Skellie is a regular writer for ProBlogger. Check out her new blog Anywired if you’re interested in earning an income online.
Since yesterday, StumbleUpon has sent me around 20,000 page views. It’s the single biggest referrer for both my blogs, despite one of them having been on the Digg front page three times! You could say that StumbleUpon traffic (and lots of it) is one of the main reasons I’ve been lucky enough to become a pro blogger.
In this post, I want to share all the trade secrets I’ve learned about how to craft posts that set StumbleUpon on fire. These are tips and ideas I use on a daily basis to get anywhere between a few hundred and a few thousand (or more) StumbleUpon visitors every day.
I should note before we start that, while StumbleUpon use is heavier in some niches than others, these principles should help you to tap into SU traffic regardless of whether you’re blogging about blogging or Mexican walking fish. SU is arguably the most powerful promotional tool niche bloggers can use.
Learn the new rules
Your efforts will be hampered if you try to write posts to appeal to social media ‘in general’. Each service likes certain types of content and dislikes others. Digg likes mass appeal. Del.icio.us likes anything its users like, but an item won’t go popular unless the source page gets thousands of hits.
If you’re in a niche without mass appeal, SU can help you where the other services won’t. Digg’s categories are deliberately broad to avoid diluting its power to send waves of traffic. StumbleUpon’s categories can be much more specific. While the traffic is not always as targeted as you’d like, it’s still much more targeted than Digg’s.
This also fundamentally changes the way you approach ‘writing for social media’ when you’re writing for StumbleUpon. You no longer have to worry about pleasing everyone. In fact, sticking within the confines of your niche — even if it’s a small one — can mean the difference between badly targeted traffic vs. highly targeted traffic.
My first piece of advice on writing SU optimized content is to write posts for your target market, not for the many. This increases the chances that your post will be submitted to a more specific category yielding better targeted traffic.
Stumble no-go zones
Before I discuss the types of content that tend to do well on StumbleUpon, it’s worth outlining a few types of posts that rarely go popular on the service. I’m not suggesting that you cut out these content types, but it might be worth thinking about how you can make them more attractive to StumbleUpon.
- Weekly link round-ups. One solution is to change your link round up to a weekly themed resource list.
- News. Time-sensitive content is favored by Digg and Reddit, but StumbleUpon will generally only pick up timeless content. If it’s not going to be relevant in a month, it’s probably not going to get Stumbled much.
- Posts that don’t make sense out of context. If your post doesn’t make sense without context it probably won’t get picked up by SU. Potential voters know that the visitors they send won’t ‘get’ your post.
- Short, breezy posts. A short, value-packed post can do well on StumbleUpon, but breezy content without pithy tips is usually bypassed.
- Posts that don’t sell themselves properly. New visitors don’t have much patience. If your mind-bending, life-changing post takes 500 words to really get going, your loyal readers will probably love it, but StumbleUpon will yawn. The value inside your post should be made clear as soon as possible.
- Overly personal posts. Sorry personal bloggers, but this one is tough. If you’ve ever re-told a story about a friend to someone who doesn’t know them, you’ve probably noticed that the story doesn’t entertain them nearly as much as it entertained you. Highly personal content can be met with a fanatical response from readers who know you, but your average SU visitor won’t know why they should care.
Each of these content types may have a home on your blog and not everything can be optimized for StumbleUpon. The main reason I want to share these no-go zones is so you don’t pour unnecessary effort into one of these post types, only to find that it doesn’t send the traffic and potential readers you’d hoped.
Photo by swruler9284
Stumble-friendly post types
Just as there are certain content types that rarely sizzle with SU traffic, there are certain types of content that seem to be particularly well-loved by SU users.
- Posts that look as if they took a long time to craft. SU users respect carefully crafted content. If your post is chock full of detail, examples, images, links or otherwise looks as if it took some time to put together, they’ll generally reward your efforts.
- Unique how-to guides and advice posts. Certain topics have been done to death, but if you can tap into something people want to learn how to do but haven’t yet been told, SU will probably reward you.
- Unique, novel and useful resource lists.
- Pithy posts with poignant take-home points. If you can find the right words to say something important, or think of an apt metaphor, your post is likely to be popular even if it’s quite short.
