Why Many Blog Posts Die Quick… But Some Live Forever

by Ari Herzog on January 20, 2010 · 45 comments

The typical blog post is written, shared, indexed, and quickly forgotten to be replaced by newer blog posts about the same topic or by the same author.

You can cross your fingers all you want in the hopes your best-written piece is shared by more people or indexed by more search engines than in the past, but crossing fingers will not boost a blog post’s value if nobody else believes there is value. For the same reason a video creator can not gauge how many people will view a video before it is created, a blogger can not predict the popularity of a post. While there are ways to resurrect and recycle the majority of old blog posts, there are also the few that survive the above tests and remain actively visited because of a high search engine index rate or limited online information.

Take a look at my most popular blog post article of 2009, for instance, wherein I share screenshots explaining how I hacked a popular Facebook game. As of today, my post on the Bejeweled Blitz game has been shared 59 times on Facebook and 3 times on Twitter, not to mention being the recipient of 23 comments.

The popularity of a blog post goes beyond comments and shares, though; you must also remember the ubiquitous Google, let alone other search engines. Based on a myriad of reasons known collectively as Google Page Rank, if a blog post is viewed so many times and commented and linked to so many more times, Google considers the information timely and valuable — and will continue to rank it high in a keyword’s results page until nobody else clicks on it or comments on it. Since I published the article in July 2009, it’s seen 1-2 comments every month. Google likes it.

Querying a Google Analytics report (that excludes my own visits) on the most popular content viewed between January 18, 2009 and January 19, 2010, the Bejeweled Blitz article is most popular, with 91,018 pageviews across 70,662 unique visitors. In comparison, here’s an image of my top 5 viewed articles over the past year:

Top 2009 content on Google Analytics

Over 95% of those 70,662 visitors entered the page directly from a search engine or a referral link, with Google responsible for 60,869 unique visits. People typed a combination of 9,175 keywords to reach the page. Evident from over a dozen unique visits to the page while I typed this retrospective article, Google continues to share its value with you and your Facebook peers.

I challenge you to write your next blog post from the perspective you are the Internet Newspaper. Write succinctly but clearly. Share a fact, a tidbit, or an image that nobody has seen before — but that everybody wants to see. Think to the future, but write for the present. Most of all, be yourself and write like the passionate scribe you decided to be when you created your first post. Don’t worry about comments or shares. Don’t worry about page rank. When you reach the gold nugget, savor the moment and share with all of us your tips for success.

I don’t know why the Facebook article remains popular. I don’t know why people still view it, for there are surely comparable articles online. I have a hunch, though, for its success, and that is because I likely wrote what I wrote before everyone else wrote what they wrote; and in Google’s eyes, original ideas mean something.

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{ 45 comments… read them below or add one }

Dave Doolin from Website In A Weekend January 20, 2010 at 3:05 AM Twitter: @websiteweekend

You’re on fire, Ari!

I believe at least 2/3 of what I’ve written has long term value, more so before I started building traffic (which is time consuming).

Since I haven’t been at it very long, it remains to be seen whether I’m right or wrong. I have less than 30,000 total hits over 12 months. And nothing that went even remotely viral.
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Ari Herzog January 20, 2010 at 10:21 AM Twitter: @ariherzog

Thanks, Dave. You realize there is a difference between being viral vs popular, right? I’d call the Facebook hack post popular, but not viral. I don’t think people are sharing it with each other, wall posting aside, which would imply a virus.

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John Sullivan January 20, 2010 at 4:04 AM Twitter: @jsinkeywest

I was just going to tweet you real fast and say just that Your On Fire
Look please in the future refrain from writing and thinking about posts like this
this is way to close to unlocking the code
Thanks LOL :)
Scanned over your last few posts Nice work :)
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Ari Herzog January 20, 2010 at 10:22 AM Twitter: @ariherzog

Sorry, no can do, John. I’m about openness and breaking down those walls. I won’t give away all the secrets, for someone’s gotta get paid, but sharing the WHY over the HOW is important.

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Brandon Cox January 20, 2010 at 6:15 AM

This is very interesting. I’ve been kind of amazed at some of my old posts and how they continue to get noticed even though I think they don’t really fit the mold of a timeless post. You point out some good thoughts!
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Ari Herzog January 20, 2010 at 10:23 AM Twitter: @ariherzog

Got some examples of your timeless old posts, Brandon?

