1. Robert Easson

    PRODUCT MANAGER at Phaidon Press Ltd

    09 December 2007 15:53pm

    Robert Easson

    Hello

    Just wondered what the current thoughts  are on page bookmarks as a viable viral marketing activity? We have recently redeveloped our website to include a substanial amount of free to air content. Wondered if these bookmark icons really do improve traffic or if they have passed their sell by date as a useful marketing tool?

    We did a short experiment with Delicious on some pages but was hard to monitor effects on traffic. Also have noticed little bookmarking icons have proliferated so any thoughts on whether pursuing this line of marketing activity is worth the reward would be appreciated?

    thanks

    Robert

  2. Iain Forrest

    Owner at Wynyard Consultants Ltd

    10 December 2007 08:23am

    Iain Forrest

    Hi Robert - interesting question. I think that the proliferation of bookmarking tags is also due to the fact that 'frequency of bookmarking' is likely to be a ranking factor on a certain well known, major search engine.

    If you can encourage users to tag content in this way it seems that this will have a beneficial effect in search results and in fact IMHO, this is the main 'marketing' reason to provide users this facility. This further exemplifies why these days 'content is king'.

    Iain

    Wynyard Consultants

    On 15:53:47 9 December 2007 Rob73 wrote:

    Hello

    Just wondered what the current thoughts  are on page bookmarks as a viable viral marketing activity? We have recently redeveloped our website to include a substanial amount of free to air content. Wondered if these bookmark icons really do improve traffic or if they have passed their sell by date as a useful marketing tool?

    We did a short experiment with Delicious on some pages but was hard to monitor effects on traffic. Also have noticed little bookmarking icons have proliferated so any thoughts on whether pursuing this line of marketing activity is worth the reward would be appreciated?

    thanks

    Robert

  3. dan barker

    E-Business Consultant at Dan Barker

    10 December 2007 11:07am

    dan barker

    hi, Rob, how are you?

    Here's what I think...

    Test it:

    1. Test it for a few weeks
    2. Change the way you display the bookmarking tools & see if it makes any difference
    3. Change the specific bookmark options you display & see if it makes any difference
    4. Ask your visitors (if you send out a monthly email newsletter you could just include a really simple poll explaining that you've added them & what they are, + two 'keep em', 'dump em' option buttons)
    If people like them & use them, keep them. If nobody uses it, remove it & test again further down the road.

    Whatever anyone says in response to your question - these tools are very subjective to your content & your audience. It's worth just spending a couple of hours testing them.

    Gut feeling extras:

    • It's not worth it for 'commodity' information (basic product pages, etc), but is worth it if you have any interesting/unusual products, or if you have any blog/news sections.
    • It's not worth including everything: digg, facebook, stumbleupon, del.icio.us is probably enough.
    Is it worth it overall?

    You ask if it's worth it: There's next to zero effort involved in setting it up. Once it's set up, it runs itself. It's easy to monitor (just look at how many diggs you get, how many users have added you to del.icio.us, how much traffic you got from stumbleupon).

    If you do hit the digg homepage, it's worth it: tens of thousands of visits, hundreds of extra inbound links. I often get big spikes in traffic & new subscribers from stumbleupon on one site. Those particular subscribers are great: they're good advocates &, as they're usually heavy members of the social tools, they can vote you up & send traffic again-and-again.

    I hope that helps!

    daniel

    ps. I like your bookshop site - 'Tiles of the Unexpected' sounds really good

  4. Dave Chaffey Silver

    Digital Marketing Consultant, Trainer, Author and Speaker at SmartInsights.com

    14 December 2007 14:23pm

    Dave Chaffey

    Hi, I agree with the comments here - it is worth positioning bookmarks above and below the fold and including prompts.

    If you have the budget it is best to design your own which blend with the content, e.g. the The BBC and other news sites, but I have found free tool http://www.addthis.com is fine - this gives useful stats on who is bookmarking what with what.

    The main benefit rather than traffic is that search engines will review this according to their patents. Of course Yahoo! owns Delicious and Google Bookmarks are increasing in popularity - on my site these are the most popular option. I get around 80-90 bookmarks a month across a diversity of content - mostly 1s and 2 bookmarks on individual pages.

    You can see Bookmarks in Y! Site Explorer and Delicious and in Google Webmaster tools (even though Delicious bookmarks have rel=nofollow on them.

    See my Tutorial on how to assess backlinks.

    HTH Dave
    http://www.davechaffey.com

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