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The Most Ignored Key To Website Traffic!

My Web Site is Built - So Where's the Traffic and Business? 

Your website is built and sitting pretty. So where are all the people you hoped would come over to play? You need traffic for your site to be effective and to start generating leads. Now that you know that just having a website won't necessarily drive business to you, you should consider the most important thing most people miss in this effort.

Here are the 3 factors that need to be in place for a successful website and successful business. I'll list them from least important too most important:

1. Sound 'on-site' Search Engine Optimization strategies. This refers to the things many consider the most important. There are the basic A-B-C's of getting things set up with keywords and phrases so that you will rank well against your competition in Google, Yahoo and the like. This involves a lot of elements that you, as the end user, may never realize or see. Having the proper titles for each page, putting in the right key words and header tags. There are solid things that should be done and most web designers that I talk to rarely take it beyond this point. Being ranked well by search engines starts here but the best realize this is only the start.

2. Content That Is Effective. Traffic us useless unless they buy something or make contact with you. We call this "Conversion Ratio". What percentage of your website visitors convert into buyers and users of your services? This can and should be measured. The important things here are the attractiveness and professional appearance of the site with content that is compelling. Having the right mix of words, graphics and informational content can take conversion rates from being non-existent to well over 10%. Do this right and your income level can really zing.

Web designers get so many calls from business owners that can only think to ask, "how much do you charge to make me a website?" What they miss is what it will cost them in business profits if it is not done right. Web designers may know how to make a good looking site but not necessarily how to input the words and content for the best effects. Writing compelling content is a very specialized talent. This takes more work and more time to do. It costs more but the difference can be huge on your return on investment.

When you have this part right, the most important part of driving traffic can be taken advantage of. This aspect is where many web developers simply drop off the map in helping clients. If you are shopping price only you won't find this part of the mix. What is it that they miss?

3. Off Site Factors Are Most The Important Factors in Driving Traffic!  What are 'off site factors'? The most important key for ranking well with Google are the links that come to you from other sites that Google considers to be important sites. MSN and Yahoo are important sites. So are Digg.com, Wikipedia.com and WowWebWorks.com. OK, so the last one is more important to me more than Google.

Here is the rub. How can you control whether or not other sites talk about you and link to you? I don't mean calling other site owners and saying something like, "Hey, I'll link to you if you link to me" stuff. Mutual links are not important anymore. One way links are. So how can you get those rolling? Well, this takes work. The nice part is that it is work that will have a direct effect on your bottom line. You have enough "busy work" as a business owner. This isn't busy work; it's vital.

Social-Business Networking Sites - Use Them 

This is where sites like LinkedIn.com, Facebook.com and even MySpace.com come into play. I recommend using LinkedIn.com for business development. From there you can refer to your website and create interest in your site in others. I have a full article of ideas for this elsewhere so I won't elaborate there. For more on this see "Why Bother with 'LinkedIn' or 'Facebook'?" By posting your information and inviting contacts to link in with you can be huge. It's like having a second or third website with positive recommendations about you and your business.

Effective PR Campaigns

This can be the most important foundation for your business success in existence. As our business partners Ray Lohner and Jerry Ogg from E3 Public Relations have drilled into me, most businesses have it all backwards. Here is what they preach for priorities:

Marketing

Wrong!

Many businesses we build websites for already to some advertising with varying degrees of success. They do some advertising yet often don't know how that differs from marketing and ignore PR altogether.

Right! 

It is PR that really sets the table for all the rest to work. Even that is being transformed by the Internet. Every time you have a bit of company news from hiring a new employee to lending support to a local charity it deserves a PR piece. Open a new office? PR. Have a unique solution to a problem? Let the press know - they may just do a story on it.

The idea is that if you get enough good PR working for you it opens doors for marketing and advertising because your company and name are more recognizable and respected. Just knowing who you are can be huge.

