February 3, 2012

Get Visitors To Your Old Posts

Get Visitors To Your Old Posts
How many blog posts do you have on your site? If you have hundreds of posts like I do, then you are not getting visitors to all of those posts and this is a real shame. If you find it tough to get visitors to your old posts, then don’t worry because I have a few tricks to get more visitors to your posts without actually building backlinks to them and pushing them up the search engines.

Should you build backlinks to old posts? Yes, this would be the ideal thing to do but if you don’t have the time then there are other things that will work just as well. My advice would be to use BuildMyRank to do this because all you have to do is write a few short articles and then add a link to an older post. Anyway, lets get started with how you can get visitors to your old blog posts.

Repost Your Most Popular Posts

Do you have certain posts that continue to get more and more traffic each month? This is common with a lot of blogs because every once in a while you will write something called a “Pillar post” and these always work to get more backlinks which in turn get more traffic. Am I saying that you need to write more pillar posts? Well, you can but this is something that most people are not capable of doing because these posts require a lot of time and expertise in a lot of fields.

The great thing about reposting your most popular posts is that you can use this time to update that post and add anything new that may not be in it. A lot of bloggers don’t realize that they can do this but if you have a post that people like, then you know they won’t mind getting more out of it sometime in the future. Just make it known that you are reposting an article and there is more content inside because sometimes readers will click off your site the second they see a post they have already read.

Note: If you repost an article make sure you don’t change the URL of it or else you will lose all the links to that older article and the traffic might not be there anymore.

Use Related Post Plugins

There are a lot of related posts plugins that you can use with WordPress so why not use them. This is something that many people do but often times they are not using the plugin the right way. If you are going to be using related post plugins, then you need to make sure that it stands out. I know you may not know much about html or coding and if that is the case, then find somebody that does. Trust me, using a related post plugin that stands out will really make it worth your while.

Share Your Old Posts

Do you have a Facebook or Twitter account? If you don’t, then it is about time that you get them both. If you do have a Facebook and Twitter account, then I would recommend sharing some of your older posts every once in a while. If you are follow PLRInternetMarketing.com on Twitter, then you know I already do this and that is why I get a lot of traffic to some of my older posts. Just know that the more posts you have the more links you will be able to share.

Do you have an email list? If you have a decent sized email list, then maybe they want to see what you have to offer them. A lot of times the people that read your posts are the people that are on your email list so send them an email filled with some of your most visited blog posts of the past few months. I know this might seem weird but it really does work.

Top Ten Posts

Have you ever created or seen a top ten post? These are simply posts that compile a list of the top ten best posts of the month, year or whatever you decide. Sometimes these posts will be the top ten posts of a certain category. What you need to understand is that all that matters in this post is that you will get people to click through to some of your older posts. Being that this is not the type of post that you can create all the time, you should create a plan in order to do it.

There are a lot of things that you can do to get more visitors to your old post but the key is to stick to it. A lot of bloggers will say that they are going to do more to get traffic to their older posts but then they don’t do it. If you are going to try and get more traffic to your posts, then create a plan and see it through.

One other thing that I want to leave you with that isn’t a secret or anything is to just interlink to your older posts in your new articles. This is something that a lot of A-list bloggers do really well and if you can take a page out of their book, then I would recommend this to be it.

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Chasing Online Traffic And No Down Line to Show For It

Chasing Online Traffic And No Down Line to Show For It

As a network marketer who wants to build an online presence to grow your business, are you chasing traffic with no results, no matter what you have tried?

Buying another on line prospecting system or webinar or another ebook  about some social media attraction trick, and then adapting it to your network marketing business, with no results, did you expect this?

So far, is it any easier or more effective than simply building your business with traditional, offline, MLM marketing techniques? It doesn’t seem that the promise of online marketing matches the hype!

Results in network marketing, no matter how you market, means a strong and active down line that provides an ample income for you and your family. It also means that your down line has successfully incorporated the marketing practices that they learned from you and that they are building thriving businesses of their own.

And, there lies the difference between our business and affiliate marketing or other online businesses. Network marketing requires a different approach to building traffic because it requires building a sense of trust and confidence in ourselves as leaders that other online businesses don’t need.

