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25 Comments

  1. Posted September 25, 2008 at 9:35 pm | Permalink

    Michael,

    Great post. I’m actually working on a “Complete Guide To Twitter for Non-Profits” - should be out in a few weeks.

    One thing I’ve found very useful is a service called TwitterFeed, which a lot of folks know about. Above you mentioned being useful. With twitterfeed, I can regularly tweet the posts of my favorite bloggers whose topics might be very relevant to my followers.

    John
    CorporateDollar.Org

  2. Posted September 25, 2008 at 9:39 pm | Permalink

    lol, you hate when people on twitter shorten conversation to convos, but its fine to use ‘thru’ in a blog post where there’s no character limit?

  3. Posted September 25, 2008 at 9:52 pm | Permalink

    John - When that post comes out, let Rebecca Leaman at Wild Apricot blog know. Her thing there is all about non-profits and tech.

    @Dan - Yeah, I know. :) The text of the post was originally my speaking notes during the audio. I usually pretty them up before posting but this time I didn’t so much.

    Busted! :)

  4. Posted September 25, 2008 at 10:30 pm | Permalink

    Michael,

    Thanks for the tip. Rebecca is a fellow AB Blog Pack-er and I’ve been in touch with her already - very cool blogs on beekeeping (!) and non-profit marketing.

    Another thing that relates to your post is bounce rate. Initially, when I listed my blog on the account page section of twitter, I just had my home page (www.corporatedollar.org).

    After some analysis using Google Analytics (what else would one do with a product that has than name!), I changed the Twitter landing page to show an article I wrote called “What If Shel Silverstein Used Twitter?”. My bounce rate dropped the day after…

    The lesson? Be relevant and useful to your followers.

    John

    John

  5. Posted September 25, 2008 at 11:21 pm | Permalink

    @John - I love that idea of Shel Silverstein using Twitter! But yes, relevancy is everything. Your example is an excellent one. High bounce rates can also occur when your articles are being submitted by others to inappropriate categories or tags. You can prevent this somewhat by specifically suggesting tags and categories if you deliberately ask someone to submit your link for you (which many of us do from time to time).

  6. Posted September 25, 2008 at 11:37 pm | Permalink

    Michael,

    You live in Vermont? Anywhere near Athens?

    John

  7. Posted September 25, 2008 at 11:51 pm | Permalink

    @John - Yes, I live in Montpelier, Vermont, which is Northwest of Athens. Why do you ask? Is that where you live?

  8. Posted September 26, 2008 at 2:57 am | Permalink

    Great post, SU and Twitter have been huge traffic drawers for all my blogs and are well worth the time/effort it takes to manage them :-)

    Maria

  9. Posted September 26, 2008 at 4:37 am | Permalink

    Stumble Upon is an excellent way to get lots of traffic to your site, but does the traffic convert into sales?

  10. Posted September 26, 2008 at 6:25 am | Permalink

    Michael,

    I live near Boston (Waltham), but have a friend in Athens who owns a recording studio (Verdant Studio).

    Can you point me to any other StumbleUpon articles I should read? I’m a new stumbler and want to know how to use the service effectively.

    Thanks,

    John

  11. Posted September 26, 2008 at 9:23 am | Permalink

    @Maria - Glad to hear that!

    @Tom - That’s where your writing comes in, and where my Gateway Blogging program comes in (currently in development). My consulting clients can be taught Gateway Blogging methods if they wish to learn them in advance of everybody else.

    @John - There are a lot of resources on StumbleUpon out there. Try Google searches using keywords like “stumbleupon tutorial” or “how to stumbleupon traffic”.

    The most popular and authoritative resource would have to be Caroline Middlebrook’s StumbleRush Course, which is a paid product. I have not taken the course myself (don’t need to) but I know Caroline and I’ve read nothing but good reviews (not all from affiliates, either). I think the course is something like $47 or $49 dollars.

