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« on: Dec 19, 2006, 01:32:34 PM »
I was just thinking about stumble upon, when I stumble a new site it gets a lot of traffic. Here's something that might be worth a test (or maybe someone already knows...) Would the total amount of traffic be different if: - 5 people stumble a given site at the same day, or - 5 people stumble the site in 5 weeks (one stuble each week)
I was just thinking about stumble upon, when I stumble a new site it gets a lot of traffic. Here's something that might be worth a test (or maybe someone already knows...) Would the total amount of traffic be different if: - 5 people stumble a given site at the same day, or - 5 people stumble the site in 5 weeks (one stuble each week)
I think its more about the "value of audience" in your account, my value is above 400 that will say people surfing my account/suggested websites frequently. If people with a high "value of audience" surf your suggested site you got more visits then from stumblers with a low value...
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« Reply #2 on: Dec 19, 2006, 03:40:02 PM »
I think I will agree with Olaf, but I am not really sure how this works (actually none is )
Also the traffic depends on the tags that you list a site. General sites - eg. humour, sports - get much more traffic than niche sites but in anyway stuble is a great tool to get some free traffic.
I think I will agree with Olaf, but I am not really sure how this works (actually none is )
Also the traffic depends on the tags that you list a site. General sites - eg. humour, sports - get much more traffic than niche sites but in anyway stuble is a great tool to get some free traffic.
yes right use a general category from the tag cloud while submitting a new stumble
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« Reply #4 on: Dec 21, 2006, 12:25:06 AM »
I love stumbleupon as a tool for a quiet moment but we receive very little traffic from it, mind you we don't go out of our way to promote ourselves on it either, the problem with stumbleupon users are they are normally just browsing to pass the time and are hard to convert to a sale, hence we tend to only suggest Blogs or sites that are article based. Like nearly all user driven sites most stumbleupon users ignore adverts as well. Does the category make much of a difference, common sense says a more generic category will get you more users though you will be part of the noise. While a smaller group less matches but less noise.
tim, from the paymentblogger article you wrote in april07:
Quote
I love stumbleupon it brings hundreds if not thousands of visitors to my sites every day...
so i guess things have changed since this last post? does stumbleupon bring plenty of traffic to your sites already?
I must say new stumbles having less SU traffic than before but I have still a lot of visits from older stumbles I guess they changed something for the new stumbles
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« Reply #7 on: Jun 03, 2007, 06:36:10 PM »
My theory of stumble upon is this,
a user stumbles a site, stumbleupon shows it to 10 of his friends,
1) if all of them like it then stumbleupon shows it to 20 of their friends. 2) If 5 people like it then stumbleupon shows it to only 5 of their friends
So every step they evaluate if its worth to show it to more people.
The number are imaginary but I think you get the picture of my "great theory on stumbleupon"
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« Reply #9 on: Jun 03, 2007, 09:04:11 PM »
In my opinion their algorithm is very complex. I think they use a value for the site that you stumble (sites with many good reviews get more traffic for each new page they submit), they see if a user submits many pages from the same domain (so if you are going to stumble your whole site it wont work) and they somehow know how those votes are spreaded.
The good thing is that they don't give any penalty to groups so if the same 10 people continue to stumble each other's sites it wont be a problem. For instance if you do this on Digg your stories are automatically get burried.
a user stumbles a site, stumbleupon shows it to 10 of his friends,
1) if all of them like it then stumbleupon shows it to 20 of their friends. 2) If 5 people like it then stumbleupon shows it to only 5 of their friends
So every step they evaluate if its worth to show it to more people.
The number are imaginary but I think you get the picture of my "great theory on stumbleupon"
I'm afraid I think your almost completely wrong I beilive it works more like this... The original stumbler tags the article and something happens, depending on their audience score depends how many waves occurs. the first wave is always unrelated persons, who have ticked the first tag (as in their likes) this wave is normally between 2-10 people The second wave is friends and people who like the first and second tag between 5-50
Now if the original stumbler had a high audience the waves will continue with friends and all tags. When someone thumbs it up, they cause a wave (again based on audience) of between 2-100
However Stumbleupon has a domain overload feature, a domain that is repeatedly stumbled by the same people will see a rapid decrease in stumbles (I still get a couple of hundred every day) but new stumbles on ventureskills.wordpress.com for example are a mear trickle so.
1st stumble wave is = Audience(of stumbler) - domain saturation = #visitors of primary tag 2nd wave = Visitors of primary tag and friends 3rd = All tags and friends and on
Friends stumbles do seem less effective also people stumbling a discovered site without stumbling to it seem less effective.
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« Reply #13 on: Jun 04, 2007, 03:30:36 PM »
I know their algorithm is very complex, that is why I tried to explain it in simple terms.
I am glad that everyone has different theories about it (it could not be otherwise, we all have differrent theories about simple things in life)
I think the truth lies somewhere between All these "Great theories" maybe its time to try to UNITE them, maybe one day the Nature magazine will have a story on US trying to get the GREAT UNIFIED THEORY of the STUMBLING EFFECT and then the debate will start with other members of other forums that have yet their own theories about stumbleupon and they will send missionaries over on our little forum (big depending on how you look at it) and they will try to convert us to their beliefs and they will be long debates that might actually have casualties .....
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« Reply #16 on: Jun 05, 2007, 09:30:28 AM »
stumbleupon has a saturation point where if the same stumblers thumb up a site without a proportion of new blood the site receives less and less new stumbles and over a great time.
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« Reply #17 on: May 28, 2008, 05:02:49 AM »
removed...
« Last Edit: May 28, 2008, 05:09:14 AM by wineo »
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« Reply #18 on: Sep 02, 2008, 02:24:07 AM »
stubleupon traffic is a waste of bandwidth not only do the visitors never click on anything they nevr buy anything also.
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« Reply #19 on: Sep 21, 2008, 04:38:47 AM »
I can't say that I know how it works but it sends me about as much traffic as Google does, but they don't usually stay long or leave a comment on the blog.
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