How to Grow Traffic to Your Blog

Vintage photography: at work

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Of all topics, this is one of the perennials. People want more traffic, more attention, more awareness to their blog. It’s fair. We work hard on our blogs. We want more attention and traffic. If your business depends on volume, this is especially important (for instance, if you’re using ads). Getting traffic is a tricky business, and it requires a lot of experimentation. I’ll tell you what’s worked for me, so far, and I’ll tell you what you might try. Maybe others will educate us both in the comments on their best methods.

Great Titles Help

The first few seconds of someone’s attention are the hardest to pass. If you have a lame blog post title, no one’s going to want to read the post. For whatever reason, we react to “how to,” we react to “7 great,” we react to all kinds of things. Not sure where to look? I stole this advice from Brian Clark years ago: go to the grocery store, buy some ladies’ magazines like Cosmopolitan, and learn how THEY write headlines on the front page.

Graphics Don’t Hurt

This entire series (and most of my blog posts) use graphics to catch your eye. It’s an easy way to get one’s attention. Screen captures help. Video helps. There are tons of ways to get people into a receptive space with your material, and graphics are just the easiest one.

Now that we’ve got a decent title, decent graphics, let’s be quick about your content.

Brevity Is the Game

Keep your posts brief (unless you want tons and tons of bookmarks). People don’t have all day to read. If you can keep your posts between 250-500 words, that’s in alignment with most people’s attention spans. Hey, you’re welcome to write whatever length you want. You asked me how to grow traffic to your blog. I can only give you results that I’ve tested. When I write a super long piece, I get much less involvement with it.

Share Your Blog

I’ve written about making shareability a priority. If you don’t have easy-to-share buttons on your blog, you’re missing the easiest way for people to see your stuff on Facebook, on LinkedIn, on Twitter, and all the other sites where it would matter. Sharing out is a great way to make some more traffic happen. I also automatically push my posts into Facebook with their notes feature. I have an automated post into twitter via @broganmedia, but don’t do this same effect on my primary @chrisbrogan account.

Subscriptions or No?

In my case, subscriptions to my blog matter. I want people to subscribe, because I don’t necessarily survive on ad revenue. If you’re trying to monetize via ad revenue, and if your ads are in the header and the sidebar, a subscription really won’t help you get more traffic. If for whatever reason you want people to come to your website directly instead of via your RSS feed, you might want to obfuscate where you put your subscription information.

If you’re like me, you ask for the subscription all the time. In fact, I’ll ask now. You’re not yet subscribed? Enter your email (I respect your privacy):

Enter your email address:

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Guest Posts

Over in the Third Tribe, we talk about guest posts (affiliate link to a guide) quite often as a great traffic-builder to your blog. Find someone who has a very similar kind of blog topic to yours (not sure where to start? Check out Alltop), and offer a guest blog post. Oh, and then actually follow through. I have heard recently from my friends who accept guest posts that often, people ask for something, get approval, and then don’t take an action. That doesn’t sound like a good plan. Just FYI.

Consistency

This is one of those points where people disagree. I blog daily. Truth be told, I’m up to 2x a day most days. Why? Because the more I blog, the more people subscribe. I learned it from some of the larger blogger sites out there.

Lots of people justify once a week, or once every two weeks. That’s fine. But if you want to grow traffic to your blog, that’s a very long slow crawl towards that growth. That said, no matter which frequency you’ve chosen, stick to it. The moment you drop off the map, people who haven’t yet subscribed to you lose sight and move on.

Market Your Blog

You can always market your blog the good old fashioned way. I’ve had people hand me business cards at events that had a compelling question or interesting graphic, and then a URL to their blog. More often than not, I’ll at least check out the post. You might make postcards and bring them to the places where your prospective readers might congregate. For instance, if you write a restaurant blog, why not have a business card tray by the mints? Make an offer, just like you do with any other kind of marketing.

Often times, we sit around inside the fishbowl of social media and hope people from outside will find us. Here’s a hint, hero: the people you need are out there wondering what they can do to learn more about the thing you’re talking about. Go get ‘em, tiger.

How Do You Grow Traffic To Your Blog?

I’m a big fan of the basics: write about what they need, make sure they see that you wrote about it, make it easy to carry on the relationship, make it easy for them to promote you to others.

Seems like a simple formula, and yet, we go through all kinds of hoops to come up with trickier methods. Try this one first. What do you say?

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  • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

    You’re right. If you can add some value to the comments section, people will want to click back through and see more about you. Of course, your name doesn’t have a URL attached to it. : (

  • http://twitter.com/peterlamb peterlamb

    Chris-
    I have your blog coming up daily. Ok I don’t read every word. But there you are every time I open Google. Since I am an observer of those who are successful at this Blogging stuff, what you say counts in my book. And this article here is pure gold. And it was free. Thank you.