- Visually interesting posts. Captivating images can be a lot more gripping than a wall of text. I start each post I write on my blogs with an interesting image from Flickr and this always appears in the above-the-fold area of the screen. I think this might have a big part to play in my success with SU traffic. A gripping headline and a gripping image help to draw SU visitors into each post.
- Treasure-trove content. Posts containing cool rarities and free stuff are usually highly popular.
There are other types of content that do well, but the above represents the most common formats for blog posts that fare well on StumbleUpon.
SUO: StumbleUpon Optimization
There are a few things you can do to optimize any post for StumbleUpon.
1. The Value/Curiosity headline formula. The two most effective ways to encourage someone to read your posts is to a) promise value that will make the time-investment worthwhile or b) make them curious. For option A, pick a headline that makes your post sound unmissable. For B, pick a headline that begs an explanation. For example: What’s the scariest fish in the Amazon? Hint: It’s not the Piranha. It’s far, far worse (source). Another simple hack is to make your headlines really big and eye-catching, so they gather more attention.
2. Start with an image. Our eyes are drawn to interesting images. Once you can bring a StumbleUpon visitor’s eyes down into your post, it’s a tiny step for them to make the move into your text.
3. Sell each post. Dedicate the first paragraph of each post to making it sound like something worth reading. Tell readers what they stand to get in return for their time investment.
Strategic tips
Having a core base of active SU users who read your blog is all you need to tap into a steady stream of SU traffic. If you haven’t yet developed this core base yet, here’s what you should do:
- Start using StumbleUpon and voting up content from other blogs and websites in your niche.
- Friend those who Stumble your articles and thank them. This will start a dialog that could turn them into a loyal reader of your blog.
- Write about SU and encourage readers to add you as a friend.
- Swap Stumbles with other bloggers.
- Link to your SU profile on your About page.
- Befriend active StumbleUpon users and stumble and review some of their content if they have a blog or website. Active users command more traffic and they’re more likely to repay the favor because they’re Stumbling all the time anyway!
- Add a Stumble button/link under each of your posts.
- Add a Stumble link to your Feedflare (find it in your Feedburner control panel).
Points to review
- When writing for StumbleUpon, focus on writing value-packed posts for your target audience. Don’t try to accommodate everyone.
- Be mindful of the post types that tend to receive little interest on SU.
- Remember the post types that SU loves best.
- Practice SUO.
- Work hard at turning active SU users into loyal readers of your blog.
Thanks so much for this information. I am new to blogging stuff and learned a lot today. I will definitely create an account on SU and try this.
??????
One question for Daren and all tenured bloggers..
If someone is good at a certain topic and blog about it in a unique way, but there are already thousands of articles and resources, what should a person do?
Should he/she write about it?
Will SU consider these posts?
Please help me with this.
Thanks
Mohit
Thanks, I’ve never noticed the power of Stumblers :)
Great post Skellie. Stumbleupon is the major traffic generator for my blog too….I’ve experienced the ‘digg effect’ on a couple of posts, but overall, stumbleupon leads by a huge margin.
Thanks for your useful article! :)
Manu.
Thanks for the comments, everyone. A few responses:
@ Tim Tucker & Gina: Hey guys — if you install the SU toolbar you can click the speech bubble icon to see who has reviewed and voted any given page :-).
@ Tad Chef: If you genuinely like their content, and they genuinely like yours, surely there’s nothing wrong with that?
@ Ty Brown: I’ve heard that you can only stumble the same domain 15 times. But if you’re writing good content, you shouldn’t need to stumble your own stuff anyway.
@ Engtech: That’s a cool tool — cheers.
I’d like to share my stats from SU. Stumble Traffic just keeps giving. Since having a post stumbled about 2.5 months or so ago giving me an initial 267 unique visitors for there was nothing for a few weeks then boom, the same article went through again and hit 767 visit in early January …. still it hadn’t finished and 2 weeks later 1169 followed by another week later 1891 …… for the last month i’ve had no less than 150 visitors and on average closer to 300 unique visitors per day from stumble.
To date, 17887 visits from Stumble with 2,34 pages per visit and a less then 30% bounce rate.
I have a screen cap of my google analytics for any doubters out there!