Keep in mind that our business builds for the long term, that we must teach before we earn the extraordinary incomes that can be had in our business, that we only need a few to enjoy those levels of income. And, that can’t be forced, but must be nurtured one recruit at a time.

An online network marketing recruiting site does not need first page rankings on search engines. Stop and think about that for a moment, then read that sentence again. You do not need first page search engine rankings. You only need enough traffic to build your first level of down line business builders. Then, you must teach them to duplicate your work. And, so on.

Affiliate marketers and other online marketers need high rankings because they have very little, to no, opportunities for repeat business, so they must constantly churn traffic with offers on tens, even hundreds, of squeeze page sites to build contact lists. Then, they market more products to their list, and share them with others to earn their incomes, a few dollars at a time.

This pressure to drive traffic to web sites, this absolute requirement to have first page search engine rankings is what has caused an explosion of offerings of software and “secrets” to bring in more sales, and it is not necessary with an honest, ethical network marketing business.

Yes, traffic is what will bring business builders, but you must build your site to attract the right kind of visitors. And, just as importantly, you must tell them whether they are the right kind of visitor for you!

You must describe the kind of visitor and recruit you want, and you must tell them what kind of leader that you are. That builds the credibility that compels visitors to take the next step, whatever that is for your business.

So, stop chasing traffic and start building a site that brings the kind of entrepreneur that you want to teach. Relax and find other sites that have the kind of visitor you are looking for, and learn from what they are doing.

Use the basic, and safe, SEO methods to build your site for the long term. When you get results, build on them. When you find compatible sites to yours, link to them. When your down line business builders go online, have them link to your site.

So, to stop chasing online traffic that brings no results, figure out what kind of leader you are and show yourself to the online community by using all of the basic tools at your disposal. Your site will be rewarded with visitors who have responded to your leadership and will be eager to learn from  you.

And, finally, keep in mind that a good network marketing business only needs a very small number of active business builders who are eager to have what you have!

About the Author

 

Ken Duggan is dedicated to offering secure, entrepreneurial career alternatives for motivated people. Create a financially secure, abundant and healthier life for yourself and your family by building a network marketing business rapidly, using the most effective online marketing strategies available. Visit my site, now, to learn more!

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Is your Blog in Alignment?

Blog Alignment

One of the very first things I did when I launched this site, even before writing my first post was to set out the goals and successes that I wanted to achieve with my site. Now if I asked you right now what’s the most important goal you’d like to achieve with your site, you’d have some answers ready to go, but the only problem is you can only have one most important goal.

It’s important to list out the goals for your blog starting with the most important and moving down toward the lesser goals. Once you have this list you can then take a look at your blog from an outsider’s perspective and see whether or not your blog is aligned to its full potential with those goals.

Here’s an example for a new blog starting out:

Priorities –

1.       Generate Traffic

2.       Build up opt in subscribers

3.       Gather 2000 fans, followers etc. to social network

4.       Will make enough money to cover the blogs costs

Notice that making money comes last? It’s important to build up a few other aspects of your blog before going after people’s hard earned money. As a blog grows, the goals will change and adapt. You may find that you excel at building up subscribers and are able to move it down the list while still maintaining a favourable growth in that area.

Now since in this case the number one goal is to generate traffic, you are going to want to have your awesome content above the fold on your homepage, and easily accessible to visitors. Perhaps you’ll have a listing of your most popular posts in the side bar. If something is going to drive more traffic, give it space and allow it to do its job.

Since building an opt in list is this particular blog’s goal you’ll want to have an attractive opt in form with some great and amazing giveaway that can only be found on your site. Not only that, but you’ll most likely want that opt in box to be site wide, and also have some additional help in the form of a light box hover (fade in subscriber box), and perhaps a subscription bar at the top like I’ve implemented recently. The more avenues that lead to a person subscribing, obviously the more subscribers you’ll enjoy.

Building your social network does several things for your blog at once. It gives you additional reach and allows you to find visitors that frequent those networking sites on a regular basis. Remember, just as you can email out to your subscriber list, you can also reach out to those people following you on social networks. If you have 5000 fans on your fan page, you can easily send them a special offer to purchase a copy of your new e-book or video course. The more people you are connected to, the larger the audience you can reach out to, and tap into for either traffic to your latest blog post, or your newest information product.

