Thursday, November 29, 2007

It's In The Mixx



"It was very strange to see that every time I was reaching 50 diggs a group of users was starting to post bad comments like “Blog Spam” or “copied and pasted from here …link…(to another profile)”.
And it was stranger to see that others were having the same problem.
It’s clear that many blogs have been banned because of such comments.
So, it happened that several popular people on Digg to leave the website to find another heaven.


Besides that, Mixx knows how to attract the ex-diggers on its website and it created a special place in the forum, called Digg Refugges, dedicated “For those of you who have been a victim of the heavy hand of digg.”


Mixx is working non-stop to improve the website by adding new features every day, and announcing them on the blog.
The Facebook application, Customizable Mixx Buttons and the Mobile Mixx version for the iPhone are just a few of the last enhancements."





Saturday, November 24, 2007

Digg Or Mixx ?



New startup Mixx, which went in to private beta just two months ago, may be finding itself with the right product at the right time. Digg users, including top contributors, are showing an increasing amount of frustration with the Digg community, and many are leaving.




"In fact, every headline that reaches Digg's home page receives an average of 129 links, according to search marketer Neil Patel, and each of those links can push an online business' traffic closer to the coveted top spots in Google or Yahoo!'s results. Digg is by far the greatest source of links and traffic among social media sites: A popular story on the site gets as many as 100,000 unique visitors. Sites like StumbleUpon, Reddit, Newsvine and Propeller can each add between 5,000 and 10,000 more."

Thursday, November 22, 2007

Digging Candidates




Digg quietly launched its "Digg The Presidential," section Tuesday. So far, the activity on the page has been underwhelming.

What's really most odd is that Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton's profile was the only candidate as of Wednesday morning not to be added, and it wasn't added until late in the day. When it was, Clinton's favorited items were press releases.

And she didn't have many friends either. As of late Wednesday, she had 80 friends on Digg. Obama had 4,249 friends, fellow Democrat Dennis Kucinich followed with 3,366. Ron Paul had 7,694. The closest Republican behind him was Mike Huckabee with 393 friends. This Quantcast audience profile gives a hint as to a partial reason for these numbers. "


Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Digging Rupert Murdoch




"It looks like the first step to me, he's certainly "got his foot in the door" as it were. The Wall Street Journal has now "integrated" with Digg to allow users to read Wall Street Journal articles for free."



"Ben Cook created a blog with a single post and submitted it to Digg. The post reached Digg's front page, a deluge of visitors ensued, but what's next? High search engine rankings and a continuous trickle of visitors, Ben Cook explains."

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Blogging Digg



"Have you ever noticed that some blogs seem to rise to the top of Digg over and over again?

You might think that they’ve discovered some magic formula for getting attention, built a “Digg culture” on their blog, or they just get all of their friends to Digg their posts.

And they might.

The most successful blogs don’t try to manipulate readers into voting for their posts. They just give them what they want.

It’s all about focusing on your audience. If you want to be on the front page of Digg, write about topics that Diggers love, such as Ron Paul, Apple, or blogging."

Monday, November 19, 2007

Digg: Take A Tour



"Digg is a place for people to discover and share content across the web, from the biggest online destinations to the most obscure blog. Digg surfaces the best stuff as voted on by our users.

Every article submitted to Digg has a count of how many Diggs the story has received. You need to be signed-in to Digg a story. For every registered user that clicks "Digg it" the count goes up one. If a story reaches the tipping point, then it gets promoted to the homepage. "


Take the tour here.

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Why Digg Is Important To You



1. Digg receives over 18 million visitors per month, growing over 500% since September 2006 (according to Compete.com)

2. Content submitted to Digg, that makes the Digg home page, can receive over 10,000 unique visitors in 1 hour.

3. The average submission making the home page receives over 100 inbound links.

4. Links can be attributed to bloggers picking up popular stories, influential media personnel, government websites and digg mirrors & clones.

5. Note that only 0.7% of all Digg submissions make the home page.

5. The top 100 users have a large influence on home page content. 56% of all submissions making the home page are contributed by those users.

