The Four Smartest Ways to Spiral Your Website Traffic
By Cari Haus
People
are paying pretty significant dollars for website traffic these
days. Pay-per-click charges of $1-10 are not uncommon for top
search terms. Multiply that by the 300 unique visitors per day
that my log furniture website gets, and you are talking at least
$300 per day, or $9,000 per month—depending on how many days are
in the month.
“There Must Be Some Easier Way”
While pay-per-click may be a
good business model for your website, there’s nothing like free
traffic to lay the foundation. My log furniture site used to get
100 unique visitors per day before it started fetching in 200,
and now 300 on an average basis. The personal goal here is 1,000
unique daily visitors—but 10,000 would also be welcomed!
Following are some of the best
ways we have found to grow website traffic:
#1: Website Optimization
A local business magazine
recently ran an article calling SEO (search engine optimization)
the equivalent of “hocus-pocus”. The author of the article, who
apparently worked for an SEO firm, described optimization as a
somewhat “shady” activity that’s impossible to get a handle on.
I say “Baloney!”
SEO is not pseudo-science. It
is a very tangible and real way to increase website traffic. If
you haven’t taken care of the basics—e.g. making sure your
website has a relevant title, focuses on the right keywords,
avoids practices that are disdained by the search engines, etc.,
you can be sure that, once found, your website will not rank as
highly (or get as much traffic) as it otherwise would. Begin
your traffic-garnering efforts by making sure your website is
up-to-snuff.
#2: Publish Helpful, Relevant
Content
Publishing helpful articles on
the Net with a link back to my log furniture website seems to
result in traffic spikes nearly every time. Notice the emphasis
is on “helpful” articles. There is plenty of useless drivel out
there by people who are being paid $5 to write an article. Not
to insult anyone, but I spend 2-8 hours on the articles I
write—depending on how much research is required and how
technical the article is—and that costs more than $5.
It doesn’t seem to matter what
you write about. My topics so far have included SEO, the
simplicity of Amish life, improving your bottom line, and
understanding Google operators. The key is to make them
relevant, short and helpful.
#3: Add more products to your
website
Our experience has been that
adding more products to the website helps us to come up in the
search engines more often. A person who finds a rustic night
stand at our site might notice that we have log bunk beds.
Somebody who is shopping for an unfinished pine dresser might
not be thinking of rustic furniture at all, stumble across one
our products, like the whole site, and end up furnishing their
cabin. Each product is like a fishing line cast in the sea. The
more well-described bait you have out there—the more “fish” will
bite.
#4: Improve your website
conversion rate
Five years ago, we used to get
one log furniture order for every 100 website visitors. Now it
seems like closer to one order for every 300 unique visitors.
Part of the reason for this, we believe, is that the web has
become more competitive. But we also pay attention to our
conversion rate.
We are in the process of making
a change right now that might really help. Someone pointed out
that when you click on an item to buy it within Miva Merchant’s
standard interface, there is no confirmation that the item has
been added to your shopping basket. This might lead some
customers to believe that the website isn’t working properly.
They might not be savvy enough to check the shopping basket.
They might even leave the site without ordering (perish the
thought!)
These “glitches” can really
hurt website sales. We went to the Miva Merchant site for
third-party modules and found a script that displays the
shopping basket after each item is added. We purchased the
script and install, and are watching to see how it affects
website sales and conversion rate. Our guess is that this will
have a positive impact on sales.
Conclusion
Obviously, there are a lot of
other ways to increase website traffic. The four listed above
are a great place to start. If you’re not into SEO, find
somebody who is. If you are paying hundreds or even thousands of
dollars of month for pay-per-click traffic, it may be wise to
divert enough of those dollars to ensure that your website is
the traffic-snagging, profit-generating machine you intend it to
be.
Copyright 2005 Log Cabin
Rustics
Cari Haus is a CPA
and entrepreneur who has been offering quality log furniture
on her website,
http://www.logcabinrustics.com/
click
for top
or
Home
or back to
Increase Traffic Section |