Q&A sites are a great way to get your message across and to build your brand and reputation.
How many people use Q&A sites?
- In a recent Business.com study, 49% of companies that use social media said they ask questions on Q&A sites. Only 29% said they use Twitter to find business-related information. The 49% doesn't even include the many who get info from Q&A sites by Googling or Binging.
- Answers.com (where I work) is now ranked (by comScore) as the 17th most visited site in the US. The vast majority of Answers.com's traffic is to user generated Q&A pages. Yahoo! Answers gets even more traffic. Much of your potential market is already getting their answers from these sites.
Source: Social Media Best Practices: Question & Answer Forums. Business.com, December 14, 2009, https://www.business.com/info/social-media-best-practices-q-and-a
What's in it for me?
Providing quality answers and links to relevant pages can help you in the following ways:
- Direct your customers (and potential customers) to accurate information about your product.
- Connect with people in your market, build your reputation, and generate leads.
- Provide links back to your site. Some of these links are Follow links, and thus also provide SEO value.
How do I use these sites?
The general rules of social media apply here too:
- Help others
- Build relationships
- Push your products and services when they answer somebody's question or request.
Q&A sites work great for this, because people are already asking the questions. When I blog I hope my posts address questions that my readers want answered, but they may not. In Q&A sites, your starting point is that somebody asked the queston that you're answering.
Specifically:
- Search the Q&A sites for questions about your subject, and browse the relevant categories.
- Answer questions fairly and accurately. If appropriate, mention your product or service, and / or link to a relevant page on your site.
- Follow up & interact where appropriate. Use these sites' message boards to see if you can be of further help, or to congratulate another contributor for a great answer.
- Fill in your User Profile, showing why people should like and trust you. You can also usually link to your site from your User Profile.
In the example below, notice how the user provided a quality answer (much of which follows a template he uses in other answers as well) and adds a relevant link to his site.
What are the leading sites and how do they differ?
- Yahoo! Answers: The biggest site in the industry, with 47 million US visits in November according to comScore (and that's probably a very conservative estimate). It's a broad horizontal site. Questions are open for 4 days. Users answer the question, and vote on the best answer. The best answer is selected by either the asker or by the community.
- Answers.com / WikiAnswers: Answers.com has 41 million monthly US visitors according to comScore, making it second to Yahoo! but far larger than the other Q&A sites. It's also a broad horizontal site. It's key differentiators are:
- It's connectd to a reference site, so if you ask "What is the abstention doctrine?" your answer will come from West's Law and the Oxford University Press.
- It's a wiki, so instead of multiple users providing multiple answers, users collaborate on one answer.
- In most cases Answers don't get closed, so you can find questions asked more than 4 days ago and still contribute to the answer.
- LinkedIn Answers & Business.com Answers: These sites are great for more targeted communication, lead generation, and reputation building. Think of Yahoo! Answers and Answers.com as more B2C, and these sites as more B2B. This is Q&A in the context of advanced professional networking sites.
- Stack Overflow and its siblings: Stack Overflow is a great Q&A site for programmers. If you're a software developer and you want to establish yourself as an expert and to network with your peers, this site's perfect. The same technology is now powering other niche sites, most notably serverfault.com (for system administrators) and Answers on Startups, which Rand Fishkin just named one of the 10 Sources I've Come to Love.
- Aardvark: Aardvark is more of a closed system where you ask questions to people in your network. This is great for well connected journalists and bloggers to get answers from their network, but may not be ideal for spreading your message beyond your social circle.
How is using them like doing a guest post on SEOmoz?
Answering questions on Q&A sites is exactly like doing a guest post on SEOmoz:
- Find the sites where the people you need are getting their information.
- Give them quality information that will benefit them.
- Get your own message across, with full disclosure of who you are. You can be self-serving, but not too self-serving.
- Build relationships, and establish your expertise.
Ultimately you need a win-win here. You need to serve the needs of the community with whom you're interacting, in a way that also builds your business and reputation.
Where can I get more information on Q&A sites?
See the following excellent articles:
- Jason Falls: How to drive business leads with Q&A forums
- Using Yahoo! Answers to generate leads. Does it work?
