Is StumbleUpon better than Google?

by Mathew on October 23, 2007 · Comments

StumbleUpon — the social app that lets you randomly click your way through the Web, or through a particular subject area, and then vote for the sites you hit — has launched an expansion of its SearchReviews feature, which has actually been around for awhile. As a dedicated user of StumbleUpon (and not just because Garett Camp and his co-founders are Canadian), I’ve been seeing it for some time: when I search in Google, certain links have StumbleUpon logos beside them and a ranking expressed as a number of stars.

There’s more detail on the announcement at TechCrunch, as well as Search Engine Journal and GigaOm, but the post that got me thinking was by Paul Glazowski at Profy. Paul’s point is a good one: When you search, the new StumbleUpon feature gives you the top-ranked sites as voted on by the clicks and rankings of its 3.7 million or so users. In other words, it gives you what the “crowd” thinks is the best site. But doesn’t Google already do this? Isn’t Google’s PageRank algorithm just a similar kind of crowdsourcing model?

If that’s the case, then what’s the benefit of StumbleUpon? I think one significant benefit is that StumbleUpon’s “social search” involves sites that are ranked by people, not by an algorithm; and it sorts them based on the actual votes of actual people, not based on manufactured link-farms that are designed by black-hat SEO artists. In other words, the spam level is virtually zero.

Not that I think Google should be scared of someone like StumbleUpon piggybacking on its results and trying to add value to them. But Jason Calacanis and Mahalo.com might be a little nervous, since people-powered search is their game. Incidentally, as I have mentioned before and others have noticed as well, StumbleUpon routinely drives more traffic than Digg.com.

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  • StumbleUpon is very, very cool... unfortunately, when it comes to search most users are not going to install toolbars or use features like this (at least not today). Same with delicious... very cool for folks in the top 1-3% of the audience, but not very useful for the masses. I think semantic search has the same challenge: folks don't want to fill out a form to get their results. They want to type one or two words into a box and get a big reward.... with Mahalo they get that.

    That being said, folks building Mahalo pages use delicious and stumble upon all the time to find interesting links to include on our pages. I think social bookmarking and editorial search do overlap in terms of themes, but just not for end users.

    best j
  • Mathew
    Thanks for the comment, Jason -- you have a point there. I keep forgetting that I am not the average Web user, nor are most of my friends :-)
  • One of the very interesting things in all of this is that Google actually had a StumbleUpon or sorts in place before StumbleUpon did.

    I think this is one of the few times where Google dropped the ball on the potential of a new service...
  • I think another interesting issue is the recent downgrading of PR based on whether a site sells links or not. I think that makes it unreliable at best. Stumble upon gets us around that. Maybe we need a metric that combines the two...

    Jason: Last time I checked, Mahalo was a social search site. Seems to me that the 3.7 million users of stumbleupon would be your core group of users. And, frankly, you can throw out the bottom 50% of users as they're going to use whatever search engine is convenient. e.g. Google.

    Mathew: we may not be the average web user, but those like us usually make or break many of these companies.
  • Mathew
    That's true, MG -- and didn't Google also launch a sort of randomization-type feature earlier this year that was kind of a Stumble knock-off? I haven't seen much about that since it was announced.
  • Yep, Google Dice back in April - don't know anyone that uses it - certainly not enough to talk about even when it's essentially the same thing as StumbleUpon.
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