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stumbleupon

As I’m off to work like a madwoman as the registration manager at BlogHer ’11, I’ve decided to take these days to reflect back on the most popular posts here at CarrieActually.com over the course of the past year.

stumbleupon logoI’ve been using StumbleUpon for well over a year now and have read a lot of theories on how its secret algorithms work. The geek in me just can’t get enough of a good algorithm and I’ve developed my own system to effectively use StumbleUpon.

The number one thing to remember with all social media is you get what you give. You’ve got to use it like it was meant to be used if you want to reap any benefit from it.

Visit How to Make the Most of StumbleUpon #31DBBB to read the rest of the post.

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I’m currently participating the the 31 Days to Build a Better Blog challenge with the SITS Girls community. Day 29′s task is to develop a plan to boost your readership and this post explains how you can do that with StumbleUpon. You can grab the workbook and get started on your own 31 Days to Build a Better Blog at anytime.

stumbleupon logoI’ve been using StumbleUpon for well over a year now and have read a lot of theories on how its secret algorithms work. The geek in me just can’t get enough of a good algorithm and I’ve developed my own system to effectively use StumbleUpon.

The number one thing to remember with all social media is you get what you give. You’ve got to use it like it was meant to be used if you want to reap any benefit from it.

In May 2009, ProBlogger suggested the following as an effective blog promotion strategy:

Join the three most relevant social media sites and work to build value. Promote 10 times as much of other people’s material as you do your own. And don’t forget: sincere, relevant, and valuable.

First thing you need to do is set up a StumbleUpon account and install the toolbar.

Once you’ve done that, use the Stumble button in the toolbar a lot to get a feel for the system. Don’t submit any new content to the system until you’ve gotten a really good feel for what kinds of posts the StumbleUpon community likes.

While you’re doing this initial stumbling you’ll likely discover that you don’t like being recommended pages for contests and giveaways that ended a year ago, deals that are long since expired, and seasonal posts that are totally out of season. StumbleUpon will keep recommending posts for months and years to come so timeless content will do best. You’ll learn that you don’t want to submit a post that wouldn’t be relevant a month or a year from now.

StumbleUpon is a 3 part system based on ratings, friends (people you’re following and people following you; you can add me), and similar users. The time you spend stumbling before you start submitting builds your profile so that when you do submit new content, the StumbleUpon system has all three pieces of the puzzle and knows who to recommend the sites you submit to. If you’re only rating your own pages, you’re only giving StumbleUpon a third of the information it needs to recommend those pages to other users.

Don’t just thumb up every post the recommendation engine gives you. You want to build your interests, relevancy, and value so that the similar users StumbleUpon pairs you with are truly similar and likely interested in the content you later plan to submit. I rarely use the thumbs down option, it’s reserved for posts I especially dislike. Posts that I just don’t find interesting or appealing don’t get a thumbs up or a thumbs down.

When you’re finally ready to start submitting content make sure to maintain at least a 10 to 1 ratio. Promote at least 10 times other people’s content as your own. If I have a post I want to submit to StumbleUpon, I start by using the Stumble button in the toolbar until I’ve found 10 new posts I like, then I go to my page and like it, and then I stumble until I’ve found 10 more other people’s posts to like. I only want to like other people’s posts when I actually find them relevant and valuable so it usually takes me 15 minutes to half an hour to submit one post of my own with this system but that effort typically results in hundreds or thousands of hits on the post (20% of the total lifetime traffic on this site has come from StumbleUpon).

Submit the content of others too (it looks bad if all you ever do is submit your own content) but don’t just submit a post because someone asked you to. An easy way to help your friends on StumbleUpon is to check the box to accept shares in your toolbar on their profile page, but again only give a post they send your way a thumbs up if you really like it. Always keep in mind what you’ve learned about what types of posts do well on StumbleUpon and keep it sincere, relevant, and valuable.

Disclosure: Some links in this post are affiliate links.

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This is a collection of all my how to tips and tricks related to organizing and managing your digital life.

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