Hi Skellie,
This was so helpful. I have been Stumbling when I have free time, and find it totally addictive. There’s some great stuff on their site, so it also becomes a great resource for bloggers. It’s like commercial free “television”. You are right though, when I stumble, I don’t spend much time on a site. Also, if it takes too long to load, I’m off to the next one.
Stumble spikes are great to see, however, they do distort your actual visitor averages. I still wonder how the conversion rate is.
nice views but am the word “SU” is not that famiiar to me hope oto know more about that someday so that I can relate to it someday :)
I’ve been a SU fan for years.
Thanks for the great advice.
Wow! Thanks for laying that out. I’ve had a few posts do very well with SU, and I didn’t really understand why others didn’t. I think I know now.
Skellie Rocks! :)
I’ve been sitting down for a couple of afternoons now and reading your posts. Thank you so much for all your help. I signed up to Stumble Upon today. We’re hoping it will help the site, but it’s also a great tool for being introduced to new designs and web applications.
Thank you again!
Shame Stumbleupon has a usage limit – after that you have to pay. I can no longer submit any articles from my website after submitting around 30 posts over a period of 6 weeks. See this forum post:
http://help.group.stumbleupon.com/forum/76187/
“If you have exceeded the posting limit for posts from a single page or domain, then there is no further assistance that we can offer. There are a few million other sites which you might Stumble!™ and post from. That is, essentially, what stumbling is all about.”
Shame Stumbleupon has a usage limit – after that you have to pay $0.05/visit. I can no longer submit any articles from my website after submitting around 30 posts over a period of 6 weeks. See this forum post:
http://help.group.stumbleupon.com/forum/76187/
“If you have exceeded the posting limit for posts from a single page or domain, then there is no further assistance that we can offer. There are a few million other sites which you might Stumble!™ and post from. That is, essentially, what stumbling is all about.”
This is excellent. I just downloaded the SU toolbar and have been playing around with it and trying to figure out how to get on it. Now I have a great reference! =)
A terrific post! It’s great to have so much detail expended on a how-to. Makes me feel as though I could sit down and start discovering SU enthusiasts straight away!
StumbleUpon likes good titles and visually interesting posts and I saw that in several examples.But this is very nice article and thank you for strategic tips.
This is a great post i have ever read. After reading this I found the mistakes that I have done. Thanks a lot.
Thanks for sharing, great post. StumbleUpon is my prefer social network, indeed is from I got the most of my referrer traffic.
Great tips! This may be a dumb question, but how do you find out who stumbled your post?
Yet another excellent post in Problogger.net. Thanks to Skellie! I must mention here the advantage of SU from others like Digg. SU promises a steady traffic to your website whereas in Digg, when its in the top page, you get lots of traffic, thus overloading the server!
Its indeed awesome to note the implications of services like SU that were not started with these in mind!
And by the way, Mr. Brett above, what SU does is correct. I am indeed proud that SU has that constraint of 30 submissions from the same domain. Otherwise, you will be using SU only for forwarding your cause!
SUO…now there’s one for the books. Thanks for the info..very well written.
@ Sarah (Real Life): When you install the StumbleUpon toolbar, navigate to the page you want to research and click on the speech bubble. That will show you who reviewed and voted up the content.
How great is this post! It gave me a lot of tips. And I agree, StumbleUpon draws way more traffic than Digg and Del.icio.us. I’ve felt it’s effect for myself. Digg is mainly tech-centred and Del.icio.us is pretty much general.
Hi Skellie, Nice post. Just some comments though. I do find that stumble upon traffic is fleeting, but perhaps I have picked up a few RSS readers. It is hard to know. Google barely reports it but I have another stats plug-in on my blog which shows how well I did.
I do friend the people who stumble me but they do not necessarily “friend me” back. I hesitate to thank them after reading a post on Caroline Middlebrook’s site about how rude people were to her when she thanked them. Has anyone experienced this when they have thanked a stumbler? If I know them, I thank them.
Also, I have been toying with this concept and would love others feedback. I write about green products. I asked one of my friends to stumble my organic vodka story. He cleverly stumbled it in beverage rather than environment which usually is where I would stumble my green articles. I received so much traffic it was amazing. I tried it again with another friend who stumbled a racy green valentine post. However, she stumbled it under shopping. I did not do as well and I would have figured with a sexy title I would have alot of people interested.
