I know that putting a link to your blog in a signature is frowned upon and rightly so.

Is it okay to link to your blog in an answer if that blog post answers the question? Are there other situations where it would be acceptable to promote your own web site in a question or answer?

Related: Are you allowed to link to your blog post?

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duplicate of meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/20553/… – Sam Hasler Nov 18 '08 at 17:27
possible duplicate of How do I properly write an answer that references my blog? – Kate Gregory Dec 5 '11 at 14:40

migrated from stackoverflow.com Sep 5 '09 at 14:07

13 Answers

up vote 28 down vote accepted

I do that all the time, and no-one's ever complained. So long as the link is to a page which is relevant to the question, I don't see what's wrong with it.

If I've already spent hours writing up the answer as an article (usually a long time before even seeing the question), why would I want to do the same again here?

To counter the possibility of someone suggesting that the content should be copied:

  • In some cases there may be formatting etc which just doesn't fit well in SO.
  • Formatting a large article can take a long time, and it's just a waste if the information is elsewhere already. I'd rather answer another question.
  • A massive article would also dwarf other answers and be somewhat intimidating to other people, I suspect.
  • Having multiple copies of an article around means that they're likely to get stale - if someone suggests a better way of explaining things, I like to only have to edit one page.

I do try not to plug my book too often though - at least not the chapters which aren't freely available. I'm happy to give a plug as an extra bit of information, but an answer of just "Buy my book and read chapter 4" would be pretty rude, IMO.

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You were one of the people I was thinking of when I thought that this might be a good idea to allow. – Bill the Lizard Nov 18 '08 at 14:10
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LOL. There are lots of people putting a lot of time and effort into blog posts. I don't see how getting interested and relevant eyeballs on those posts can be a bad thing. – Jon Skeet Nov 18 '08 at 14:13
+1: If it answers the question, it isn't SPAM, is it? Links to references seem to be encouraged, and I see little difference. – Ken Gentle Nov 18 '08 at 14:33
I agree. I've done a few (though not many) links to my own posts when relevant. I've gotten downvoted once for it, and the other time believe I was actually upvoted a couple times. (Would have to look.) As long as it's (a) relevant and (b) correct, I see no harm in it. – John Rudy Nov 18 '08 at 14:41
It's ok if the people copy the code over here. The reason I think it's I agree that it's better to have only one place the source but no one can edit and it will end that SO will only be a "link proxy". – Daok Nov 18 '08 at 14:55
@Daok: I think there's little risk that SO will consist solely of links. There are plenty of questions which aren't readily answered by existing articles (or where explaining the answer is quicker than finding a link). – Jon Skeet Nov 18 '08 at 15:00
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And when your blog goes away, or is disrupted due to service issues, then those answers can simply rot, right? If you're posting a link, please at least give a succinct answer here so that when, not if, the URLs change or go away then the answer is still useful and valid. You don't have to copy it all in, reformat it, etc. – Adam Davis Mar 2 '10 at 13:56
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Precious few answers require a 5 page treatise to get to the point. Say, "Here's the answer, blah, blah, blah, and if you need to understand the why, check out myblog.com/42 " - it should be 15 seconds to cut and paste the relevant answer paragraph and make a link, or up to a minute to summarize the conclusion and make a link. – Adam Davis Mar 2 '10 at 14:02
However, I understand that sometimes you might have to decide whether to answer at all with a quick 5 second link to ephemeral material, or not answer at all - in which case please do answer. I hope eventually someone else comes along and fixes the post later, or that your site is archived by archive.org, but the immediate, quick fix is very useful and an important part of SO. – Adam Davis Mar 2 '10 at 14:04
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I do usually provide a succinct summary - but often a link is "For more details, see ..." – Jon Skeet Mar 2 '10 at 14:54
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Yeah... but you're Jon Skeet. – snicker Mar 2 '10 at 16:46
I believe it would serve the community to actively encourage reading of your book. – surfasb Feb 17 at 21:36

For the answer to that question, check out my blog post "Is blogspam ever okay?"

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I'm now trying to work out whether or not I'm disappointed that it wasn't a Rickroll... – Jon Skeet Nov 18 '08 at 17:29
hahah. man. i so should have done that instead. – CodingWithoutComments Nov 18 '08 at 19:20
i just cannot stop laughigh about this answer :) awesome ^^ recursion as a joke is just even more funny! – Joachim Kerschbaumer Dec 15 '08 at 23:01

Well your blog might be less permanent than StackOverflow.

An answer which is written on a blog and linked to is a useless answer if the blog is unavailable when someone later finds the question and follows the link

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Another fine point. Maybe a summary here to answer the question, followed by a link to more background information would be appropriate? – Bill the Lizard Nov 18 '08 at 14:14
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Don't forget the reverse is true too: the question may be less permanent than your blog, given that the questioner could delete it. If you've spent hours writing an answer (and no, I haven't done this specifically for an SO question yet) wouldn't you rather have that content under your own control? – Jon Skeet Nov 18 '08 at 14:17

I'm a bit late to the party, but everyone commenting in favor of linking to blog posts seems to be a person who actually has a blog and links to it. In my opinion, SO is supposed to be like Bowser's castle in world 8: the answer is here, not in another castle.