  12. Posted September 26, 2008 at 9:28 am | Permalink

    Michael,
    I’ve looked into Twitter, and seen it on other people’s sites. I can’t explain why, but it seems a bit “big brother-ish” to me - like someone is always following me! (FYI: I’m one of those rare women who hated being pregnant, as I felt I couldn’t go anywhere “alone.” - lol)
    Any ideas on this? Or is it just the weird messages I see other people getting on THEIR twitters? Is the “invasiveness” I see on twitter real or imagined?

    Thanks,
    Rita

  13. Posted September 26, 2008 at 10:11 am | Permalink

    @Rita - I can only speak for myself, but I never got that sense from Twitter at all. You’re never obligated to follow anyone, and you can block others if they seem too clingy. Twitter is like one big party to me. Jump in! The water’s fine! :)

  14. Posted September 26, 2008 at 10:16 am | Permalink

    Michael,

    OK…perhaps I’ll dip a toe in and go in “the chicken way.” I’ll watch, learn and go up to my knees…I’m just not ready to dive underwater yet (it might ruin my hair!)
    Thanks for the advice!

    Rita

  15. Posted September 26, 2008 at 10:26 am | Permalink

    Michael,

    Thanks for the tip.

    John

  16. Posted September 26, 2008 at 2:30 pm | Permalink

    Micahel,
    Thanks for the tips
    Patricia

  17. Posted September 26, 2008 at 2:52 pm | Permalink

    @Rita - There ya go! Give it a shot!

    @John and Patricia - You’re welcome! Hope you get a lot out of it.

  18. Posted September 26, 2008 at 9:11 pm | Permalink

    Good post Michael. Both StumbleUpon and Twitter can be great sources of traffic when used correctly. StumbleUpon, in particular, can quite simply flood you with traffic if your post gets a lot of thumbs up in a short period of time. I have a 5 month old post that still gets trickles of traffic from SU simply because people keep thumb it up.

  19. Posted September 27, 2008 at 10:52 pm | Permalink

    Thanks Micheal.

    Really useful information. Most tips I read just ask to join StumbleUpon but don’t really tell me what to do after I join. But you tell your reader what to do. So, I really appreciate that.

    Thanks again!

    Chetz Yusof
    ChetzTV.com - My blog about Love, Money and Fitness

  20. Posted September 27, 2008 at 10:57 pm | Permalink

    @Chetz - Thanks for the kind words. This is the same kind of stuff I tell my clients, except often there are specifics that would only apply to a specific client in a specific niche. Each person’s situation is different. But for the general stuff, I don’t hold back or keep any “secrets.”

  21. Posted September 27, 2008 at 11:15 pm | Permalink

    Great post. I use digg and twitter often, but have not used SU yet. I will soon.

  22. Posted September 28, 2008 at 5:14 pm | Permalink

    I really get a lot out of Twitter - I need to head over to Stumbleupon and start taking advantage of that as well. I do Stumble, mind you, but I’ve only been doing for fun. Time to get serious!

  23. Posted September 28, 2008 at 5:28 pm | Permalink

    @Dana - StumbleUpon can get you some great traffic, so I’m glad to hear that. What’s your StumbleUpon profile URL? Let us know so we can add you as a friend!

  24. Posted September 29, 2008 at 2:09 am | Permalink

    Great post! I have been trying to figure out StumbleUpon for weeks now, and you explained it quite well. I’ve gotten a lot of traffic from it so far, but didn’t fully understand how it works.

  25. Posted November 1, 2008 at 12:58 pm | Permalink

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8 Trackbacks

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  4. [...] StumbleUpon and Twitter to Build Blog Traffic — Great tips and well worth the effort for any blogger to invest time in both sites to draw great traffic in. [...]

  5. [...] to look. One recent post that stands out is on Michael Martine’s Remarkablogger blog, and offers two podcasts about StumbleUpon and Twitter. Of course, the guidance he offers can be extended out to just about every social networking site. [...]

  6. By Ten Social Media Tips on December 3, 2008 at 8:01 am

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