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Top Commentator List

Posted on July 5th, 2007 in Traffic by Scott

I recently added the Top Commentator Plugin to my Blog.   It is an exciting plugin.  I think that it will help encourage comments on my site, and reward the top commentators with links that count in Google.  I know that the Top Commentator plugin on other people’s blogs has encouraged me to leave more comments to try and get on the list.   However sometimes it can be difficult to find blogs using the plugin.     As such I have started to compile a list of all blogs using the Top Commentator plugin, or a clone.

Rules

1) Blog must have top commentators on the Sidebar, at the bottom, top, or anywhere else that is on the majority of pages.  If you just have top commentators on a single page in your blog you don’t qualify for this list

2) Links in the plugin can not contain the rel=”nofollow” tag, they must be search enabled

3) Submit your blog by leaving a comment or sending me an e-mail and I’ll add it to the list

4) New additions go on top for easy reference, after a while they will be put alphabetically

5) If you find a site on here which is not using the plugin, or has turned on rel=”nofollow”, let me know and I’ll remove it from the list

6) If you like this, you may also want to check out Forums That Follow List

If you like this list, please give it a link and let others know.

Top Commentator Blogs

Do Follow Forums

Posted on July 4th, 2007 in Traffic by Scott

Forum marketing is a great way for beginning blogs to get some traffic to their site as well as get spidered by Google and Yahoo.  However there is no point to posting in forums for search engine traffic if their links are tagged with “rel=nofollow”    So what forums have search enabled links?   This list is intended to help you find that out.

Here are some forums which have Do Follow links enabled in their signatures. The search enabled signatures were verified using Search Status.    This is by no means a complete list.   It is heavily biases towards the types of forums I myself frequent.    However I would like to make it more complete.  If you run, participate in, or know of any forum which allows signatures and doesn’t insert “rel=nofollow” tags in leave a comment or send me an e-mail and I will add it to the list. 

All Member counts are at time of addition to this list.

Affiliate Marketing

Blogger Forums

Gadgets

General Internet

Online Gaming

I am interested in adding to this list.  If you have a forum, post on a forum, or know of any forum which allows links in the signature, and doesn’t add a rel=nofollow tag, either e-mail me or leave a comment and I’ll add it to the list.     If I have a site on here which doesn’t allow signatures, or has rel=nofollow, let me know and I’ll check it out

Digg Assault Results

Posted on June 20th, 2007 in Traffic by Scott

Yesterday I wrote about How To Launch A Digg Assault   How well did it work?

Overall it worked about as well as I expected.  Got 9 Diggs, 2 negative comments and drove a couple hundred visitors, but never got picked up and was buried in fairly short order.  But it still gave some insight on what worked well and what didn’t.

What worked

1) Getting Friends

Getting some of my blogging friends to Digg the post worked very well.  Chris at Blog-Op, Rich at Rich Minx, RT at Untwisted Vortex, and Tobsy at Bloggers Journey all came through amazingly quickly with Diggs.   I would say that asking some blogging friends to Digg it was the most successful part of the experiment, but the one that you can use the least often.   I certainly wouldn’t feel comfortable e-mailing people to ask for Diggs with any frequency, but once in a rare while is no problem.   

Of course RT is an exception, since he does ask you to submit a site for Diggs.

Now I just need to make some more friends :)

2) Comments

My article created a little controversy.  (very little) and got a couple of comments.  I think that was a good thing traffic wise and helped drive a few extra people who otherwise would not have come.   The bottom line is that comments can attract attention, and that is always a good thing.

3) Digging it myself

Again, this is a once in a rare while thing.  Digging my own post allowed me to write the intro I wanted, time it like I wanted, and get some Diggs immediately.   If I had waited for a reader to Digg it, it may have happened soon, it may never have.

But self Digg too often and your account will start getting weaker and weaker.   Plus you’ll go blind.

What didn’t work

1) Writing about Digg

Let’s face it, Diggers don’t like anything about gaming Digg or SEO.  It is just not their style, and those kind of posts tend to get buried pretty quickly.   Being so transparent about begging for Diggs was a turnoff to many people I am sure

2) Making The Digg button obvious

Why I think this is good in theory, it didn’t really help in this case.   Most of the Diggers weren’t going to promote it no matter how obvious the button was (see 1) so it was something of a moot point

Hopefully you can use some of these tips to promote your own sites…. Which are hopefully not about getting Diggs.

