Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Uncover If Social Media Signals Factor Into Search Results



I initially heard about Synnd from a pal, and it sounded trulyinteresting. The thought of having the ability to utilize the power of Synnd's 800+ members into voting, social bookmarking and tweeting your submissions appeared like a severally pressing idea. Plus the indisputable fact that everything is bordering on completely automated was another thing that grabbed my attention.Therefore 1 or 2 days back, I took the plunge and joined up for the 14 day trial for $1 offer. In this Synnd review blog, I'm going to chronicle my past experience with using Synnd to work out if it basically works as advertised.

The entire Synnd ecosystem, is reliant on credits. To accrue credits, you have got to spend a while promoting campaigns of other members. You can bookmark their page to a social bookmarking site, vote or comment on their story on Digg, or Retweet one of their tweets. Each action you take makes you one credit. Normally, this could be a moderately time consuming process, but Synnd's internet-based interface makes earning credits fairly straightforward. You do not basically have to log on to each site and enter in all of the needed info. As an alternative you basically just choose a task to finish, and it'll get sent to your Remote Automator which may do the particular task for you.

Synnd comes in two parts : the 1st one is an online application that you log into, to create and maintain a tally of your promotional campaigns. The second is a tiny application called the "remote automator", that you download and install. The remote automator will immediately create accounts and do promotions for other SYNND members, in the background. Simultaneously, all of the other member's remote automators will be doing promotions for you. At least, in theory.

Synnd does have some stringent QC rules, and you cannot just submit anything you need. There are currently 3 different kinds of campaigns you can create in Syndd. A Syndication campaign is content that you need promoted on Digg, Mixx or Reddit. These are sites that permit you to "vote" up content to extend their visibility to their general user-base. You can only promote content that is non-promotional in nature to these sites, as no one wants to use their Digg account for instance to vote up crap content.



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