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Honeypots
John Battelle calls them "honeypots".
They are blog posts that get indexed high on certain search terms and get a lot of traffic long after they were written.
I've got a bunch of them.
Lately I've been getting a bunch of comments on my Best Rice Krispies Ad post from six months ago. Comments are generally correlated with traffic. So I decided to figure out why I am getting so much traffic to that post these days. One search for rice krispies on Google explained it.
A top link like that for a search term that is relatively popular will bring a lot of traffic. I've had five hits on that post in the past hour from Google. Not all of them are from that same search term, but they are all slight variations on it. Maybe there is something going on with a rice krispies ad that is causing a lot of people to search Google today. Who knows?
According to Google Analytics 43% of my web traffic (not feeds) comes from Google. Here's the chart.
I don't know how much of that is truly search driven. I've seen people find my blog by typing AVC into google or fred wilson into google. I bet at least a third of my google traffic comes from people who don't recall my URL or don't want to be bothered typing it in.
But I bet another third of my google traffic is going into honeypots like the rice krispies ad, the allen iverson post, the neil young post, my high school post (where I am above the high school's own website), and a bunch of others.
I am not sure that I turn many of the people who come to these honeypots into regular readers, but I am sure a few of them come back for more. In any case, I find the search/blog ecosystem fascinating and I think honeypots are an important factor that we should all pay more attention to.
Comments (5) | Posted October 30, 2006 in Venture Capital and Technology
Comments
There is already a description for HoneyPots.
Using this term for two different meanings especially in IT, is going to cause a lot of confusion.
In IT Security, Honeypots are specially configured servers (UNIX, LINUX, Windows) used to capture hacker activity.
Posted by: JEiden | Oct 30, 2006 1:29:09 PM
Do you have old posts that routinely show up in Feedburner's feed stats as well?
Posted by: Rick | Oct 30, 2006 1:54:13 PM
Maybe it's music. It still amazes me how high I rank for "I hear a train coming" - and I didn't even get the lyric right in the title.
Love them Honeypots
Posted by: Mike Sansone | Oct 30, 2006 9:07:50 PM
Amen to that. My Italian slang page is consistently number three in Google results for "Italian slang", and is by an order of magnitude the most popular page on my site. I didn't set out for it to do that, but I'm not complaining...
Posted by: Deirdre' Straughan | Oct 31, 2006 9:29:33 AM
Yeah, I know what you mean. I've got two on my blog... a post on synchronization (300-700 search hits a day) and another one on how to solve a windows bug (70-200 search hits a day).
Posted by: engtech | Nov 7, 2006 5:27:48 PM
A VC


