This article is completely true about traffic driven directly by TechCrunch: lots of users who test, zero retention.<p>That said there's a slightly more interesting effect to being featured on TechCrunch, and that's what I would call "rebounds": other media noticing your startup / project / whatever and talking about it.<p>For instance, one week after Moodstocks Notes (a kind of side project / experiment of our B2B image recognition company) was picked up by TC in 2010 (<a href="http://techcrunch.com/2010/12/10/moodstocks-notes-is-stickybits-without-the-barcodes/" rel="nofollow">http://techcrunch.com/2010/12/10/moodstocks-notes-is-stickyb...</a>) [1] it got featured in Mashable (<a href="http://mashable.com/2010/12/18/moodstocks/" rel="nofollow">http://mashable.com/2010/12/18/moodstocks/</a>). It drove slightly less traffic, but retention was an order of magnitude higher. Smaller, more focused blogs are even better.<p>That being said, even taking all that into account, fighting to get on TC is probably not worth it. In our case we basically got featured because Michael Arrington noticed us at LeWeb and thought what we were doing was cool, so it did not cost us too much effort. The only negative effect it had was to delude us into thinking we could have unexpected B2C success at hand and divert part of our efforts away from our B2B product, but fortunately that didn't last very long ;)<p>[1] Yes, I know, this video is terrible. I still can't figure out what happened...