social media

4 Ways to get More Traffic to Your Blog

There are now literally millions of businesses and individuals in the world blogging, all vying for the eyes of as many readers as they can get.  Many times blogs are set up, a few posts are created and then the blogger or business just sits back and waits for traffic to come pouring in.

Sorry, it doesn’t work that way.

Blogging takes time, commitment and hard work.  But it can be a worthwhile investment and reap great rewards for yourself and your company – if done well.  The question most bloggers (including some of my clients) end up having is  have is, “How can I get more traffic to my blog?”

This is not an exhaustive look at how to get more readers, but here are 4 good ways to get started:

1. Write Great Content

It doesn’t matter how flashy your site looks or if you post 5 articles a day – people read blogs for the content.  Make sure your content is high-quality information that the niche you are writing for cares about and people will come to read it.

Tip: Use Google Analytics to see what pages and posts people are reading the most as well as what keywords they were searching for when they came to your site.  Write more content accordingly.

2. Post Consistently

How often you post is up to you.  But don’t leave your readers guessing if you’ve given up on the blog.  Make it obvious how often your blog is updated and make sure you stick as close as you can to your timeline.

Tip: Future-post!  Prewrite a few great articles, then change the publish date on them to the future (super easy to do with WordPress).  Viola!  You’re already on target for posting consistently in the next few day or weeks.

3. Guest Post

Write somewhere other than on your own blog.  This helps new, more and different readers see what you write about, and if they like your post enough they will click through to see your blog.  Ideally you should guest post on a blog with more visitors than your site has, and with readers that would want to learn about the same general topics that you write about.

Tip: Make sure you read the blog that you are submitting an article to.  Get a feel for the writing style, length, and content.  If you don’t know where to start, try guest posting on blogs you like to read often anyways.

Check out the spike in visitors the day one of my clients guest-posted on a bigger blog.

4. Participate

Blogging is all about sharing information, ideas and opinions.  Make sure your sharing doesn’t stop when you hit Publish.  Engage your audience continually to build a sense of community around your blog.  Reply to comments on your own blog and go comment on other blogs.  Use social media to interact more directly with readers.

Tip: Make sure it is easy to leave comments on your blog.  If the form takes too long to fill out, or if it is obvious the blogger doesn’t respond to comments many people won’t waste their effort.

Some further resources for getting more traffic to your blog:

How to get traffic for your blog by Seth Godin

13.2 Easy Ways to Build a Thriving Blog Community from Men with Pens

9 Things to Do To Make Sure Your Next Blog Post is Read by More than Your Mom at ProBlogger

Advice from the Pros: How Writers Should Use Blogging and Social Media

Recently I gave a workshop at Write on the River, a writers’ conference for North Central Washington.  My presentation was entitled Blogging and Social Media: What Every Writer Should Know.  I spent a lot of time preparing and had lots of great information for the talk, but one of my favorite parts was getting to show the power of social media directly to attendees.

A few days before the conference I had tweeted some of the most helpful and influential people who tweet about blogging and social media for writers.  My basic question to all of them was this, “I’m giving a workshop for writers about blogging and social media – could you give your 140 char. of advice about them?”  I received replies from everyone I tweeted, and all within 24 hours.

Thus one of the most powerful aspects of social media is displayed.  When else in the history could I get on such easy, instant, direct contact with someone who gets the respect and following of tens of thousands of people?

So without further ado, here is advice from the pros: How Writers Should Use Blogging and Social Media:

Ronnie Smith

Ronnie runs writersrelief.com, a great website with lots of tips, hints, and hot leads for submitting and publishing your books, poems, and stories.
@WritersRelief >10,000 followers

Advice? Proofread. Be consistent. Smile. :-) Sounds like a great workshop.


Dana Lynn Smith

Book marketing coach and author of The Savvy Book Marketer Guides at www.SavvyBookMarketer.com.
@bookmarketer > 3,000 followers

Blogging: Combine author blog & website; plan on paper first; keyword optimize; blog 3x/week http://bit.ly/BloggingResources

Social Media: Choose right networks; build effective profile; budget time; write effective updates http://bit.ly/SocialResources


Joanna Penn

Is the author of thecreativepenn.com, offering TONS of advice on writing, blogging, social media and how to get published. Tweets lots of links to great content for writers across the web.
@thecreativepenn >12,000 followers

get a distinctive blog, add great content regularly, be useful, use multimedia, stay in niche, focus hard on 1 social network


Alexandra Levit

Business/workplace author and speaker with 5 pubbed books and 2 syndicated columns. Featured in New York Times, USA Today, National Public Radio, ABC News, Fox News, CNBC, the Associated Press, Glamour, Cosmopolitan, and Fortune.
@alevit > 34,000 followers

Set aside an hour a day for blogging and social media.  Otherwise they will eat up time surreptitiously.


Leo Babauta

Started ZenHabits.net, one of the best blogs ever (in my opinion) and WriteToDone.com, a blog to help writers improve their craft and their art. He’s a true poster-child for noname-to-stardom blogging. With his great content he got over 100,000 readers of his blog in less than 2 years. He’s also published multiple books from his blog.
@zen_habits > 42,000 followers

Writing advice: Say less, choose carefully, clear distractions. And it’s all distractions, if it’s not writing.

Have more advice for writers using blogging and social media? Give it below in the comments and be sure to leave your social media links.