Stumped or Stumbled?
Generating Quality Traffic with StumbleUpon
Stumble can bring you a ton of traffic, and opposed to many of the others, you have great control of how targeted that traffic is.
Stumble creates traffic , that’s how it works. Participating in the network means actually viewing a lot of sites. Many of the other networks provide listings, where a snappy title and witty description is the only thing that brings in the hits. Yes, you can submit to specific topic areas, which will target it a little. But that’s about as good as it gets. Great articles are constantly lost on the social bookmark sites that use lists because someone posted about Britney Spears latest antics 2 seconds at the same time.
Stumble is different; your submissions will go through your network of fans and friends. And you don’t even have to annoy ask them to do it. If they are your fans, Stumble makes sure that they eventually sees the pages you like.
You Decide
You get many of your fans based on your stumble history, people who like sites you have submitted will find you, and they will find you through their other friends, who may have found you through the sites you have submitted and stumbled. In other words, people will add you based on what you like, not based on your ability to write a snappy title only.
Relevance
So your stumbles, if they are relevant to your own site or blog, will attract people who like what you write about too. Making them more likely to thumb you up, this will drive more people that like what they like… And the chain continues. This chain can bring you traffic for weeks and months, not just hours like so many of the other social bookmarking sites.
This spreading of information through your networks is almost like a pyramid scheme, the more powerful you are the more people will see your stumbles. If they have a lot of fans, you will quickly be reaching a very large network of people, all of whom will see your actual site, as opposed to just reading your snappy headline on a list where it drops to page 39 before you have refilled your coffee.
This is the brilliance of Stumble, not only does it drive traffic; it gives you the control to focus your network and bring you quality traffic that is actually interested in what you do. Not just those that got lured by the snappiest headline.
Once you have your target audience on your site, it’s all up to your content quality to get that Thumbs Up.









June 9th, 2008 at 12:34 pm
Stumbled
June 9th, 2008 at 12:38 pm
Nice write up for folks that are not quite acquainted with the ins and outs of stumble, I’ve been on it almost a year, but still not quite sure how it works! Thanks for the clarification!
June 9th, 2008 at 2:59 pm
Thanks for that. I kind of new how stumbleupon worked but wasn’t sure where all the traffic was coming from now I know.
June 10th, 2008 at 4:41 am
Interesting post…I’m relatively new to social sites and while I’ve heard of sites like Stumble and Digg I’ve no idea what they are about…this post helps me somewhat with Stumble.
I’ve never bothered to check them out as BC and Entrecard already take up a great deal of my time…there are only so many hours in a day…:0)
Having said that maybe I should take a look…
Cheers
June 17th, 2008 at 4:21 am
Erik,
I am a perfect example of what you are talking about. I found this site through your StumbleUpon page. I found your SU page through our mutual friend Poddys. I came to your site, because I am interested in and also write about some of the same subjects on this blog. StumbleUpon works.
If you just read this post and are not signed up for SU… Go here now: http://www.stumbleupon.com and be sure to download the StumbleUpon Toolbar. It makes it so much easier to use the system and start receiving traffic to your blog.