I’m going to assume you’ve chosen goals that are going to bring you closer to the success you seek, but the part that often gets missed is making sure that those goals are reflected in the message you are sending with your blog. If building a community is the number one goal for you at this time, then make sure you’ve invested in the commenting system that reflects that. Perhaps you’d like to integrate a forum where your readers can interact, and communicate directly with yourself, and each other.

Without looking at your current blog setup, write out what’s most important to you right now at this point in your current situation. Then go back and see if those goals are being reflected to the best of your blogs ability. A blog is a constantly evolving system that grows alongside the blogger!

 

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Traffic from Technorati

traffic from technorati

For those of you who’ve been around the blogging scene for a few years you no doubt saw the rise and fall of the blog ranking website Technorati. Most had all but given up hope, as the results went from bad to worse, to showing no value whatsoever and saw low quality sites ranking well and high quality sites ranking nowhere. That is… until recently.

Over the last few months there seems to have been some changes over there, and once again the results seem to becoming more reliable and they are actually sending some valuable traffic again.

In the last 25 days Technorati has sent me over 120 visitors to my blog of which I’m glad to then invest the effort into converting them each into long term readers, and perhaps a fan or follower as well.

The key to building traffic is not only to focus on the largest sources like Google, Twitter, Facebook and the like, but to also analyze the smaller trickles and see if you can then turn those into streams, or even rivers of traffic. If I could add even one additional, cumulative visitor each day, I’d consider my blog a success.

The way you go about generating 2000 + visitors a day is simply by adding one to one, and providing those visitors with value so they return again and again.

If you’re going to play the ranking game with Technorati, it isn’t all about the number of sites linking to you (as it used to be). Lately they are taking more variables into consideration when assigning a rank to your blog. Now while even this new method isn’t infallible, it is a much greater improvement over the last few years.

Some of the metrics they seem to be looking at are:

-          Links from other blogs

-          The growth with which those links are taking place

-          The frequency with which you post

-          Various other “secret” variables

The ranking system gives your blog a rank from 1 to 1000 with 1000 being the highest you could achieve and 1 seeming to mean you are being punished for something as I’ve seen some high profile blogs down there including John Chow’s which is easily one of the most popular “make money online” type blogs with tons of valuable content.

One thing I will mention as I think it might be the reason for my own site’s decline in their rankings. I recently watched as my blog climbed the ranks to the number 436 spot including #60 in the “small business blog” category, and after an issue with my RSS feed (it wasn’t updating) my rankings plummeted to 387 during the same week which could mean that posting frequency has a fair bit of influence. I believe I have my feed fixed now, so will make a point of leaving a comment if the number increases again after a few days of consistent posting, so stay tuned!

Technorati is simply one more avenue with which to promote your blog, help with branding, and if all goes well pull a small portion of their traffic away from them to your own blog. The more venues and mediums that you can find and use to help spread your message the more likely you are to experience the success you seek with your site.

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Blog or Business

Blog

When you’re first starting out in the world of blogging it can be confusing as to whether or not you should be treating it like a mere blog, or something more that could potentially someday make you some money, or perhaps even replace your offline income altogether as mine has, thus allowing me the freedom that comes from working from home, and owning my own business!

If you happen to be fine with keeping it strictly as a creative outlet where you can express yourself and you have no intention of adding in ads like Google’s AdSense, or banners or anything of that nature, and you really don’t care if anyone other than yourself reads it then by all means treat it as a blog.

If on the other hand you’d actually like have the posts you write read by as many people as possible, and you might one day like to have this exciting hobby of yours start contributing to your income then you should start out early on treating it as you would any other business, with goals, plans, budgets, and clear ideas about what it is you are trying to achieve with it.

While the decision to treat your blog like a business should be started at the very beginning in order to maximize the effect on all aspect of your blog from the domain name choice and theme topic, it is really never too late in the process to start. By making a conscious decision to treat it as you would any other business you are effectively telling yourself you are going to take it more seriously.

