It’s All About The Traffic

No blog survives without traffic. More so, less traffic only means that the content is not that good. However, there are also instances wherein a great blog does not have enough traffic. The key in getting traffic is to come up with a strategy and make everyone notice your blog. There are a few things that you need to consider with regards to generating traffic to your blog and these are not that different from planning a regular Web site.

The only exception is that blogs can generate traffic a lot faster. What you need to consider first is your target audience and where exactly you are generating your blog’s traffic.

The Content

The content of your blog is most important. It is the reason why people visit your blog. Try to make your blog interesting and learn to master the ideas included in your blog. The content should also be relevant and of high value to the audience. Find out what your audience wants and if what you are writing satisfy them.

The content is especially important if you are planning sales from your blog. First, you must become a trust-worthy and credible source of information before people try the product. Blogs are excellent medium for sales since they allow you to connect and converse through the use of the content. You must realize that without a great content, your blog cannot fully achieve power and leverage against others.

In order to gain audience for your content, remember not to publish infrequently. Additionally, do not criticize others if you do not have facts to support your claim and references for those facts. If you criticize, do it in an objective non-personal manner. What you can do is to publish often and make sure that the entry you are about to publish is meaningful and of high-value. Lastly, be yourself to help your audience relate to you but do not reveal any private information.

The Ping

Some bloggers take the extra mile just to ping and do not solely rely on the blog software pings. The blog software pings’ job is to update the servers for the purpose of announcing your content updates. Search engines and blog directories then checks these update servers for the latest updates; this is the reason why your blog’s content gets into search engines quickly.

Pings make blogs excellent search engine optimization tools. There are even instances where it only takes a day before your content gets into search engines. However, your blog’s content will only take hours to a few days to get into most search engines, on average.

When starting a blog, always check the instructions included. There might be a section where you can turn on the blog software ping automatically, which activates on the background. By doing so, whenever you publish content in your blog, it will instantly transmit ping updates.

RSS feeds are also important. Not only will you be able to publish your content within a short duration but also replicate your content through the use of your RSS feed. Nowadays, the flow of your content is real-time and the RSS allows you to show your content to a wider audience.

There are several ways to promote your blog. However, keep in mind that there is no strategy for quick money when it comes to profitable blogging. It requires dedication, time, a strategy for the content and patience before the cash starts flowing in.

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My way of saying “Thank You!”

My Comment Commitment: If you leave an approved comment on any of my posts, I will visit your blog and “share it” in some way whether on StumbleUpon, Twitter or Facebook depending on if I can find a nice fit.

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Originally posted 2009-11-16 21:47:17.

StumbleUpon

I’ve been a fan of StumbleUpon since I gave my first thumbs up in February 2008. At first I didn’t quite understand the concept, but knew what Stumbleupon was doing to my traffic. I actually found StumbleUpon by reviewing my traffic stats and seeing over 1,000 visitors originated from a single stumble. I’ve had several pleasant experiences since then. StumbleUpon is simply an incredible viral means to drive a large amount of traffic to any website over a short period of time with lingering effects that can recharge weeks and months later.

StumbleUpon has such strong potential in maximizing brand exposure and fits nicely into a long term site building strategy.

I’m going to share some personal observations on using StumbleUpon to drive traffic to your website, as well as other strategies you might try in order to retain StumbleUpon visitors while monetizing your website.

What is Stumble Upon?

Stumble Upon is a social website that allows users a different way to experience the Internet. Instead of searching for specific items through classic search engine methods with Google and Yahoo, StumbleUpon users simply need to tag personal or professional interests and then ‘channel surf’ the web by simply clicking on a button located in the StumbleUpon tool bar.

Users will be randomly directed to websites that fall within their listed interests. Users can choose to tag the webpage they are on, give it an additional ‘thumbs up‘ or ‘thumbs down.’

Users can use the StumbleUpon toolbar as a form of social bookmarking. By surfing the web and tagging or submitting specific websites, each user can keep track of which websites they like and share them with others.