Launching A Digg Assault

Posted on June 19th, 2007 in Traffic by Scott

Climbing to the Front Page of Digg is like mountain climber assaulting a summit. 

It isn’t easy to get to the front page of Digg.  Here are some tips to help you launch your page to the top.

1) Make Your Page Easy To Digg

You may occasionally get one or two Diggs from random visitors to your page, but to get to the summit, you need Diggers to Digg your site.  Make sure they can do it with the click of a button once they come.  At the top of the pages you are trying to reach the front page with, place a link for easy digging.   Such as

Digg This Page

Note, that link works.  Please actually this this page

2) Give Your Page A Great Title

What is most important in getting Diggs from Diggers.  Content?  Maybe.   Arguably a great title is equally important, if not more so.  Your title should be funny, create controversy, or engage a whole lot of Diggers one way or another.

Example -

How often do you see pro Bush or Bush bashing titles with a lot of Diggs?   I see them all the time.  In fact I will sometimes click and give a Digg to an article I don’t even read, because I like the title and it leans to my side of the political spectrum.  ( Which side that is I will leave as an exercise to the reader. )

Is this title an accident?  No, I hope an article about launching an assault on Digg may create some controversy and get some Diggs.

3) Digg Your Own Post

As a rule, you shouldn’t spend too much time Digging your own stuff.  If all you submit is your own site, your account is going nowhere.  But occasionally you write something you think is great.  Can you leave it to the whims of fate?  No

By Digging your best posts you can

  • Control the title

  • Control the description

  • Control when it is first Dugg

  • Get some friends to give it a few boost Diggs right away

Don’t do it often.  But it is alright to sometimes Digg yourself.

4) Get Some Friends

The first 30 minutes after a Digg is critical.  You need to get some more Diggs in that time to boost your site so that the community as a whole can see it.  After you Digg a page, contact a few of your friends and get them to Digg it write away.  If you can get 10 Diggs in the first hour the page is well on its way.  If it goes 3 hours without other Diggs, you have no hope of making the front page.

5) Comment on your Digg

Either you or your friends should write a comment or two on the Digg.   Some controversy would be great.   An example on a pro Bush post would be “How stupid are you to support him.  All you people are idiots.”     A good example for this Digg might be “See this asshole who is trying to game Digg”

A positive review might also be good.  “This really helped me out” or “That is a great idea on getting some traffic from Digg” are all useful

Once again, Don’t do too much.  Diggers are among the last people you want to annoy.

6) Timing is everything

Time your Diggs.  Early morning (PST) is best.  Catch office workers when they first get into work and when they are eating lunch.   If you can’t manage that, try for early evening.  Timing your Diggs can make sure that your site gets seen by the greatest number of people, driving Diggs and traffic.

 

That’s all the tips I have now.  Any advice you can offer?  Any tips for climbing a different site, like Stumbleupon?

 

5 Tips To Get The Most Traffic From Comments

Posted on June 6th, 2007 in Traffic by Scott

If you take the time to comment, make the most out of it

Commenting on other blogs is a great way to drive traffic to your own site.  Although it won’t directly drive hundreds of hits, it will do a great job of building your brand and increasing awareness of you among other blogs.  But commenting on many other blogs can take a lot of time.  Is it worth it?

Here are some tips to make sure you get the most out of the time you spend on comments

1) If the site has top commentators enabled, make sure you are on it - If you want to get the attention of a blogger, being one of the top commentators on his blog is a sure way to do it.  I would much rather participate fully in half a dozen other blogs, and be one of the comment leaders, than spread two or three comments around here or there.  If you only comment once the blogger is not likely to remember you and may not follow you back to your site.  It is through repeated exposure to you that he and his readers are most likely to find you.

2) Aim to be the first commentator on each post - As far as driving reader traffic, being the first commentator on a post is where it is at.  Everyone reads the first several comments, they set the tone for the entire thread.  Very few people make it all the way down to comment #40.  A good trick to be one of the first commentators is to keep the number of unreads feeds in your RSS low.  Then whenever someone posts something new you can go check it out and quickly write a response.

