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SiteProNews Blogs
How to Increase Your Network Marketing Traffic and Leads with the Best Social Bookmarking Strategies
By Ontarian Hawkins in Featured
Effective social bookmarking has become a tool to be reckoned with when it come to producing network marketing traffic and leads. Back in the day, bookmarking use to be a tool of leisure, but today it has become a network marketer’s dream come true. Did you know that using proper bookmarking etiquette can increase not only the traffic to your mlm business, but can also drive your website(s) up in the top rankings of the search engines? Social bookmarking gives you an immediate edge of being exposed to more targeted leads overtime, plus more targeted traffic to your blog or website which in turn will lead to more sales and signups.
Some of the best social bookmarking sites are
- Digg
- Propeller
- Technorati
- Stumbleupon
Although there are tons of social bookmarking sites on the internet you want to make sure you only use a few to get the desired results, because Google is very particular about the abuse of these particular services and they will penalize your status making it very difficult for you to show up in the search engine results.
If you want to boost your network marketing traffic and the amount of leads through bookmarking, the above list will suit you well. The key here is to use bookmarking services with the most users and popularity. However, don’t be selfish in your activities with these services. If you see a post that really catches your attention, make sure you vote, comment, or write a short review giving the author credit, and in return you will increase your traffic to your network marketing business website.
There are many benefits of social bookmarking that will help you to expand your network marketing business. One way is to upload and share videos that you’ve posted on Youtube or your blog. Or you may want to bookmark an article that you wrote to get more traffic. Either way, the most important step in the bookmarking process is the use of keyword tags.
By using proper tags, the search engines will be able to search your content when your information is searched for by someone in your niche market. Tags are very important to use in each bookmarking component since this is how your article or video will be found by targeted prospects.
So if you are looking to increase your network marketing traffic and leads, using the best social bookmarking strategies has to be in your marketing arsenal. Not only will it increase the amount of exposure you receive, but it will also create more one-way backlinks pointing back to your website, which means more opportunity for your site to move up in the search engines much faster.
Ontarian is an elite network marketing and personal development business trainer interested only in the success of others. He is an expert in Social Bookmarking Traffic Generation Training Do You want to know how to achieve massive success in your business? Make sure to sign up for Ontarian’s Free Minset Training Newsletter and learn how to Think and Focus before Taking Action
How Digg Got Me On ESPN and Fox News
By Brian Cuban in Featured
What is Digg? For those who do not know, I will use the description right off their web site:
“Digg is a place for people to discover and share content from anywhere on the web. From the biggest online destinations to the most obscure blog, Digg surfaces the best stuff as voted on by our users. You won’t find editors at Digg we’re here to provide a place where people can collectively determine the value of content and we’re changing the way people consume information online.”
I will not go into all the ins and outs of Digg. You can read a good article about it here. You basically submit content you find interesting to the Digg Community. The community votes it up or down. If enough people vote it up and not too many vote it down or “bury it”, your submission makes it to the “Front Page” which can generate thousands of hits to the submission.
Is Digg beneficial to the “obscure bloggers” of which I count myself? It can be if you remember the key phrase coined by Viacom movie mogul Sumner Redstone “CONTENT IS KING!”. I actually thought my brother Mark Cuban coined the phrase until I read about Redstone. This is the golden rule that drives the Digg community.
What is your blog about? Is your blog about getting traffic from front page postings regardless of quality of the content because you are ad supported? I see a lot of that on Digg. That kind of content in my opinion is not king when it comes to blogging because it is almost always content generated by someone else. Why not spend some time building a loyal readership base with quality and or original content? If you don’t people are not going to come back until you have another popular submission. I want reader loyalty. I want people to stick around and look at my multiple posts. The only way they are going to do that is if they enjoyed the initial post I submitted to Digg. When a Digg submission of mine hits front page, it is just as or more important to me how many other of my articles are clicked.