  • Anonymous

    Everything that you are detailing here makes a lot of sense and I have begun to take action on most of these points. I am a new blogger with a restaurant management blog that is graphically represented with daily 3×5 index card posts. How do I get the search engines to find my blog?

  • http://www.socialcubix.com/services/facebook-connect Facebook Connect Integration

    Well, it also depends on your readers/admirers, how much they understand you and your work! :)
    I read your post, it was really exciting to see how you merged the subject of marketing with your kitty and I never felt that I was reading about a pet. It was just another useful marketing post which I read daily! :)

    Cheers
    -Desmond!

  • http://www.socialcubix.com/services/facebook-connect Facebook Connect Integration

    Simple, You ever heard the term S.E.O. ? :)

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  • http://hubpages.com/profile/dame+scribe Gin

    I have found by writing with answering the why, what, etc. draft in point form helps me write content in the under 1K format. I will also add a free ebook related to my content. Great tips!

  • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan
  • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

    Here’s one way to afford me – http://thirdtribemarketing.com

  • http://www.webhostinglogic.com/web-marketing/web-marketing-home.html Seo Guru

    What you had mentioned are the ones that is on your blog or how to get traffic based on your content. That is only 50 percent of the work you have to do to have that traffic. Your content will be useless if no one get to read it. Promoting your blog gets the other half of the work.

  • http://kommein.com Deb Ng

    Many of the comments here feature advice that is just as valid and valuable as the post itself.

    Rock on.

  • http://www.thedesktopanalyst.com The Desktop Analyst

    Checking it out now. Thanks for the tip. And if you ever need your desktop analyzed, just click my name.

  • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

    That’s when I know I’ve done it right. : ) I’m learning right along with everyone else.

  • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

    Happy to be there, Peter. : )

  • http://www.aronetworking.com Kelly-AROnetworking

    Yep. I see my Disqus profile was not complete. I always thought it was. Oy vey! Thanks for pointing that out. It has been corrected.

  • http://www.carfocus.info Peter Abatan

    I’ll add patience also. Building a widely popular blog does not happen overnight. You can implement all that Chris has mentioned in this blog and you do not get the massive traffic you expect. It takes a lot of experiments to build that traffic.

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  • http://twitter.com/gschaadt Geoff Schaadt

    It’s not content that is king – it’s relevance.

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  • http://heathero.com HeatherO

    Great points!!! I would note that every now and then if it is a really compelling post you CAN go longer. I recently wrote a post that I just couldn’t make any shorter w/o diluting the content IMO (although I tried!). I finally decided to let it go, and got MORE comments and feedback than I usually do. I guess it’s all in the topic, relevance, etc.
    Just my 2cents :)

  • http://heathero.com HeatherO

    Great points!!! I would note that every now and then if it is a really compelling post you CAN go longer. I recently wrote a post that I just couldn’t make any shorter w/o diluting the content IMO (although I tried!). I finally decided to let it go, and got MORE comments and feedback than I usually do. I guess it’s all in the topic, relevance, etc.
    Just my 2cents :)

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  • http://www.consulting-reif.de Alexander Reif

    Great! Thanks for this great post!

  • http://www.consulting-reif.de Alexander Reif

    Great! Thanks for this

  • http://www.ianbrodie.com ianbrodie

    I’m in two minds about the “keep the posts short” advice Chris.

    I guess my point is that I don’t just want traffic and readers – I want the “right” readers (in my case, ones who could become potential clients).

    The demographics of my target audience are a bit older, a bit better educated, and a bit more senior in their work roles than the norm. I figure these folks can live with the occassional longer post as long as it adds value.

    And conversely, I figure that if someone can’t sit through a 1,000 word post then they’re probably not a good reader/potential client for me.

    Ian

    • Polemicus

      Ian, your points are valid. I have found that older readers tend to be willing to sit through a long article but brevity has more to do with personality types than age. The real difference is between print vs an electronic article.

      Brevity is not a commentary on intelligence as as mush as necessity. Assuming you are a business owner, you know there are seldom enough hours in a day to accomplish everything. I think this is the point Chris tried to convey.

    • Polemicus

      Ian, your points are valid. I have found that older readers tend to be willing to sit through a long article but brevity has more to do with personality types than age. The real difference is between print vs an electronic article.

      Brevity is not a commentary on intelligence as as mush as necessity. Assuming you are a business owner, you know there are seldom enough hours in a day to accomplish everything. I think this is the point Chris tried to convey.

