User Power
Value/Post Ratio
174%
- Jul 20, 2012
- 673
- 1,172
I assume that everyone skipped your posts because it looks like you're a new poster who's just dropping your blog link in and will never be seen again. I googled it and didn't see it anywhere else, so maybe that's not true. Either way, here's a quick answer that maybe you or someone else will find useful (if this post stays out of the landfill at least):
I think you're asking the wrong question on two levels.
First, virality is simple, just not easy. It sounds almost stupid to even say it, but I think people forget what words actually mean when they want something to "go viral". Virality only happens when people share your content, and that only happens when people derive value from the sharing of it.
Note that that doesn't just mean that you need 'great' content, whatever you think that is. You need content that makes other people feel something when they share it. I've read tons of content that I thought was really and truly great but I rarely bring it up because most people wouldn't care. But literal process of sharing is very valuable in certain cases. Maybe someone finds value in being helpful? maybe it's in being a curator? maybe it's instigating outrage? How do you do that? It's different for every situation of course... different audiences, different motivations, different timing etc.
I know you weren't asking the question that I just answered and that you'd rather have a formula, but just like everything else, the formula is situation specific and constantly changing. The closest that you're ever going to get is to just look at the most viral posts and learn from them.
Second, I took a look at your blog, and this is NOT the question you should be asking right now. What would you do if you had a post go viral and 100k people hit your site? Do you think the quality of your content and site are sufficient to convert any of them into followers or buyers? Don't get me wrong, it's great that you're taking action, and I know that your site has only been up for a week... but it LOOKS like a site that's only been up for a week. You really need to work on providing value to your users instead of chasing them.
If I'd ran across your blog in any other context, that visit would have been maybe 2 seconds, and I'd never give it another chance, assuming that I even remembered the name. I know this sounds a little harsh, but if you keep iterating and making improvements, people here will actually help and offer great feedback. Some of it may be harsh at times, but that's nowhere near the cold reality of the market.
I think you're asking the wrong question on two levels.
First, virality is simple, just not easy. It sounds almost stupid to even say it, but I think people forget what words actually mean when they want something to "go viral". Virality only happens when people share your content, and that only happens when people derive value from the sharing of it.
Note that that doesn't just mean that you need 'great' content, whatever you think that is. You need content that makes other people feel something when they share it. I've read tons of content that I thought was really and truly great but I rarely bring it up because most people wouldn't care. But literal process of sharing is very valuable in certain cases. Maybe someone finds value in being helpful? maybe it's in being a curator? maybe it's instigating outrage? How do you do that? It's different for every situation of course... different audiences, different motivations, different timing etc.
I know you weren't asking the question that I just answered and that you'd rather have a formula, but just like everything else, the formula is situation specific and constantly changing. The closest that you're ever going to get is to just look at the most viral posts and learn from them.
Second, I took a look at your blog, and this is NOT the question you should be asking right now. What would you do if you had a post go viral and 100k people hit your site? Do you think the quality of your content and site are sufficient to convert any of them into followers or buyers? Don't get me wrong, it's great that you're taking action, and I know that your site has only been up for a week... but it LOOKS like a site that's only been up for a week. You really need to work on providing value to your users instead of chasing them.
If I'd ran across your blog in any other context, that visit would have been maybe 2 seconds, and I'd never give it another chance, assuming that I even remembered the name. I know this sounds a little harsh, but if you keep iterating and making improvements, people here will actually help and offer great feedback. Some of it may be harsh at times, but that's nowhere near the cold reality of the market.