Here are some things you can do to start treating it like a business and get yourself rolling in the right direction, don’t worry you’ll add to this list as you and your blog grows into something of its own. We all have similar but different lists because we all want different things where our blog is concerned and we all bring different skills to the table. Build on your strengths, develop the skills you’d love to have, and outsource the ones that you couldn’t be bothered with, or have no aptitude for. Just because I’m bad at coding html or php doesn’t mean I can’t find and use someone whose passion happens to be coding websites.

Passion for your Topic

The very first thing you should have, and I’m assuming you do so I won’t spend much time on it, is passion for the topic you are looking to write about. Hopefully it is something you bore the relatives with during the holiday meal because you just can’t seem to stop talking about it, and the excitement you feel comes out in your voice. It is this passion that you will tap into when things are tough, progress slows down, or halts all together, and you wonder what you were thinking in 6 months when you realize you still only have 100 readers coming to visit on a daily basis. Passion is an amazing revitalizer, and is great to have on your side.

A Clear Focus

You need to set out exactly what it is you wish to achieve with this blog of yours. By having a clear set of ideas in hand in the beginning, you’ll know just where it is you are trying to go with this blog business of yours. You’ll need a clear focus before you move onto the next one.

A Roadmap or Checklist

Ok so you know what it is you want, and where you’d like to see your blog in five years, now what? Well we need to map out the steps you need to take in order to get you there. If you said you want 1000 visitors a day reading what you write then you know you need to focus on traffic generating techniques each and every day alongside of writing that great content you intend to write. This will quickly branch out into other areas as you’ll soon see, such as developing a social network, and setting up a Facebook fan page, or Twitter profile in order to capitalize on the traffic they can send. Your roadmap will be long and daunting to look at, and in the beginning it will seem impossible and overwhelming. Don’t worry though, with each step you take forward you’ll be one closer to your goal, and you’ll soon realize that it isn’t arriving at the end result that is the best part, but the journey along the way.

Tracking Methods

I don’t know too many businesses that don’t bother to track progress on the different metrics they’ve deemed important to their business. If traffic is important to you (as I’m sure it is) then programs like Google Analytics are a great help, but you’ll need to dig deeper, and take a look at where and why these visitors are coming to your site in order for you to tweak and improve it in order to make that 1000 visitor goal you set out for yourself.  Tracking keeps you focused on what’s important and allows you to see if you are making progress, stalling out, or perhaps slipping behind and need to redouble your efforts, or perhaps explore new options regarding that particular method.

I recommend using a calendar to track when you need to enter your tracking data. It generally isn’t hard, but is often forgotten or left to slide. Adding it to your calendar will help keep you on track, and also make you more productive at the same time!

Separate your Income and Expenses

Most people don’t see the need for this in the beginning because the blog either isn’t bringing anything in, or it has such low expenses it doesn’t warrant the time needed to keep track of. Nonsense! It takes very little time, and gives you an accurate reading on what your business is costing (or making) you in a day, week, month, or year, and goes a long way toward making you feel like this is an actual business rather than just a hobby to be financed out of your back pocket. While some people will go as far as opening a separate business account specifically for their blog you don’t have to go quite that far (unless you want to) and can easily add $1000.00 into the running of your business, and track the results that way.

This also focuses your attention on the income streams that are most profitable to you and perhaps warrant a little extra attention in order to provide you a 3% return over a 2% return which can be huge at the end of the year. I personally recommend diversifying your income into at least five or six streams, and preferably into ten or twelve in case anything ever happened. People were making killings off of single websites until Google made a simple change in their algorithm that dropped their traffic, and hence their earnings down to zero. Those people were left scrambling to find a new method of earning money while they had to then learn a new way to drive traffic, and make money online.

Here are some example income streams for you to focus on. Now depending on your chosen theme, or topic these may or may not fit, but they should give you an idea of what you can expect.

Advertising

If your blog receives traffic then you can make money with advertising other people’s products and services to the people visiting your blog. If you have higher traffic levels this can result in this being your primary source of income as it is for many of the top blogs out there. Also if your blog is quite specialized you might be able to fetch a higher than normal price based on that fact alone. If you blog about the Bugatti Veyron (a high end car) then chances are you’ll be able to ask a higher price of a local Bugatti dealer looking to advertise on your site than if you were discussing something more common such as 4×4’s or pickup trucks!

