Theater Hopper
About Links Store Contact Thorum

Posts Tagged ‘StumbleUpon’

4 items.

WANNA BE MY STUMBLE BUDDY?

September 14th, 2007 | by Tom
Posted In: Blog

Does anyone out there have a StumbleUpon account? Do you want to be on my friends list? It should would be nice if you did.

Here’s the URL to my StumbleUpon account page:

http://tombrazelton.stumbleupon.com/

Let’s be friends!

└ Tags: Friends, StumbleUpon
[ No Comments ]

Related Posts ¬

    Mar 5, 2009LAYOUT QUESTION
    Jun 3, 2003THE WORLD IS CHANGING ALL AROUND US
    Jun 3, 2009THE SOCIAL BOOKMARKS

POPULAR BY-PROXY

January 27th, 2009 | by Tom
Posted In: Blog

It’s probably not good form that I’m talking about Theater Hopper’s site traffic with you, but I thought this was a funny story that you might enjoy.

Last night when I got home from work, I settled down at the kitchen table and was checking the site’s traffic while Henry was eating dinner. Looking at my logs, traffic to the site was on par with an average Monday. Refreshing the logs a little later, I saw an insane jump in the number of hits. About half of Monday’s traffic gathered in the time span of about 15 minutes.

I was checking my referrals to see where the traffic was coming from, but using my real-time counter, could only see they were coming from StumbleUpon. I couldn’t see where on my site they were landing.

A Henry finished eating, I folded up my laptop content to wait for Google Analytics to pull the landing page information once it had time to log the traffic a few hours later (Google Analytics runs on a delay).

I gave Henry a bath, put him to bed and left to get a haircut (while Cami was still at home) before coming back to check on the traffic logs. I logged in to Google Analytics and saw that it had been populated with the new data. I checked on Traffic Sources, I went to Referring Sites, I identified StumbleUpon and I filtered the results by landing page.

What was the comic everyone was going so crazy about? This one. A guess strip by Clay and Hampton Yount of Rob and Elliott from 4 years ago.

You probably found this story underwhelming. Imagine how I feel!

In all seriousness, though – Rob and Elliott is an excellent comic and their guest strip from 2005 is actually one of my favorites. If people are checking it out, all the better. Because that means not only are they visiting the site and boosting my numbers, but they’re seeing that link back to Rob and Elliot and hopefully checking out more of Clay and Hampton’s stuff, too.

I’ll just be damned if I can figure out exactly how StumbleUpon works!

└ Tags: Clay Yount, guest comic, Hampton Yount, popularity, Rob and Elliott, StumbleUpon
[ No Comments ]

Related Posts ¬

    Dec 9, 2003BEFORE I TOTALLY FORGET…
    Jun 29, 2005LJ FEED REMINDER & GUEST COMIC REQUEST

LAYOUT QUESTION

March 5th, 2009 | by Tom
Posted In: Blog

I have a design question for you guys.

Where do you think would be the most prominent place for me to put a StumbleUpon button? I’m thinking of removing the one I have now and putting it even closer to the comic navigation.

Bonus question: If the StumbleUpon button goes closer to the comic navigation, where should the site bookmarking tool go? You know, the one that keeps your place if you’re combing through the archives.

Leave your thoughts in the comments below!

└ Tags: layout, placement, social bookmarking, StumbleUpon
[ 3 Comments ]

Related Posts ¬

    Jan 18, 2010REDDIT
    Feb 11, 2008DUGG-GONE IT!
    Feb 24, 2006NEW AD SCHEME
    Sep 14, 2007WANNA BE MY STUMBLE BUDDY?
    Jan 27, 2009POPULAR BY-PROXY

THE SOCIAL BOOKMARKS

June 3rd, 2009 | by Tom
Posted In: Blog

I just wanted to collect some feedback on something site-related I’m toying with.

Under the comic, there is a link to the ShareThis! application that, on rollover, reveals dozens of links to different social bookmarking sites.

The other day I stumbled onto the Sociable plugin and really liked the way that it displayed the icons of the social bookmarking sites I choose.

My main problem with their plugin is the coding. Specifically the CSS. I want to put text around it to kind of explain what all these little images are doing there (“Bookmark this comic!”) but the way the code is written, it won’t let me.

At this point, I’m afraid I’m overthinking it.

So let me as you this: Does there need to be any text on the page explaining what those icons are for? Twitter, StumbleUpon, Reddit and the like? Or is it safe to assume that if people see those icons and the like the comic enough to bookmark it, they will?

I’m trying to get a sense of how you guys use these social bookmarking plugins (if it all) because I want to make it as easy for you as possible to help share Theater Hopper with others.

Right now I have a sneaking suspicion that the ShareThis! plugin I’m currently using is forcing you to jump through hoops by clicking on the link, then hunting for the social bookmarking service you want versus seeing the icon for that service front and center, clicking on it and getting it done.

What do you think? I could really use your perspective.

└ Tags: feedback, Reddit, ShareThis, Sociable, social bookmarking, StumbleUpon, Twitter
[ 5 Comments ]

Related Posts ¬

    Mar 19, 2010COMMUNITY BUILDING
    Feb 12, 2007DESIGN FEEDBACK
    Feb 22, 2009OSCAR LIVE-BLOGGING
    Sep 29, 2009NEW TWITTER BACKGROUND

Archives

    Tweets by @tombrazelton
    • The Comic
    • The Author
    • The Cast
    • Supporting
      Theater Hopper
    • Press
    • Ranked Comics
    • Year Three Backers
    Enter your email address:

    Delivered by FeedBurner

    Tag Cloud

    Adam Sandler advertising announcement auction Ben Affleck buzzComix Charlie Christmas costume death dream dress up DVD fire first appearance Guest Strip Halloween help Hollywood Iron Man Iron Man 2 Jimmy Joe and Monkey Joe Dunn Nothing Nice to Say Oscar Oscars Pixar podcast punch review Robert Downey Jr. Shia LaBeouf Spider-Man store theater The Triple Feature Top Web Comics trailer Truman Victor vote voting Wizard World Chicago Zach Miller
    HOME | ABOUT | LINKS | STORE | CONTACT | TOP RATED
    THEATER HOPPER by Tom Brazelton - The internet's longest running movie-themed webcomic. Updating every Monday, Wednesday and Friday since 2002. All content © Tom Brazelton, Theater Hopper Inc. 2002 - 2009 unless otherwise noted. Please seek author's permission before reproduction. // Privacy Policy

    Integrated by Frumph |Powered by WordPress with ComicPress |Subscribe: RSS