I think an appropriate guideline for SO would be analogous to Wikipedia: links to supporting references are acceptable and welcome, but the meat of the answer, as it were, should be found on SO.

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If its actual content you wrote, I'd say its okay. If its a post that contains little more than a link to somebody else's work, I say leave your blogspammy links at home.

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Excellent point. I'd definitely prefer a link to the original source in that case, too. – Bill the Lizard Nov 18 '08 at 14:11
Ditto. The one exception I'd make is if there are lots of relevant articles, and you've already collected them, possibly summarised them, got rid of the cruft etc. The key question is: does the page provide extra value? – Jon Skeet Nov 18 '08 at 14:14

Since we link to outside blogs when answering questions fairly frequently, it doesn't seem unreasonable to link to your own if that's where the best answer is.

The question is whether you'll be tempted to link to your own blog when the post you're linking to is only tangentially related to the question, or only marginally useful. You might justifiably be slammed in rep if either is the case. And since it's your blog, your judgment of whether it is the "best" information available may be skewed.

For questions, the same logic applies, but you have to be even more careful that your question is welcome. The onus is on you, and so far it's seemed that questions are held to a higher standard than answers (since they're far more visible).

So, proceed with caution.

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That's where voting comes in - if others deem it not "best", it will not be voted-up. – warren Nov 18 '08 at 14:14
Exactly - the great thing about SO is that this is a judgement call on an individual post basis, and voting is applied in the same way. – Jon Skeet Nov 18 '08 at 14:15

Obviously if you have already explained an answer, no use copying it over here. A link is definitely appropriate in that case. I'm not sure of other cases where it would be acceptable. While there probably are some, I would assume they are few and far between.

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It would simply be a misnomer to call a relevant link / answer to a question "Blogspam", regardless of whos blog it is on.

The problem as I see it is random links that don't have anything to do with the question--

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I think that the info should be cut/paste into the answer for many of the reasons given above. The largest being that the fact that your blog may move. Broken links are one of the biggest issues I have with the web. That said, I think it's quite reasonable to include the link to the original source as well as the cut/paste.

As far as the no blog links in the signature. I don't get that at all. It just doesn't make any sense at all to me. The signature is your own little tiny personal space on their bigger space. It's there to tell a quick blurb about yourself. What better way than through your blog link?

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By "signature", I meant leaving a link to your blog in every question and answer you post on StackOverflow. Having a link in your profile is perfectly acceptable (encouraged, even). – Bill the Lizard Nov 18 '08 at 14:54
related question stackoverflow.com/questions/277128/… – Steven A. Lowe Nov 18 '08 at 15:43

I think the appropriate course of action is to copy/paste the relevant info from your blog. I however wouldn't be opposed to someone linking back to their blog for additional info

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Ironically, I just found this question via Bill's blog.

If the link is relevant then it doesn't matter who wrote the content. If I link to Jeff's blog that's OK, but if I link to my blog it's not OK unless I copy-and-paste the content? That doesn't sound right.

Copy-and-pasting is OK for short answers, but for longer answers a link is probably better (perhaps with a sentence or two explaining what you are linking to).

If you think that your blog article is relevant, include a link. If the community disagrees they will give you the down votes that you so richly deserve. As others have pointed out, this scenario doesn't really qualify as blogspam (unless you are linking to articles about how to get viagra from Canadian pharmacies).

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We can put the website in our user info, that should be enough. Not only that you pollute the design with exterior content.

edit: The question is about links in the signature. Normally that is a link just to the site, not the solution in specific. So if its a link directly to the solution I dont have any problems with it.

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So should we cut and paste all MSDN info as well? All JavaDoc? Redundancy is a bad thing, IMO. The web was made for linking. – Jon Skeet Nov 18 '08 at 14:10
+1 for Jon and for linking – BoboTheCodeMonkey Nov 18 '08 at 14:13
Technical documentation is a primary source. Personal blog content is much closer to opinion pieces. Not that I'm picking sides in this argument but we can't treat all pages on the internet as equal. This question is specifically about personal blogs. – Gareth Nov 18 '08 at 14:31
Many blog entries go into significant technical detail in an objective way, often giving more information than the official documentation. I do take your point though. – Jon Skeet Nov 18 '08 at 14:52
blogspam + signature reminds me of those signatures seen in many forums that waste half the page height with crap. Links to specific solutions Im all for it. What Jon does I dont consider spam. Far from it. He should link to his book when relevant, Its a good book. – Artur Carvalho Nov 21 '08 at 8:40

I do not believe it's necessary to put your name OR a website link in SO in an answer. If someone want to visit the website of the people that has answered than it should go to the profile of the person.

I have already edit post (wiki) that people was written "Best Regard XYZ" with a link at XYZ to an other website... shouldn't be accepted. The only exception is if you Reference to your own blog or other website. Than you should put "Reference : Website ZYX"

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I don't feel it's necessary for SO to make money from my posts either. This is such a small issue in comparison. If people are willing to donate useful answers to SO, including a useful general link in their signature should be allowed. – Peter Ritchie May 30 '10 at 17:45

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