Last week I discovered the power of StumbleUpon. While StumbleUpon has been around for nearly two decades, it was never on my radar. Recently, I heard about it through Twitter and became curious. A little more searching got me thinking about how others use it and if I could use it to get my content in front of people. Many people rave about how much traffic it drives. Others seemed to describe it more like a sugar rush. In the end, I decided to try it out myself and get an idea of its value. So I went over to the help center with two questions: How does it work; and can I use it? Will it get The Modern Father to the top of the world? Read on to find out.
StumbleUpon setup
In order to use StumbleUpon, you need to set up an account. Thankfully, the Help Center has a nice New User Guide to help you out. I started off with the mobile app, since I was at lunch when I decided to try it out. I have an Android phone, but if you navigate to it in your phone or tablet browser, you’ll be presented with a landing page that will take you to the appropriate app store to download.
I haven’t tried to use it on the phone browser by going to a direct link, so it might be an app-only option. The nice part is that the app works pretty well, though in a slightly more limited way than the desktop site.
Stumbling isn’t just from drinking
In StumbleUpon language, Stumbling is the main activity. Stumbling will present a page that matches your interets. These pages were submitted by others, and then liked by one or more people. It displays the page like it was from the site, though with the StumbleUpon toolbar across the top (or bottom in the app). If you like it, click the thumbs up. This adds it to your Likes, and if you have followers, it will be injected into their own Stumbles.
If it was okay but not something of interest, you can either Stumble again, or give it a thumbs down. The thumbs down, per StumbleUpon, isn’t a downvote like you find on Reddit or Digg. It’s a way to tailor your experience. There are a number of reasons to thumbs down something. On the desktop, the thumbs down give you options as to why you are doing it. If you just are tired of seeing a specific interest or domain, enough thumbs down will reduce it’s likelihood of appearing in the future. But you can also report a site for technical reasons, being in the wrong interest, etc. These are all in a dropdown from the thumb down icon on the desktop.
For the app, you need to “Report an Issue” and then select the reason, which makes it different from the thumbs down. Some claim that enough thumbs downs will bury a page and make it nearly impossible to Stumble into. This seems contrary to the stated purpose from StumbleUpon, which is more like a thumbs down on Pandora. It just makes similar content less likely to appear in the future.
Putting it to work
The be clear, StumbleUpon is not a promotional tool. The stated aim of the platform is similar to Reddit or Digg: allowing users a way to share content they find interesting. The method is different, however. StumbleUpon is a little more random. Content from years ago can be resurfaced as new users Stumble into it and like it. And each time something is liked, it becomes more likely for it to be put in front of another Stumbler through followers and the algorithm.
Once you have your account and have stumbled through a few pages to get a feel for how it works, you can try to add your own pages.
After repeatedly looking at both the Terms & Conditions as well as the more readable article at the Help Center, here’s my two cents: Both the Ts & Cs and the article make it clear that non-commercial self-posting is okay, as long as it’s not the only thing you do. Non-commercial is defined as pages that don’t sell a specific service or product. So if you have a landscaping company, an Etsy page, or something else, you can’t post those. If you have regular articles that might be of interest that don’t promote a specific product or service, you should be fine.
Keep in mind, however, that StumbleUpon may prevent you from adding pages from a specific domain. If you have a site on the Blogspot domain, you’re out of luck. If you find that pages from your domain aren’t being added from your account, it’s likely because you aren’t sharing a variety of content. The solution is to use the service as intended and help spread the word about other interests you have. That means Stumbling and liking already submitted pages, adding pages from others, etc.
To add a page, grab the URL then head over to your account. If using the apps, you go into the menu and select Add a Page. Toss in the URL, enter a description, the check the box if it’s not-safe-for-work (things you wouldn’t want to Stumble into while at the office). If using a browser on a desktop, there is an Add a Page option when you go to My Profile. You get a few more options there, as you can give it an interest and then add a number of tags. The tags can be important as it helps further categorize the page and put them in front of interested Stumblers.
How it did
When I added a few articles, I did notice a huge uptick in traffic… for an hour or so. Then it trended back to normal levels. However, that jump was noticeable, and the articles that ended up with likes had much more sustained traffic. The downside is that if the likes dry up, you’ll end up getting only a small amount of traffic each day from StumbleUpon. At this point, I have about a dozen articles added. If I were to do it all over, I would probably spend more time building out a portfolio of likes and contributions so that I could attract followers. That way, when I added my own pages, they would have a wider audience that was already more likely to enjoy my content.
In short, it’s not a huge effort, it’s actually a fun way to find interesting content, and it’s another avenue for promoting content from other bloggers you don’t think is getting the attention it deserves. As a way to drive traffic to your site… the results are mixed. It doesn’t seem very sticky. You get a huge rush of views, but unless the content is liked, it’s going to disappear and only be seen occasionally. My most liked content does still see a few random views each day, but it blends into the general traffic for the site.
Going forward
I’m thinking about other ways to use this tool, besides for fun. If you build up enough of a following or find enough like-minded Stumblers, you can probably get some critical mass behind content to get it rolling on its own. But by yourself, it takes a very special or viral piece of content to get enough likes to rack up the thousands of views some people claim. So overall, StumbleUpon is just another tool, though it’s not as involved as others. It’s fire-and-forget, then let the whims of the internet determine where it goes.
