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Ask HN: Have you used StumbleUpon to market?

14 points by leslyn 14 years ago · 12 comments · 1 min read


I'm really curious to know if any of you use SU for marketing and have these questions:

1. What conversion rate would be considered average?

2. Did you experiment with budget/target audience, etc. and was did you find a meaningful difference?

I would appreciate if you could share your experience.

jawns 14 years ago

My site, Correlated (http://www.correlated.org) has gotten >100K hits from StumbleUpon (all organic), and in my experience, it's crappy traffic.

I've looked at my site stats, and only a tiny fraction of those hits -- less than 1 percent -- results in any sort of action on the site.

Compared with traffic from practically every other referrer, that's markedly less engagement.

There are some sites, for instances, whose referral traffic results in engagement in up to 50 percent of cases, and those aren't all necessarily highly targeted audiences.

What can I infer from this?

My guess is that a lot of this StumbleUpon traffic is coming from people who are only passively using the service, as opposed to actively using it.

I would describe an active user of the service as someone who says, "Hey, I'm bored. I'll go to StumbleUpon and look for some interesting websites."

I would describe a passive user of the service as someone who, say, has it set as their homepage, so it opens up whenever they open their browser, whether or not they're actually in the mood to check out new websites.

Whatever the reason, StumbleUpon referrals are traffic that I have largely written off.

  • JonnieCache 14 years ago

    As someone who was a university student recently, I can tell you that the standard stumbleupon usage pattern goes like this:

        1) Click stumble button
        2) Look at page for 0.5-2 seconds
        3) Stay on page if it's the kind of thing you're looking for (usually novel flash
           games or funny videos,) otherwise go back to 1.
    
    The mouse pointer typically never leaves the stumble button during this process, we used to flick through dozens and dozens of pages like we were doing a psychoanalytic free association excercise until we found something we liked.

    So yeah, not exactly high quality traffic.

  • user24 14 years ago

    agreed. You get huge, brief spikes of largely useless traffic.

    I'm not convinced there is an 'active' user of SU; I think people get into a click-the-stumble-button cycle and burn through 10s of pages a minute, meaning that most of the SU traffic is just bounces because they'll click for the next page in a matter of seconds.

dclowd9901 14 years ago

Our site, NoSweaters (http://nosweaters.com) started marketing on Stumbleupon's lowest click rate ($0.05/click) right after the Black Friday weekend. The start was slow. We garnered essentially the clicks we paid for and nothing more. Further, there were a lot of hiccups in the process, as we waited for approval for the campaign, which seemed to take much, much longer than other venues (read: Adwords).

Our target market, we decided, was women aged 15-30. From our exhaustive studies (aka, friends and family cajoling) we gathered they were the most enthusiastic users. We set up a custom front page for Stumble users to introduce them to the site.

We did this for Monday, Nov. 28th, Tues. the 29th and on Wednesday, we got caught up again in an approval issue, yelled at SU on Twitter, and all of a sudden we got blasted with organic traffic late Wednesday night (the 30th). Our daily visits went from 100 paid to ~20k unpaid hits a day for a solid week. After that, the traffic dropped off like a stone.

In that time, however, our bounce rate was only about 48%. We believe several factors account for this:

1) The main page was little more than an enticement with easy click through to the meat of the site.

2) The site was very appropriate for the time of year (a gift help site in the holiday buying months)

3) Our target happened to be spot on (we think).

We were also running a contest at the time to help drum up users and usage. Top users would receive Amazon gift cards.

All of these efforts yielded over 300 new users and more than 2,500 new "questions" (our site is a Q&A site for gift ideas; "asking a question" currently requires nothing but an email address).

From a purely return-on-investment perspective, we can say we were quite happy with the results we got from Stumbleupon. We're definitely suspicious of their methods of how they deliver organic vs. paid traffic (seems they've got their hands on spigots). We paid about $40 for the equivalent of 160K visits, and we got a ton of new content, and some very focused and dedicated users.

We've got a ton of test and usage data that we can now mine through to figure out what our next changes should be. We have very active involved, non-friend-or-family users that have given us very valuable feedback on what they want to see from the site. All in all, it's a great utility for a site trying to build itself, but I question its value for an established site (vs. blog posts or other SEO efforts).

If you have any questions about our experience, please don't hesitate to chuck them my way.

endlessvoid94 14 years ago

When I was still working on it, my site ThatHigh.com would consistently get more than 100k visitors per month from SU. That started out from paid traffic, but since the site got good ratings on SU the organic traffic continued.

However, I only think it worked because of the site's niche (cough). If you have a site that needs high quality traffic, it might not work very well.

  • nickfromseattle 14 years ago

    I remember reading about thathigh soon after you guys launched, I think on reddit. It sounds like you are no longer working on it. Could you give a summary of the site in terms of how it started/ended with growth/revenue?

PaulHoule 14 years ago

The only way to make Stumbleupon profitable is to put a high-paying clickthrough ad underneath the Stumble button.

It seems to me that once you pay for traffic on Stumbleupon, they turn off your organic traffic, since by paying for traffic you've proven yourself to be a rube.

garethsprice 14 years ago

Not used the paid option (didn't know there was one), but tried using it for a few (non-tech) small businesses about 2 years ago. Lots of traffic, no conversions, high bounce rate.

The demographic appears to be "bored people looking for free stimulation".

dholowiski 14 years ago

I've spent about $50 on stumble upon for my site, at $0.05 a click. As others have said it's very poor quality traffic. I don't sell anything on the site so conversions is not meaningful, but I did not get any lasting traffic from the campaign. Because my site is about beer, it was nice that I could target very specifically (males, 21-35 in california). One thing i noticed is that after you run a paid campaign, you're more likely to get organic stumble upon traffic - I've probably gotten twice the amount organically then I've paid for.

damoncali 14 years ago

Stumbleupon clicks convert at near zero rates. The value, if there is one, is in promoting linkbait. If you can get a genuinely interesting piece of content in front of enough people to attract some links, Stumble can be worth it. But to use it like you would AdWords (i.e. to directly generate sales/leads) is like burning money, only less fun - the CPA is astronomical.

earlyriser 14 years ago

I used it some years ago to bring traffic to trendgal.com and I was disappointed for the quality of the traffic even if it was targeted to our niche. There was a lot of visits but little stickiness. I guess it is based on the web surfer pattern and the tacit promise that maybe there is a cooler site on the next click.

leslynOP 14 years ago

That has been my experience as well... very few conversions but... I'm wrestling with the idea that it is similar to impressions of an ad ... maybe a 'bad' ad?

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