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Allan from iWoodpecker January 20, 2010 at 12:10 PM Twitter: @iWoodpecker

Your stats are another evidence that games.. and cheats… are way popular today. But I just don’t get it – why having 50+ facebook shares there are only several tweets of that post?

Do you have that strong facebook audience? :)

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Ari Herzog January 20, 2010 at 3:49 PM Twitter: @ariherzog

When you consider the dominant readers of that post are people finding it from Google, they are then sharing it on their FB walls. If it was an article about Twitter — such as this case study — there’d be a lower FB share count and a higher TW count.

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john from Raleigh Computer Repair January 20, 2010 at 12:23 PM

I have a few Linux Posts, which describe how to make it more accessible, that have had a similar sort of long term success. It really is a nice feeling to look back and see something you wrote a few years ago still going strong.

I think you are right about one of the main factors of your success being that you were one of the first reporters on the Facebook thing(cool post btw.) They say imitation is the most sincere form of flattery, but this doesn’t really hold true on the Internet. Pretty much as soon as you post something, if it is even remotely interesting or original, you will have a lot of people trying to ride your coat tails…

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Ari Herzog January 20, 2010 at 3:50 PM Twitter: @ariherzog

Care to share some of those Linux posts and get some backlinks in the process? ;)

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Sanjay Maharaj January 20, 2010 at 1:36 PM

Good points mentioned, I agree blogs must demonstrate your passion on your topic

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Ari Herzog January 20, 2010 at 3:50 PM Twitter: @ariherzog

Thanks for chiming in. What’s your topical passion?

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Kikolani from Blogging Tips January 20, 2010 at 2:42 PM Twitter: @kikolani

Well, when I go to Google and type “hacking be” the top suggestion is “hacking bejeweled blitz” and your article is #1. The next suggestion is “hacking bejeweled blitz on facebook” and your article is #2. “Hack bejeweled” gets 2,400 searches per month, and your article is #1 for that term. The best one though is “bejeweled blitz” which gets 40,000+ searches per month, and your article is #3. So keyword value wise, your article is gold! Congrats!

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Ari Herzog January 20, 2010 at 3:51 PM Twitter: @ariherzog

Thanks for the research, Kiki.

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tjeisenstadt (Tim Eisenstadt) January 20, 2010 at 3:42 PM

Twitter Comment


Good article on search optimization of your blog: [link to post]

Posted using Chat Catcher

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Thomas January 20, 2010 at 4:47 PM Twitter: @InteractOne

Getting relevant and interesting content for viewers can prove challenging yet it if it is a good post it can age well and garner rank and traffic for your site. Great insight. I’ll be back for sure:)

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Roberto Mazzoni January 20, 2010 at 5:32 PM

It has been refreshing reading your post since it describes very well how I when I write a post or an article: I hope it can be meaningful and popular, but I will never know until I am done and it is out there. And even if one single person likes it and finds it interesting, it was worth writing it. And only by writing constantly with a good heart and a good pen (hopefully) I will eventually hit what you call the gold nugget.

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Ari Herzog January 21, 2010 at 12:48 AM Twitter: @ariherzog

You nailed the takeaway with that one person analogy. All it takes is one person to be a fan of a company even if the person never buys any product, for that person knows other people. That’s why companies should notice the prospects as much as the customers.

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JR from Internet Marketing January 20, 2010 at 5:49 PM Twitter: @imstrategies

Great post Ari, I think that the authority of the blog has huge significance as to long term ranking, especially with Google. If a blog’s authority remains, those old posts will rank for years to come and create ongoing long term traffic.

Also the popularity of a niche plays a role, if you do the requisite keyword research for posts then you can ensure that your content sits in the best possible place in SE’s, many just title their articles with random titles and therefore they are seldom found.

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Ari Herzog January 21, 2010 at 12:49 AM Twitter: @ariherzog

Great points for folks who write for search engines and keywords. Me, I write for you. ;)

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Dennis Edell January 20, 2010 at 5:56 PM Twitter: @DennisEdell

This is one of the reasons I’m launching the new blog blank; all the posts are there, just in draft mode. ;)

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Paul Cornies January 20, 2010 at 6:39 PM Twitter: @quoteflections

I have several perennial posts which browsers visit again and again. They are a blogger’s gold. I wish I knew the exact formula because some of my ‘great’ posts fizzled pretty quick. I suspect it’s triggering the right search words, a niche topic, a topic that everyone is wondering about…

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Mark Dykeman January 20, 2010 at 8:17 PM Twitter: @markdykeman

I like this post, Ari. It seems a bit surprising to me that a Facebook game hack turned out to be so popular, but you never know what will be popular sometimes.