What has changed in the PR realm in recent years is the rise of online PR companies that will take your electronic releases and send them as feeds to news services nationwide. An example is www.prweb.com. It is chock full of information about good PR and advice on how to write it for best effect. Your submissions are sent out and picked up as a feed by other services. If your PR piece has a reference to your website you now have 1 if not dozens of incoming links to your website. Do dozens of releases and you have dozens of one-way links and start to get noticed by other people interested in your field. Google notices this also.

Why Is PR All But Ignored? 

So why don't more businesses use this? Why do business owners nod in agreement but rarely follow through doing this? Because it takes time and effort to put together a good PR piece in a form that will be picked up by other sites or publications. It takes some knowledge to know where to even send it after you write it. Frankly, you probably don't have time to sit down and pen out a 700-word piece. Few have the writing talent to do it right. It's a skill, specialized skill. Even if you do have the ability, you may well not know where to send it or who at a publication might be interested in it. This is exactly why PR firms exist. They do it well, know where to send it for greatest effect and they know what is news worthy to send. They usually know people at the publications on a first name basis and what they are looking for.

I'm betting that if you cut your advertising budget in half and put that half into paying for a PR firm to take over that job that your remaining advertising will be even more effective than before. 

This is one of the added values for quality web development companies. Next time you call a web design firm and ask, "How much does it cost to build us a website?" find out if "fries" come with that. Do you get just a website or do you get the added value of expertise in Public Relations, Marketing and Advertising. Trust this, you will get no more than you pay for. Find out if they know enough about LinkedIn to even be there. If not, maybe they can't help you there. How about their press releases? Do they even do them for themselves? How do they pro-actively do marketing for themselves? Maybe they just do static (read "you have to call and pay us to edit your site") everyday ordinary sites? Then they probably are the cheapest bidder. A larger vision can make you a lot more money. You have to decide if "who's the lowest bidder" is more important than how much money and exposure the site adds to your bottom line. After all, isn't making money the point?

John Clark   

Posted: Friday, May 16, 2008 5:46 PM by John Clark

Comments

goode006 said:

Ok I have done most of this, but still dont have much traffic. I get about 40 to 50 visitors a day. I want 100+. www.the-best-hot-sauce.com

# May 26, 2008 1:51 AM

ezimarketing said:

Great article. A few home truths at last on website marketing and traffic generation. The other side of the coin is sales conversion rates. i.e. Getting visitors to do something once they arrive. But that's another article.

# May 26, 2008 4:04 AM

John Clark said:

goode006,

Just a guess but the problem may be partially in the things missing on your site. A couple of quick observations:

1. Proof read - in your first sentence "their" should be "there'.

2. You are missing all the <meta> tags in your header section. You don't see this as a viewer but the search robots do. See my article on "7 Easy Ways to Romance the Google bot!" for more on this. This one I didn't write, only wish I had. Then get with your web designer for follow through. I can't believe they just left them all out. Make sure you have a robots.txt and sitemap.xml in your root directory.

3. You are missing a lot of conversion keys as well. One is there is "we-we" all over it. It has to be all about the customer, not you. "You, your and yours" should outnumber "we, us, I, my" by 3-1. "We have" can be replaced by "You will be delighted to find".

4. Testimonials - get some from customers. Put happy faces eating your products. Your not selling the sauce, your selling the taste and experience.

5. I don't find you on LinkedIn. Be there and use it. See my article on "Why Bother with "LinkedIn" or "Facebook".

6. Make sure you are listed properly in Yahoo! local and then get customers to go there and write testimonials and recommendations.

I'm just getting started but from what I can see it might be a good place to start.

John

# May 26, 2008 5:52 AM

John Clark said:

ezinmarketing,

Nice site you have as well. You are right on Conversion Rates. I have numerous books on the subject, all good. Well done site should have a 10+% conversion rate instead of the 1-2% they seem happy with. Ahh... but that's a whole new series of articles.

John

# May 26, 2008 5:59 AM

www.chocolatedownunder.com.au said:

I think what you are saying is so true and applies to most small websites.

