Top 20 Most Popular Social Bookmarking Websites | December 2009
You want web visitors to be able to easily bookmark your website to virally build your business. To accomplish this you need to allow them to link to these sites with bookmarks to communicate to others their use and approval of your website. From a recent article by eBizMBA, here are the 20 Largest Social bookmarking Websites in the US for 2009. The Websites were ranked by a combination of Inbound Links, Alexa Rank, and U.S. traffic data from Compete and Quantcast. Although no traffic metrics are completely accurate we do believe the data below to be useful for gauging relative audience size.
This ranking was compiled by: Top 20 Social Bookmarking Websites | Updated 12/2/2009 | eBizMBA
1 | twitter
760,750,806 - Inbound Links | 23,579,044 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 28,000,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 13 - Alexa Ranking.
2 | digg.com
383,598,000 - Inbound Links | 33,433,760 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 11,400,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 183 - Alexa Ranking.
3 | Yahoo! Buzz
20,031,000 - Inbound Links | 8,119,906 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 3,600,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | NA - Alexa Ranking.
4 | tweetmeme.com
422,863 - Inbound Links | 18,244,542 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 2,300,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 1,898 - Alexa Ranking.
5 | StumbleUpon.com
234,000,000 - Inbound Links | 4,418,609 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 1,100,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 362 - Alexa Ranking.
6 | reddit.com
161,685,000 - Inbound Links | 4,908,990 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 1,300,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 441 - Alexa Ranking.
7 | Technorati.com
175,287,000 - Inbound Links | 3,309,174 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 2,000,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 662 - Alexa Ranking.
8 | del.icio.us
427,665,000 - Inbound Links | 1,623,083 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 317,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 2,476 - Alexa Ranking.
9 | kaboodle.com
2,600,000 - Inbound Links | 3,941,212 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 2,500,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 1,694 - Alexa Ranking.
10 | mixx.com
16,005,000 - Inbound Links | 879,108 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 2,200,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 645 - Alexa Ranking.
11 | Propeller.com
5,725,000 - Inbound Links | 1,164,549 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 624,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 1,801 - Alexa Ranking.
12 | newsvine.com
71,708,775 - Inbound Links | 1,142,779 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 1,300,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 5,545 - Alexa Ranking.
13 | Fark.com
36,162,723 - Inbound Links | 652,762 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 1,300,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 4,119 - Alexa Ranking.
14 | Slashdot.org
37,566,035 - Inbound Links | 862,416 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 404,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 970 - Alexa Ranking.
15 | twine.com
343,090 - Inbound Links | 1,062,304 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 188,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 19,592 - Alexa Ranking.
16 | clipmarks.com
461,141 - Inbound Links | 379,354 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 507,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 6,330 - Alexa Ranking.
17 | dzone.com
3,867,009 - Inbound Links | 281,098 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 208,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 7,002 - Alexa Ranking.
18 | faves.com
1,437,453 - Inbound Links | 159,051 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 244,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 6,198 - Alexa Ranking.
19 | blinklist.com
51,912,576 - Inbound Links | 86,650 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 44,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 10,985 - Alexa Ranking.
20 | diigo.com
8,933,453 - Inbound Links | 146,144 - Compete Monthly Visitors | 30,000 - Quantcast Monthly Visitors | 7,569 - Alexa Ranking.
New technologies including trainable AI like ChatGPT are changing marketing. It produces an acceleration in the speed & complexity of your marketing programs. This blog is dedicated to showing you how its done & the strategies proving successful
Tuesday, December 29, 2009
Saturday, June 28, 2008
What makes a GREAT social marketing program?
This blog is developed to search for the best examples of social or community marketing and then examine what made them successful. In this post, I want to present one example and attempt to identify its elements of success. Your assignment...take a look at this site and identify what makes it a successful buzz marketing program.
Ever hear of the One Second Film?
Located at http://www.the1secondfilm.com/. The One Second Film is a great example of using social community sites to raise money, awareness, and passion for a particular cause. Here is their story [from their site]
The 1 Second Film is a non-profit collaborative art project that anyone can be part of, from celebrities to great-grandmothers. As a global community, we're creating the World's Biggest Shortest Film.