Affiliate Income

Affiliate marketing is where you earn money for promoting someone else’s product or service. This is different than advertising in that you will seek out products and services that fit in with the topic of your blog, and also have an affiliate program in place. Then you can promote those products or services to your visitors, e-mail list, Fan page members etc. in exchange for a commission on the sale. Affiliate marketing is great because it allows you to choose the very best products from the very biggest names in any industry without having to create the product yourself, or even build the relationship for that matter.

Affiliate Income (as a vendor)

Having your own product goes a long way toward establishing yourself as an expert in your field and allows you to showcase your knowledge while also making a profit. Even better if it’s a product you can sell through an affiliate network. Digital products such as e-books, software, audio recordings, and video courses work extremely well, but can be just about anything you can think of.

If I have a $20 dollar product and I sell one a day then I can make $600.00 a month. If however I have 5 affiliates selling one a day at a 60% commission (leaving me 40% or $8.00) then I’m able to make double that. If I want to increase my sales it is now a simple matter of adding more affiliates to my network, or by adding more products for them to sell for me!

E-Mail Marketing

You’ve heard people talking about the money being in the list for a long time now, and it’s because it’s true. Having a group of people who are interested in the topic you write about and promote is more valuable than you can believe. One of the hardest things in business is to acquire the customer in the first place, and having a pool of people that you can access whenever you want will go a long way toward the profitability of your blog/ business. Growing your list and developing a relationship with them should be something that you start right from the beginning. I personally use Aweber and love their service and will be a customer for life!

Here is a special discount if you’d like to sign up. (Affiliate link)

www.plrinternetmarketing.com/aweber

Selling a Service

If you have a specific talent that you can market to your peers, or others who might be interested then this will probably be one of the quickest sources of income you’ll experience. You can literally hang out your shingle this morning, and be working this afternoon if you try hard enough, and there are enough people needing your service. Say you are a better writer than marketers, perhaps offering to write quality articles at a discounted price for other people would be a great place to start. People are always looking for quality writers. Even if you haven’t yet developed your writing skills to the point you feel you’d like to start selling them you could offer a blog commenting service or something similar where you go out and write relevant, quality comments for blog owners on blogs within their industry using their website as the backlink. I know I don’t have time to do as much blog commenting as I should, and I’m sure there are millions of others out there!

These are just a few sources of income and there are many more out there waiting for you to implement them, and develop them into being profitable. Even the one’s listed above can be broken down further. There are thousands of affiliate programs out there with even more products. Instead of focusing on finding just one or two to promote, you could develop ten or twelve of these into their own separate income stream sources.

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Driving Traffic to your blog

Blog Traffic

Whether you write simply for pleasure of having your words read by appreciating people, or to attract people to a cause you promote, or because you earn part or all of your living from your website, one thing you need is always going to be traffic. Traffic is the life blood of any online business, and preferably the kind of traffic that converts.

There are dozens of ways you can go about attracting people to your website or blog, and it should be seen as more of an ongoing process than a “do it once and forget it” type of deal. By developing a continuing strategy geared toward building your traffic levels, then you’ll see consistent growth and once you reach a certain level it will even gain a sort of “critical mass” that helps perpetuate itself.

There are four main sources of traffic that you should be focusing 90% of your efforts on in order to maximize the return on your time investment. Those four are:

1.       Referring Traffic Sources such as you’d get through guest posting, article marketing, blog commenting on popular blogs, links from popular blogs etc.

2.       Search Engine Traffic consists of 60% of all my traffic and I manage to keep it there by applying a consistent SEO strategy which also ties in with my traffic driving strategies, obviously SEO traffic is highly targeted so it converts quite well for me.

3.       Social Network sites Like Twitter, and Facebook should also be part of your traffic generating efforts, and while there are a ton of them out there, I focus on these two, however if you’ve already established a presence in another network then I’d say develop it, and cultivate it.

4.       Feedburner is one you can’t afford to ignore, having a large RSS count isn’t just for looks, and it also serves up your content to a highly targeted, highly interested group of subscribers. Invest some time into increasing the number of subscribers your blog has, and over time as this number grows, so will your traffic.

