Web
Articles
February 2007- Webmasters can benefit from social
bookmarking
by David Leonhardt
If you are like most webmasters, you might not even know what social bookmarking
is, let alone how you can use it to increase your website leads, sales, subscribers
and even your repeat visitors. Get ready to ride the next wave of Internet
marketing.
Everyone knows that a bookmark is a piece of paper that marks a page so
you can find it easily again. Most people know that a computer bookmark is
a link on your computer that marks a web page so you can find it easily again.
A social bookmark is a link that marks a web page so you can find it easily
again, but also so you can share it with others, usually by posting it to
one of several dozen social-bookmarking websites.
Social bookmarking is all the rage these days, with websites like Del.icio.us
and Digg commanding a presence among the top traffic generators on the Internet.
People like to bookmark their "finds" and they like to show off their "fiends" to
others. Hence bookmarking, hence social bookmarking.
Webmasters hoping to capture the attention of today's Internet user should
head the signs and recognize the phenomenal opportunity presented by social
bookmarking. In a follow-up article, I will explain the "how-to"s, but here
are five ways a website can benefit from social bookmarking.
REPEAT VISITORS: Considering that many people do not buy/register/contact/take
action on their first visit to your website, repeat visitors are a necessity
(not to mention laser-targeted prospects!) You can get more repeat visitors
to your website if they can find your website again. That means getting them
to bookmark your website, either on their computer or on the social bookmarking
site of their choice. The more bookmarking options you offer, the more visitors
are likely to return. The easier you make it for them to bookmark your site,
the more of them will. However, you really must have quality content, or nobody
will want to bookmark your page.
VIRAL BOOKMARKING: When somebody bookmarks your website on their own computer,
they share it with, well, themselves. It's a private thing. But when they
bookmark a web page on a social bookmarking, it's more "social". Other people
will see it. Other people might share it. Other people might even bookmark
it. Websites like Del.icio.us, Ma.gnolia and SpicyPage are ideal for this.
In fact, many of the biggest users of a social bookmark website are often
users of several. However, you really must have quality content, or nobody
will care that somebody else has bookmarked your page.
VIRAL LINKING: When somebody sees your link at a social bookmarking website,
they might bookmark it...or they might add it to their own blog or portal
or fan site. Suddenly one person's bookmark becomes several links to your
website, presumably from reasonably well-targeted sources of traffic. However,
you really must have quality content, or nobody will want to blog somebody
else's bookmark.
SEO-FRIENDLY LINKS: Many of the social bookmarking websites offer no direct
SEO value. The links might feature the NoFollow attribute. Or the mea robots
tag might be set to NoFollow. Or your bookmarks might not show on unique URLs.
Os the links might use a redirect script that search engine spiders don't
follow. But there are some social bookmarking websites that offer SEO-friendly
links.
SEO-FRIENDLY LINKS ELSEWHERE: Even if a link from a social bookmarking
website is not SEO-friendly, don't underestimate its SEO potential. There
is a whole industry growing just to game Digg and Del.icio.us, knowing that
if a website's bookmark can stick on the home page for an hour or two, it
will mean dozens or even hundreds of inbound links from reasonably relevant
blogs and portals and fan sites. And this is natural linking, the kind that
search engines love! However, you really must have quality content, or whose
going to post a link to your website just because they found it bookmarked?
About the Author
David Leonhardt is an SEO marketing
consultant. Read David Leonhardt's
SEO marketing blog, specifically this social
bookmarking posting that inspired this article.
Note: These articles do not represent the advice or opinions of
Apollo Hosting. They represent the thoughts, advice and opinions of
the individual authors.
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