    • Polemicus

      Ian, your points are valid. I have found that older readers tend to be willing to sit through a long article but brevity has more to do with personality types than age. The real difference is between print vs an electronic article.

      Brevity is not a commentary on intelligence as as mush as necessity. Assuming you are a business owner, you know there are seldom enough hours in a day to accomplish everything. I think this is the point Chris tried to convey.

      • http://www.ianbrodie.com ianbrodie

        Yes – I believe that may be the case Polemicus. And, of course, we spend less time reading online than off.

        I realise business owners – all of us – are short of time. All I’m saying is that it’s by no means a given that people won’t read a longish article – if it’s useful enough. I credit my readers with a bit of intelligence and a bit of staying power.

        Ian

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      Quite interesting. So your prospective clients are being tested by you by seeing if they have enough time to read all the information you give them?

      • http://www.ianbrodie.com ianbrodie

        That’s hardly the intention Chris.

        What I meant was not about whether they had the time to read a longish article, but whether they had the attention span. I just credit my potential clients with an attention span long enough to read more than a few hundred words.

        And I believe that if an article is useful, people will make the time.

        Yes, of course, we’re all pushed for time. But I read long articles online – if they’ve got valuable information in them. I believe my clients are the same.

        Are you really saying that you never read long articles, or that busy people don’t? Of course we do – the key question is whether the article merits attention, not whether it’s long or short.

        I make no claims as to whether my own articles actually merit attention. Just that it’s perfectly possible.

        Ian

  • http://www.ianbrodie.com ianbrodie

    I’m in two minds about the “keep the posts short” advice Chris.

    I guess my point is that I don’t just want traffic and readers – I want the “right” readers (in my case, ones who could become potential clients).

    The demographics of my target audience are a bit older, a bit better educated, and a bit more senior in their work roles than the norm. I figure these folks can live with the occassional longer post as long as it adds value.

    And conversely, I figure that if someone can’t sit through a 1,000 word post then they’re probably not a good reader/potential client for me.

    Ian

  • http://motivatory.com Richard Chidike | Motivatory

    “Great Titles Help” I can’t help but agree with this point becuase if your titlle looks silly no one will never bother looking at your post and as such you will lose that traffic to your blog.

    So, pay attention to your blog tile.

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  • http://twitter.com/mubarti mb’ti

    nice blog..
    visit me..

  • http://twitter.com/mubarti mb’ti

    nice blog..
    visit me…

  • Anonymous

    I get 2 blogs via RSS. Yours and Seth Godin’s. In the RSS environment seems the title may be the most important angle. Getting a new email each morning with all of my other Google Alerts that are coming in can cause some of your posts to get “lost” if you will. I also wonder why you don’t leverage a Business Page in Facebook?

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      A business page in Facebook means that fewer people are coming to my home base to interact with me here. I use the LIKE button on every post for people to have the opportunity to share things INTO facebook, but I don’t really want to spend time and effort building and maintaining an outpost on Facebook, when I want all the action to resolve here, and then for people to take their newfound knowledge and do something with it.

      • http://www.findallanswers.com Jane@Find All Answers

        This is what I exactly felt when I was thinking of building a Facebook page for my blog. I was not sure if I was right or wrong, since there are so many FB pages around that promote blogs. Somehow I haven’t found the point of FB pages. Thanks Chris for making it clear, so yes I am right.

  • Anonymous

    Makes sense but would your advice be the same to those of us with smaller/less established tribes?

  • Anonymous

    Makes sense but would your advice be the same to those of us with smaller/less established tribes?

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  • http://www.blackfridayplanet.com/ William Hushburn

    I think your advice is not applicable for me.

  • http://www.blackfridayplanet.com/ William Hushburn

    I think your advice is not applicable for me.

  • http://websitetrafficz.com WebsiteTrafficz

    This is a great article..

  • http://matthewm.org Matt Medeiros

    Guest post on my blog will ya? :)

  • http://matthewm.org Matt Medeiros

    Guest post on my blog will ya? :)

  • http://matthewm.org Matt Medeiros

    Guest post on my blog will ya? :)

  • http://matthewm.org Matt Medeiros

    Guest post on my blog will ya? :)

  • http://twitter.com/AshkanTalk Ashkan Parsa

    Good article for people who just started blogging. For me the only piece of information that I found useful was you sharing your experience about how the more you blog the more subscribers you get. Quantity seem to really matter a lot. we also do at least 1 to 2 posts a day at iPhoneAppCafe and I can really see the search engine visibility growing on weekly basis.

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  • http://contentsgeek.com Donald Arinze

    A good read.

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