How to Get Your Website Talked About on Blogs
Blogs are a very powerful
force on the web today. Have you ever wondered why searching for something
seems to turn up so many blog entries as results? That's because
blogs link to each other all the time, creating a strong network
of links that does very well in the search engines. Not only that,
but they're not shy about linking to other sites, as long as they
like them, and one blogger is likely to take links from the
next and re-publish them. In other words, getting talked about on
blogs gets you potentially thousands of links from sites from
highly-ranked pages - that's enough to get you quite high up in any
search engine.
So How Do You Do It?
Well, to get your website talked about on blogs, all you have
to do is create some content that would be interesting to bloggers.
Luckily for you, bloggers as a group have a relatively consistent
set of interests. They care about entertainment (films, books),
gadgets (iPods, TiVos, etc.), computers and the web - basically, imagine things that a slightly nerdy person with lots
of free time would care about, and you've pretty much got it. If you
need any further inspiration, take a look at the links from the front
page of a site like www.slashdot.org
or www.kottke.org.
Once you've chosen your subject, all you've got to do is write something
about it that is either new, amusing, or controversial.
For example, if you've heard that Apple is releasing a new iPod the size of a fingernail, that's new. Note that you can do perfectly well guessing at new things, as long as it sounds plausible and you're good at predicting: you can often write an article announcing the obvious next step for a company with popular products and get linked from all over the place.
When it comes to amusing, you might try some kind of spoof
along the lines of 'popular nerdy film/book in the style of nerdy
thing'. For example, you might do a version Lord of the Rings as though
it were being acted out in an IRC chat, or recreate the storyline
of the Star Wars Trilogy with Lego (warning: both of these have already
been done).
Controversy is the most fun thing to create, but it's not easy.
You have to attack one of the bloggers' 'sacred cows', the
things that they almost all seem to agree on. The best example of
this is a guy who wrote an article called 'Why Your Movable Type
Blog Must Die', criticising the software that most bloggers ran
their blogs on at the time. It was linked from literally thousands
of blogs, and received an enormous amount of traffic - if you want
to find it, it's still ranked amazingly highly if you search for 'movable
type'.
Basically, I Have to Be a Wind-up Merchant?
Well, not necessarily - it's better to put forward controversial views
that you genuinely hold and stick to producing amusing things that
you genuinely find amusing, otherwise your insincerity will no doubt
show in what you produce, and no-one will like it enough to link to
it. What I'm saying, rather, is that you have to be in tune with the
blogosphere's likes, dislikes, interests and
obsessions, and write about things it cares about.
So I've Written It...
Once you've written something, the next step is to get it out there.
There are several ways to do this: first, try outright submitting
it to a blog or two, saying that you found this thing you thought
they might like. If you published your content in a blog format, it's
also well worth linking to a few related entries on other blogs, as
this will create a 'trackback', automatically creating a link
from their entry to yours.
Other than that, you might try linking to what you've done from a
few weblog-style communities, where you know bloggers participate.
You would be surprised how many people will take that link and put
it on their blog if they like it.
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