste! If you look at the "weeelll...." searches on one of the Google Trends screen caps, there are a few variations of how it's spelled, but people have obviously stayed quiet true to the original!
While not an active DIGG user, I am proud to have been an SEOmoz user prior to the spike and read it before the Diggers made it hot.
Does that give me credibility or am I being elitist? :)
BTW I loved the original post, this post and the fact that traffic spikes come from strange places. I'm still amazed at the amount of traffic I get that I shouldn't get. Google Images loves my Leopard image even though I don't actually have one, and there are a couple of YouTube videos I've embedded that rank better than YouTube.
I really wish I'd read the post now instead of just skimming through and looking at the images.
Great work.
Omg, I can't stop laughing at this whole thing. Good job Jane & Rand
Funny stuff. When's part II coming out? We need more!
Jane, I noticed that people posted your contact info in the digg comments and encouraged people to contact/spam you. Did anyone?
Just brilliant, Jane. I love it :) Specially the "number of horns on a unicorn" LOL
*edited to display correct name
I'm slightly mystified at all this hot air over some in-jokes. Do you guys do this for a living? What is the point? Driving traffic to your site? For what purpose?
Is there any intrinsic value to creating linkbait like this? Somebody enlighten me please... ;)
I like to think of an instance like this as a wonderful experiment; it doesn't help with sales or conversions, but it is great to see what a small piece of content can do to searches across the Internet...
Modeca..
Fantastic. It was a great post anyway and made me laugh but it's great to see such a reaction. Well done guys!
Can't wait to see the SEO Only version of this!
What kind of links did you receive from the post?
That's amazing how Google Trends was impacted. The power of social media, creativity and a bit of alky-hol.
Great analysis Jane. I would love to see the same type of analysis from other blog that have highly viral or popular post.
*** ("what is the answer to life the universe and everything") would have done a lot better. All people had to do was click through from the post. ***
I tried that particular search, as I wanted to see it for myself. I also passed that search query (as text, not a link) on to several other people, as well as a link to your article.
I typed the search in to Google myself.
I do wonder if they don't count "clicked-on" search query links from other sites, but only include searches directly typed into Google. The former would be easy to spot from the lack of referrer.
Is a search link, when clicked on from another site, really a search? If I were collecting search stats I would be counting clicks via links differently to direct on-site searches.
*** (and the fact that the site didn't go down ***
It was down from me, briefly; I think it was about 24 hours ago now.
I'm nearly speechless. I love this stuff! Every time you think some one has thought of everything, you see something completely new and crazy. Who says that innovation is dead? Social media is so fun, interesting and has shown enormous potential for content promotion. Great stuff!
It's funny you say that, because I was fairly sure someone would have done this already. We searched for such a post before we began putting this one together. I always do that before embarking on linkbait, just in case I'm re-inventing someone else's work by accident...
*laughs*
I loved this post when I saw it and I'm glad to see it got the kudos it deserved and that it created such a spike in search traffic, it made Google Trends.
Move over Britney - here comes SEOmoz!
*sighs*
I need Rick to run my life for me right now.
We should watch this link:
https://google.com/trends?q=horoscope%2C+%22things+rick+astley+would+never+do%22&ctab=0&geo=US&geor=all&date=mtd&sort=0
Will someone please PM me when we see a result for any of Jane's keyphrases against 'horoscope'. I know how much traffic someone would get by ranking well for horoscope and if Google Trends never registers Jane's queries to that level, then it was more about the influx of queries than the quantity of queries.
I think Google Trends takes a while to compile the data but it appears they have done that for the time frame of Jane's wild success. I think by Monday we'll know a lot more from this link.
Thanks,
Brent D. Payne
https://google.com/trends?q=%22rick+astley%22%2C+horoscope&ctab=0&geo=all&date=mtd&sort=0
It's important to underscore it is the influx of searches not the quantity of searches. See the above link.
Brent D. Payne
Brent, you're right - sort of.
My understanding has always been that Hot Trends (which is what these phrases dominated) is, as you say, about surges in searches - things that have suddenly become popular.
Google Trends (which you have linked to) is about volume. That's why the Hot Trends isn't topped by porn & viagra every single day.
This is still a pretty amazing story though, whether it's volume or surges.
EDIT: Just seen that CK had already made this distinction above.
It is about surges, so I sort of like to think that if you ignore the usuals (myspace, sex, free (whatever) etc), you get the current most-popular items. Sort of like if Blog Search worked properly. I'm making no sense.
effing brilliant!
I'm undecided about what I found more humorous - the post itself or the reaction and comments of many of the diggers that just didn't get it - especially the one that was moaning about another reason to not Digg anything from a site with the letters "SEO"!
A victory for SEO's the world over... Haha!
That is impressive!