Get started with StumbleUpon

Start by installing the toolbar, which is compatible with I.E. and Firefox at StumbleUpon’s website. Once installed, you can check to see if your website is already listed on StumbleUpon. Do this by visiting this page StumbleUpon Website Reviews and typing in your site’s URL.

If your website is not listed, you can start using your newly installed toolbar to tag and review. Simply click on the blue thumbs up symbol located in the upper left of your screen in the StumbleUpon toolbar and has “I like it!” next to it.

This will open a pop-up window that allows you to categorize your website, write a short description and tag with specific keywords. Once you’ve give it a thumbs up, your website will be included in StumbleUpon’s database and will show up when other users with interests similar to your tags use the StumbleUpon toolbar to surf the internet.

Why should You use Stumble Upon?

StumbleUpon is known for generating massive amounts of traffic to a specific webpage or website that’s been stumbled. If you just wrote a great article or created a website that offered interesting or useful content, you’ll want as many eyes on it as possible.

Once your website gets stumbled, it’ll usually begin to receive visitors from all over the world instantly.

What this allows you to do is:

   1. Generate rapid exposure for a specific website.

   2. Establish a reader base for your blog quickly.

   3. Gain backlinks from StumbleUpon visitors with websites.

What type of traffic can You get from StumbleUpon

StumbleUpon is different from a search engine. Search engines offer targeted traffic that matches keyword searches with the content on your blog.

The very nature of StumbleUpon invites exploration of different websites based loosely on tags selected by other users.

My own experience has led me to the following conclusions on traffic from StumbleUpon:

    * Diverse demographics – Visitors from StumbleUpon come from many countries, while a sustained 45% plus comes from North America.

    * Low Adsense or contextual CTR – There’s really  no reason to click on ads when you can simply stumble to the next site within a set topic category.

    * Good web design is important for StumbleUpon visitors. The average time spent on a web page is usually under 10 seconds so stumblers are more like window shoppers then actual readers. Make your storefront more appealing and you might just snag a loyal reader.

    * Fickle RSS subscribers – While my feed subscription does increase when certain posts received a lot of traffic I noticed the unsubscribe rate increases within a week or so of the influx. Whether that has anything to do with the whole stumble process or not, I don’t know. Just an observation.

    * Traffic is long-term – I’m still receiving periodic bursts of traffic for pages that were stumbled several weeks and even months ago.

How can I get repeat visits?

The very nature of channel surfing is to assess with a single glance and determine if the channel is worth watching. StumbleUpon works much the same way. Visitors are people who will evaluate your website instantly and decide to either continue browsing or click ahead to the next channel.

Stumblers are usually attracted to interesting news, appealing design and unique content. Applying all these elements can increase your chances of receiving a thumbs up and repeat visits.

Points to consider for improving the rate of repeat visits

    * Content – Your website should be full of content that cannot be digested in one single visit.

    * Ads – You shouldn’t have too many poorly blended ads. You don’t want to appear amateurish.

    * Site Design – Your website should be visually appealing, with an attractive design.

    * Exclusive on-site materials – Offer offer tools or material that can only be found on your website.

    * Feed/Newsletter Subscription – Prominently ask visitors to subscribe to your blog feed or newsletter for updates.

    * Branding – Provide a memorable branding or an easy to remember URL.

How to use StumbleUpon to increase blog feed/newsletter subscribers

It’s likely that you will experience a mini spike in feed subscription, that could decrease gradually over time. Your goal is to retain these subscribers and make them a part of your reader base and community.

There’s really no definite method that will guarantee success but here are some suggestions that will increase the possibilities of converting StumbleUpon visitors into feed subscribers.

    * Content quality – Only stumble the best content available on your website.

    * Offer email subscriptions – Providing an alternative subscription option can be helpful for different types of visitors.

    * Offer subscriber-only benefits – A classic trick to use if you want to build up your marketing list or feed subscribers. Give away free materials available only to subscribers.

