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How to
Make the Digg Home Page..
|
Article by Brett Borders owner
CopyBrighter.com
Posted
Mar.25th 2008
You find a great story. You submit
it to Digg, cross your fingers and
hope for the best.
But when you check on it the next
day, you are disappointed to find
that it only got 3 Diggs.
The Secret of Digg
New users often wonder how some
people manage to get hundreds and
thousands of diggs, day after day.
It's simple:
top Digg users have established
social networks of friends on the
site who vote on their stories.

You can build a strong Digg network,
too... without gaming the system or
begging people for votes. This
article will explain how you can
organically develop a network of
friends who will help you and
exponentially increase your chance
of hitting the Digg home page.
All it takes is about 30 minutes a
day and a desire to digg lots of
interesting stories.
Getting Started
After you've signed up for a Digg
account, you need to learn your way
around. Spend a couple of days just
playing and exploring the site. Digg
stories that interest you, and take
a close look at the submitter's
profile and statistics.
Does this person digg a lot of
stories? Submit a lot of stories? Do
they have a lot of friends? Do their
stories get made popular?
Before you try to make friends, you
need to spruce up your own personal
profile first. Click on the
"profile" selection at the very top
center of your screen.
First, upload an icon. If you don't
have a picture, you are a
complete nobody on Digg. Your
icon is one of the few things that
will make you stand out and help
people to remember you - so be
creative. The display size is small
so keep it simple and 100kb or less.

Then, at the top left of the screen,
select "Manage Profiles" or "EDIT."

Make sure your name, location and IM
username are entered. Adding a link
back to your personal blog or
website will give your profile a lot
of credibility. Once your profile is
completely filled out, you are
already way ahead of about 90% of
the Digg population.
Next, go learn about the different
news categories. Digg is a
tech-focused news site, so there
isn't a category for every kind of
story. Get familiar with the
upcoming stories sections, where new
stories germinate before some of
them are "made popular" and voted
onto the home page. Practice
searching and sortng through the
results (by most diggs, most
commented, cloudview, etc.)
Building Up Your Network
Making friends on Digg is a bit
oblique; the personalities behind
the tiny icons may seem elusive,
inaccessible or downright weird at
first. Unlike MySpace or Facebook,
there's no easy way to contact
people, browse their photo albums or
break the ice first. You mostly look
at a user's
statistics, and then scrutinize
what kind of stories they Digg and
submit and then form your
opinion from there.

You can instantly add anybody as a
friend, even site founder
Kevin Rose or the #1 digger
Mr. BabyMan. Once you've added a
friend, it means that you can see
their story submissions and
diggs easily and vote on them, too.
But adding a friend won't directly
help your content on the home page.
You need a two-way, reciprocal
friendship.
You want people to add you as a
friend so they can see your
stories.
You don't want just any Digg user to
befriend you, either. 99 out of 100
Diggers don't participate much and
are worthless for helping promote
your content. You're on the lookout
for active and savvy diggers, like
yourself.
Beware: many of the
Top 100 Diggers are slammed –
some spend 15 hours a day hustling
RSS feeds and digging a massive
stack of stories – so they are less
likely to pay attention to a new
user like you.
A Hardcore Digg User's Stats:

Look for someone moderately active
who seems likely to enjoy and digg
your content. Their stats, their
friends list, and previously
submitted stories will gives you
clues about whether you should make
the effort to hook up with them.
An ideal Digg friend:
-
Checks in
and uses the site daily
-
Diggs a lot
of stories
-
Checks for stories that their
friends submit and diggs them
regularly
-
Submits
stories that you will enjoy
following and voting on
-
Doesn't
submit way too many stories
-
Doesn't have
50 zillion friends
A More "Approachable" Digg User's
Profile Stats:

A good place to make new friends is
on the upcoming section of the news
categories that interest you most.
Click on "Upcoming Stories," sort
them by "Most Diggs" and see if
there are any stories that interest
you. If it's a cool story and
interesting description, then most
likely a cool person submitted it.
Scope out their profile and if they
fit most of the above criteria, try
adding them as a friend.
Follow and Digg Your Friends'
Stories -
Every Day
After you've added a few active Digg
friends, then you need to start
digging their content . Click on
your profile (1), then on the
friends tab (2) and then submitted
(3).

Or if you are on the home page, you
can just click the "Friends'
Activity in 48 Hours" panel:

Now you'll see a list of the stories
that your friends submitted.
Check in at least once a day and
digg ALL your friends' good stories.
Go all the way down the list and
don't leave anyone out. (If you
don't like their taste in stories,
you need to to pick a more
compatible friend... just like in
real life.)
After a while, the active users will
notice that you're voting on their
stories. And soon enough some of
them will surely befriend you, and
start to Digg your stories, too.
More Tips on Building a Powerful
Digg Network:
-
More friends
is not necessarily better. The
more friends you have, the more
votes it will take for your
story to hit the home page.
Better to have 20 active friends
than 400 deadbeats.
-
Digg has a
feature that will try to block
you from adding friends too
quickly. To get around it, just
Digg about 10 or 20 stories, and
then go back and see if it will
let you add another friend.
Digging stories is seen as a
natural activity pattern that
can reset the limit.
-
Frequently
check the "See Who Befriended
You" section of your friends
list. Look closely on the
profiles of the people who have
added you as a friend. If they
look like a legitimate
(i.e., not an icon of a hot babe
with an account created
yesterday) active user, try
adding them and see if they
start to digg your stories. If
they don't, you can always dump
them in a few weeks.
-
Prune your
friends list every few months.
Get rid of deadbeats who aren't
socially interacting with you or
following your content. Search
for new people who will take an
interest in digging your
stories. You can find out who
diggs your stories by looking at
"Who Dugg or Blogged This?"
button at the bottom of your
story descriptions. Better yet,
use this tool to
find out who is digging your
stories. Check them out and
see if you'd want to befriend
them.
-
Get the
right people to notice you by
leaving sincere, intelligent,
personal comments on their
stories. If their story doesn't
make the home page, they are
likely to check who voted on it
and read all the comments.
-
Your
reputation on Digg depends
primarily on the quality of the
stories you submit. It's okay to
submit a piece of content you
wrote every once and a while,
but be sure to mix it in with a
healthy ratio of other great
content that the community will
enjoy. If you submit spam or
crap, Digg will restrict your
account and users will quickly
blackball you.
The Sweet Taste of Success
So, finally, you've paid your dues.
You've been active for a few weeks
and you've dugg hundreds or
thousands of fun stories. Now you
find people are automatically
reading and digging stories that
you submit. You're nurtured
a genuine, symbiotic connection with
some of your friends and you start
to understand their quirks and
personalities.
At this point, instead of submitting
a story and getting 2 diggs, you'll
get
at least 10 or 20. Because
you're hooked up. And you know
people. You're finally grooving with
the
social aspect of "social
media."
Once you your story gets a bump of
more than 15 or so diggs, it has a
fighting chance. Your story becomes
visible in the "Upcoming Stories"
section, and if the content is truly
compelling then it will make the
home page.

When it breaks on through to the
other side, you'll finally get a hit
of the Digg Crack – the massive
emotional rush of creating national
news and reading the hundreds of
comments and reactions to your
story. It's one of the strongest
buzzes that that you can get while
sitting in front of the computer.
And it's not rocket science or
voodoo magic... it just takes
participation. So, what are you
waiting for? Flick open your Firefox
tabs and start digging!

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