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How to Write Posts That Set StumbleUpon on Fire

Posted By Skellie 14th of February 2008 Featured Posts, Social Media, Writing Content 0 Comments

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:

  1. Start using StumbleUpon and voting up content from other blogs and websites in your niche.
  2. 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.
  3. Write about SU and encourage readers to add you as a friend.
  4. Swap Stumbles with other bloggers.
  5. Link to your SU profile on your About page.
  6. 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!
  7. Add a Stumble button/link under each of your posts.
  8. 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.
Comments
  1. This makes a lot of sense. I’ve not focused much on Stumbleupon before, but what you say does correspond with the fact that this post…

    http://theuniversityblog.co.uk/2007/09/18/7-tips-to-top-sleep-3-tips-for-staying-awake/

    …has had thousands of pages views all originating from SU.

    Thanks for the explanation. Maybe I should be using SU myself, just as you suggest in your strategic tips!

  2. Some great posts. The hardest thing is getting started with Stumbleupon! When you are just starting out and have only a handful of readers, it is near impossible to get enough stumbles to get noticed!

    Once your traffic hits a certain level it is then able to attract a lot more using SU.

  3. I like that this article focuses more on making quality content and less on gaming the system in some manner. I enjoy my stumbleupon stumbles. Great article as always Skellie!

  4. I got surpised one month back when I started using SU. I stumbled my fresh post and within hours I got almost double hits I usually used to get. It excellent option to get free traffic. Creating posts optimized for SU does takes time , but I will say the rewards are extremely promising.

  5. Although I haven’t ever actually tailored an article to attract traffic from StumbleUpon users I have had some success with StumbleUpon. The advice in this article makes a lot of sense and sounds like good solid advice. I’d say that it would probably work.

    I’ve submitted this article to BloggingZoom.com so that other bloggers can benefit from the advice as well. Hope you don’t mind.

  6. This is one of the most valuable articles I’ve read in a long time. Awesome tips and something that isn’t very well known. Huge potential though for any site. Thanks Skellie!

  7. Excellent tips that I often have given to my readers, info like this is so valuable to those starting out in the blogging world. Excellent well written post! CONGRATS

  8. Nice tips, Skellie.

    I’d also like to add that it’s important that you have the content on the main fold and that it shouldn’t require vertical scrolling.

    Stumblers have less time to spare and in case you’re putting up your content down below, you’re not going to get votes.

  9. Have you found that StumbleUpon visitors become regular readers? I’ve had similar pageview success with my cartoons (30,000 in one particularly memorable weekend), resulting in a grand total of zero regular viewers (no newsletter registrations, no RSS feed subscribers).

    Since that fateful weekend I’ve adjusted my site to make the feed more prominent and that has helped.

    I don’t deny the power of StumbleUpon, I question the conversion rates.

  10. I haven’t used SU much but does it not work against you somewhat if you keep submitting your own content.

    Not sure. Maybe I have been informed wrong. If anybody like to shed some light on that for me that would be great!

  11. Awesome advice, Skellie! One of the things I’ve told some blogging friends is that Stumble users are just like television channel surfers – they have a short attention span and something has to grab their attention quickly or they will simply move on. You eloquently described that phenomenon in this latest post. Great job!

  12. Some great tips there Skellie.

  13. One thing that doesn’t make sense is the Google Analytics logs from SU traffic. It seems they all visit the same page twice (but hardly any other pages). For a page with mostly SU traffic, the GA Navigation Summary shows the Next Page is 51% the same as the first page.

    Also, I was surprised to see how SU brought me more traffic this month than Digg and Slashdot combined. My story was listed on the Slashdot homepage (but not the Digg homepage), but I didn’t see much Slashdot effect. Perhaps it was just a bad story.

    Does anyone have any comments on how well SU, Slashdot, and Digg traffic converts into clicks? One other thing I noticed is that Slashdot users hardly much fewer pages than other sources.

  14. Thanks, this is a great article. A question for you: you say ‘Friend those who Stumble your articles and thank them.’ But whenever I get StumbleUpon traffic on my blog, I can’t find out who submitted it. If I click on the referral link (I use WordPress), it just goes to a holding page that says ‘Your site has been Stumbled’.

    So, my question is: how do you find out who actually submitted the link to StumbleUpon?