The 1 Second Film began as a student project at California Institute of the Arts in 2001; a collaborative festival bought hundreds of people together to paint 12 large murals that collectively form one-second of animation. The project has since grown from the ground up by allowing anyone to become a Producer of the film by donating $1 or more. Producers will be listed in the film’s credits (in order of amount donated) and receive profiles on the1secondfilm.com, where they can participate more.
With thousands of Producers, our end credits will last over an hour; a feature-length making of documentary will play during the credits, detailing the collaborative process. All profits raised by the finished film will be donated to the Global Fund for Women.
The 1 Second Film is the flagship production of The Collaboration Foundation, a non-profit art organization with a 5 Phase Plan to bring people around the world together, using collaborative art to foster global community and social change.
The project is the brainchild of Nirvan Mullick, an award winning filmmaker who began the project while a student at CalArts. Nirvan began fundraising on the streets with a xerox flier; person by person the project continues to grow.
Take a look at their site:
Their site is a great example of a social marketing site. They have a cause but, rather than make a traditional appeal, they decided to take a community oriented approach by 1] creating a way to get involved with the cause for a low cost, 2] making it possible to become a part of the solution and join the cause, and 3] made it easy to encourage others to join in the cause
If you take a look at the bottom of their site, you will see they are saavy marketers in the way they show their contributors and allow them to be a part of the whole one second film experience. Notice how they provide links to all of the major social sites so you can ask others to join as well as steps you can take to support the one second film and their marketing activities [including an expedition to Oprah
Do you think this type of marketing works. Search for them on Google. You will find over 35 million references to this project. Also, check out the blog references. What makes it successful? There are several things
Ever hear of the One Second Film?
Located at http://www.the1secondfilm.com/. The One Second Film is a great example of using social community sites to raise money, awareness, and passion for a particular cause. Here is their story [from their site]
The 1 Second Film is a non-profit collaborative art project that anyone can be part of, from celebrities to great-grandmothers. As a global community, we're creating the World's Biggest Shortest Film.
The 1 Second Film began as a student project at California Institute of the Arts in 2001; a collaborative festival bought hundreds of people together to paint 12 large murals that collectively form one-second of animation. The project has since grown from the ground up by allowing anyone to become a Producer of the film by donating $1 or more. Producers will be listed in the film’s credits (in order of amount donated) and receive profiles on the1secondfilm.com, where they can participate more.
With thousands of Producers, our end credits will last over an hour; a feature-length making of documentary will play during the credits, detailing the collaborative process. All profits raised by the finished film will be donated to the Global Fund for Women.
The 1 Second Film is the flagship production of The Collaboration Foundation, a non-profit art organization with a 5 Phase Plan to bring people around the world together, using collaborative art to foster global community and social change.
The project is the brainchild of Nirvan Mullick, an award winning filmmaker who began the project while a student at CalArts. Nirvan began fundraising on the streets with a xerox flier; person by person the project continues to grow.
Take a look at their site:


Do you think this type of marketing works. Search for them on Google. You will find over 35 million references to this project. Also, check out the blog references. What makes it successful? There are several things
- Its a cause which is easy to support
- Support is fun and intellectually engaging [it connect with you]
- It is an approach which is fun to communicate with others [great buzz potential]
- Their approach requires you to visit the site multiple times to see your progress
- It allows you to become directly involved & can give you your 15 minutes of fame on the sites home page [which keeps you involved]
- It is a program with a number of legs - making the film, other contributors, expedition to Oprah, celebrity tie-ins. It keeps you in contact with the program.
Thursday, June 14, 2007
Interstates & Highways

Highways, on the other hand, come from a different era...a time when travel was less of a "sure thing". When I was young [yes...it was a long time ago], travel by car had the potential for breakdowns and the need to service your car. For example, on one family trip we traveled to Arizona by car & blew out 4 tires over the course of the trip! Because automotive travel was not a "sure thing" & cars overheated, broke down, or had problems, travel required drivers to "sprint" from one town to the next. As a result, highways are built to seek out towns & cities as "way points" between point "A" and "B". They leisurely move through the countryside ... slowing for every town on the way ... so you can stop to eat, maintenance your car, and just see the sights along the way.