3) Write Quality Comments - No one wants to read a thousand “Me To” comments (though it is ok sometimes if that is all you have)  Aim to read the article and post a good question or expansion on the topic.  That will give other guests something to respond to, and you in turn can respond to them, helping to kick up your ranking in the top commentators

4) Comment on Digg - Instead of focusing all your time commenting on blogs, try to switch it up a little and comment on Digg.  The trick to getting traffic from Digg comments is to look for a rising star on the right hand side of the categories page.  You can then go there write your comment, and insert a link.  However you better make sure that the link is relevant to what you are commenting on, because Diggers are quick to be vindictive against people they think are spamming them.

5) Keep Track of What Works - Make you you keep track of which sites work at driving traffic and which sites don’t.  There is no point spending a lot of time commenting on a blog where the owner stubbornly refuses to take notice of you, and none of the visitors see fit to visit your site.  By taking a little time to track your results, you can save a lot of time in the long run.

I hope this help you.  As a note I try to make it a rule to trace back my commentators to their sites and check them out.  So please drop a comment and let me know if you use any of these tips.

Free Diggs And Stumbles

Posted on June 5th, 2007 in Traffic by Scott

Need A Digg Or A Stumble?  I’m giving them away free

I’m please to announce that if you submit a site to me, I will give it a Digg or a Stumble for free.  If you are a new site, having several people give one of your articles a Digg or Stumble immediately after you submit it can be crucial for getting that post off of the ground.  I myself have trouble often getting the necessarily immediate 10-15 Diggs required to hit the hot in topic sidebar, so I want to make myself a resource for other bloggers

Rules

  1. Submit your site either by comment on this post or by e-mail to SavvyAffiliate [at nospam] Gmail [dot] com -  E-mail has the advantage that I will be sure to see it.  Comment submission has the advantage that other people can see it too and you might be more hits
  2. Submit only your best work -  I’m not going to waste my time Digging a whole bunch of posts which are just a rehash of things which are floating around the web in 1000 places.  Create something original, interesting, and exciting and submit it to me and I’ll be all over it.
  3. Bear in mind my time line - I live in Seattle and work until ~5 Monday-Friday.  I don’t check my Blog email while I’m at work, so don’t be upset if you send me something 10 Am on Tuesday and I don’t get around to Digging it until 7 PM.   Most weekends I will be faster at, but no promises
  4. It can go both ways - Next time I write a post which I am really excited about I will be interested in using you to help me forward it along.  So if you e-mail me bear in mind that I’ll save your e-mail and send you a reply when I need a Digg.  (To be fair, I usually only write an excellent post on a bi-weekly basis.  So I won’t be spamming your e-mail box with tons of crap)

That’s it.  Social Networking sites can be a huge boon to a blogger.  Combining social networking sites with real networking between bloggers can drive traffic in incredible levels.  Feel free to start submitting.

How Well Do Link Trains Work?

Posted on June 4th, 2007 in Traffic by Scott

Link Trains, Worth The Time?  Or Just Worthless

I recently took part, and am actually still taking part, in a link train called Viralink.  Basically you put a link to your blog in a matrix of asterisk, along with other asterisk linking to other blogs.  Your readers see the matrix and decide to put it on their blog as well, giving you and everyone else in the matrix links.  Basically it is a pyramid scheme where no one loses any money.

I was an early adopter to this link train and said that I would write about how well it worked. 

So far I can say that it has worked better than expected -  The link train has not driven very much traffic to my site.  But it has given me a fair number of backlinks  My Technorati links jumped from 78 to (at the time of this publishing) 101 in a matter of 3 days.  For me that is quite an accomplishment.

Although traffic would be good, the links make my site more valuable.  My technorati ranking has gone from ~54,000 to ~22,000.  Still not the highest, but much better than I was at before.  This means that I can charge more for ReviewMe reviews, as I am better suited against my competitors

The bottom line - Link trains may be worth doing… every now and then.  Do too many of them and you will piss your readers off.  But every once in a while they can give some juice to your site.  This is especially true if you can get in on the beginning of the link train, or can start a clever one.  The danger of getting in on the end of a link train is that there could be some unsavory (i.e. adult) sites linked up ahead of you.  You don’t want to be linking to those. Luckily I’ve checked out all the links currently in my matrix.  If you want to use my matrix as your base, go ahead and there is nothing unsavory in it.

