Creating Viral Content
-
Hi, I’m currently building a brand new site in the fitness vertical. The site is brand new, no authority, and backlinks.
My goal is to turn it into a high end authority website, with organic traffic, and into a brand. My other goal is it to be purely organic growth, content driven. All my backlinks are natural. I don’t want to plead with other webmasters to link to me, whether it would be for guest posting or other questionable SEO tactics.
I understand that creating awesome content so people have a reason to visit and link to, is what I need, and it’s a long-term process.
I guess the part, in which I’m seeking advice/suggestions on is how do I go about creating awesome content which people link to and share.
I’m thinking of doing something like Movoto and bridging together the sites topic and current trends online.
For instance content on comparing North Korea average diet and how it compares to the US. Or who’s the fittest character on Games of Thrones. It’s relevant to the site and is current related to a hot trends.
However creating content which is designed to go viral can be quite costly and I don’t have unlimited pockets nor do most people. E.g. creating an awesome info graphic, collecting data, hiring a professional writer, getting professional images, etc. So you don’t really want to screw up.
So how can you reduce the risk? How do I go about it from a risk adverse angle?
I’m thinking I can find content which has been previously shared (had a pulse), repurpose the content (I remember Rand mentioned this in one of the white board Friday sessions, make it way better, use visuals, apps etc), then base some of my content decisions using this process.
I guess other ways – look at places like Reddit, bridging topic with current rends (as mentioned before), find popular forum topics, etc.
The goal of the content is:
1) Content which naturally attract high quality links to the site, so it lifts up the other pages which don’t attract many links (through authority).
2) Turn some of that viral traffic into long-term subscribers of the website, and repeat visitors.
- Increase total search presence naturally
Any suggestions or insights into this question would be very much appreciated!
Thanks,
Matt
-
This is the approach that I am using. I spend all of my time creating content.
It is a really really slow way to start but every bit of content that you get up starts to pull in a little traffic and after you have done that for a while it starts to build momentum.
I would focus on the following types of content...
-- misconceptions (these surprise people and can get shared)
-- basic knowledge explained exceptionally well (if you can do this in best-on-the-web quality it can get shared widely - but slowly)
-- things that everyone should know but most people don't know (how to select mountain bike tires for sand vs mud vs gravel vs pavement)
-- demonstrations (how to change a mountain bike tire in 50 seconds)
-- stuff that pisses people off (how to prevent flats... focusing on rim strips, spoke ends, tire selection, tire inspection, inflation, what to avoid hitting)
-- stuff that surprises... (the number of calories required to finish an ultradistance triathlon and the amount that must be consumed on the road to keep from bonking... on top of that there is the liquid requirement - which varies by race day air temp - very different approaches for 50 degree race day in Montreal and a 90 degree race day in Florida)
It is really rare to have something go viral. I shoot for things that are simply good content that people will share if they like it.
-
Hi Matt
First of all, I'd like to say that you're well on your way. You've got a great mindset for all of this and have already suggested two very good ideas on how to go about the content curation. The content that you have in mind also looks to be very appealing.
Let's look at ways at how you can minimise the risk. First of all, to limit cost, you may want to look at creating the content yourself. It could still take time, but have a look at sites like Easel.ly, Visual,ly and Infogr.am. All sites are free and come with some nice interfaces and graphics that can help you to at least visualise your post. I'm also a big fan of Timeline JS, which adds an interactive element to an infographic.
Another way to minimise risk would be to get a brief from a great site or news source before you put the content together. That way you know that, provided that the content is useful, it has a very high chance of being picked up.
For this, I absolutely love using Help A Reporter Out (HARO) - it's a service that puts you in touch with reporters looking for expertise to feature in their content. I can tell you now that the health & fitness section is buzzing with requests 2-3 times daily and you often get some very big websites and news sources looking for a hand. Definitely get in there and make a name for yourself.
Like I said, I think you're approaching this in exactly the right way. Hopefully these links can help you out too. Furthermore, I'd certainly look at creating video content, especially for a viral effect. Not only does health and fitness simply lend itself perfectly for video content (who doesn't like looking at pretty people?), I think there's definite room in the market for a self-depreciating or mickey-taking spin on the industry. You have your gym junkies and your obsessive dieters and the like - there's as much ego in that industry as there is in SEO! There might be an opportunity to poke fun at it slightly, while still producing some great and useful content for you and your audience.
All the best with everything and keep us up to date, would love to see how you progress!
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Social Media Causing Duplicate Content
Recently, I spent some time in the SEO MOZ Crawl Diagnostics, and found that I have 40 pages that are being listed as “duplicate content.” These are original blog posts, but I made the mistake of sharing on social media immediately after publishing each post. I recently found out that if you post on a blog and on social on the same day, Google indexes the social first, and then up to 2 weeks later indexes the actual blog post. When it does, it stamps the blog post as duplicate and the social media posting as the original. Any ideas on how I can rectify this? Any code I can put in each blog post to let Google know they’re the original? I’ve begun publicizing my blogs on social 14 days after I actually publish them to alleviate the issue going forward, but I’d like my 40 other blog posts to get the authority they deserve.