By Interstate, the destination is the key ... by highway, the journey is the experience.
What does this mean in a web world?
When originally developed, most websites were built on a "highway" philosophy. We were looked at as surfers who were visiting companies to see what they offered. Web developers talked in terms of home pages, sticky sites, and assumed people were visiting to "see the sights along the way" as they attempted to find the items they wanted.
Look at most site maps. They start with a single home page with the assumption that one message - one position is right for every possible visitor coming to the site. They then have a deep structure of product, services, about us, and other places to visit as you cruise their company highway. The assumption is you will take the time to leisurely move through layer after layer of information and visit lots of pages to find what you need.
While this worked in a highway world...consumers & businesses are moving at Interstate speeds.
Today, people want websites which quickly get them the information they want. This means they expect the company to structure their web experience to quickly get them where they need to go. How quickly, in our research, we have found people seldom want a web experience to be longer than three pages. Page one positions the company and shows its expertise, page two can present products or tools to determine what they want. Page three shows details and starts the order.
If you agree with this approach, ask yourself the following questions:
- Does your website force most of the people to visit a home page first?
- Does your PPC [pay per click] and SEO [search engine optimization] strategy also focus on the home page?
- Are all of your search terms the same for all pages?
- Do you drive all PPC searches to one page?
- Can you identify unique markets or communities who visit their site?
- Do these communities have different needs or purchase patterns?
- Can a web visitor identify their community of interest and can you move them to a unique page developed just for them?
- Can you identify unique communities on search engines and PPC to drive them to these pages
- Can you tailor your community landing pages to move from information to order in three steps?
- Does this make sense to you?
In considering your website and marketing programs, think Interstate not highways.
Saturday, June 09, 2007
The Surfing Myth & Its Impact on Web Design

When we discuss prospects moving on the web, we often use the term "surfing the web". However, when you hear that term, what comes to mind? For many people, surfing conjures up an image of a person moving effortlessly across a wave. As they surf, they move from one portion of the same wave to another. While this is an interesting image, is it really a useful metaphor for the behaviors prospects use as they attempt to find a company with the products and services to meet their needs?

If this analogy reflects the types of cruising patterns you see on your site, there are several web and marketing items you need to consider. They are:
- If an average web visitor will only stay on your site long enough to "bob" to three pages, how can you make every visitor find that they need in three pages or less? At MSI, we have found it is possible to accomplish this objective if you remove the home page from most visitor cruising patterns. How? By identifying the unique communities that frequent your site and building mini-sites which start with a landing page tailored to the community interests. If this becomes the first page they see, then page 2 is for a specific product and page 3 is to complete the order. Three steps. Look at your site and see if this three "bob" rule occurs and, if it does, you need to find a way to make the "trip" three steps or less.
- How can you get communities to a mini-site? To shorten the trip, we have found using your PPC and organic search terms to go directly to a community page works effectively. In addition, you PR and new product announcements and other market media must also move the individual directly to the mini-site most suited to their needs. In doing so, you will see an improvement in final results with longer but still three step cruising patterns.
- What about visitors that find you directly? The key is to quickly inform them about your mini-sites and encourage them to move to the one which best meets their needs. If you do so, you will find they are more attracted to your company.
Thursday, June 07, 2007
Target Markets versus Communities

From a marketing perspective, the key to success was our ability to identify a target market. To do this, a direct marketer has several "tools" they could use to develop a likely target market for any B-2-C or B-2-B offer. The tools were:
- Behavioral data - In a push marketing campaign, direct marketers generally look for list which are likely to hold the same type of prospects they will want for their effort. For example, womens fashion catalogs often swap their lists because they know if a woman purchases from catalog "A" they have all of the desirable behaviors to purchase from catalog "B". What are these desirable behaviors? Direct marketers use the term RFM & P to define them. They are:
- R - Recency A person who recently purchased from catalog "A" they will be "in the market" and likely to consider other similar offers. This is why you frequently receive a number of offers from companies shortly after you purchase from one. Because you are a recent purchaser, they know you will be more likely to read & purchase from another company ... as opposed to an individual with less recency.
