How would you differentiate the users of Stumbleupon and Digg? I ask this because
 SU has been my top referral site in terms of traffic, although I don’t send any of my posts there. I sometimes send my 
posts to Digg, and I know it is a sin. However, I also submit other 
bloggers’ posts.
Can I conclude that Digg users prefer news posts, which is not my 
blog topic? Or basically, Digg users hate me because I submit my posts?
First of all, regarding the difference between Digg and StumbleUpon 
users, I would say that Digg users are relatively younger and more 
tech-savvy. The technology niche is undoubtedly the main one on Digg, 
and while there are many StumbleUpon users that are also tech fans, the 
overall population of its users is more heterogeneous (i.e. there are 
also many users that like videos, funny pictures, how-to guides and so 
on).
Keep in mind that this is what I have observed by using those services, and other people might disagree.
One essential difference between the two services, though, is how 
they work. Digg has an upcoming section on their website, where users 
are able to vote the stories up or down. The traffic that you would get 
from getting listed on the upcoming section alone, however, is not very 
big, because there are thousands of others being submitted every day.
Should your story receive enough votes to break to the front page 
(those days this happens at 150 diggs or so, but varies a lot), you 
would see a huge traffic spike, because virtually all Digg users keep an
 eye on the stories that go to the front page. It is not uncommon to 
receive over 100,000 visits in a single day from a Digg front page, in 
fact.
As you can see, Digg works under a “make or break” situation. Your 
content either gets enough traction to go popular and hit the front 
page, sending you a horde of traffic, or it doesn’t, in which case it 
will join the thousands of other stories that never get enough exposure 
or traffic.
StumbleUpon, on the other hand, works with a browser toolbar where 
its users vote the web pages that they see up or down. The higher the 
number of up votes, the more people will see the page via the Stumble 
toolbar. The difference here is that it is a continual process, and not a
 binary one. As a result, you will end up getting some traffic 
for most of your pages that end up on the StumbleUpon database, even if 
they don’t receive many up votes. Traffic spikes are also possible with 
StumbleUpon if a lot of people vote your story up in a short period of 
time.
Secondly, the StumbleUpon traffic is gradual and can last for a long 
time. If people keep giving your story or web page an up vote, it will 
keep showing to Stumble users, sometimes for months after it was first 
submitted.
On the second part of your question you asked: Can I conclude that Digg users prefer news posts, which is not my blog topic? 
News posts tend to perform better on Digg than on StumbleUpon, but I 
would not conclude that merely from the fact that your posts never got 
any traffic from Digg. As you can see from my explanation, the cause of 
that might be the fact that they never got enough traction (i.e. votes) 
to go forward. Should your blog keep growing its audience, one day it 
could starting seeing better results with Digg, even if your content 
style won’t change.
Then you ask said: Digg users hate me because I submit my posts?
I don’t think that is the case either. Digg users would hardly notice
 if you submit your own blog posts once in a while, especially if they 
never get close to becoming popular. This is only an issue if you end up
 submitting each and every new post your publish, regardless of their 
quality, and if you try to further manipulate the system by asking all 
your friends to Digg your story even if other Digg users won’t find it 
worth.
YNG Media is creative web Agency located in New Delhi India provide ppc, seo,smo, web design & development services at affordable price.
Wednesday, 7 November 2012
Why we should use Stumbleupon & Digg for Online promotion
Labels:
audience,
browser,
database,
Digg,
Online promotion,
Stumbleupon,
toolbar
Location:
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1 comments:
Stumbleupon and digg are one of the best sites that can help you to draw an ample amount traffic to your sites.
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