Archive of Digg

How to Target the Right Social Media Sites

Posted in Must-Read Articles

This is a guest post on targeting Social Media Sites is from Steven Snell. Steven writes about social media marketing at Traffikd. Most bloggers recognize the incredible potential that exists with social media marketing. Many want to maximize the traffic they receive from social media, so they add a Digg button to their posts or sign up for an account at StumbleUpon. What too many bloggers overlook is that Digg and StumbleUpon are just two of the hundreds of available options, and they may not be the best fit for every blogger. In order to get the most out of social media traffic you’ll need to put some thought into choosing the socia

Read More

5 Steps to Become a Better Social Media Marketer

Posted in Must-Read Articles

From Daily Blog Tips If you want to be more effective with driving traffic to  your website or blog with social media, here are five steps that are sure to  improve your results. 1. Targeting the Right Sites There are hundreds or maybe even thousands of social  media sites that you could be using. Obviously no one has the time to use them  all effectively, and some of them aren’t worth your time anyway. One of the first things you will need to do is find a  few sites that will work well for you. Of course the larger sites like Digg and StumbleUpon are popular choices because of  the large traffic volumes that they send. B

Read More

How to Set Up a Domino Effect of Traffic

Posted in Must-Read Articles

From Vandelay Design Do you think your blog doesn’t have enough traffic to become popular with major social media sites like Digg, StumbleUpon and del.icio.us? I don’t normally have a huge amount of traffic either, but I’ll show you how I was able to get over 34,000 unique visitors in two days without submitting the page to any of the sites mentioned above. And best of all, I think it is a strategy that many of you can duplicate. With dominoes, before the fun begins you have to strategically set up the pieces. You set them up to flow from one to the next, and to multiply from one into two. As the dominoes spread, those small multi

Read More