Saturday, February 4, 2017

What is Social Bookmarking?

Many online bookmark management services have launched since 1996; Delicious, founded in 2003, popularized the terms "social bookmarking" and "tagging". Tagging is a significant feature of social bookmarking systems, allowing users to organize their bookmarks and develop shared vocabularies known as folksonomies.
In a social bookmarking system, users save links to web pages that they want to remember and/or share. These bookmarks are usually public, and can be saved privately, shared only with specified people or groups, shared only inside certain networks, or another combination of public and private domains. The allowed people can usually view these bookmarks chronologically, by category or tags, or via a search engine.
Most social bookmark services encourage users to organize their bookmarks with informal tags instead of the traditional browser-based system of folders, although some services feature categories/folders or a combination of folders and tags. They also enable viewing bookmarks associated with a chosen tag, and include information about the number of users who have bookmarked them. Some social bookmarking services also draw inferences from the relationship of tags to create clusters of tags or bookmarks.
Many social bookmarking services provide web feeds for their lists of bookmarks, including lists organized by tags. This allows subscribers to become aware of new bookmarks as they are saved, shared, and tagged by other users. It also helps to promote your sites by networking with other social book markers and collaborating with each other.
For the past 10 years, social bookmarking has been a way for Internet users to add, edit, annotate and share bookmarks of documents on the web. There have been a lot of bookmarking services around since 1996, but it wasn’t until Delicious. It is the first social bookmarking site, popularized the term known as tagging and social bookmarking.

Have you ever emailed a friend or family member and sent them a link to a website you thought they might find interesting? If so, you have participated in social bookmarking.

But what is social bookmarking, anyway? After all, it's not like you can take a small piece of cardboard or a sticky note and physically put it on a web page the way you can do with the pages in a real book. And even if you know how to use the bookmarks tool that comes built in with every major web browser, this still isn't "social" bookmarking.

You can think of social bookmarking like this: simply tagging a web page with a web-based tool so you can easily access it later. Instead of saving them to your web browser, you are saving them to the web. And, because your bookmarks are online, you can easily access them anywhere you have an internet connection and share them with friends.

Just a Short History

Shared online bookmarks began, in a very early form, in 1996. In 1997, WebTagger came along with more advanced social bookmarking features. The service continued to evolve for the next several years and in 2003, Delicious came along and pioneered tagging, while also creating the term social bookmarking. In 2004, Delicious began to take off. In 2004, Flickr came along, inspired by tagging on Delicious. Bookmarking continued to evolve with various websites that have taken the Internet by storm and changed the concept of how people use the Internet. These are sites like Digg, which launched in 2004, Reddit in 2005 and Newsvine in 2006. Today, both Reddit and Digg rank in the top 300 most visited sites on the Internet today.

Why Social Bookmarking is Important

New social bookmarking tools have sprung up allowing users to bookmark content, share it across their networks, and get recommendations about new content they might like. But it’s not only users that benefit. There are ways your business can leverage social bookmarking for sales and building a strong community of brand ambassadors.

How? Let’s take a look at three benefits of social bookmarking for businesses today:

Social Bookmarking Sites Drive Targeted Traffic


Social bookmarking
sites allow you to categorize the content you save with custom keywords (or tags). Unlike in SEO, these keywords aren’t ranked by percentage of relevance. This allows you to make your bookmarks more searchable and easier to find by a broader base. With the right tags, you’ll build a group of followers who are interested and engaged in the niche of your brand and are likely to bookmark your content themselves.

You’ll also see an increase in repeat traffic that’s vital for continued engagement. Not every first-time visitor to your site converts to a sale. But if you offer bookmarking options on your landing page, they’ll be more likely to remember you down the line when they’re looking to make a purchase.

The Benefits of Going Viral

Social bookmarking can play a huge role in helping your content go viral. Because the sites make it easy for users to vote, rate, and share content, your brand will benefit from increased exposure and social proof. In addition, the most popular content might get republished on external websites and blogs, giving you valuable back-links and industry exposure.

Social Bookmarking Helps Build Your Brand

Most social bookmarking sites allow you to create a public profile to display your content. Not only are these profiles indexed by search engines (hello, SEO!), but they also make your brand more visible to users. By posting valuable information and fresh content regularly, you’ll build a name for your brand, grow your network of fans, and generate huge spikes of traffic back to your landing page.

Understanding social bookmarking can give a huge boost to the community surrounding your brand. By making it easier for visitors to bookmark your content, you’ll see not only more traffic, but more sharing as well. And as we all know, the more your brand is shared between friends, the more sales you’ll make down the line.

Why Should Start Social Bookmarking?


Not only can you save your favorite websites and send them to your friends, but you can also look at what other people have found interesting enough to tag. Most social bookmarking sites allow you to browse through the items based on most popular, recently added, or belonging to a certain category like shopping, technology, politics, blogging, news, sports, etc. You can even search through what people have bookmarked by typing in what you are looking for in the search tool. In fact, social bookmarking sites are being used as intelligent search engines.Since social bookmarking tools are access on the web or via a web-based application, this means you can save a new bookmark using one device, access your account on another device and see everything you added or updated from your other device. As long as you're signed into your social bookmarking account, you'll have the most recently updated version of all your bookmarks and other customizable information. 

