Digg effect: achieve it with digg clubs
Digg.com is no doubt one of the most popular social websites at this time. If you are lucky to get your website article to its home page – be prepared for digg effect: your website will get tons of traffic.
Yes, it is short time effect, with no many affiliate income generated. But it is still traffic every webmaster dreams about. In addition to that there is a good chance that your website will get a bunch of natural links. In a word, digg.com is one of the social websites hot at this nowadays and worth your time and efforts.
How can you get to home page? It is not an easy task. To start with, you can read Top Digg user recommendations But from my experience I know you need a back up of other digg.com users. And this point is shared by other people: Top 100 Digg Users Control 56% of Digg’s HomePage Content
Kevin Rose, digg.com founder, has recommended a few times in his interviews to ask friends to digg you articles. ‘You digg me I digg you’ clubs are yet due to some reasons not acceptable. I am tempted to join this sort of club each time I come across one. The other day I have stumbled into this website. It covers more social websites than just digg.com:
Feeling buried by Digg?
Unread on Reddit?
Can’t rate on Netscape?
Summary: Probably artificial way to boost your digg submissions are not ethical. But why are they recommended by the service founder? I think he sees it in a different light and consider digging by friends and by clubs differently.
Do these clubs work? I am not sure yet as I did not try it, but when I scan top digg entries I often have a feeling that only some external help could secure a top place for that sort of information.
[tags]digg, digg clubs, Kevin Rose, social websites, seo, internet marketing, affiliate marketing, make money online, home based job, earn your living online[/tags]