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How to Get Tasty: the 2 things you NEED to get HOT on Del.icio.us

December 6, 2007 by Halfagain Team 

Last week our blog made it on to the del.icio.us Hotlist with its third post.  We saw subscribers double, 325 people bookmarked us and traffic jumped by about 5,000 hits or so.  Not an insane amount of traffic but, all-in-all, it was a nice little bump. So, how’d I do it? 

You’ll find you have more control over social media sites than you might think… 

get tasty - how to get hot on del.icio.us
Image courtesy of VintageIP.

The article that made it.

The post that’s responsible is What’s My Name #$%&*?. In a nutshell, it details the naming process (of products, businesses, etc) and some unique naming strategies / tools.

How long did it take to write?

I’m neither an author nor a genius, so I’m a slow writer.  Though I didn’t time myself, my guess would be that What’s My Name #$%&*? took me about 8 hours to write. 

The 2 (and ONLY 2) rules I followed…

Rule #1 – Create value (or try).

This one is talked about a lot in marketing circles.  The proverbial ‘build it and they will come’ approach.  It’s both the most obvious and the easiest to overlook piece of creation.  Why?  Because creating something of value can be a pain in the ass.  Especially, if you’re not getting directly paid for it.  However, this is THE deal with social media sites.  You MUST create something of value to get noticed.  And it must be free.

What is value?  Big question.  For our purposes here though, we’ll define value as anything that your readers want or can use.  Your article/post/site can have:

- informational value
- emotional value
- entertainment value
etc

You’ll actually find that most of what people value will fall into a fairly small set of easily targeted categories.  Bottom line, create something that has value to your reader and your message will get fully ingested, bookmarked and passed around.

Rule #2 – Let people know.

As with any marketing campaign, it’s all about who sees your message.  The new blogger can write post after post of golden information and if no one sees it, they’re sunk. 

So, lets say you’re a new blogger and you don’t have an email list to alert or an existing traffic source to help “get the word out” about your new blog.  (This is where just about everyone starts.)  What should you do?

You have one, very powerful tool at your disposal.  Email.  Caroline Middlebrook made mention of this idea over on her blog also.  Email may be your only way of communicating with people about what you have to offer, so USE IT. 

The process is comprised of three steps. 

A) Figure out what kind of readers and what kind of websites would be interested in your blog and your specific post. 

If your blog covers do-it-yourself home improvement and the post you’re promoting is about flooring, your ‘target market’ is going to be people interested in DIY and flooring in particular.  See our article about segmentation and targeting for some good strategies on this.

B) Make a list of the influential names and websites in this niche and collect their contact info.

Using the DIY example above, look up keywords/phrases in Google such as “how to install floors”, “do it yourself flooring”, etc and make a list of other blogs and websites that both cover your topic AND have sizeable readerships.  You want to target ‘influential’ individuals here, who, if they mention your article on their site, will send some traffic.

C) Email them and say hi.  Introduce yourself, tell them about your article and why they should be interested.

Be personal.  No form emails.  Craft a specific email for each and every person you’re contacting.  It’s more than a promo email you’re writing, it’s the beginning of a relationship.

The Outcome.

Not every article you write or piece of info/entertainment you offer is going to be a slam dunk.  Some you think are destined for greatness will bomb.  Others you don’t give a second thought to may run to the top of digg, del.icio.us, etc.  It’s a numbers game.  But if played right, the numbers can be turned very much in your favor.


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Comments

9 Responses to “How to Get Tasty: the 2 things you NEED to get HOT on Del.icio.us”

  1. Eric Gehler on December 7th, 2007 12:39 am

    Great Post Scott,

    Getting social bookmarks via Del.icio.us as well as Digg can lead to some great traffic as well as SEO value of increased backlinks for SERP’s from the search engines.
    Keep us all informed of your future findings and information

  2. Seo Design Solutions on December 7th, 2007 1:39 am

    Are you reading my mind or what? I just posted something along the same lines before reading this, well, now at least I know it works.

    I think it’s time to try our wares on delicious…

    No, seriously. Awesome post, very informative and like you said, you never know when the audience will sink their teeth in.

    All you can do is set the table…

  3. Omar on December 7th, 2007 4:10 am

    @Eric

    “Getting social bookmarks via Del.icio.us as well as Digg can lead to some great traffic as well as SEO value of increased backlinks for SERP’s from the search engines.”

    I agree with the traffic part, but, at least oficially, all links from del.icio.us are having “nofollow” attribute, so SE should not even follow it, not to mention count it as backlink or get PR from it.

    However, sometime i think that the “nofollow” is there only to scare SE spammers :) . Even if links from del.icio.us are not shown as backlinks, for some “strange” reason, many of the pages getting high bookmarks number are also well ranked in SERPS

  4. Mich in web on December 7th, 2007 2:58 pm

    The no follow does not stop the spiders, it just stops the bleeding of PR.

  5. Scott Trimble on December 7th, 2007 4:30 pm

    I think what Omar means here is that the site that’s being linked to from a social media site doesn’t gain any direct seo benefit from the link. Unless you’re operating a horde of black hat sites, just getting spiders usually isn’t a problem.

    The REAL seo benefit from social media sites of course come from the secondary links from people/sites that find you through the social media outlet.

    And SEO Design Solutions – nice analogy :)

  6. Mark on December 8th, 2007 12:52 pm

    Hi, just wanted to say thanks for the tips. Personally I would just like to add a tip for the newbies. In anything that you write, please do remember that sincerity is the most important. People can “feel” you so DO NOT think you can get away with just any posts. Cheers

  7. Laef on December 9th, 2007 2:44 pm

    If you have a website bookmarked in Del.icio.us and you run “linkdomain:http://www.yoursite.com” in yahoo you’ll find that “Del.icio.us” backlink to your site is returned by yahoo results that means that “nofollow” does not exist or has no effect (at least in yahoo).

  8. Matt Ellsworth on December 19th, 2007 10:13 am

    I see lots of links back to our sites from social bookmark sites that use nofollow. Just as I see the redirected ones that joomla creates. I have no clue as to what that means about whether or not they pass page rank, etc. But the spiders seem to still read and record them.

  9. J.R. Jackson on January 20th, 2008 5:36 pm

    Thanks for the information. I’m a new owner of a bright new shiny blog and like everyone else I’m interested in getting insane amounts of traffic to it.

    Keep up the great work.

    J.R.

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