6.Digg receives an estimated 75,110,000 page views per month.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Discovering Digg




"The labs provide a broader (and deeper) view of Digg. A lot of stuff gets submitted to Digg every day, so good things can sometimes fly right past you. Labs projects look beneath the surface of the Digg community's activities."



The Digg Blog

All the latest Digg updates.



Tour Digg and discover how it works here.


Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Digg Suggestions



Derek Edmond has an interesting article called "75 Suggestions, Best Practices, and Resources for Digg.


"Examples of What Can Work Well on Digg

* Lists work well (Top 10 Lists, 25 Most Important, 17 Best, etc)
* Tutorials, how-to guides etc seems to work (as relevant to the community)
* Offbeat News, Humor can work (as it is deemed relevant to the community)
* Important newsworthy events seem to work (but make certain be the first to report and always submit the original source)
* If your content does not appear to be appropriate (but you really want it to get to the popular page), you need to figure out how to position your material so that it will be perceived as valuable by the Digg community
* Remember whom the audience is that you are trying to contribute to. You will not be successful if you do not understand the community."

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Daily Diggs



Not much time to Digg? Don't feel like searching for articles?

Here's the easy way.

http://digg.com/users/sweat1951/history/favorites

Every time I digg an article I save it to my Favorites. I can then have all the articles in one place and can post this one link.

This link can be used repeatedly as favorites are updated daily too.

Monday, November 12, 2007

Submitting A Story To Digg



When you click on the Digg button after reading an article you may be taken to a page where you will see that you are the first person to Digg it so you must submit the story. It's very simple.

1. You will be asked for the the article's URL.

2. You write a brief little bit as to what the story is about.

3. Scroll down to categories and choose the appropriate one.

4. Scroll down and you find one of those boxes where you type in the code which shows you aren't a bot.

5. You may come to a page that says similar stories have been submitted. None of them will be the one you're entering so scroll down and hit the Submit button and you're all done.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Why Digging Is Important




Let's begin by explaining why Digg is so important to everyone.

In one word; exposure.

Remember the Save Jericho campaign? It's a prime example. Jericho fans would Digg any Jericho post and the Diggs would number in the thousands.

Once a submission has earned a critical mass of Diggs, it becomes “popular” and jumps to the homepage in its category. If it becomes one of the most popular, it qualifies as a “Top 10”. If a submission doesn't receive enough Diggs within a certain time period, it eventually falls out of the “Upcoming” section.
The system only works when users actively participate on a large scale, so make sure to do your part and Digg content that matters to you!

Basically, the more Diggs an article gets the more people who will see it. I'm not talking about 10, 50, or even 100 Diggs-it often requires thousands. Do you want a network to stand up and notice fans? Do you want more viewers to your blog/website?


The promotion and burying of stories is managed by an algorithm developed by Digg. There is no hard number of Diggs/buries to promote or remove a story. It's based on a sliding scale that takes several factors into consideration, such as number of Diggs, reports, time of day, topic submitted to, Digging/burying diversity, etc.

One of the keys to getting a story promoted is diversity in Digging activity. Until the algorithm gets the diversity it needs of users Digging the story, it will remain in the Upcoming section. That way, the system knows a variety of people will be into the story. This means we all need to digg a variety of topics and not just the few that are only of interest to us.


Here's an article that will explain more.




Saturday, November 10, 2007

Introducing The Digg Coach



Terocious and I would like to thank everyone who attended Digg Chat. It was a lot of fun and we'll do it again soon.

Everybody had great ideas during chat so this blog was born from those ideas. Terocious and I will be working together to bring you information, tutorials, and various pros and cons of using Digg. We hope this blog will be a central location where you can find anything you would like to know.

This is a blog for every fan of every show and anyone else who wants Digg information. Leave us a comment if you would like to ask a question or have a suggestion. We welcome any Digg articles you may run across.

Many thanks to Terocious for the beautiful header and for the title. I was struggling trying to find just the right name for this blog when he popped up with a title and picture.

Since this is a new blog please bear with us as we grow and add more articles.

Welcome to The Digg Coach!!!!!!!