How To Generate Traffic To Your Blog?
I read several posts about SEO but my finite mind have not grasped yet it’s fullness. I’ve met some bloggers, and they too talked about these 3 letter phenomenon that can bring fortune to those who knew how to manipulate use it.
Am blog hopping and landed into http://stevepavlina.com/blog . His post on building high traffic blogs caught my attention. His approach is far different from what I have read so far. More important than SEO, he believes, the added value your blog give to readers is far more important than key words. I find this great, perhaps because we blog for the same reasons, well almost.
Read the insights of Steve Pavlina, and let me know if he makes blogging sense:
1. Create valuable content.
Is your content worthy of being read by millions of people? Remember that the purpose of content is to provide value to others. Do you provide genuine value, and is it the best you’re capable of providing?
2. Create original content.
Virtually everything on this site is my own original content. I rarely post blog entries that merely link to what others are writing. It takes more effort to produce original content, but it’s my preferred long-term strategy. I have no interest in creating a personal development portal to other sites. I want this site to be a final destination, not a middleman.
3. Create timeless content.
While I do occasionally write about time-bound events, the majority of my content is intended to be timeless. I’m aware that anything I write today may still be read by people even after I’m dead. People still quote Aristotle today because his ideas have timeless value, even though he’s been dead for about 2300 years. I think about how my work might influence future generations in addition to my own. What advice shall I pass on to my great grandchildren?
4. Write for human beings first, computers second.
A lot has been written about the optimal strategies for strong search engine rankings in terms of posting frequency and post length. But I largely ignore that advice because I write for human beings, not computers.
5. Know why you want a high-traffic site.
I write because my purpose in life is to help people become more conscious and aware — to grow as human beings. I don’t have a separate job or career other than this. Because my work is driven by this purpose, I have a compelling reason to build a high-traffic web site, one that aligns with my deepest personal values. More web traffic means I can have a bigger impact by reaching more people. And over the course of the next few decades, this influence has the potential to create a positive change that might alter the future direction of human civilization. Most significantly, I want to help humanity move past fear and for us to stop relating to each other through the mechanisms of fear. If I fail, I fail. But I’m not giving up no matter how tough it gets.
6. Let your audience see the real you.
My life and my writing are intricately intertwined, such that it’s impossible to separate the two. When someone reads this web site, they’ll eventually come to know a great deal about me as a person. Usually this creates a skewed and inaccurate impression of who I am today because I change a lot over time — I’m not the same person I was last year — but it’s close enough. Getting to know me makes it easier for people to understand the context of what I write, which means that more value can be transferred in less time.
7. Write what is true for you, and learn to live with the consequences.
If the stuff I’ve written on this site means I’ll never be able to run for a political office, I can live with that. I’m willing to write what is true for me, even if it goes against my social conditioning. Being honest is more important to me than being popular. But the irony is that because bold honesty is so rare among civilized humans, in the long run this may be the best traffic-building strategy of all.
8. Treat your visitors like real human beings.
Though I’m sitting at my computer writing this, seemingly alone, I know you’re a real human being reading it on the other end. My apologies to sentient androids who may be reading this years after it’s been written. You aren’t just a number in my web stats. Despite the technology involved and the time-space differential between my writing and your reading, there’s still a human-to-human connection between us that transcends time and space. And that connection matters to me. I feel its presence whenever I do my best writing.
9. Keep money in its proper place.
Money is important. Obviously I have bills to pay. Money pays for my computer, my high-speed internet connection, my house, and my food. I just returned yesterday from a vacation that money paid for. My wife and I had a great time partly because we didn’t have to worry about money at all on the trip. We did everything we wanted to do without being hampered by a lack of funds. And this web site paid for it.
10. If you forget the first nine suggestions, just focus on genuinely helping people, and the rest will take care of itself.
One thing that turns me off about typical self-help marketing is that authors and speakers often position themselves as if they’re the opposite of their audience. I’m successful and you’re not. I’m rich and you’re not. I’m fit and you’re not. You need me because something is lacking in your life, I have exactly what you lack, and if you pay me (and make me even richer and you poorer), I’ll show you how you can have it too. And if it doesn’t work for you, it just means you’re even more of an idiot than the people who provided my testimonials.
To read the complete post of Steve, please go here
Related Website: Buy Traffic Buy Traffic
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Comments
Hi Jhay,
IMO, religion should not be the primary reason for their reflection.. but the advocacies of their blogs vis-a-vis their purpose in life.
Happy Easter
As an additional, I do believe that bloggers value most the people who not just visit or read their entry but those who leaves with a comment.
I did not read the blog of Steve, since what I’ve read in your entry sonnie is already revolutionary and unique for me. But I’ll be reading it in the near future for sure.
Thanks for posting stuff like this.
> 9. Keep money in its proper place.
Steve’s note about using “money for the purpose of increasing my freedom” strikes a chord. Sometimes I wonder if I am doing it for the right reason. While working on my 1st product, SchoolPad (shameless plug:) ) I had to spend weekends and nights in front of the computer while I keep a day job. I don’t spend that much time anymore with my wife and kids as much as I do before I decided to start this business.
I still remember Kiyosaki’s words that money should work for you and not the other way around. But I guess you need to sacrifice some (maybe a lot) things for now in order to gain that freedom later.
Greg,
Though we really need to earn to support our family, and better gain the financial freedom and cease to become a corporate slave, our family is our priority. I always remind myself to invest more time with my kids while they are young. Otherwise, I will have nothing to withdraw when they reached their teen age years.
“invest more time with my kids while they are young. Otherwise, I will have nothing to withdraw when they reached their teen age years”
I will always keep this in my mind and my heart. Thanks.











Yup, a little blog recollection and reflection would be nice for the bloggers who are not religiously active.