Is it acceptable to post links to your own blog/site as part of an answer or comment if you have a covered a particular topic in detail and it will assist or answer the question?

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By the way Diago, congrats on the mod status. – Troggy Aug 19 '09 at 14:36
Thanks Troggy. Appreciated. – Diago Aug 19 '09 at 15:23
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Should this form part of the FAQ? – Diago Aug 19 '09 at 15:24

6 Answers

up vote 19 down vote accepted

It is absolutely appropriate when it is on topic, but ideally when you use it to supplement the text in your answer. Actually, on a few occasions I've reversed this and blogged about something because I found it an interesting question (I might talk more about the "journey", and other asides on my blog - where-as the stackoverflow post will cover just the details relevant to the question, with a link to the blog).

But:

  • not as a regular tagline / footer / signature
  • there is a line somewhere when it becomes spam - the extreme case being when every answer you post is just a link to your blog and nothing else; the community will start flagging that as removal
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+1 for the note about supplementing the text in your answer. Ideally, an answer to a question should have an answer in it. – Tracy Probst Aug 19 '09 at 16:12
Mind you, when I notice self linking, I turn the gain on the spam-o-meter up a little. That said, I haven't seem much abuse in answers... – dmckee Aug 19 '09 at 16:22

Absolutely. I do this all the time. Just make sure that the link is genuinely relevant, and post at least a summary of the text in your answer so that it's a useful answer on its own.

(I've a sneaking suspicion this question is a dupe, but a quick search hasn't found one. Maybe someone else will have more luck.)

To me, the litmus test is whether you would have posted the same link even if it wasn't to your site. If so, I see no reason to deny readers useful information just because it's your own content.

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My only caveat would be to avoid posting the link in such a way as to make visiting it required to understand the Q/A. For instance posting a question "I have a problem go here to erad it www.blah.com" would be a problem for me. However posting a question that is a valid question without the link then posting the link to show an example or give more details is a fine idea. – EBGreen Aug 19 '09 at 13:41

As long as your reasoning is sound and you have data to back up your claims, I don't see why this is a problem. Especially if you have a Yegge-length post to link to and you'd like to keep your responses here more concise with a link at the end.

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I've done this, but very rarely (around 2 or 3 times in over 1000 answers). I do think it's acceptable if your previous post is exactly what the question is asking for. I'd still add a summary of information on the site you're posting to (don't just drop a link), so the question is answered without going off site.

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I've done this too. IMHO it's fine to refer to content on your personal blog so long as it is relevant to the question. Certainly not any sigs or the like however.

You could take this as far as going to look for questions that are relevant to something you've written and then throwing in a link with an answer.

Bear in mind though that spurious links on SO won't help you at all with search engines. External links seems to have the ref="nowfollow" attribute added, meaning Google won't follow them or use them in PageRank determination.

All the more reason to make sure what you're posting is relevant.

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Yes, this is ok when it is on topic. There is one thing I noticed recently though. Make sure the question actualy posts a question and some information on this website. There was a question posted a while back that said something like "I have this question posted over here, please take a look and tell me what you think". Obviously, the super mods descended from above and closed the question. The user was asked to post the question, but just left it as a link. So just something to think about. Otherwise, as long as it is relevant to the question, any extra information is useful.

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