  15. I have been blogging since 2005, and I have been an active member of Stumbleupon since Aug 07. I have to disagree with most of what is written in this post. The best way to get noticed on Stumbleupon is join, be active, build up a good network, write good original posts of interest, write what you would like to read. Stumblers like images but not just any image, there are many images already on stumbleupon. There is a 4,000 character limit when posting so that it always important to consider. Most strumblers will only initially see the headline which isn’t very important and the first 10 words or so, which is important. Stumblers like news posts about things like Burma but only when Burma is hot in the main media, like it was last year. Ask stumblers to give you a thumbs up and most actually will.

  16. :)

    great tips in using SU…in fact, there are just so many creative ways of using SU and also things to note to attract your stumblers to stumble your blog….

    thanks so much for your post! :)

  17. I’m drafting a post at the moment, and I’ll add some of these ideas as well.

    Increased readership and socialization gives you a lot better feedback about the quality of your content.

    Great information as always.

  18. Regarding your point about ‘getting to the point’ as soon as possible. For my long posts, I include an ‘abstract’ that summarizes the whole post in 5 lines or less. If the reader likes it, it’s up to them if they want to read the rest. The idea is that I don’t want to scare away readers when they see blocks of of text. I make *sure* to include the ‘money’ line/concept. Checkout my blog for some examples.

    I’d be real curious to know what other think. This idea came to me from the academic world where professors/researchers go through hundreds of papers (5-20pages long). They read the abstract to decide if it’s worth reading the rest of the paper. The result is that they can effectively go through dozens of papers in a couple hours.

  19. Excellent! Now this is timely since I just signed up for an account at SU. Thanks! :D

  20. so that’s why my posts never get stumbled, most of my rants are news and current event related. maybe I shoud start posting about topics that have a longer shelf-life.

  21. Hi Skellie – these are great tips. As you know, advice you gave on your own blog helped me get some huge stumbles, so I’ll be following this advice carefully too.

    Thank you.

  22. thanks for the tips. I had it happen once, where I wrote a post and within a few hours had a 200% spike in traffic. I can’t quite figure out what was so unique about that one post as opposed to any others, but I did enjoy the traffic.

  23. How do you know who has stumbled your posts?

  24. Skellie, your tips and advice always inspires me and it has helped tremendously in getting many more Stumbles and positive reviews for my articles.

    I’m often surprised when looking at my stats to discover thousands of visits from Stumble Upon users to archived posts, even months after the initial Stumble/Thumbs Up.

    I’ve also been curious about possible dangers of stumbling our own posts after reading so much about how it tends to hurt bloggers rather than serves as help. ?

  25. Very good round up, but don’t do one thing: “Swap Stumbles with other bloggers.”

  26. These are some pretty solid tips. I’ve recently been lucky enough to have some major rushes to one of my short stories through StumbleUpon, and I’m always impressed by how often the cycle will repeat itself.

    Seeing a huge spike in visits will be enough of a motivating factor to make any blogger try harder to turn pro :)

  27. Great tips, Skellie. Seems I have some work to do to improve my blog to get stumbled.

  28. Are there any penalties for stumbling on your own stuff?

  29. Submitting to the right category is also essential. For more traffic I generally submit it to a broader category… For example, instead of Blogs, I’d submit my post under Internet.

  30. I’ve had some really good luck with SU, one article did 45k unique views over 72 hours. I agree 100% that quality, crafted and time devoted posts do the best on SU, the people who use it are, for the most part, wanting to learn / read something.

    The major downside to SU that I’ve found is the horrible bounce rate. One day brought 20k unique views to a single article, not even a sliver of of those viewers went to any other article or the homepage of the blog. While SU traffic is great when it rolls it and lasts, on average, 10x longer than digg traffic (in some cases a full week’s worth of traffic spikes), the users tend to blow through sites spending only a few seconds on them before clicking on the SU button in their toolbar again.

    Just like digg, write a quality article and many will see it, but don’t expect to cash in off the traffic, get a spike in RSS subscribers or expect to see much more traffic on other pages of your site.

  31. @Will Reinhardt, given the number of page views possible, I’ve not seen a huge number of people subscribe to my RSS feed after a SU surge, but there’s still a healthy increase compared to a standard day without any major Stumbles, Diggs, etc.

    So it’s not to be sniffed at, but neither is it something to spend all your spare time on ‘getting right’.

