Let's Get Social: 7 Tips To Win The Social News Beauty Pageant
Written by Samuel on 3:17 PM 7 Tips To Win The Social News Beauty Pageantby Muhammad Saleem �It is not a case of choosing those which, to the best of one�s judgment, are really the prettiest, nor even those which average opinion genuinely thinks the prettiest. We have reached the third degree where we devote our intelligences to anticipating what average opinion expects the average opinion to be. And there are some, I believe, who practise the fourth, fifth and higher degrees.� (Keynes, General Theory of Employment Interest and Money, 1936). What he means is that people don't make objective choices based on their own judgment. Rather, they choose what they think the average person is going to agree with as being the right choice. The same principle applies to social news sites. People mostly submit and vote for content not because they objectively think the content is good, but because they think that the community in general is going to find the content to be good. To illustrate this point, let's look at the following news submission to Digg and break down the things that people look at as they anticipate the community's verdict: 1. Play the field
There are several ways of playing the categories on Digg: You can you can create content purely for the more popular categories (like business and finance), in which case there will be significantly more competition but if you're successful the payoff will be much higher. You can create content for a relatively less popular categories (like sports), in which case the competition will not be as tough but the payoff won't be as high. Or, you can create content that is about a more popular category, but applicable to a less popular category. This way, you can get the best results with the least amount of competition. A great example of this is a post I recently read, titled 4 Ways Technology is Changing Sports Officiating. The post is great because it is about technology (hot category) and how it is changing sports (not-so-hot category). Therefore it can be submitted to the sports category and be made popular easily, but still drive the traffic of a story from a popular category. (There are other reasons for the fact that this particular submission wasn't significantly promoted, but the principle remans true.) 2. Obsess over your titles
Stick with regular formatting. Don't use special characters, capital letters throughout, or excessive punctuation. Make sure there are no spelling mistakes or grammatical errors (the audience can be vicious if this is the case). Try to use trigger words when possible, without over doing it. If you've been on the site long enough, you start living its culture. If you're writing about a popular meme, be sure to use buzz words that will get people's attention. Don't give it all away. You want people to know what you're writing about without actually telling them what you wrote. 3. Summarize, and don't state the obvious
Think of the summary as your chance to pitch the story. Answer the reader's question: "Why should I click through to read this? Please tell me in 150 characters or less." 4. Make it "picture perfect"
Make sure that the images are relevant but provocative. 5. Take advantage of network effects
This secondary effect is pretty much boundless: If you have 100 friends on Digg, who have 10 unique friends each, even if 10% of your friends Digg something, that submission is 'green-shashed' for 200 people (100 of your friends, and 10 friends each for the 10 people that actually Dugg the story). 6. Woo the power users
Though its very easy to talk get in touch with a power user, don't do it unless you plan on pitching only your best. 7. Talk, talk, talk, talk, talk
Every time someone makes a comment, it adds to the "hotness" of a story. A combination of the quality, quantity and time of Diggs and comments on a story is what it takes to push a story from just the queue to the "hot in all topics" category and eventually to the Digg home page. Also, every time someone makes a comment, the activity is recorded and can be shown in Digg/Spy, as well as users' activity pages. Comments breed more comments which ultimately means more visibility. Winning the pageant There are two schools of thought for achieving success on social news networks. The first is to write something provocative and incite emotion, and the second is to appeal to the masses and pander to the middle of the road. Both can be equally successful if you can manage to find out who your audience is. For example, if you're going to be writing about technology, anything about Microsoft is going to be provocative but that doesn't necessarily mean it will be successful (simply because the Apple camp is stronger). In situations where you can't judge which camp in your audience is stronger, targeting the average can be well worth it. Muhammad Saleem is a social media consultant and a top-ranked community member on multiple social news sites. The Let's Get Social column appears Tuesdays at Search Engine Land. |
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