One of the first tactics I came up with when creating linkbait was to think of a relatively basic idea and run its various keywords through search engines. There were usually at least a few examples of my idea already in existence. If the pre-cooked versions of my idea were good enough, I usually went on to something else. There is nothing worse than a rehashed version of an already-good idea. Searching for a vague content or concept showed me where my competition lay and how advanced it had already become. It was usually readily apparent whether I'd be able to compete or whether I was better off thinking of something else. I don't believe that this is cowardly of me; if you came across something like this, would you attempt to do it better?
Content is one thing, but entire website concepts are something else. To my mind, this seems even more difficult. As the person who went through the Web 2.0 nominees, I've seen a huge number of sites that attempt to do something new and exciting, as well as those who attempt to do an old concept better. Very few succeed.
This is because imitation, at least at a high level, is not as easy as it seems. Creating a barely-used Digg clone might not be hard, but inventing a functional competitor to Twitter that both Twitter fans and new users pick up (admittedly when Twitter was experiencing difficulties) is more difficult. I am not a fan of Plurk, but its features appeal to a growing number of people for a good reason. It did what Twitter couldn't do at a critical time (provide Twitter-like functions and stay up) as well as appeals to a new audience who'd never liked Twitter. That it was essentially a copycat really isn't a negative. Some of the best sites and products we have online were copies of other projects, but were done better.
I'd still argue that Twitter is far from beaten by its competitors, but once it fixes its downtime problem, it has a mountain of spam to cope with. Most Twitter users will have noticed that they've been inundated with new followers during the last few days. A great many of us don't really check out who has recently added us on Twitter, but we should. Sadly, in influx of people isn't because we've all suddenly become much more interesting. Clicking through to the profiles of the "people" who've started following us usually tells the real story: these accounts aren't human but are bots, scraping the public timeline for content. My latest example of such an account is that of "Lisa Starkin." Twitter will probably ban the account in time, so here's Google's cache and, when that goes, here is a sample of what Lisa has been saying recently:
"Her" latest update says "Catching Up With Jamie Lynn Jamie Lynn Spears 17 years old is speaking out for the first time since gi http twurl nl 5fawn7" and is possibly more obviously fake than these above.
The amazing thing is, "Lisa" has 179 followers, many of whom do actually appear to be real people. The messages look real enough (especially considering some people's awful grammar) that 179 of the 1,458 people she's followed believed that she was a real-life, underwear-clad college student from San Francisco.
I see this as Twitter's main threat and the one that would spur me of if I were managing a competitor. I didn't have to look far in order to find more examples. Basically every new follower I've received in the last few days is fake. Experience shows that an out-of-control spam problem is a threat. On the surface, it makes no difference to my interactions on the site, aside from putting even more strain on Twitter's servers. However, look at MySpace: even those of us who never suffered from its outrageous spam problem will still cite spam as one of the things we don't like about it, and will praise whichever service we moved to for its lack of the problem.
Twitter seems to be good at deleting the very obvious examples of spam, such as "sarah2323" and "heysexy", both of whom had one thing to say: "What do you think babe? Anne tried it and it worked. Testing it at d mo. Catch u late hon. https://www.the6figureteam.com." "Sarah" attracted quite a few followers, including people who should have known better. Both of these accounts were gone within a day, but the content-scrapers live on.
There are various theories about what the owners of these spam networks intend to achieve, one of which states that they're all pointing followed links (i.e., profile links) to a queen account, which will in turn point at an external site. This would have worked a lot better before all Twitter links became nofollowed, although with some engines' ongoing trouble with nofollow and the fact that some still use nofollowed links for discovery, there could still be an ounce of merit in the idea.
There is definitely nothing wrong with having a go at established businesses, websites, or services, but being as good as they are isn't enough. Facebook is successful because it was better at social networking at MySpace. If Plurk or FriendFeed are to succeed on a mass large scale, they have to be at least slightly better at serving feeds, information sharing, and "microblogging" than Twitter. They have the distinct advantage of being able to learn from Twitter's mistakes and steal its good ideas, which is the more irritating part of the imitation / flattery game.
I don't know what goes on in Twitter's offices, but it seems like they're working very hard to improve speed and uptime with regular maintenance. I also don't know how much strain the spam is putting on the service, but it certainly can't be helping. In order to combat the possibility of spam becoming more prevalent than content at Twitter, I'd be working hard to remove all of these accounts as quickly as possible. If I were a competitor, I'd be putting some big road blocks in place to ensure that the spam doesn't transfer over to my business instead.
This is a great post. I'm just checking up on how me knows go Cubs. Are you seeing Jon later, he's 329879 I love Twitter.
Follow me to MySpace?
Watch the astonishment of people who don't get it...
that would be me :)
It's cool, I don't get it either
Fine, I spells it out for you :)
He's pretending to be a Twitter-scraping spambot. Either that, or Ciaran has misplaced his SEOmoz password again.
:D
*clicks* Follow
Okay, great minds think alike, but yours is so much better written. :) I got so fed up with this today that I ranted about it and the two URLs that keep coming up. Maybe Google will take more note if these places are mentioned a) in more than one space and b) by someone as cool as you. :)
Anyway, struck a big nerve with this one, great write up.
When I did training for the military, I taught a short workshop on developing creativity.
One of the main points from that workshop was that creating something entirely new is next to impossible. Remixing, improving, or changing something that's already in existence is a heckuva lot easier--but it still requires ample creative muscle.