5.       I know I said four, but this is a bonus method that very few people are utilizing. Affiliate traffic! Affiliates will always be able to send more traffic than you could ever hope to see left to your own methods. It’s a simple matter of math, if you have 1 person working on sending traffic to a site vs. 100 people working on the same task… well the 100 affiliates will most likely win out. By having a product that can be promoted by affiliates you can start recruiting them to your cause in exchange for a portion of the sales proceeds, typically the higher the percentage, the more affiliates you’ll be able to attract, but there are other things you can do to attract them as well. See harnessing the power of affiliates.

Developing traffic isn’t hard; it just takes a consistent application of effort toward a few key sources in order for it to be successful. If you’d like a more in depth look at how you can grow your traffic, and see the actual techniques I used to grow this blogs traffic by well over 1500% Here is a 27% discount page for my popular 78 page e-book “Blog Traffic Tactics” that walks you through traffic generating methods that will have your sites traffic rising steadily in no time!

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Top 10 Blog Killing Mistakes

Some people blog for fun, others for profit, while still others seem to never really get started doing either for some reason. I mean sure, it starts out all fun and exciting, but after a flurry of 30 or 40 posts something seems to happen and the excitement wears off, and the whole idea just sort of fizzles out.

If you’ve fallen prey to this particular situation, perhaps you were making one of these ten mistakes right off the bat, and were setting yourself up for failure. Maybe it isn’t too late to recover, or perhaps you’ll discover that the topic you chose for your blog just wasn’t a good fit for either of you.

1.       People start off by reading a popular blog that’s been online for a few years, and the owner earns his living by working just a couple of hours a day, and that appeals to them, and so they launch a blog with the sole intention of making money blogging. Typically in cases like this they won’t even choose something they are knowledgeable, but rather something they feel will end up being profitable for them.

It’s important to blog about something that is so much a part of you that it can be called nothing other than passion. It’s that topic you could go on about for hours, and that you spend all your free time reading, or learning about. This is the only way you’ll be able to invest the time and effort into producing high quality content that is going to be bringing in visitors for years to come, as well as being linked to by other blogs within your niche. The passion you have for a subject will come out in your writing, and in the things that happen on your blog.

2.       People are unsure of how to choose a posting frequency for their blog, and end up posting either too frequently, and burn themselves out, or start to look at the next post as a chore, or they go the other route and post either too infrequently or sporadically. Visitors to your blog will become “trained” to the posting frequency you post with, and will come to expect a post to be there when it’s supposed to be.

3.       They go with a free blogging site, rather than invest in a domain that can be branded and built upon. If you are starting out with the intention of dropping it, then by all means use something temporary. But if however you plan to be around for a while, invest in a domain and some hosting, and start building as if you’re going to be around forever!

4.       Letting the comments remain empty, or worse they allow spammers to have their way with their blogs. A blog with no comments seems like an empty blog to people, and they are less likely to stick around to find out whether or not you’re a decent writer. It’s just easier to hit that back button, and check out the next blog on the list. Participate in comment groups, try seeding them until they take off, reward your commentators somehow, and just make it attractive for people to leave your comments in the first place. Once you have them coming in, make sure you monitor them, and respond to them in a timely manner. Try emailing some of them to personally thank them for leaving the comment in the first place. I guarantee you the majority of blog owners aren’t doing this, and it will stand out.

5.       They invest 30 second coming up with a blog title. The most important part of your post is the title, and it deserves some thought and consideration. Make it catchy and intriguing to those who see it, and make sure it leaves them wanting for more of whatever it implies.

6.       Writing amazing content and sitting back waiting for the flood of visitors to arrive. Writing high quality blog posts is unfortunately only the beginning of your journey. You need to promote your blog using methods like Social Media, Blog commenting, Article Marketing, SEO, just to name a few. It’s important that you let the world know where to find you in the first place, your killer content can do the rest, and bring them back

7.       Failing to follow up on a post! There’s nothing I hate more than when a blogger writes a post starting out a project, with all these goals in mind and tells you that he will be blogging about the progress, and then just seems to forget that he wrote it. I think perhaps at times the lack of comments convinces new blog owners that nobody is reading what they are writing, so after writing something, they don’t feel a great need to follow up on it.

