Social Bookmarking... Confused? You're Not Alone
Larry Reynolds - 09/20/2008
The word is out that social bookmarking is the thing, that
special flavor of the month (or year or decade?), but only by
taking it in small steps have I been able to figure out some of
its ins and outs.
The long and short of social booking is, it is a way to save
your Favorites folder (or portions thereof) online. This means
no matter where in the world you happen to be, as long as
you've got a connection to the internet, you just log into your
social bookmarking account and voila! at your fingertips are
all of the important urls you might find yourself needing - but
without access to - since your computer is sitting home and
you're not.
Now that is a good idea! Saves uploading a bunch of urls to
your domain, or remembering to send them to your Aunt Sally
before you visit, on the off chance you'll need to remember
that special something while you're away.
(By the by, it's also a quick way to actually use your home
computer. I don't know about you, but my Favorites folder is
virtually useless at this point.)
But, there's even more to social bookmarking then easy
access. You can also share this information with others. Your
friends, family, co-workers, subscribers, whoever, can easily
see what you've been uncovering on the web and decide, at that
point, if it's something so useful and/or interesting that
they, too, would like to access it easily through their own
social bookmarking account.
The logical step from there (since I'm assuming that you are
reading this because you, too, are interested in new ways to
market on the net) is to find a way to tie bookmarking to your
service and/or website.
If this is all new to you, too, head here: http://del.icio.us/ This is a very
popular social bookmarking service.
You'll see numerous urls listed on their main page, and
since we're just getting the hang of this (assuming you don't
already have an account and are way ahead of my learning curve
level), let's practice :)
Beside each of these web page entries are the faint words
"save this."
Put your mouse over the "save this" and click. If you have
an existing del.icio.us account, it will take you to the log in
page for your account (for you smart ones!). If you don't have
an account yet, you'll be given the opportunity to create one
now.
After creating your account and logging in, you'll see an
area on your screen where the url you've chosen to bookmark is
awaiting your description and/or notes and/or tags.
For our purpose, initially bookmarking our first entry, you
need not worry about this too much at this time. Give it a
description and/or tag that will make sense to you. You can
delete it later.
Hit the save button and voila! You've got the beginnings of
your social bookmarking!
At this point, under your "settings" area (upper right hand
of screen in del.icio.us) you can do any number of things.
Importing your current Favorites folder (or portions thereof)
is available. Explore!
Now that you're on the road to social bookmarking comes the
fun part... telling others what you're doing.
If you have a website, you can easily add (assuming you do
your own webmastering or know the rudiments of copying and
pasting) a "save this page" to any and all of your important
webpages within your site. Use the "help" link, then read "For
Publishers" under the Feeds and Tools section. That's where
you'll find the code.
In addition, you'll want to share you're newly found method
of communication with others. Get your family, friends,
subscribers, mailing list involved in bookmarking your small
chunk (del.icio.us listing) of the social bookmarking web.
Then, make use of it! Don't just load it up with junk. If
you're a writer and find interesting writer's resources add
them to your account. If you're a news junkie and track
particular newsworthy items, post those!
As you get more and more familiar with social bookmarking,
you'll understand the importance of "tagging" your information
correctly. According to del.icio.us, your page goes on the
front page (I've yet to see any of mine though) and also is
filed away under sub-indexing using those all-important
tags.
=============================
A LAYMAN'S EXPLANATION OF TAGS:
If you're just bookmarking stuff online for yourself, no
worries, but tags are critical to your marketing social
bookmarking success.
Tags are sort of like mini meta desciptions. Tags cannot be
inserted into a regular html page (don't bother trying to put
them on your website, they won't do anything but take up
space).
Tags are basically equal to metas and content. However, tags
are used in blogs and rss feeds. They are the trigger words for
online feeds to categorize (more or less) what it is you're
writing about and posting. Obviously tying your words to
popular tags will be very important.
http://del.icio.us/tag/ is a huge
list of popular and not so popular currently used tags. My
advice would be to be sure you've got the Google toolbar
installed. As you click on some tags, check the page ranking
(little green bar) on your Google toolbar. That will help you
see how popular (or not) that particular "tag" is... and
remember you don't have to "follow the crowd." You can choose
tags "not so popular." Then, when others pick up on those tags,
you're already ahead of the game :)
In the future, give your tags some very serious thought!
Your tags will brand your own posted entries.
===============================
I'll admit, I've only just scratched the surface so far. I
don't claim to be an expert (that's obvious), but I do know
that with further education and implementation, social
bookmarking as a marketing tool is definitely worth the
effort.
And... like all new things takes a bit of fumbling around
before we get it right.
So ahead! Get started! See where it leads you - the next
brainstorm idea is only a few minutes (okay maybe hours or
days) away! :)
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