A large percentage of new bloggers want to make it big, to have a blog that tons of people visit and money pouring in. The truth is this rarely happens, and if your goal is to make money online, getting tons of people to your site is the wrong way to go about it.
I will probably get booed off the blogosphere for stating the obvious and so many people are ready to defend social media successes, but rarely do any of those defending it actually make money from the traffic that sites such as Digg and StumbleUpon deliver.
I won’t lie to you and say that if you make the front page of Digg you won’t get a ton of traffic, because you will. But did you know that most of Digg’s front page stories are generated by just a handful of people? The rest of the stories are generated by everyone else who is using the site. (Grip time) The traffic from these sites rarely comment, subscribe, buy, share or hang around.
When I first started blogging I used to think that social traffic was the end all and be all of blogging and that having good stats was better than anything. But if your goal is to make money, go where the money is and where you need to go in order to get paid. Provide for or target the people who are looking for a solution to their problems. Digg users aren’t looking for something in particular, they are looking for something random or weird that they can entertain themselves with for a few minutes while they kill time at work. They aren’t going to sign up for an affiliate program or buy a book. They are simply wasting time and floating from one thing to the next.
Making money online more often than not requires you to do and talk about the things that social traffic sites shy away from. This would be the niche blog or abstract art dealer site. By catering to the people who are looking for specific things like a service or collectibles you will find there is money to be made.
Before you persecute me saying you can convert that massive social media traffic, I will admit that many people can convert that traffic and have perfected the monetization of mass traffic flow. In the end, for me, if comes down to the amount of time spent achieving that goal and if that can sustain itself. If you stop for one week pressing, shouting, friending, digging, stumbling and so on, your business will wither. But if you set up a site that generates nice and consistent traffic and money you now have a business model. Don’t forget that a lead in the hand is worth more than a thousand fly by.
*For the record I have obtained mass traffic including having a number of posts hit the Buzz page on StumbleUpon, netting upwards of 35,000 page views per article. So it is possible, but simply unsustainable in the long run.
*Inspired by Vic and Grizz
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Tags: Blog, blog marketing, Blogging, Brand, Business, Digg, Make Money Online, Marketing, Money, Social Traffic, Stumbleupon, Traffic






It's a worthwhile cause, but many should beware of using their own accounts to discover their own articles or regularly discovering them for others. Instead an email list and random selection goes a long way. Quid pro quo and reciprocity will be terms you will have to live by.
Generally I try to do one really big social post a month which nets me some great traffic and rss boosts. I may depending on the post also try some single network exposure as well through out the month. It's a hit or miss thing and honestly you should not depend on it.
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@Ben, well put and sound advice.
You know the more I learn the game the more I find that everyone has a different opinion when it comes to marketing a blog. Great post! Josh I'll be back.
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@Rick, don't get me wrong you can market a blog any way possible. But is the method of promoting it making money, increasing branding, sales, leads, whatever else? Or will that marketing sustain itself if you leave it for a little while. Its all personal preference.
I tend to agree. My biggest month this year was almost 95,000 unique visitors and over 220,000 pageviews. This was due to one of my posts going big on Stumbleupon. Shockingly enough this wasn't a post that I stumbled myself. Someone else did it and it went big. That being said, the amount in increased traffic did NOT translate to ad clicks or RRS subscribers. And everyone seems to agree that comments and RSS subs are what measure a blogs popularity.
However, I don't think that the social media traffic is all bad. It's exposure. I am not in the MMO clan, I just like to blog and network. You meet the most interesting people in the blogosphere. I guess I will take whatever traffic someone is willing to grace me with.
Great post Josh.
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I have found my upstartagent site does really well – there's not much competition, the readers get useful info for free, and they like to click on my high paying adsense ads
It also gets a lot of sponsored posts requests & advertising – it gets the least amount of traffic, and makes the most!
My stupid blog on the otherhand might get 1000 visitors in a day from SU…it makes the least!
So I have to agree targeted traffic, even if it's not much at all, is way better than tons of useless visitors. Of course, finding more targeted traffic is never a bad idea either!
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There are still ways to take advantage of social media traffic, but overall I agree that they convert less than search engine traffic because they tend to have shorter attention span.
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I agree entirely with this post, on the long run marketing to social media will be very hard to sustain. Social media will be the best platform to introduce new blog.
Good point you have here. Search engine traffic still the best for long term.
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@Josh,
Yeah, you might consider putting a chatbox at the sidebar there?
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Josh,
I agree 100% – Social traffic is hit and run traffic that usually increases bounce rate and with little or no comments left.
Great article and one that many bloggers should realize.
Coming at this post very late Josh, and yes I would agree to the first part – regardless, social community visitors rarely tend to buy anything (although I wish my grassroots buyfrombloggers would take off). However, these same visitors to serve a purpose (or multiple purposes): 1) they generally like to read and comment; 2) help lower your bounce rate because of #1; 3) help with alexa and the like (even if you don't agree alexa is the be all and end all, it's a good indicator); and 4) they help get you into the search engines and/or recognized by the search engines.
So while I would not pin my hopes on the blogosphere making anyone rich, they do serve a purpose, and god bless 'em