There is nothing wrong with writing about other people’s news. Unless you are writing an original screenplay it makes sense to write about the world happening around you. The key for me at least is to take an event, even if 500 other people have written on it, and make it mine with original ideas, thoughts and viewpoints. If I can not add something new (at least new to me) to an event, I tend to stay away from it.
The tendency of some Diggers is to read only the lead-in when they digg. I try to create a lead-in that encourages readers to click on the link to my blog rather than simply digg and comment off of the lead-in. A bad lead-in can get an article buried as quickly as a bad article itself. The art of writing a good lead-in can be compared to a a teaser for a Hollywood movie. You want to capture the interest of your audience quickly without giving to much information. You want them to be curious enough to go see the movie.(your blog) It is a continuous learning process.
Do not be afraid of the comments. When a submission goes front page there can be hundreds of comments. Many of them are hateful and tough to read but if you shrug those off and find the meaningful ones you can learn a lot about ways to improve your writing and content selection skills. I routinely got tortured for my grammar before I started working harder on it. I still get tortured to a degree but the complaints have reduced dramatically.
Here is an example of how Digg recently worked for me resulting in two ESPN interviews and an appearance on The Fox News Channel.
On June 6 2008 I wrote an article entitled “Why Athletes Go Broke”. It went popular and generated 814 Diggs. This is a fairly modest number for a front page submission. In contrast, the actual article on my blog received 30 thousand hits. This is again, not an unusually large number of hits from a front page submission. The real benefit is the other search engines and blogs that pick up on this large number of hits. This process got my post noticed by the New York Times. The Times linked to the my blog in their Freakonomics Section in a post entitled: Why Do So Many Celebrities Go Broke. It was also posted in their “Whats Online” section. The Times postings resulted in my submission being picked up by news blogs all over the world. This resulted in two ESPN interviews and a national appearance on the Fox News Channel.(video below) I have also received several offers to write for publications.
What lessons can be learned from this? There are some that will say that this only happened because my last name is Cuban. I dispute that assertion. I have written many blogs that have gone front page and not generated any interest beyond Digg. It proves that Digg does work for bloggers even in the face of any disdain by the Digg community towards the blogging community. I have no idea if this disdain actually exists but I read about it frequently. It proves that regardless of any Digg variables, content will always be king. If you have content that is timely, interesting and hits a “public nerve” Digg will work for you. Digg is not just for distributing hard news around the internet. Digg can work to distribute your thoughts on that news as well. You just have to have something worth saying. Digg can pull back the curtain but the audience still has to like the show. Be original-Be timely-Be bold as a blogger. The Digg community will stand up and take notice.
Brian Cuban – You can read Why Athletes Go Broke here. You can watch the Fox News interview here.
Digg, Social News, and Social Authority Building
By Jack Humphrey in Featured
Digg ( http://www.digg.com ) is a news-oriented, or “social news” website, where the majority of its content is submitted by its users. Digg’s users also rate the site’s content, determining what’s important enough to go on the front page, and what should be removed. After signing up for a free account, Digg’s users can submit, review, vote on, and comment on news stories and other content they find on the Internet.
The idea is that instead of searching the web for useful content, people can just make one stop at Digg and see the latest current events, feature stories, videos, podcasts, and other content ‘ selected and rated by users instead of by an editor.
Digg is an important tool in building your online presence.
If a link to your content is submitted to Digg and receives a lot of positive votes and comments, your website can receive hundreds or even thousands of visitors within a short period of time. There is a great deal of the traffic that will probably quickly read the article or post and leave but, there’s a good chance that the more targeted visitors will browse your site and sign up for your newsletter and/or RSS feed which will also help you to receive incoming links, trackbacks, and social bookmarks.
You may receive comments, earn extra income, have your rss feeds picked up, and many other possibilities may come from having your content submitted. How does Digg work? In order to make your comment live, Digg requires you to enter your name and email address, and then use a password and confirmation link they email you.
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