As far as Twitter and it's competitors go, there are things I like and dislike about them all.
I've been dying for a third party utility that will both aggregate you and your friends feeds, and allow you to update statuses from one spot. Profilactic, Hellotxt and Yoono are almost there, but not quite.
I'm wondering whether something like Spokeo might one day develop into the all encompassing update centre everyone seems to be looking for. It's certainly got the potential...
I've just been followed on Twitter by karen4343 who has this to say: "Hi babe - Debbie just tweeted me with this --https://www.the6figureteam.com Apparently you can save $$$$. Wot do u reckon"
The6FigureTeam.com = spamtastic fail.
I got hot by them 3 times this evening alone. And by some chick selling this miracle fruit that will make you cancer free, rich, and incredibly good looking all for the low low price of....
I gotta get me some of that - I assume it'll help me lose weight too - I only want to drop about two dress sizes...
Jane - I presume you saw the Twitter vs. Plurk usage charts? Looks to me like the Twitter downtime isn't going to be enough to stop the juggernaut. They've got the brand awareness and the network effects benefit, and those are really tough to shake away.
However, I did see Bit.ly launched and looks to be a truly better version of TinyURL (or is.gd). I'm impressed by the creativity, as I had thought that market was wrapped up.
I was just about to ask how you come up with truly unique, never-before-seen, shiny new ideas?
Funny that you should post this, right now.
I really liked your point about unique original ideas. I think we had this argument a while ago (Rebecca posting on Ron Paul effect). With today's wealth and speed of information flow, that's really should be a lifetime task to invent something completely unique...
great article.. but i don't know that i could improve upon the inman link.
Great point (and comments) about "original" ideas. I find myself shelving so many ideas because they aren't completely original, or monetizable, or 100% implemented, and sometimes good concepts never see the light of day. I've made a real effort lately not to self-censor quite so much, when it comes to project ideas.
Instead of obsessing about originality, I've started looking at ideas more from 2 criterion: (1) Sincerity and (2) Effort. If I'm sincerely interested in a topic or project (and not just doing it because it's the popular thing or might get me attention) and I put real time and effort into it, the outcome is almost always positive and somebody gets value out of it.
This is timely post for me as well. We're coming up with our content plan for the upcoming season and it just doesn't seem like any ideas are 'original', but there is always room to improve. Think it was on this site that I saw a link to that Steve Jobs video saying something along the lines of all good ideas are stolen (not an exact quote, but something like that).
The other interesting thing to note is that to get content going it's not always about being 100% original, it's about getting in front of the right people that will spread the word about it.
I'm sure we've all seen great content that never 'made' it and some average content that spread like crazy. A lot of the times, it's about who you know, not what you know.
"If the pre-cooked versions of my idea were good enough, I usually went on to something else. There is nothing worse than a rehashed version of an already-good idea."
My favorite quote from the article. Now if that was posted at the top of the Sphinn submit page it'd be great.
The State of the Web link was also awesome. Sadly, I got all of the references.
Isn't the solution to Twitter spam just locking your account so new followers have to get your approval first? I think for the average user this works fine, no?
Well, no matter what, even if your account isn't on lock down, you can get emails every time someone adds you. If you don't like the person that adds you, you can block them at that point.
Everything spam is solvable, it just doesn't make it less irritating. :)
It is, and I privatised my account yesterday, only to find that it magically removed 172 of my followers who became "follower requests." When I have the time or patience to go through 172 people, I might do that again :)
Make it 173 follower requests! :)
That's why it is so critical to never stop brainstorming and creating. Just because you've created something great doesn't mean you should stop there. Ideally you come up with the great (improved) imitation of yourself, yourself....before the new guy does.
One of my profs always says there is no such thing as a "new" idea...just some kind of glued together version of things that have already been thought of. Not sure how I feel about that, but it seems to kinda fit here.
*** Brainstorming ***
You're not allowed to use that word in the UK any more... :-)
It's now "thought showers".
Bloody stupid politically-correct morons taking over the world. Can I say "arseholes", here?
https://www.google.com/search?num=100&q=brainstorming%20showers
This is my main issue with the whole idea of plagiarism. I’ve seen several blog posts and comments recently that claim that the blogger or commenter are being ripped off. And to a certain extent, I can understand that you have a reason to gripe if your work is being copied and pasted somewhere else without credit. I even concede that rewritten content is not above board.
My issue is that some people write about things (Google: “SEO Plagiarism”) and then push this idea that anyone else who has something to say on that topic is somehow disrespecting them if they don’t credit every person who has ever talked about the topic previously.
I have my own thoughts and opinions about most everything that I get a chance to read. I regularly come up with “new” ideas (with and without direct exposure to someone else’s idea) only to find that they have already been covered or developed by someone else. Does that mean I shouldn’t write or talk about the idea? I just don’t think so.
I guarantee that you can find every word I used to write this comment somewhere else . . . and I know that this is a crazy statement, but I came up with it all on my own!
Well stated.As a slightly older dude I was beginning to think I was not keeping up on the clever texting code and hidden meanings.
Thanks for explaining that. I always wondered why those complete strangers started following me.
I am almost to the point where the follower requests outnumber my followers.
I have had the oddity where people I allow to follow aren't then showing up in my twitter stream but hey - obviously Twitter needs more chocolate
The idea (or myth) of originality is something that I regularly return to in regard to music, and I find that it is often the enemy of creativity. I think Ben Johnson put it best when he said to 'observe how the masters have imitated, and imitate likewise'...