    As I’ve said in a comment above, I don’t know much about SU, but it’s helped my site reach out to others, which can only be a positive thing. Skellie’s post has been useful in helping give me further insight and possibly using SU myself now.

  32. This is a great post, Skellie. I’ve always noticed that your posts appear high up in the ranks of stumbled pages relating to blogging (and other similar subjects) so it’s great to read about the useful techniques of how Stumbleupon is best leveraged for visitors.

    Thank you for sharing your advice :)

  33. Such a good tips.. Maybe it will help to increase my traffic..

  34. I don’t have too much time in hand to stumble around, do reviews and befriend other stumblers. Well, that have to change…

  35. I’ve recently signed up with StumbleUpon and quite haven’t figured out what to do with it. Thanks for the article. It really helps.

  36. My first week this month saw 900+ visitors from SU, 1100+ if you count two more days. These tips are key.

    One more tip: Humour is great. Just like those chain email forwards that get around, SU users love to pass funny stuff around.

  37. I used to discount the Stumbleupon effect, seeing it as worthless traffic until post on two of my blogs got Stumbled back to back. SU is great. I like it a lot.

  38. Stumblers will spike the hits to your blog but most won’t stay very long, or read another post, leave comments or subscript to your feeds. To most, stumble is a ‘kind of drug’ and the most important is now many sites they can hit.

  39. I honestly don’t optimize for anything. Not Google, not SU… I do however change my style of writing so now and then when I learn something about writing to satisfy the reader.

    I just like to keep my style of writing, without having to optimize for search engines or such. Everyone writes about what people should do, I like to write about what I did, or plan to do.

    I think it’s very good to have lists with “How to” and “25 ways to …” but I also think it’s important that people sometimes read real experiences and learn the lessons from them.

    However, I would also like to have more people read my blogs, and I still need to learn how to use SU to promote them.

  40. This is a very good break down of a StumbleUpon friendly site. I have had a lot of success with StumbleUpon. I just want to highlight that the images above the fold are super important. StumbleUpon is channel surfing for the internet. If you don’t have anything that is going to make the person stop you have lost a useful visitor and another potential thumbs up.

  41. This is a very good post because a lot of times people spend too much time doing the wrong thing on social media sites. You have probably helped thousands of people (bloggers) by posting this because now they won’t have to spend three to six months learning the ropes.stumble upon isn’t for everyone know. Not every niche works in every single social media site. For example: if you have any sort of Obama website than you would most likely want to submit your article to Digg. why? Because the users there tend to be younger and if you’re following politics then you would know that most of the younger class supports him. Just go to the politics section and you’ll know what I mean.

  42. so true, SU has a very picky market and its one i have spent a lot of time mastering

  43. The one article of mine that was Stumbled brought in 300 eyeballs, which was massive for the site. I’ve had absolutely no luck installing the toolbar for Linux, however. I’d love to hear from readers who have managed it.

  44. Great post, Skellie. Some excellent points there to consider when I write my next bit of SU bait. Also, if you are lucky enough to get your content on the SU Buzz page, you can expect residual traffic from SU for a good long time. I still get about 20% of my traffic from SU.

    Keep up the great work!

  45. Great tips even though all seem “basic” to me (I might not apply it to my own posts though :P), but many others doesn’t know this…

  46. Brilliant Skellie! Love this.

  47. I like the way you’ve specified the “no-go” zones here, gives me a lot to think about. That tip about posts that took a long time to craft is very true. When I see a huge list of links or tips, I thumb it up sometimes even before scanning it. Probably the thinking goes, “There’s bound to be something good there later on.”

  48. Another fantastic post Skellie. Personally the last few weeks i have been focusing more on Digg & Delicious, which has been bringing me some nice traffic, then all of a sudden, 2 days ago stumbleupon sent me 1,295 visitors in the space of 7 hours. I was amazed, so StumbleUpon has now become something i am trying to focus more on, and your tips are going to help me in doing so.

    Thanks for the great advice.

  49. One trick I did that has turned me into a StumbleUpon power user is submitting everything I bookmark in Delicious to StumbleUpon at the same time:

    http://internetducttape.com/2007/09/14/delicious-stumbles-stumbleupon-crosspost-same-time/

  50. the images tip is a good one. stumblers love images and if they can favorite the post by photo-blogging a great image, that will increase your hits.

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