Have link trains been any good to you?  Have you gotten visitors, links, or neither?

Do You Lurk Or Participate?

Posted on June 3rd, 2007 in Traffic by Scott

When you visit a site how active are you?  If you’re just lurking you may want to rethink

I have written several times about how one of the best ways to get attention to your site is to comment on other people’s posts.  Now RT over at untwistedVortex has written a post about How Commenting is Better Than Lurking

RT states that

I didn’t get the urge to become more prolific until I started receiving a lot of comments the following month. I notice that a lot of bloggers give up at the 6-7 month mark and part of it may be that they’re not getting the stimulation provided by commentators.

Which I think is completely true.  Many of my posts currently get no comments.  However when I do get several comments on a thread, it helps inspire me to write more and better about that topic.  I can’t imagine that any blogger could go 6 months without getting feedback and still feel enthusiasm for keeping it up.

RT also mentions that several times he has left comments which are more or less just a “I’m here, nice page”    Although in the past I’ve tried only to comment when I had more to say, I think RT is correct that even short comments are better than none.   Leaving any kind of comment on a blog you like is a great thing to do, even if it is just an I’m here kind of thing.

So why should I leave a comment, what will I get out of it? Leaving a comment will benefit you as well as the blog.  Here are some reasons why

  1. The blogger will trace back to your site - Make friends with other bloggers by commenting on their blogs.  Chances are they will come to yours and do the same.  If you are blogging only in your own world you will never expand
  2. Attract their readers - Insightful and well thought out comments can attract the readers of the blog to your page.  They figure that if you were smart enough to have an intelligent comment, maybe your site is worth reading
  3. Do Follow - More and more blogs are enabling do follow in their comments.  If you can comment and get some link love out of it, why wouldn’t you?

The bottom line - Make a habit to be more active in blogs.  Take the minute necessary to comment on a blog and it will turn out to be a good investment in time

So how bout you?  Do you usually comment on blogs?  This would be  a great chance to leave even an “I’m here comment”  Let me know who’s reading.

Guest Blogging, Trading Time For Traffic

Posted on May 30th, 2007 in Traffic by Scott

The Best Way To Get Traffic to Your Site Is To Go Where The People Are

One of the quickest ways to get a large traffic increase for you site is to become a guest blogger on a popular website.  If you are guest blogging, then you can either throw up a biography of yourself, or include links to your own pages, helping to drive the visitors to your blog.  However not all guest blogging opportunties are created equal. Some sites are much better to submit content to than others.  If you are going to take the time to write articles and give them away, you want access to as many readers as possible. 

Almost all bloggers are hungry for content.  Every single blogger faces the prospect of needing new content every day to keep his visitors coming back.  Many bloggers are open to the idea of guest bloggers if you can deliver quality to them.   So next time you have a killer idea, try writing it up and sending it off to another popular site in order to drive your traffic, it could be well worth your time.

Who should I submit my work to?  Almost every niche has a list of the Top bloggers in that niche.  Find that niche and think about what site your article would work best on.  Have any of the bloggers asked for submissions?  Does the tone of the article fit the bloggers persona?   Daily blog tips has recently come out with a handy list of the Top 25 Blogging Blogs.  When I am looking to submit some work a I will go there.  Although I would like to post on Problogger, I have no past relationship with him and it is unlikely that he will post my articles.  (Not that it hurts to ask)    I have never seen John Chow post guest articles, so that might be out also.   However I know Lorelle has read this blog before, because she was kind enough to comment.  If I have a post that is up her alley I may shop it to her.  Additionally, Daily blog tips has asked for submissions, so they are a great candidate for guest blogging.

Is it better to go for paid posts?  Or post to get traffic?  I would much rather post on a site with strong traffic, for free, than be paid to post on some one else’s blog which wasn’t going to drive people to my own site.    The going price of blog posts is relatively low, only $10-$30.  I think that for that price, it is much better to work on my own blog.  To me, the lifetime value of a blog post can be in the triple digits, and my blog is just starting out.  The bottom line is, I would rather work for myself than someone else.  Being paid to post is too much like working a job, but guest posting to drive traffic is more like expanding my brand.