    * Welcome new visitors – You may want to include a welcome message to all stumblers if you notice that your web page is being heavily stumbled. WordPress users can install the What Would Seth Godin do WordPress Plugin which encourages all new visitors to subscribe to your feed.

    * Use signature links – Include links at the end of your post that push for readers to subscribe for updates.

    * Produce great content after stumbles – When you notice a spike in traffic from StumbleUpon, it’s important to take advantage of the opportunity and put out exceptionally great content. Perhaps something similar to what received a large number of stumbles. The topic was appealing once, why not try again?

    * Increase the comments on your blog – A blog with a large community will encourage participation, that motivates readers to return.

    * Host a contest – Everyone loves winning free stuff or money. By offering tangible benefits, you can convert one-time traffic into a continuous stream of repeat visitors.

How many visitors can you expect from Stumble Upon?

An average of 100+ to 8000+ daily unique visitors for a specific web page that is stumbled is fairly standard. I’ve stumbled several posts as an experiment and the best performance was just under 2,000 visitors in a matter of hours.

What determines how much traffic you receive from StumbleUpon?

There are so many factors that could have an impact on the number of visitors you receive.

StumbleUpon doesn’t reveal the traffic algorithm they use so these are just factors I think can positively affect the amount of traffic you receive.

    * Number of StumbleUpon users who thumbed up or tagged your webpage. This the most important factor.

    * Number of users in your network – A wider reach should translate to greater influence when it comes to tagging or thumbing webpages.

    * Number of StumbleUpon friends you have – This seems to increase the authority or strength of your stumbles.

    * Number of profile reviews and thumbs up you currently have might legitimize you as a user.

    * Types of users who tagged or submitted your website. Are they power users with a lot of Stumble authority? That might be a powerful variable in increasing your overall influence.

It’s easy to assume that the easiest way to increase the number of visitors you receive is to increase all of the factors listed above.

Observations following experiments on different websites.

    * You need other StumbleUpon users. The traffic you receive depends on other users submitting and reviewing your website. When other users review or submit a specific post, it generally receives traffic immediately.

    * Self-submission and review does not always lead to SU traffic.

    * Your StumbleUpon profile plays an important role. I’m thinking the number of friends, the range of your network, the number of stumbles you’ve offered and the number of profile reviews you’ve received determines how much stumble authority you have.

    * Broad tagging helps. Try using tags that are more general and less specific. For example, some tags which have worked for me are ‘weblogs‘ , ‘internet‘ and ‘money‘.

The fact that you’re limited to five tags per submitted item suggests that you should use terms that are more general Unique tags may work but my thought is to leave the unique tags and keywords to Google and Yahoo – Stick with generalized tags on SU.

Ways to maximize power of StumbleUpon and increase the traffic

Build your network, personal and site profile.

Network with high profile StumbleUpon users by adding them as your friends list or reviewing their profile. This can help you win a few friends while ehancing your social profile on StumbleUpon.

Stumbling websites that link to you

Let’s take a look at a hypothetical example. Say someone like Shoemoney linked to me yesterday in a post, what I’ll do is visit his website and stumble his post and get other users to do the same.

Thousands of StumbleUpon visitors will visit his blog and read the specific post. They’ll likely visit my blog through the link in his post. The end result is that I’ll eventually get traffic by pushing stumbles towards his website. How sweet is that?

How to monetize StumbleUpon Traffic and make money from it

StumbleUpon visitors are just not that into contextual ads. There are a few other ways you can monetize the massive amount of visitors.

    * CPM advertising – Idiot-proof and easiest way to monetize your website. Get a good banner company that pays you a good CPM rate. Also try private ad arrangements and negotiate specific CPM rates.

    * Use affiliate banners or affiliate text links within content. Cloak the links to improve your CTR – I’m not the greatest at cloacking all my links, but I’m improving. For those links I don’t want to, don’t have time to or can’t cloak, that’s where VigLink comes into play quite nicely!

    * Video advertising – YouTube used to partner with Adsense and Revver, I believe still allows you to put up videos and get paid whenever anyone clicks on ads within the video. Video advertising has changed over the last year or so, but I’m sure there are plenty of offers out there – just find the one that suits you best.

