There’s a big debate in the blogosphere about long term effects (if any) related to being Dugg. Kim Krause Berg, who recently posted a ton of useful links relating to web design, had her post hit the Digg main page. Business Wave SurgeFrom the exposure, her blog got 28,000 new hits. Her reaction? Not very positive. Kim has gone on to write that the Digg effect is a “quick marketing sugar high,” because the traffic appears to be short-term. She references Matt Bailey’s review of social media where he writes that “social media site links consistently yielded the lowest rates of engagement and no conversions.”

I am reminded about a post made not so long ago by Darren Rowse of Problogger who addressed this concern as well. After evaluating the traffic before and after the Digg effect, he speculated that the Digg effect does have long-term benefits, though nothing that can consistently match the spike from being featured on the main page of such sites. Benefits include:

  • New RSS subscribers
  • New newsletter subscribers
  • Blogs about your blog post (hmm, what’s this post about?)
  • And… subsequent Digg exposure (for all of the above — again)

Greywolf then experimented by creating a viral campaign and showed how this is indeed possible: “each successive viral effort compounds and builds [the] previous one.” Andy Beal confirms this in Kim’s comments: “But, here’s the trend. After each digg effect, my long-term traffic increases. Also, those diggers do tend to come back and often digg you again.”

Should you deemphasize the value of this system? It’s a lot about understanding the demographic of the sites you submit to. The exposure may not necessarily generate positive feedback (as in the comments at Digg, which may not necessarily be something the author wants to hear), but regardless, the word of mouth is exceptionally valuable. As Brian Clark writes, “First and foremost, Digg is a community. Despite the broadening of categories, there’s a certain demographic that resides at Digg that you need to understand and work with. If you can speak to them, you win. It’s just like any other marketing.”

And marketing it is. But as Digg clones are predicted to evolve into different verticals, perhaps we don’t have to learn to speak directly to Digg, a community that assumes every blog post comes from a male (did anyone else notice the references to Kim as a guy in the comments?). There will be others. But for those who value traffic even if for a short while, despite the negative aspects of the community, this is a great way to become known.


Posted by Tamar Weinberg at 1:48 pm
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