Social Media | | Jake20150 -
Will posting an article from my website to LinkedIn mean its duplicate content?
Hi everyone, I'm currently writing my first blog post for my new business, and initially it was intended to be written for my website and then have it shared as a link via Social Media. However, I notice now that LinkedIn allow you to post self written articles to it's website directly and that these are then linked to your profile. My question is if I write my blog post as intended, and then publish it separately to LinkedIn, will search engines see this and think I am duplicating content? If so, roughly how much of the content would I have to change in order to avoid this? Thanks!
Social Media | | mickburkesnr0 -
Value in content from website being shared across social media?
If I write content (small career advice quotes) on my website and I distribute across Twitter and FB I assume my site will get the full credit (from an SEO perspective) since that is where the content was originally uploaded. However, will I still get SEO credit for being active on social media, or will Google view it as duplicate content and evaluate that I am not active on social media? thank you
Social Media | | knielsen0 -
How can I gain links by creating infographics and/or memes?
It seems that both infographics and memes seem to be popular methods of creating good quality links at the moment, but how can you actually gain links by using these? When people share the graphics they will need to put an extra link in back to you and obviously most will be via social media so will not be worth that much to Google? Do I need to email these out to blogs etc?
Social Media | | harrygardiner0 -
Publishing Content Through a Single Persona
Hi, I have a client who's made some changes to their content strategy. They want to use a single author for all content produced and publish, to maintain a consistent identity across the web. This single author is a persona e.g. "Joe Bloggs" but this is not a real person. This works fine for creating and publish content (for their blog and outside blog posts). It allows many people to work on creating and publishing content under the same name, which for a number of reasons makes good logistical sense. The problem arises when it comes to social marketing. They have set up a Facebook and Google + profile and Facebook and Google business pages. The main issue is that they are finding it difficult to friend other people because nobody knows this "Joe Bloggs" persona. Can anybody offer advise on how to approach this kind of strategy. Thanks,
Social Media | | Leighm0 -
How to get most out of viral blog traffic?
Our website has a WordPress blog, hosted at website.com/blog. I've discovered that with some hard work and a bit of luck, I can create a blog posts that will go viral - they will get about 50k readers in 1-3 days (which is a LOT for our website), and 300-1000 tweets, 100-250 Facebook shares, and anywhere from 10 to 130~ G+1s. (Unfortunately, these are for the posts, not for our website.) The posts will also get some comments. And most importantly, a few links - sometimes from very reputable domains. However, I feel that I could be doing much more here. The links go directly to the blog post, and I'm not sure how much is that helping our website overall in regards to SEO. What actions can I encourage the readers to do, and how should I prioritize them? Some of the actions are: Sharing/liking, writing a comment, checking out our products, subscribing to our Facebook/Twitter/G+ profile, subscribing to our RSS. One another possible action/opportunity that I see and which could potentially pay off is to offer some kind of PDF report to be emailed, which would initiate an autoresponder sequence. Do you think that having a clear call to action in a blog post could reduce the sharing of it ? Is it possible to encourage whoever is writing about our blog posts to use a direct link to our website, instead of linking directly to the post? If yes, how? E.g. if I included a direct link to our website in the post itself, e.g. in the most important part of the post that gets quoted, it could work - unfortunately that's usually virtually impossible. Am I sitting on a gold mine here, and should do this as much as possible? Should I consider putting this content not just onto the blog, but on our website.com/something ? I'm actually not sure how that would help though, it would simply have a shorter URL. I've discovered that it doesn't matter where I post this content, if the presentation looks decent. So it doesn't have to be posted on website.com/blog. I can even post it on other domains - should I? And the most important question: How do I get the most out of this opportunity in SEO regards? Thanks for any ideas or insights!
Social Media | | Jiri.Novotny0 -
Ways to get the most out of your content/blog posts?
I've been working on posting more content on my blog and now I need a workflow to help me get more exposure on my posts. Currently this is what I'm doing: 1- Write Post 2- Add it to my favorites in Stumbled Upon 3- Post it to Facebook 4- Pin it in Pinterest I would love some more ideas. My goal at this point is to gain greater web exposure. I would love to be they type of blog others actively follow.
Social Media | | continuumphoto0 -
How fast to post content to Google+
If an established publisher gets started on Google+, is it better to post one or two things a day like a real person would, or is it okay to do a "data dump" and post a ton of articles at once? Does it matter if the account is a brand or personal page? Thanks.
Social Media | | ebenthurston0