Social bookmarking is the practice of posting links to articles and web pages to various “link aggregator” or social bookmark sites, such as Digg, Stumbleupon, and so on. Social bookmarking sites rise and fall in popularity fairly quickly, but they generally have a few common features:
1. Users can submit links that other users can browse, providing a good way to expose your content.
2. Links go into large pages of lists, which are normally very easy to navigate, and are also usually divided up into a “main page” of the best links of the day, and various sub-sections which help you to get exposure in more relevant circles.
3. Links can usually be “voted on” to determine which links get more airtime on the front page of various sections. The more votes your links get, the more traffic they get.
4. Some sites, like Digg, attach a weighting to certain actions and users, so a user who submits more popular links will have a vote that carries more weight.
5. Most social bookmarking site users are fairly jaded when it comes to the internet, and will ignore things that aren’t interesting, funny, or very entertaining. This is not a place for your boring press releases.
6. Most bookmarking sites usually have some kind of “social” element to them, allowing users to create profiles, have a friends list of other users, etc., in the hope of getting users to share content between themselves.
Those are the basics, so let’s have a look at how best to approach social bookmarking. I’m going to use Reddit and Digg as my main examples, but bear in mind that Reddit itself requires a great deal of familiarity with its culture before you are able to submit links that anybody even clicks on.
Choose your niche
Submitting an article on growing bonsai trees to the front page of Reddit won’t get you anywhere – you’ll get 30 visitors may be, none of whom will buy your products. But submitting it to /r/bonsai, even though it only has around 1,100 readers, will probably garner more attention from interested people.
Ironically, submitting to /r/trees will have much less of an effect, because /r/trees is dedicated to marijuana culture. The lesson here is: know your subreddits.
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