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Happy to have found you. I've just subscribed. Keep the great content coming.
-Jeff
http://blog.zemote.com
Your findings match the same I've seen at least a dozen times with various properties over the last year or so. Sites I've been involved with have been both Dugg and BoingBoinged, wreaking havoc for a day or two. But after tht, the traffic has normalized much to where it was prior to the spike. Several friends of mine have noticed the same on different sites, like getting the featured position on the iTunes Music Store.
Death of the blockbuster? Or just what we've known for a while -- it's more important to build meaningful long-lasting relationships?
E.
We hear a lot about "The 60 Minutes Effect", "The Oprah Effect" & "The Diff Effect". I used to work for a guy who was featured in a positive story on 60 Minutes and 6 months later was on Oprah. Both resulted in temporary (a few days) spikes of interest, but things always returned to "normal". However, in the long run, his notoriety improved steadily through hard work.
The appearances probably helped, but I know very few people who've "made it" who did it overnight because of an appearance on Digg, Oprah, del.icio.us #1 on Billboard or whatever.
I've had clients mentioned on Fox News Network or BusinessWeek and got huge bumps, but quickly returned to previous levels. Curiosity seekers don't hang around, they're on to the next thing. You're dead-on to build a quality, engaged audience who seek your insights and opinions. Keep up the good work.
I've found your blog this weekend, and I have to say your 100 Blog Topics list is amazing. That article alone made me want to subscribe to your feed, and here I am... saying "hi", as you requested. ;)
As for this Digg experience of yours, it proves once again what's been said by many others: Digg users don't stick to a site, don't click on ads, don't subscribe... they just enter, take a quick look and go away (some will even say bad things about you later on). Unless a blogger is able to produce at least one weekly piece with real chances to make it to Digg's front page (therefore ensuring a consistent trafic flow), I'd say he/she shouldn't put too much effort in using that site as a promotion tool.
My experience is that traffic and RSS readership usually settles down to a level a little higher than before the 'Digg' but that's not always the case.
At the end of the day getting on Digg gets you bragging rights and a pat on the back, while the hard work you put in day after day is what's growing your community long term :)
Thanks for all the thoughts.
And for those of you who peeped, great to see you!
http://gdayworld.thepodcastnetwork.com/2006/11/...
Since then I haven't really bothered much with Digg. You can't build a business model on 15 minutes of fame.
cheers
CR
Getting huge amounts of traffic might be cool, but it would reduce the chance for you to interact with your network as much as you do now. It may be inevitable as the scope of what you do grows, but I'm interested to see how you adapt.
Thanks,
Rick
What I do notice is that I rarely read your posts within Google Reader as I do most others. I always find something in them that I want to take time to read and ponder so I open the post in a new tab. This morning I checked my tabs and found I had 53 open, several of them were from this site. Many get bookmarked to come back to again.
Ultimately content is king. Digg is kind of like carnival food. Always something interesting and perhaps even tasty in bites but the things that feed us and sustain us are the good hearty meals we get when we settle in at the bounty provided by those blogs/sites that consistently serve up good fare.
Ok now I'm hungry. Peep.
What I do notice is that I rarely read your posts within Google Reader as I do most others. I always find something in them that I want to take time to read and ponder so I open the post in a new tab. This morning I checked my tabs and found I had 53 open, several of them were from this site. Many get bookmarked to come back to again.
Ultimately content is king. Digg is kind of like carnival food. Always something interesting and perhaps even tasty in bites but the things that feed us and sustain us are the good hearty meals we get when we settle in at the bounty provided by those blogs/sites that consistently serve up good fare.
Ok now I'm hungry. Peep.
/off to stalk some others for a while...
~ Merlene
Keep up the good work!
Mike
One spike isn't going to change your traffic. A month of spikes, one every day, may have more of a lasting effect.
All in all, thats a cool lookin spike.
FWIW, I came in off a link on http://bestengagingcommunities.com/ - which is a blog I read regularly. Niche affinity means more engaged readers, I suspect.
before Digg got big (pardon the pun!) you could get the same effect if you were "Instalanched" (as in linked on Instapundit) or Slashdotted (I heard that one at a confernece two years ago)--basically, it's being linked on any really huge big traffic site.
In '06 I got both Instalanched and then, six months later, Kos'd. Both were great spikes, but really didn't send over any long-term readers--probably because I'm not a political blogger.
For me, most readers that subscribe come thru Techmeme (not big traffic hits, but quality ones) and thru Google search (oddly enough.) I also find that subscriptions go up when I end up linked on blogs of very influential people. These folks might not have huge traffic, but they have influence. And, for me, at the stage where I'm at in my career, getting those links are like gold.
John Chow swears by getting dugg. I hope to achieve the same with my website.
signed by oasisfleeting.tk and epsteins mother.
Interesting results about digg to...
Idetrorce
visit my site too
http://www.leopix.com
thx
leo stanley
blogger