Are You on the Twitter Blacklist?

Social Marketing 11 Comments »

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Being on the Blacklist is a Sad ThingPhoto by belgianchocolate

Lately the whole Twitter thing has gone spastic as social marketers and more mainstream users have discovered Twitter and scrambled to get on the bandwagon. Now there’s nothing wrong with using Twitter to build great relationships with new and existing friends and business associates, in my humble opinion. However, there are some who take issue with a certain type of Twitter user.

Most folks are pretty responsible with their Twitter usage, but for those who are following WAY more peeps than they have following them, they’re about to be in hot water—of a sort.

A new service called Twitter Blacklist is tracking rogue Twitter accounts using a, “ ‘Follow factor’ (how many they follow divided by how many follow them) . . . ” So if you have too many followees and not enough followers, be careful as you might end up on the list.

There’s also another similar service called Twerpscan that seems a little harsher and is specifically targeting “SEO experts and entrepreneurs” using a similar algorithm to the Twitter Blacklist. This goes a little farther as a service such that you actually log into this one and it offers you a block link.

So a word to the wise—check your ratios and avoid getting on the blacklist. It’s not really hard to avoid if you’re using Twitter as intended. These services are new and may not get much traction, but it’s a reminder that abusing any social system, be it the karaoke mic at your neighborhood bar, or your shiny new Twitter account won’t go unpunished. Opinions? Let’s have ‘em!

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Is Your Website Hot, or Not?

Design, Marketing, Traffic 5 Comments »


Command Shift 3 Rates Websites

Here’s a curious and possibly useful new tool, if you use it with a grain of salt. Command Shift 3 has created a rating site that lets you peer into the mysterious depths of the collective web psyche. It’s a little like Google Zeitgeist for web site design, but more specific and less useful. Now you can see what the mob thinks of the current state of web site design and even submit your own site for rating.

Is it Useful? Maybe…

In general you can get a feel for what’s popular in site design today. Although this is, admittedly, only a little helpful since raters are encouraged to judge quickly with little to go on.

If you want to understand what people think makes a great looking website, this can definitely give you a certain type of insight. There is something to be said for the first 5 seconds a new visitor sees your site and attempts to place it into their master list of fantastic versus utter crud. In this case the aggregate attitude is interesting to see, but it’s really so very general that it has limited use in terms of learning about optimizing your site’s appearance.

How About Traffic and Backlinks?

I’m curious to see what kind of traffic might be generated by submitting your site and having it become popular. It might be an easy source of traffic. So far it’s nothing to click home about. I submitted my site on April 13 and have gotten a whopping 2 visits since then.

Admittedly, my site is not a design powerhouse. In fact, it leaves a lot to be desired so this is not the best test. For sites that have some truly astonishing design, the results may vary considerably. Here are my stats so far:

Command Shift 3 Competition Results

Additionally, you will NOT get any backlink joy from this site as all the outgoing links are set to nofollow. 

Bottom Line

It’s a fun idea that may end up generating a little buzz for those sites that make it into the top popularity listings, but otherwise it’s mostly a time sink after about the first 10 minutes.

At the very least, it’s a great way to see some cool and terrible designs that are out there, especially if you’re a designer needing a little inspiration.

They list the best web sites by weekly, monthly, and all-time and you can also see the worst sites of all time.

If you end up submitting your site and seeing decent results, or if you have some additional thoughts about it, please stop by and leave a comment. 

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My Linkbait Experiment, Holy Mackerel!

Blogging, Copywriting, Marketing, SEO, Social Marketing, Traffic 9 Comments »

Baiting the Hook
Photo by zappowbang

A couple weeks ago I seriously riled some folks up. It was fun, but now I want to show you why I did it and how perfectly my fiendish blog-traffic-linking plan has unfolded so far. If you haven’t yet, definitely read my recent post about misusing five words. If you’ve already been there, you know there was a little controversy stirred up, but otherwise, a lot of fun talking about the idea. If you hadn’t guessed yet, that post was not really about screwing up the English language at all. In fact, it was an experiment in linkbait. What is linkbait? Oh my, where have you been? Please allow me to refer you to the number one Google result for the term linkbait by Matt Cutts (at least it’s number one as I write this).  

It Sounds a Little Dirty

The word linkbait sounds like it could be a bad thing, or at least, it could have a few negative connotations. In fact, it’s not bad at all if you do it right. Linkbait is essentially nothing more than writing a great headline that attracts a reader to click your link and commit to reading your article. And if the article is good enough, they cannot resist bookmarking it, or linking to it on either social media sites, their own blog, or their website.

When newspaper, or magazine editors select a headline, they’re creating the equivalent of linkbait. They make the headline as compelling as possible and attach it to a phenomenal article. And the best articles are passed around by friends who may eventually subscribe to the publication, if they like the article enough. This is offline linkbait. More like, readbait, or make-you-not-able-to-put-the-magazine-down-and-also-insist-your-friends-read-it bait. You get the picture. If you want your blog, or web site (or printed ad, for that matter) to attract and keep readers, you must learn how to write headlines and posts (articles) that are so compelling that a majority of casual observers click through and commit to spending a little time with you and then even bookmark you for reference and sharing. A curious thing about this:

The headline is useless if you write a terrible article and the article is useless if you write a terrible headline.  

 

Doing it Wrong Can Hurt You

If you’re just writing a snappy headline and it has a crappy article behind it, you probably just lost yourself a whole mess of readers. You made a great promise with the headline, but failed to deliver with the article. There’s good linkbait and bad linkbait and if your article is weak, or an obvious attempt to linkbait-and-switch, you will get what you deserve: a bad reputation and no catch-of-the-day, AKA link love. I’ve already written a post about how to write great headlines and there are some good references there to get you started. That post, by the way, had a terrible headline and is a perfect example of how to fail epically at writing a linkbait headline. I got almost zero readers for that post, although it did have some good info in it. Word to the wise—seriously consider your headlines.  

So, Does Linkbait Work?

I’ve been practicing and diligently doing the training in the Social Power Linking program and my last, best attempt at a linkbait piece succeeded better than I could have expected in my wildest dreams. I spent probably five hours on that post, whittling away every non-esssential word and making sure it flowed smoothly, etc. I also spent a good 30 minutes on the title alone, to which I grant the most credit for having made that post so popular. My post on five misused words got more traffic than any other post I’ve ever made.  

In fact, during the two days following my linkbait post, this blog received over 1800 pageviews and is now up to approximately 4870 pageviews at the time of this post. Unique visitors climbed to over 900 during those two days and have continued to flow in ever since. I got more unique visitors and overall traffic from that one post than all my other posts combined to date. 

A Few Resources

If you want to learn more about the fine art of linkbaiting, the following resources will really cover almost everything. I owe a lot to SPL, but I also spent a lot of time reading the posts linked below and I want to thank the authors for taking the time to put that information together. I’d also love to hear about your own experiments in linkbaiting as well as any advice that the resources below may have left out.  Andy Hagans’ Ultimate Guide to Linkbaiting and SMM The Link Baiting Playbook: Hooks Revisited

And if you don’t feel like reading right now, check out Aaron Wall’s video on linkbaiting, How to: Create Linkbait Every Day:

 

 

And finally, here are just a few more linkbait resources you might find useful:

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