    * Monetized image hosts. Several image hosts allow you to earn money whenever anyone clicks on a thumbnail which leads to the full image on their website. Great for picture intensive sites or blogs. Here’s a list of image hosts that pay.

    * Use subscription based monetization. A good example would be an online magazine, business networking community or forum that offers a premium section for paying members.

    * Buy sponsored stumbles. You can run an advertising campaign with StumbleUpon Paid Discovery and pay as little as 5 cents for every targeted person they send to your website. You can target according to personal interest, history of rating similar sites, location, and demographics such as age and sex. Very useful if you’re focusing on long-term monetization strategies and plan to build a community such as a social networking site or niche forum.

One should also take note of StumbleUpon’s suggestions on content monetization in their advertising FAQ:

Some content doesn’t work well with StumbleUpon. A hard-sell offering little introduction or supporting information will seem out of place to StumbleUpon’s community members. Remember that they’re using the service to find something new, something different. Pages that contain little more than a list of ppc or affiliate links also will not perform well.

Final thoughts

I love StumbleUpon, it’s the easiest way to get hundreds of new visitors who are eager to learn more about your website.

While monetization is something that I am concerned about, I think StumbleUpon works very well as a brand and link building tool. You have the ability to increase exposure across a wide demographic. That in and of itself can help to build online communities or a blog’s reader base.

Remember to stumble the websites or blogs you like because it’s a great way to help them get some much needed exposure.

A little over a year ago I had to start over with a new StumbleUpon account because I didn’t plan ahead when I chose my username. I highly recommend you select one you know will stick with you for a very long time. Starting over stinks.

QUESTION FOR READERS: Have you had a post that has really benefited greatly from StumbleUpon? If so, leave a comment and a link in the comment section below. I’d love to see how diverse some of top posts for my blogger friends are. I’ll even give them a new nudge just for you sharing the link with me.

Follow me on StumbleUpon – I’ll follow back :)

Have fun stumbling!

My Comment Commitment: If you leave a comment on any of my posts, I will visit your blog and “share it” in some way whether on StumbleUpon, Twitter or Facebook depending on if I can find a nice fit. This is my way of saying thank you!

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My way of saying “Thank You!”

My Comment Commitment: If you leave an approved comment on any of my posts, I will visit your blog and “share it” in some way whether on StumbleUpon, Twitter or Facebook depending on if I can find a nice fit.

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blog carnival

Blog Carnival – Blog Communities Publishing Magazines

Is your blog fairly new? Are you wondering why it’s not generating much traffic? Before you start clicking through on those emails you’ve started getting from SEO firms offering increased traffic, first page Google rankings and your blogs weight in gold, you might want to consider a blog carnival. Blog Carnival’s are an excellent, free way to get your posts in front of more readers and it could convert into more links and more loyal followers.

Bloggers, hosts, and other readers will see your post. If it is a quality post, people will want to visit your blog or possibly link back to you from their blog.

The earliest use of Blog carnivals I know of date back to Carnival of the Vanities. The Silflay Hraka blog introduced this tool in September, 2002. When most everything else on the Internet becomes outdated in such a short time, Blog Carnival’s have a proven track record and shelf life as being an effective promotional tool.

As you learn more about carnivals, you may also want to create your own if you are unable to find an existing one that suits your topic.

It’s been ages since I participated in blog carnivals, and with the launch of a couple of micro-niche sites, I am going to be using them again.

I’m going to provide tips to get you started and explain how to promote your carnival. Once you’ve got it up and running, you must learn how to manage your blog carnival. Keep reading to learn how to run it smoothly.

Let’s get started…

A blog carnival consists of a group of blog posts that are focused on a specific theme. You can think of a blog carnival as being somewhat similar to a magazine. It has both a title and topic. Like a magazine, the blog carnival has editors and contributors who to operate it. Finally, it must have an audience who will read the content.

