Mar 23

Posted by JaneCopland

We post about Digg quite often (and here we go again), but I've been watching certain Digg phenomenon for a while, and one stands out from the rest as the most ironic and most amusing. My favourite Digg irony is the hatred the (a-HEM) Diggorati have for Design, coupled with the fact that they fall for linkbait All. The. Time.

Every so often, one of our employees will roll into the office and announce, "I'm going to get on Digg today." Said employee will sit down, write something and then nervously monitor the server as predicted Digg occurs. I can only remember one instance in which this tactic has failed. The post does not always come from Designmoz; in fact, it's often posted elsewhere. Sometimes, some Diggers will catch on to the fact that the submission came from someone affiliated with Design and the comments will get nasty, but still the diggs keep going up.

Negative Digg Comments

As pathetic as "dead-things-at-bottom-of-lake" jokes are, they reflect the sentiment of many Diggers who think Design is atrocious. I have this mental picture of the most obnoxious Diggers sitting around, scratching their chests through their off-white vests and thinking (in their own, Diggy dialect), "I'll never digg anything posted by an Design. I only digg organic content."

And yet. The Diggs keep going up. Below is the number of Diggs for the post that generated the above comment thread. Four-hundred and eighty one is hardly a great number, but it (obviously) hit the homepage and wasn't buried.

As pathetic as "dead-things-at-bottom-of-lake" jokes are, they reflect the sentiment of many Diggers who think Design is atrocious. I have this mental picture of the most obnoxious Diggers sitting around, scratching their chests through their off-white vests and thinking (in their own, Diggy dialect), "I'll never digg anything posted by an Design. I only digg organic content."

And yet. The Diggs keep going up. Below is the number of Diggs for the post that generated the above comment thread. Four-hundred and eighty one is hardly a great number, but it (obviously) hit the homepage and wasn't buried.

My point is that Digg's hatred of Design can't compete with their liking of good, interesting or controversial content. They remind me of people who profess to hate all things French and yet can't refuse champagne. People who say they can't stand the USA but who can't get enough of American T.V. Dogs that are scared of vacuum cleaners but that can't stay away from them when you're cleaning.

I don't like the juvenile, snotty culture that Digg seems to foster. However, it makes me smile that every day I see linkbait on the homepage. Do Diggers not realise that they fall for cleverly crafted viral marketing campaigns all the time? Is my Digg account about to get banned?

Technorati Tags

digg bait, linkbait, digg

Original source here...
Mar 23

Posted by great scott!

Well folks, you asked for it, you got it: After last Friday's vidcast about cloaking was such a big hit, "Whiteboard Friday" is going to be a regular feature.┬?

This week, following in the footsteps of Rand's multiple posts about attracting the Linkerati, we're bringing you a concise video recap of why targeting Linkerati is important to your Design efforts.┬?

Technorati Tags

Design, interview, linkerati, optimization, rand fishkin, search, Design, Designmoz, social media

Original source here...
Mar 23

Posted by randfish

Brandon Hopkins, who runs a blog on search & webmastering, emailed me earlier this week to ask for my opinion on an article of his. Here's what I wrote back:

I doubt you've got a shot at Digg-bait; it's too Design focused and will get buried instantly. I'm not sure I'd even submit it as the Digg folks might give your account a bad association :)

How wrong I was! Brandon's article - 66 Ways to Build Links in 2007 -┬?got Dugg, didn't get buried, and sent him lots of great links and traffic. It's little more than a straight list, but it obviously took a good bit of care and attention. There's a lot of great points on there, and the relevant links off-site make the article a 5-minute skim or a 2-hour slog depending on your mood. Great work, Brandon, and congrats on the Digging - I'm very happy to be proven wrong on the bury brigade.

p.s. I think it's a bit odd to see a How to Get Dugg from people who get one or two posts to the homepage (Brandon's definitely not alone here). Though, he does offer some good advice, there, too.

p.p.s. I also liked his How to Comment to the Top post.

Technorati Tags

digg, brandon hopkins, link building

Original source here...