Oh, and belated congratulations on being elected councillor!

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Ari Herzog January 21, 2010 at 12:43 AM Twitter: @ariherzog

Thanks, Mark.

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Dwippy from DoFollow Blog List January 20, 2010 at 8:45 PM

It’s kind of funny that so many people want to hack bejeweled. I guess it just goes to show that you really can’t anticipate what people are going to be interested in.

When you wrote that post did you have ANY clue how popular it would get?

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Ari Herzog January 21, 2010 at 12:41 AM Twitter: @ariherzog

I had an idea it would be popular for a few weeks…

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Glen January 21, 2010 at 12:28 AM

I have a few thoughts on this.
Conventional wisdom is that you look at those stats and decide that you should write more of those types of articles.
This is especially true when you start out and want to build a community. Or raise your page rank.

Sometimes we no something or have an opinion on something, write about it, and really don’t want to continue writing about it.
This appears to be the case with your most popular articles. You aren’t writing a game site..
Does this mean that conventional wisdom may be flawed..

My other thought is that you suggest that we “Share a fact, a tidbit, or an image that nobody has seen before” which sounds like a great idea but then you go and spoil it with ” — but that everybody wants to see.”
That is far to much pressure to put on us..
First I thought ,cool. I’ll take a picture of a gas pump where I live. No one has seen that before.
And then my dream was crushed when I found out people have to want to see the picture..

Other than that I liked your article..

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Ari Herzog January 21, 2010 at 12:38 AM Twitter: @ariherzog

If people didn’t want to see your picture of a gas pump, there wouldn’t be photo sharing sites like Flickr.

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Keith from Need Information January 21, 2010 at 10:46 AM Twitter: @kbloemendaal

I was faced with this once, where I wrote a post that got 4x the traffic as any other. I decided to capitalize on that and write more articles on that topic, and it paid off BIG!
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amymengel January 21, 2010 at 11:26 PM Twitter: @amymengel

My most popular blog post is one I wrote on a regional McDonald’s coffee commercial. I didn’t even think it to be a particularly good post, but thanks to Google, it gets hits daily, even many months later (and even a few comments now and then). People see the commercial and then go searching trying to find it. Somehow my post is one of the first results. It’s interesting, but also in a way discouraging – some of what I think are my best posts are those that seem to languish in pageviews and fall flat. Neither popular nor viral.

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Ari Herzog January 21, 2010 at 11:47 PM Twitter: @ariherzog

Got some examples of older posts you’d like to breathe life into? Find a way to incorporate a link to them in your next comments on different blogs.

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Josh from RV Blue Book January 21, 2010 at 11:31 PM

Interesting. I didn’t know/think that the number of comments a blogpost had affected the importance Google assigns to it. Do you know if this is definitely true? I’d think that you rank high for that keyword because your post title matches what people are searching for.. and maybe you have some links to that post out there too. Then again, you probably know more about SEO than myself. I’m definitely a newbie. Interesting post!

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Ari Herzog January 21, 2010 at 11:49 PM Twitter: @ariherzog

From the perspective of backlinks, comments weigh into the metric. For instance, if someone from CNN linked to your blog with some keyword context, then a search engine would notice the context, index it, and track how often people click and visit your blog from it. If you then comment on CNN’s blog, a relationship is formed.

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Josh from RV Blue Book January 22, 2010 at 8:34 PM

Ok, that makes sense. Thanks for replying!
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Dennis Edell January 22, 2010 at 10:45 AM Twitter: @DennisEdell

Also remember that all comments are more unique content for Google to snack on…they enjoy that. ;)
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Tynan from Movies January 23, 2010 at 12:08 AM

I have written over 400 blog p0sts over the past 5 years, and yet the single biggest traffic generator to my site has been a random blog post I did two years ago about Gerard Butler dealing with fangirls from two years ago. I think the post was linked on a fan site, but now I think it has resulted in a prominent listing in Google Images search for Gerard Butler. The only problem is I don’t really blog that extensively about Gerard Butler (nor do I want to), which means most of that traffic gets bounced.

Could be worse, I supposed
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