- Lisa Barone: Finding Answers on Business.com
- Business.com's Study: Social Media best practices: Q&A forums
This is a great post, Gil. People - particularly experts and small businesses - overlook the potential of building their online (and offline) reputations via sites such as Answers.com. Adding this approach as part of an overall marketing strategy can certainly help increase exposure and foster greater market reach. Hope more people take advantage of the power of Q&A sites!
Great useful post. Extremely well organized. I wish I could write with such clarity!
In a lot of ways the format for WikiAnswers seems to make more sense than Yahoo! Answers.
Good stuff!
Thanx. Your post on Yahoo! Answers was an inspiration for this post.
Thank you!
(Congrats on the move to the main blog btw!)
Excellent analysis, Gil. I especially enjoyed the the leading sites and how they differ.
I agree, building on online reputation by participating on Q&A sites and writing articles is more than a trend - especially now that Facebook Connect is increasingly common across the web (it's available on Answers.com now, for example).
Great article, it's nice to expand what someone posted about a few weeks ago (re: Generating Leads from Yahoo! Answers). I think I need to start spending more time in these sites!
Other than the obvious reason*, I'm surprised that Answers.com isn't the leading source for Q&As. It seems a much more usable site than Yahoo! and seems a bit more trustworthy. Yahoo! Answers seems to be full of teenagers asking how they can download TV shows for free.
*Links, links and more links.
Well said.
I had the same thing in my mind too Traxor. I read the "Generating leads from Yahoo! answers" very recently and liked it too. But at the same time, I must also agree with you on the same regarding yahoo answers because I also came across some silly questions most of the time there.
Yeah, Yahoo! Answers can be a terrible source, as it is often flooded with nitwits.
Stack Overflow is by far, the best Q&A resource for developers... I use it quite a bit.
Thanks for the info. Great to hear "insider" type of blog posts since you know your site better than anyone else.
I think I like WikiAnswers much more that Yahoo Answers. I made a profile and answered 3 questions today woot!
Good post Gil. It's funny Q&A sites are hot item nowadays, since they've existing for years. Think about Newsgroups for example (in the pre-leech era). There was, and still is, a tight community of people exchanging relevant information there. It's brought people business then, as it does now. The difference is that it used to be a 'geekie' thing, and now it's accessible for all internet users!
Thanks, and good points about newsgroups. I think the newsgroups were more optimized for conversations, whereas the Q&A sites are more optimized for a question and answer. Also the Q&A are naturally optimized for search engines, because the question text often matches search queries and then the answer (hopefully) is at the top of the content.
Great post about something that is probably undertaken by many of us.
It made me reflect, and I think I will start seriously thinking about add this tactic to better the aknowledge of my Brand, even if in the Italian websphere these kind of instruments are quite few (I mean of a really good level): Yahoo! Answer in Italian and Answers.com (italian version).
Just a hint about a problem I found out in the italian Yahoo! Answer... looking for questions they seems always already closed.
Thanks for all your great and supportive comments!!
Late to the party here, but thought it might be worth adding that although Twitter alone may not be a Q&A site, with the right app, it too can serve as a great way to find questions that match your company, service or site. Having been in the Q&A space for a decade, we wanted to try something novel and needed with our latest project: Replyz.com. We're displaying a real-time stream of the questions people are asking on Twitter, and making it easy to search, jump in and respond. We're finding a lot of people using Replyz to reach out to people on Twitter asking about their company, product or expertise, and thus building their following and getting new visitors. Hope that's of some interest as you keep an eye on the space.
Hey Gil! Your analysis on Q& A distribution is worth the applaud. I personally used Business.com answers, which is a social media Q&A site where business chaps who are in search for products and services can ask for help and recommendations over a wide arena. The way you have pin pointed how leading sites differ displays your judgement acumen. Cheers
Thanks Gil,
Great idea to help others and also promote your knowledge about something. I wasn't even aware "Answer" sites existed; I guess I just thought people simply typed in their questions to Google or Yahoo, then looked for the search result closest to their issue. I will take a look tomorrow for some of these Answer sites. Thanks again for this useful information.
Great article,
Thanks for the statistics, did have a go on Yahoo answers a while ago, after reading the post it’s a lightener on how powerful it can be.
Thanks.
I use LinkedIn to ask and answer questions all of the time. It extremely reliable and a great way to make new connections.
Thanks alot for the post and the other resources. These are great!