- F - Frequency If you are a multi-time purchaser, you are more likely to purchase again for a similar product.
- M - Monetary value - If you have purchased in high dollar amounts you are likely to be better than another individual who purchases in less dollar amounts.
- P - Product If you purchased a product which is like mine, you are more likely to purchase from me. This means a womens catalog purchaser is better for another womens catalog compared to a mens catalog
- Demographic - In addition to RFM-P variables, direct marketers also used demographic data which described the household and its members. Important variables include age of the head of household, age of both adults by gender, number of children, age of oldest child, income of the household, geographic region, types of autos owned, etc. They describe the household.

Which brings us to another topic. My wife - the bowler. My wife is a member of a bowling league here in Naperville, IL. If you were a direct marketer who had a bowling magazine or bowling catalog, would you target my wife. Let's look at the "facts"
If you consider RFM-P let's see how she looks.
- She is a bowler so she has the "P" covered.
- She has just started her current bowling league season so her recency is strong. She has just exhibited a desired behavior - she is bowling - and she is doing it now!
- If you look at her history, she has bowled in this league over the past 7 years and, of the 4 bowling seasons each year, the league bowls during 3 of them. So from a "F" perspective, she is extremely strong.
- From a "M" monetary perspective, she spends a fair amount on bowling with league and lane fees, lunches after each weekly match, travel, etc. She has her own ball, bag, shoes, and other required accessories.
HOWEVER, you would be wrong in targeting her.
From a direct marketing perspective, my wife is the ideal target for a bowling product but the picture is incomplete. My wife is a terrible bowler. She rarely exceeds 100 and her team has found that the best prizes are given to the first place team - which they will never become - and the last place team [which they can easily win]. But they don't place last because they simply want to be bad. They do it for another ... much more important ... reason.
She doesn't bowl because she loves bowling...she does it to be in the "loop" on gossip on the Naperville / Lisle communities. The bowling league contains all of the "whos who" of our area and, if you want to find out what is happening in area politics, social groups, school districts, etc, you need to be in the league. This is where the information is distributed throughout the community and where key issues are discussed and action plans evaluated. It is the hub of our local neighborhood social structure.
My wife bowls poorly because, if you are wasting time aiming your bowling ball, you might miss something. She and her team often just grab a ball, roll it, and quickly return to the discussion. If they do it quickly enough, they don't miss anything.
Target Markets versus Communities
The difference between target markets and communities is that target market describe a household based on descriptive elements as well as recently completed behaviors. It is always looking back in terms of behaviors and looking at broad demographic data. Even the most exacting demographic / behavioral data is never really describing any one household but a collection of thousands of households.
Communities are different. The community my wife belongs to is not a bowling community but a "gossip" community. Her bowling is defined by the other activities which attract her ... not the bowling activity. It is just an "excuse" to meet each week with other women to discuss key issues. Essentially, the bowling league in Naperville is a far better marketplace for local politicians than it would be for bowling vendors. Essentially, if you want anything done within Naperville / Lisle, you need one or more groups of people within the bowling league to support your endeavor. It is that powerful a group and that cohesive of a community. That is why it has existed for so long and is so strong.
The key is that communities are defined by the members and are self-forming and self-regulating. Each season, the women reform their community and simply "pick up" where they left off. The key is they know the bowling league is not for bowling but to exchange information important to the community. They would tell you that if you asked them about the league. They know ... and will tell you if you asked them.
Target markets, on the other hand, are defined by marketers using past behaviors and descriptive data to predict future purchases. It does not really know or consider the attitudes and exact needs of any individual.
While we exist in target markets, knowing our community involvement and understanding the community is a much more powerful tool for marketers. In future blogs, I will give you some specific actions you can take to both identify communities and determine how to ID them when they visit your website.
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