8.       Bouncing from topic to topic. We discussed the importance of blogging about a topic that you’re passionate about, and sometimes the lack of this results in posts ranging from working out, to dirt bikes, and over to gardening. Now I might be inclined to follow the first two, but I’m out of here when we start talking perennials.  It’s important to have a focused topic for your blog in order to keep the attention of your readers.

9.       Forgetting to proof the post before hitting the publish button. It’s important to not only spell check your article prior to launching it, but also reading it through a couple of times, preferably out loud. This will allow you to catch mistakes that otherwise might go unnoticed. Typically when a blogger lets these posts go live with errors in them, they never again go back to that post, and it remains there for all who stop in to visit, and reflects on you as a blogger.

10.   And the top tenth reason new bloggers kill their blog right out of the gate is trying to monetize it before they have invested the time to grow their traffic. Filling a new blog up with ads and AdSense will only annoy the 8 readers you have, better to focus on building your community of readers before you plan to make money with it.

The bloggers that thrive and flourish are those that learn from the mistakes of not only themselves, but also of others. Spend some time reading about the mistakes the bloggers before you have made, and learn from them. Blogging can be fulfilling and rewarding both personally and financially if done right.

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Timing your Blog Posts

open for business

Some of you have chosen to post to your blogs weekly, others every few days, and still others on a daily basis, but did you ever stop to consider the time that you release your post to go live?

If you take the time to monitor your analytics program then you will notice that there are certain days that receive more traffic than others, and also certain times during the day. If you can publish your posts at the optimal time, or on the optimal day, then you can increase the effectiveness of your blog.

For one thing your bounce rate will start to lower because if someone logs on to read your post for the day, but it isn’t there yet then they are much more likely to click out to another site, or log off all together. By having your post up when they show up, you will keep that persons attention where it should be, on your blog.

Another positive that your blog will experience is a higher return on your social media investment. If a hundred people show up during that optimal time, and there isn’t anything for them to see, they just wander off, but if one hundred people show up and there is a nice juicy post for them to read and enjoy, then they will also be sharing that post with their circle of friends via social media tools like Twitter and Facebook which will in turn drive even more visitors to the post which could result in even more retweets, etc.

Humans have a built in clock as you all know, and we also are creatures of habit, by posting your article at the same time of day, or the same day of the week then your readers will come to rely on that from you, and will be rewarded by showing up at that time with a post. However if you’re all over the map with post times, then they might just be disappointed to find nothing when they show up, which though being subtle will still be a letdown.

If you think of your blog as a business, then think of publishing your post as opening the doors for the day to traffic.

Treating your blog like a business is an important aspect for each of us, and it’s important that we start each day ready for business, publish your post, and do a quick walkthrough of your website to ensure everything is working as it should be. You might think that just because everything was working yesterday, everything would be working properly today, but that just isn’t the case. Hosting companies have issues, there are hackers out there, or it could just be a simple case of a plugin failing on you.
Do a quick run through to ensure you are running smoothly.

After you’ve posted, and done your walk through check on your email accounts, follow up with your social media outlets whether that be responding to people on your Facebook Fan page, or replying to twitter fans out there, simply put, just take care of business!

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What is Bounce Rate?

What is bounce rate

Bounce rate is definitely something you’re going to want to take into consideration when you’re evaluating the analytics for your website or blog. If you’ve installed Google Analytics you will have a screen that looks something like the one below.

Bounce Rate

Now from this graph you can see that they have a bounce rate of 36.6% and people are spending close to three minutes on the site when they arrive which is pretty good. This allows quite a bit of time for you to show your visitors your writing style, the products or services you’re promoting, and maybe even make a sale.

So what is bounce rate? Well typically every visitor to your site will “bounce” or leave your site eventually through various methods, but bounce rate will only take into consideration the visitors who came, and left while only visiting one page. The formula used to calculate bounce rate is:

Bounce Rate = Total Number of Visits Viewing Only One Page / Total Number of Visits

Some will leave through an advertisement that you have displayed on your site, they may simply close the browser window after they finish reading your blog post. Some will arrive via Google after typing in a keyword, or key phrase, that is related to the topic on your page. The more relevant the page is to what they typed into Google, chances are the longer that person will stay. For instance if someone types in “What is bounce rate?” and this article comes up, then hopefully I did a good job in explaining it, and that person will stick around to read the article. If however I mistitled or did a poor job of explaining the concept that person might simply hit the back button and check out one of the other websites that were listed in the search results, which would increase my bounce rate. Obviously If Google sends me 1000 people for that search term, and they all hit the back button and go visit another site, they will not only record the high bounce rate, but will also stop sending me traffic for that search term as well. So it’s important to try and write for your readers and not for Google.