I was trying to get traffic from outside my niche to give cross appeal to my articles. My friend on the last stumble used tags too to hit other areas of interest including the environment. Has anyone tried stumbling outside their niche with any success? Is it hit or miss?
StumbleUpon tips are very good but I have question about this topic.Does anybody know how StumbleUpon index pages – many my posts are not indexed.How long it takes to index pages ?
You certainly are a quality writer and publisher, Skellie.
@Anna – wow that sounds nasty. I can’t imagine being rude to someone thanking me for stumbling them! I think I’d just be plain happy they noticed!
I have been using SU for a long time.
I never thought of using it to get traffic
to another blog or site. I do/did it
for fun. There are tons and tons of
great people, but it does have its share
of jerks (just like anywhere else).
I have been blogging since 2 months and I love stumble and it brings me good traffic !
Blogging
| Making Money Online
stumbleupon gets me great traffic
Skellie your rock. Its always great to go through your post and always informative.
Best of luck for your new site. May StumbleUpon send your millions of hits.
One just hit :)
I’ve recently used StumbleUpon and it does bring me quite a good number to visitors and increasing too. I hope, these techniques will even boost my traffic.
Good luck to you Skellie.
Thanks for the article. I really hadn’t thought that a SU audience might prefer a different type of article than a typical Digg reader. I believe my blog is better suited for the typical StumbleUpon reader with very little, if any, change in writing style. I certainly have seen siginificant traffic spikes when something has been submitted to StumbleUpon. Can’t say the same for Digg.
Thanks for the post.
great and helpful post.
darren u rock !
Shardul
http://www.blogsha.com
This is a copy of my earlier post, this time with the spelling fixed. Sorry.
Great information. I have been working hard to get traffic to my blog without a whole lot of success. I have not tried to use stumble upon.
Does SEO of the blog help with StumbleUpon at all? If I used an SEO optimizer like RaSof, will it make any difference?
Thanks,
Scott
Thanks for the sweet post, you’ve helped validate a number of things I’ve been doing right and identify other areas to improve on.
This was a great article with really useful tips. It’s a lot to think about but, in my opinion, really important. Sometimes people overlook the amount of traffic that Stumbleupon can bring.
Thanks!
i use stumbleupon quite a bit in fact my website is a little over a week old and Im now getting 10,000 hits a day do to stumble, Entrecard and web 2.0 sites like sitehoppin.com and powerdropping.com…It works! Good article thank you!
I read all this stuff about forming relationships with others on these social networks so they can favor you later when you need them.
It seems like it takes an ENORMOUS amount of time to have like 100+ friends on SU, and build your account to a high pagerank.
Skellie,
What a great article. This is the first time I have read you. Your blog is also great and its on my list as well. Thanks for creating great product for the blogosphere that I would recommend to anyone.
Because of you I am going to StubleUpon!
Thanks Again,
Rob West:)
Great advice for us newbees at blogging. I appreciate all the advice and hope to get on the same level. I would appreciate any comments from readers to know what they like to read.
Is stumbleupon traffic worth? I use digg only. Well, great post anyway.
thanks so much for a great post! i’ve just recently joined StumbleUpon.com, so right now it’s all news to me. but i’m definitely going to take your advice on the ways to optimize stumbleupon, and also the tips.
your section on ‘no-go zones’ is quite informative and helpful. now to just apply these concepts as a newbie! ;-)
This is a great post…I never realized the potential that Stumble Upon had for sending more traffic to my blog. Good to know!
I have had some success with Stumbleupon and always suspect that it is due to my lack of like it!’s and the large number of friends that I have.
With any of these social sites I find that if you have good content and a chance that you will get noticed but without any leverage you are just one of 1000s of submissions that the sites see every day and you can get lost.
I have found the SU traffic to be sporadic – sometimes good – sometimes non-existant.
Also is there a way to “un-stumble” one of your own pages so as to be able to “stumble” another?
Probably, this is the best SU tip. I just create my new SU acc & will follow your advice. Thanks Skellie.
I think having to many ads on your site also pushes away stumbleupon users.
I think I’ll try StumbleUpon. I could do with some more readers of my site though. Good article btw…
Up until now I have actually not paid much attention to SU. This is something that i’m going to have to look into and maybe go back and do some SUO one some of my old posts.
Do you have a few examples of posts that are doing well vs. posts that are not?