A few popular social bookmarking tools include:



Evernote
Pinterest
StumbleUpon
Diigo
BizSugar
Blog Engage·         
BuddyMarks
Delicious
DZone
Folkd
Reddit
Technorati

Benefit From Social Bookmarking

  • Social bookmarking and social news allow you to specifically target what you want to see. Instead of going into a search engine, typing something into the search field and then searching for that needle in a haystack, you can quickly narrow down the items to what you are looking for. 
  • Because many social bookmarking sites display recently added lists and popular links, you can both keep up with what's current and see relevant information. For example, let's say you are interested in learning more about social shopping. You might search for social shopping on one of these sites and come up with two articles: one with a hundred votes and one with two votes.
  • It's pretty easy to tell that the article with a hundred votes might be your best choice. And this is a lot easier than typing "social shopping" into a search engine and seeing page after page after page of links that may or may not be useful based on what you're looking for.
  • So, what started out as a way to send bookmarks to friends has really grown into social search engines. You no longer need to page through thousands of results to find something that real humans would recommend enough to save for themselves and share with others. Now, you can simply go to a social bookmarking site, choose the category or tag that matches your interest, and find the most popular websites.

Key Features of Social Bookmarking

There are at least three main features that I conceive as being the most important when thinking about social bookmarking:

Tagging (classifying)

  • Probably the most key feature for social bookmarking
  • Refers to the user's ability to provide a quick label (and multiple quick labels) to any resource she has bookmarked
  • Tags congregate into tag clouds, which allow all users to see which tags are popular ones for a user or for a particular group of users
  • Terms that tagging invokes: folksonomy (grass-roots classification schemes as opposed to top-down, controlled vocabulary) and information technologies (ability to collect data produces new data--aggregation of tags teaches us something new: how people think about resources)

Pivoting (searching)

  • Most social bookmarking sites work in a very similar fashion in that they allow people explore bookmarked resources in multiple ways
  • If I were interested in what Kristin has bookmarked, and I can click on "kpartlo" and see what she has tagged
  • If I'm interested in what people have tagged as "crime," I can search by that tag
  • If I'm interested in what Kristin has tagged as "crime," I can do that, too
  • If I find a resource that I like, I can see who else has tagged that resource, identify a user who has similar resources as my own, and see what else he has tagged

Widgets (exporting)

  • Increasing, most social bookmarking sites allow you to create a "widget," essentially a little tool that allows you or someone else export my tags to other sites and media
  • For example, I could allow my tag cloud to appear in the sidebar to my blog
  • For example, someone interested in what I am tagging could subscribe to an RSS feed that tells him when I tag a new resource

Disadvantages of Social Bookmarking

Social bookmarking introduces a couple disadvantages to SEO. Social bookmarks seemingly take the authenticity away from organically earning links. SEOs and content marketers become robots executing a strategy of plug-n-play when we should be empowered to solve problems with our content.
You may not need social bookmarking in your SEO strategy. At SEJ, we don’t have a dedicated social bookmarking strategy anymore. Instead, the goal is for our content to earn their own links. Ultimately, some posts may not scale, but we love seeing how our content gets distributed naturally.
When there is no need to dedicate time to share posts on social bookmarking sites, a magical thing happens. You let your content do the work. The “chores” of manually posting links are no longer a burden and you can focus your attention on higher priority items like manually outreaching to people you mentioned in your articles.
Some will argue that you’re not getting the right traffic from social bookmarking sites. Submitting a link to a social bookmarking site may increase traffic, but may reduce your engagement metrics (time on site, conversions, page views, etc.) and increase your bounce rate. If one article can produce X traffic from one social bookmarking site, why can’t you produce the equal or more traffic from a social channel? Or, syndicating your content? The reality is that it’s a lot more work.
Developing and managing communities in multiple channels, creating authentic content, and manually performing personalized outreach takes time. It also increases the amount of work on the shoulders of each person doing the work. In order for links to build quickly, SEOs must collaborate with the content team. Ownership of links is now distributed and no longer a plug-n-play tactic.
Another major issue plaguing social bookmarking sites is a little algorithm called Penguin. The more low-quality, non-relevant links you generate, the more red flags you’ll be waving for Penguin to come waddling in. Search engines already have it out for social bookmarking sites. Just take a look at what Google search results brings up when you type in “social bookmarking sites:”

Dynamic Strategy of Social Bookmarking

So you’ve heard both sides of the story of social bookmarking. Now, you’re trying to decide what’s best for you. Follow these steps for a real, actionable social bookmarking strategy.

1. Know your Audience

Fact is, unless you know who and where your audience is, you probably won’t know what social bookmarking channels they are on. Developing personas from your Google Analytics and social channels will help guide you to determine where to spend your time. For example, if you’re writing a blog on parenting tips, sharing an article on Inbound.org is not going to be useful to you or the audience.

2. Engage in Conversation

It’s always scary to start a conversation for the first time. But, asking questions, leaving comments, and recommending another person submission, even if you don’t know them personally creates a community of engagement. This technique works because people love sharing if your content makes the right connection.

3. Say ‘Thank You’ to Others

Before you begin posting, the temptation to only submit your own content may be high. Resist the urge. Just take some time to share and promote others work. It’s a way to say thank you to others.

4. Casually Self-Promote

Finally, when you think you’ve nailed it on a great piece, pick your social bookmarking site to share. You should have your personas built out for each social bookmarking site you’re building your community on so you’ll know which piece will perform best where. For instance, my article on Google Adwords probably won’t hit the top of the charts on Pinterest. Be selective. Be courtesy to your audience on each social bookmarking site.

Social bookmarking or link building is now link earning. And, link earning is no longer about link chasing. So, do you develop a social bookmarking strategy? Or, do look grow your community elsewhere? I’d love to know more about the tools, channels, and strategies you use for social bookmarking.






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