Break Out Blogging

Posted on May 30th, 2007 in Traffic by Scott

Conventional wisdom states that A blog Is built through work and slowly building up readers, conventional wisdom may be wrong.

Actually that is not entirely true.  Conventional wisdom is correct that it takes daily work to create a great blog.  It is correct that it takes time to build a decent readership.  But what you don’t hear often, is that once you have established your readership base, you can break out, and your visitors can increase dramatically practically overnight.

As an example we’ll look at how four of the “A List” bloggers got started, Problogger Darren Rowse, John Chow, Steve Pavlina, and Shoemoney’s Jeremy Schoemaker.

Looking up the Alexa stats on each of them, and panning back in time to where they got started gives a great demonstration of where they broke out.

Alexa Rankings for Problogger

alexa problogger

Problogger started out strong, and within the first 6 month had an Alexa traffic reach of .02.  (For comparison Savvy Affiliate has a current reach, May 2007, of .002 )  However for the next 6 months, the end of 2005 through the beginning of 2006, Problogger’s traffic reach went stagnant.   Then he had his breakout.  Overnight his daily reach more than doubled, took a bit of a dip, and then surged ahead.   We can see this pattern repeat time and again with the other bloggers

Alexa Ranks for John Chow

alexa john chow

John’s surge in traffic may be the most dramatic of any I examined.  He was hovering around .005, not too different than your average PR 4 blog, and his traffic shot up overnight.  I’m told that this was due through judicious use of an AdWords campaign on sites such as Problogger, but am saving investigating causes of breakouts for my next article.

Looking at ShoeMoney, you can see a more gradual surge, but still a clear breakout pattern

Shoe spent 6 months hovering at a daily reach of .01, and then in the span of the next 6 months increased his traffic by a factor of 10.  Although that has dropped off slightly, Shoemoney is still a strong force in the blogging community.

Finally Steve Pavlina has a blog which might be the most profitable of any yet listed  (He reports 40K/month earnings).    Did he get there through a steady increase in readership?  Nope, once again he plateaued and managed to break out in a surge

Although the exact reasons behind each surge will be examined later, there are several conclusions one can draw from looking at these charts

1) The right content / marketing can drive a surge of visitors - Clearly all of these bloggers benefited from either viral content of some kind, or smart, aggressive marketing.  I personally read each blog and know that they are all well written, spawn lots of content, and have interesting/unique personalities.  However without the idea / marketing that they did to generate their surge of visitors they may not be considered “A List” bloggers today.  (Although I would argue if they had missed one opportunity, they would create another for themselves)

2) Sites need a base traffic level before they can surge - In each of these cases, all four sites had moderately strong traffic ( ~.01 Daily Reach) before they surged.  They each seemed to reach their initial traffic levels through sustained growth.  The fact that they had a base traffic enabled their surge.  The moderate daily reach would be essential to get traffic due to viral blog links.  If their initial traffic was too low, no matter how exciting a blog post they wrote, not enough bloggers would see it to drive a surge.  The bottom line, if your site is still very low on the traffic scale ( < 200 uniques per day ) you should focus on growing your site through common SEO and content generation techniques, rather than trying to break out.

3) A surge needs to be sustained - In each case, after the initial spike in traffic, there a downswing in visitors.  However the reason that you know each blogger know, the reason that they are “A List” bloggers, is that they were able to sustain their visitors and keep them coming back.  It would do a site no good to have only 1 good article.  Readers would come, perhaps even subscribe, but would stop coming back when no more gold was forthcoming.  After you get a surge in visitors is the most important time to write quality content!  If you ever see a spike in readership, that is when you need to put out your best work.  Spend extra time writing more articles and making each interesting.  Take time away from your SEO tasks and your site design to sustain your visitors.  Once you have gotten each hooked on the site you can go back to a more normal routine.  Until then, you must treat each as valuable and work hard to retain them.

Any thoughts on how you might attempt to kick your blog out of a rut?  Would a viral article or an intelligent, aggressive marketing campaign work better?