Good post, Gil. Using Q&A sites is really particularly helpful in certain industries where questions about proper use of a product can be a safety concern. For example, one of my clients manufactures aftermarket automotive parts, and probably over 80% of the social media work we do is really answering technical questions.
Preventing your customers from blowing up their vehicles is good for business! ;-)
Yeah, I can see how that would help repeat business :-)
Thanx for your comment, it's good point I hadn't thought about.
Great work Gil. The statistics you provided here were really amazing. I have been using Q&A sites for a long time till now and really found many benefits out of it. It is a nice way to build better reputation, links and improve traffic to the site.
I feel it as a better tool to share knowledge than through blogs. I should also mention you that answer.com is really doing great as a Q&A site.
Thanks a lot.
Hi Gil,
Congrats on your post's promotion to SEOmoz blog.
Do you have any studies or reasearch on how you suffer from users trying to post SEO friendly links (therefore spamming with low quality replies)?
Is this a major threat that e.g. will cause dofollow links to be replaced with nofollow ones?
I don't know of any research that's been done on this. Speaking for Answers.com, our community and technology do a pretty good job going through the links and cleaning out the bad ones. I think we'll be able to continue this way, but yes, there is the possibility that too much spam will force us to make greater user of nofollow. I hope for all of our sakes that it doesn't come to that.
After building interestingly I have realised the whole Q&A thing is great but very challenging to build an audience for.
My site relationship surgery is a fledgling Q&A site based around the relationships and dating niche. Instead of a forum I took the idea to develop a Q&A platform which worked out nicely. We are up to about 5k hits each day with lots of popular content. We have not yet had anyone answer while linking back to their own site but I am sure it will come and is very welcome.
[link removed by editor]
The benefits of using Q&A sites to increase the exposure of your business is there but so is the importance of proper usage. Making sure you answer questions with details and display an educated and informative approach to your answers so you will get more votes and help build a credible profile as a good answerer. This also helps the Q&A continue to be a good source of information. Stuffing your URL in an answer that does not educate readers or answer the question can work against your business. While we are talking about Q&A sites a recently launched new comer at Answer Highway is looking promising.
[stuffed URL removed]
Thanks for providing this information it will help me to do my https://www.instani.com website Q & A submission.
Thanks..
Great post, Gil. I think you've accurately pointed out a lot of opportunities for people to start using.
One thing that amazes me is how few people fill out their profiles on sites (other than LinkedIn.) It's great to get an answer to a question from someone, but when you look to see if that person is qualified and only see that they are Male, it makes you wonder...
One other site that you might be interested in is Bizmore. (Full disclosure: I am currently working with them.) Bizmore is a niche Q&A site targeting owners and managers of small- and mid-sized businesses. Beyond the normal peer-to-peer advice network, Bizmore also has a stable of industry experts who participate in the Q&A discussions. Bizmore also produces original "How to" and feature content specifically for this audience.
https://www.bizmore.com
Great article. I believe we should think beyond the normal SEM techniques to generate the leads. Q&A websites always help you to learn new things and by participating in the thread, you can earn reputation as well that would be helpful to generate more leads.
I generally spent few time on forums and forums are also great places to earn reputation and business. There is a thumb of rule while participating in forums and QA sections that is, more precise you answer others, much probability to earn reputation and business.
Great Article, I was not aware of this. Thanks for the information!
How about Mahalo Answers?
Thanks.
Mahalo Answers is similar to Yahoo! Answers and WikiAnswers, but about a tenth the size. Mahalo's key differentiator is that they allow some monetary payment. I'm a little biased against the site because I think it's been overhyped by prominent journalists who are (or were) business associates of Mahalo's owner (see for example: Reality Check: Blodget’s Latest Calacanis Infomercial). [Note: TechCrunch has always been above board in disclosing their relationship with Jason Calacanis, and while they cover him a lot, the coverage IMO is relatively balanced (and often negative)].
Honest reviews are the key anyways. If you want me to review your company for money or other kick backs, I'll still only do it if I have free reign to tell people how I feel about it, not let you tell people how you want me to tell them I feel.
Great article,
Thanks for the statistics, did have a go on Yahoo answers a while ago, after reading the post it’s a lightener on how powerful it can be.
Thanks.