The blog carnival’s organizer starts this event by coming up with the theme, designs what the submission criteria will be, and then solicits for blog submissions that are based on this theme. The blog submissions, or carnival posts, are permalinks to these blogs, which can provide some decent traffic back to the blog, or at the very least provide an all-important backlink back to the original article.

The organizer collects these blog carnival posts, edits and comments on them. The organizer then publishes these posts on the its blog carnival. Carnivals usually have a home page.

The organizer usually schedules guest bloggers to moderate or host each edition. As a result, the blog carnival travels around, popping up on different blogs each time. Blog carnivals are generally published weekly or monthly, and they cover a wide range of topics. There should be no problem finding a carnival that relates to your blog.

Another step to promoting the carnival is groups of bloggers, edition hosts, and readers will visit these particular carnivals. These people, particularly bloggers, will contribute by posting their comments on the carnivals. One thing to keep in mind is that these bloggers tend to be gurus on the topic.

The host then edits and annotates these posts. Readers will read these posts, and if they find them interesting, they will click on the link and come to your blog. Keep in mind, the moderator provides your link and also provides a favorable review or possibly a brief outline about your post.

First thing you will want to do is find the carnivals that focus on the topics that interest you. You can find a list of carnivals by visiting Blog Carnival. However, this is a more time-consuming process, which is why you should definitely consider using a service such as Blog Carnival that is already established and many blog owners already use.

Make sure you read and understand what the blog carnival’s submission guidelines are. Before you submit your post, ask yourself, "is this one that readers will want to read?" You will want to submit your best one. You will also want to submit your post well ahead of the deadline. This will give the carnival host plenty of time to edit, approve, and maybe comment on it. To make it easy for the host who can get upwards of 50 entries, include a description of what your post is about.

After your post has been published, you may choose to provide a link back to the carnival on your blog. Just think of this as  gratitude for the carnival publishing your post. Some hosts may require a backlink, while others don’t really enforce it.

Another advantage to using blog carnivals is that they take part in SEO. This means every blog carnival that you participate in gives you a direct link to one of your posts. So like magic, another backlink pops up to help boost your blog in the SERPs which can get a few direct visitors from the link alone.

Want to be a carnival host?

You can attract a lot of attention this way because, as you have learned, blog carnivals generate a large amount of visitors. If you become a host, you will want to promote your blog, telling people what it’s about. You can use social sites, such as StumbleUpon, Digg, etc., and have each blog carnival participant vote for the carnival on whatever social site you choose to market it. For instance, if you choose to market the carnival, and you have a total of 50 entries in your carnival, tell all 50 blog owners to vote for it. This would give you a minimum of 50 votes and quite possibly enough to get you on the front page!

How to be a blog carnival participant

You’ve decided you want to participate in a blog carnival. The first thing you want to do is locate the blog carnival’s home page. You will then contact its owner and get your name on the list. The process varies depending upon the blog carnival site.

Make sure to submit your best posts to any blog carnival. Blog carnival hosts are known to stop accepting your submissions if the quality is not there. You’ll receive much better traffic to your blog if you submit your best work. I’ve used blog carnivals to promote different blogs at different times and I’ve never been turned down by a carnival host because I only submit my best work because I keep one thought in mind – It’s not about quantity of visitors, it’s about the quality visitors that will hang out, read and actually comment on my work.

Deadlines: If the blog carnival is supposed to be published tomorrow or next week, make sure you get your post submitted as quickly as possible. Even days ahead is fine. If you fail to follow instructions, the blog carnival owner will probably not publish your submission.

Participating in blog carnivals takes time. But it’s not so much time that I would completely disregard participation. It’s simply taking work that you’ve already written and submitting it. When I’m active in carnivals, I usually place the carnival in my online calendar for both the date of publication and the date I want to make sure to submit my entry by.

Have you participated in blog carnivals? What’s been your experience?

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My way of saying “Thank You!”

My Comment Commitment: If you leave an approved comment on any of my posts, I will visit your blog and “share it” in some way whether on StumbleUpon, Twitter or Facebook depending on if I can find a nice fit.

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