We even went further than that and did the right thing and took on a large company who are based in the United States and Australia.

They were recommended by our Bank Manager.  

What is so upsetting is that after 8 months they didnt put the word chocolate in as a key word.

Every other word like "Australian Chocolates - Australian Souvenirs but not the most important word first "Chocolate"

Our website is :  www.chocolatedownunder.com.au and they said you didnt ask us to use the word chocolate.

You would fall on your face if you knew who the company was as they are so well know.  Its shameful.  Truly you would think you were dealing with a firm that doesnt have a clue.

We have invested, time, money and lots of it, paying people handsomely and still no traffic.  

For over $2,000 per month we were only getting 10 hits a day and the 2 people who were looking after our account had the nerve to say well traffic has doubled!!!!

Your website is fantastic and probably one of the best I have ever seen and realise we still have to do more.  

Love the gadgets - eg Community etc

If by leaving blogs and getting one way links which we work on each day will help, then hopefully it will eventually take off.

Afterall we believe in our chocolates and Aussie souvenirs - we just need more people to see our website.

We are trying to "live our dream"  but its hard.

# May 26, 2008 3:58 PM

John Clark said:

Actually, I looked at your site and here are your header tags:

<title>Unique Australian Souvenirs, Aussie Chocolate Gifts & Macadamias Down Under</title>

<meta content="Australian tourism souvenirs, boxed chocolate confectionary, gifts, bulk chocolate macadamia and nuts from Wholesale Australian chocolate exporters and gift suppliers, Chocolatedownunder.com.au - Chocolate covered macadamia nuts distributors supplying worldwide these delicious products everyday." name="description"/>

<meta content="wholesale Australian tourism gifts, souvenirs, unique souvenir chocolates, gift suppliers, Aussie boxed chocolate confectionary gifts, chocolate covered macadamia nuts distributors, chocolate exporters, bulk chocolate macadamias, nuts, macadamia nut products exporters" name="keywords"/>

Notice you have 2 "content" tags but no "keywords" tag and no "description" tag. Big mistake. Googling "chocolate australia" you do come up 8th on the first page.

Shorten your "title" tag to fit the right number of characters for Google. Put in an inviting "Description" tag and put a unique on to invite on every page.

It's unfortunate but it seems you have to depend on the web site company to put that stuff in where a good "enterprise" level site with a good content management system would enable you to do your own editing on all of that. This is exactly why we moved to doing only database oriented sites with asp.net.

Another idea, write about your specialty and submit it like I did to online magazines. "Chocolate, What Makes It Romantic?" "Not Getting Lucky? Maybe You Need the Right Kind of Chocolate" Make it fun and make'm drool. Get some happy facing "experiencing" the exquisite taste and smooth texture of the finest of morsels. Some testimonials of past customers and why they prefer yours.

Hope it helps,

John

# May 26, 2008 4:28 PM

Himadly said:

Hi John, we are a small pharmacy who is trying to grow more. we have 1k visitors daily, have joined facebook as well, but still no increase. will join linkedin but, can you check our site and share us your wisdom? Thanks! much appreciated!

# May 26, 2008 5:07 PM

John Clark said:

Maybe instead of working to increase visitors, concentrate on conversion rate. If you are getting 1k a day, that's pretty dang good. What percentage of visitors are "buyers"?

Increasing conversion can be an ongoing nudging process from adding video and audio to testimonials from customers on exceptional service or advice.

John

# May 26, 2008 8:50 PM

Norma Scott said:

Great article. I am struggling so much in trying to implement different marketing ideas. I'm a one-person dog-and-pony show. Being an accountant, marketing is like a different language to me. I'm doing to keep reading everything I can, and hopefully get my website seen more. In this economy, I can use all the help I can get.

# May 28, 2008 9:41 AM

goode006 said:

Thanks for the info I will be working on my site more to enhance it.

# May 29, 2008 4:22 PM
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