Typically the lower the bounce rate of a site the better, however this may not always be true. MFA sites (made for AdSense) would probably appreciate having a higher bounce rate since the goal for these sites (which I personally dislike) is not to keep your interest, but to get you to click out of the site using one of the Google ads on the page. I personally like seeing a very low bounce rate and will continue to work on my sites to see this number go lower, because this will mean I’ve engaged my audience and kept their interest which in turn means I’m providing them value through my content and hopefully showcased some of the products and services available on my site so that when they are in the frame of mind to make a purchase, it will hopefully be through my site, or my link.

So what is considered a good bounce rate? That will depend entirely on the site in question, I have blogs with bounce rates under 5% and others with 65% and both do quite well in terms of traffic, subscribers, etc. But I also have websites with very little text and a buy it now button at the bottom with bounce rates in the 90’s that is only there to sell a PayPal Donation script www.paypaldonationscript.com and as such does quite well at Its job. This is a zero maintenance website that makes money month in and month out, so while I’m sure I could lower the bounce rate, what would be the purpose?

It’s important to have a clear idea of the goal of the website in order to determine which you’re your bounce rate should be heading. Once you’ve determined that, it is a simple matter of either providing higher quality content, or perhaps more interactive media in order to lower your rate, or perhaps tweaking and improving your sales copy if you’d like to try to convert visitors quicker, or make them take an action that suits your needs. Either way bounce rate is something you should be aware of, as well as keeping an eye on it and the direction it’s heading to ensure that it’s in line with your particular marketing model.

I’ll use PLR Internet Marketing as an example; the bounce rate for this site is up around 67% despite the fact that visitors spend an average of 2 minutes here.  It would be a simple matter for me to lower this number, I could simply take out my fade in popup that new visitors see asking them to optin to my list in exchange for downloading my 79 page eBook that I’m offering. Many people when they see any sort of popup will instantly click out to escape. Now I know this is true, so why do I leave it in there? Because bounce rate isn’t the only thing I’m tracking. I’m also tracking subscribers to this site, and with that subscriber fade in, I have a much higher subscription rate than without it, so it ends up being a personal choice. But it brings into focus the fact that you need a clear idea of what the goal of your website is.

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Content Delivery Networks

Content Delivery Network

Content Delivery Networks or (CDN) are servers that are distributed around the web, with the intent of serving each client from the closest possible server. Whenever your site hits a certain level of traffic and your income can support it. (It can be expensive) you might want to consider relocating your content onto such a network in order to significantly speed up your visitor’s experience.

The difference between the typical hosting solution that most of us employ and a CDN setup is that when your site is situated on a single server, every request coming from around the globe has to travel the distance to your server’s location. In a content delivery network setup, your content is located on many different servers over a much wider geographic area, and whichever server (generally) is closest to the requesting client serves up the content. What this means is that if twenty people request your website, or content from twenty different locations, each could hypothetically receive the data from a different server, typically the one closest to them.

So you can see the implications this would have on the load times a user would experience when visiting your site regardless of time of day, or server load.  I’ve seen sites with load times over thirteen seconds drop down to five seconds or less. Don’t mistake CDN for mirroring a website, which while being a similar concept, is less selective and dynamic in nature.

Content delivery can be especially useful for high traffic events that may occur in your business, such as product launches where the financial stability of your launch could be compromised due to a server meltdown due to high loads and subsequent shutdown.

I priced out some CDN options, and it looks like you can expect to pay about $39.95 for one terabyte, which is 1000 gigabytes. Depending on your usage and the volume of traffic you blog receives, could last you several months or possibly more.

So if your blog is starting to receive a high volume of traffic, or your simply are looking to increase the load time for your visitors, consider taking a look into content delivery networks to see if they might be a good fit for you and your site.

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