Liberty on the Lighter Side - (LoLS) says
Very helpful post – thanks, I learnt some new things. I recently grabbed the StumbleUpon bull by the proverbial horns and finally decided to try and figure it all out. I’m still learning and like you had a huge spike on the first day, it was a real sugar rush as you say! Since then I have a smaller spike every time I post a new piece, I’ve found that the posts that have done well are ones that are how-to pieces or have an artsy slant to them. SU is one of my main referrers at the moment which helps my stats but I’m not sure how effective it is at actually driving engaged traffic to one’s site. Nevertheless the raise in figures was helpful I think for a recent bid I did to work for a company so that counts for something. I have to say I also find it a very absorbing platform, so many amazing articles on there! #ThatFridayLinky
Liberty on the Lighter Side - (LoLS) says
ps, feel free to delete this comment but just thought to let you know, I tried to follow you on StumbleUpon via your social media icons above under ‘Follow us’ but it came through with an ‘oops’ message from their site. you might need to check that the link is not broken or something?
Eric Olson says
Thanks for the heads up. I recently changed my “name” at SU and I assumed it would redirect. It’s all fixed now.
Balaka says
I was just thinking about trying StubleUpon when I stumbled upon your post. Your post proved helpful. I am surely going to try it. Thanks for the post.
Michele Morin says
This looks really interesting, and you’ve given such good directions that I don’t feel as if I have the option of ignoring the challenge to try this.
Thank you!
The Shed of the Father says
I love my tech and social media so SU is definitely one I’m going to try and use to promote my blog. I only have a few foloowefo so far so branching out in another direction can only be good. Great post and thanks for the info.
#globalblogging
Navigating Baby says
Thanks that info. I am just starting to use stumble upon so it was very helpful. #lrgtstumbleupon
Karen Dennis says
I have never understood stumbleupon, so reading this has been really helpful #dreamteam@_karendennis
Lucy At Home says
This was really interesting. I signed up for StumbleUpon ages ago, added 1 post which got no traction whatsoever and never went back! Hahaha. But, reading this, it’s probably because I was approaching it all wrong. I am always skeptical of people who say things like “I got 10,000 views with this one simple step” – it’s a load of rubbish! So I really liked your honest analysis and it’s great to see that it does actually bring in views. I may need to revisit SU again… #blogcrush
Nita says
I use stumbleupon, but never really saw how it could help with traffic and to be honest, was losing interest in it. After reading your post, you have really explained it clearly and maybe I’ll just hang in there and give it another go! #DreamTeam
Musings of a tired mummy...zzz... says
I was into StumbleUpon a few months ago but I felt like I wasn’t using it effectively: I think I’ll give it another go! I had no idea it had been around for so long… Thanks for linking up with #globalblogging
Annette, 3 Little Buttons says
I’m new to StumbleUpon too and so far, so good. I’m not sure that I’ve really sussed it out though, but I do love having a giggle over some of the posts that pop up in my feed. Thanks for sharing with the #DreamTeam 🙂
mini human resources says
This is great and really helpful! I’m going to be looking into this now as I have noticed a few refers coming from there lately (I didn’t even know my site was added to it?!) #blogcrush
passion fruit, paws and peonies says
I want to use stumbleupon more wisely. I’ve added content and shared others for a year or so but I am not growing in followers. You’ve reminded me that it’s worth learning more. Thanks x
Tracey Bowden says
Stumbleupon is something I have used effectively in the past but keep forgetting to be consistent as I was never sure if I was doing it right. I keep meaning to go back to it but after reading this I have a better idea of what to do now, thanks #blogcrush
Kids of the Wild says
Interesting read and useful to come back to when I’ve got my head round twitter and instagram properly!!
fiveinthehive2018 says
Really helpful, thank you! #BlogCrush
millerinthecity says
I use Stumbleupon – I don’t have much followers but can see that it is driving some traffic to my blog. Thanks for some insight.#blogcrush
Alice Letters to my Daughter says
Very helpful! I have signed up for and started using SU but haven’t paid it much attention to be honest – it’s good to know what’s going on behind the scenes! #BlogCrush
sensationallearning says
Thank you for this helpful post! I’ve recently started using StumbleUpon (though not in any structured way). I suspect the descriptions you add to your articles can make a difference as well, like on Pinterest? I’m glad to see it seems to work similarly for you in regards to traffic, that you can get a sudden boost, but then it dies again almost as suddenly. I guess I’m not doing anything too much wrong then, I was kind of wondering about that… 🙂 #BlogCrush
Lisa Pomerantz says
This is helping me tremendously! TY! #blogcrush xox
Shyam Chathuranga says
Hey, I like your perspective on StumbleUpon. I’ve been reading a couple of articles about SU today and you said a few things others didn’t.
I didn’t knew SU doesn’t allow promotional activities and I’m glad I read your article. It’s better to know this than learning it in a bad way by getting terminated. Sharing our stuffs and other people’s stuffs that we enjoy along with a stumbling period set aside per day seems to be a good and safe way to get traffic as well as find content that makes us happy.