Day in and day out, we all have a million things we want to do versus one million things we have to do. We own websites that need traffic and conversions, but have a limited budget. We want to do it ourselves…
There are plenty of “how-to” articles out there… “Link Building in 20 Days or Less!” they proclaim, or “Writing 100% Conversion Copy!” Why have a link building campaign, though? Why is it important to understand conversion goals? The most obvious answer for both questions is to get more traffic and, ultimately, to get more business. But – are link building campaigns and increased conversions as simple as writing, say, ten articles a month?
Why are some businesses / individuals more successful than others? How much time and energy is spent to get relevant hits from the almighty Google due to keywords?
The Heavy Hitters
A lot of people have great blogs, write awesome articles and only have a few readers – occasionally. They’re committed to their cause, whether it’s making a connection with new clients or writing about their passions. More often then not, they’re very qualified to take on large clients, yet they’re not even seen as part of the selection. Between Fortune 500 companies and businesses with a budget, the small guy isn’t even in the game.
The likes of Outspoken Media, Chris Brogan, and Problogger are the ones that have the most effect on the blog world at large. From all aspects, they seem successful, sought after and respected as authorities in Social media. All they have to do is write an article and thousands of people will read and follow their advice.
None of them gained success overnight. Now, they may have the time to do speaking circuits, the different SXSW, Blog Nation, radio shows, etc, but that’s now. What was the price? What did they have to do to get where they were? How much time did it take?
Do You Have Any Idea What You’re Doing?
A lot of small business owners have no clue what they’re doing. They’re just following the next best thing, hoping it works out. You know who you are. You’re on Twitter, using Facebook, Stumbling or Sphinning articles day in and day out. You’re doing everything you know how to do to get more links and better conversions, but can’t understand why nothing’s working.
First, it’s important to understand that any kind of campaign, whether it’s a full-blown SEO campaign, a link building campaign or anything else, takes time. “Instantaneous gratification” is a myth. Once you understand this concept, the rest gets much easier; you no longer spend your time endlessly checking your rankings, links, pagerank, etc. to see if anything is working immediately. You can now focus on the important stuff, which is actually implementing the plan you’ve created.
Secondly, social networking is less about link building and more about engaging and connecting. Yes, people may follow the links you post to read your material, but unless they take your link and post it on their own blog or website, social networking as a whole does very little for link building.
Rather than use social networking as a link-building tool, use it instead to build your authority and reputation. Post short excerpts for blogs you’ve written on your Facebook or LinkedIn accounts, yes, but use networks like Twitter to gain a following. For instance, if someone asks a question that falls in your industry in a Twitter feed, don’t hesitate to answer. Share links to interesting, relevant articles – not just to your own website. Take the time to build up your reputation so that, when someone does actually need your services, they’ll think of you first.
Third, understand that not everything that works for someone else will work for you. Just because someone gets great traffic from an article posted at XYZ Article Directory doesn’t mean you’ll get the same traffic boost. As well, when you use the same methods everyone else is using, you’re staying even with the competition, not outweighing them.
Explore avenues such as trust and credibility, using logos from secure shopping portals (PayPal, for example), media mentions or marquee clients. Use testimonials where appropriate, or share how many transactions have been completed on your website. These things alone can help create a persuasive and influential website.
Lastly, remember that every visitor is not a potential prospect and/or buyer. The promised 100% converting copy is a myth. You will get visitors looking for something only partially related to what you sell, or even not related at all. Don’t waste your time bemoaning the “lost client”.
What Matters and What Doesn’t?
Some of the things you try will matter and others won’t work at all. Online business is a “trial and error” world. Yes, things take time, but after a while, it becomes obvious which variables are useful and which aren’t. If they aren’t, decide whether it’s worth it to spend more time and collect more information.
However, before you try anything else – before you even look at whether your campaign is working or not, stop and take a deep breath. Do you really know whom you’re marketing too? Who are your clients – today, right now? When was the last time you spoke with them, sent out an email or sent a newsletter? What are you doing to generate more business? What are some key elements that affect your bottom dollar? Do you have a plan, and do you know how to implement it?
In other words – are you targeting the right people or are you just doing one thing after another, hoping something works?
Once you understand your audience, you can shave the fat and go deeper into what their needs are. What are my challenges and how can I make them better? This should be your mantra, whether you have a small company or a large one. Set your goals in small steps. Make your messages actionable. If it’s a blog, engage the reader. If you’re using email marketing, have your readers commit to your product by doing something. Whether it’s a poll or a questionnaire, build from the ground up.
In short, great business is about giving to the client, so the client gives back!
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Hi… That sounds like a lot of work if you have more than a few blogs…
I always thought of it like this;
Either you write about stuff that interest YOU and then (by time) someone will stop by and find your writings interesting.. Then you can monotize or whatever you like..
OR… You only create blogs to make money (e.g. niche blogs) then it's a whole other game and the question is if it's better to keep on moving forward and create new blogs all the time or to select the ones that gets lots of traffic and nurse those…
I personally try to do a combination of both…
.-= Isak recently posted: A Hunter’s Guide to The Best Hunter Build =-.
Hi, Isak – It is a lot of work, but the tracking you do can help you focus your efforts, whether those efforts are for monetizing, bringing traffic or a combination of both (which it should be). Why fill up monetizing space with ads that don't work? By tracking your efforts, you KNOW what works and what doesn't. Good luck on your combination!
.-= Gabriella recently posted: SEO My Site =-.
You are right on the money Gabriella, thanks for the great info. Though I've done some things right – I fall right in the category of "I haven't got a clue what I'm doing." I think I'll have to give myself a time out to think a bit!!!
Thanks again,
Bonnie
If I may suggest, write out a plan with direct goals. Maybe you want to guest blog; maybe you want to see more traffic. Whatever your goals are, write out your plan! Make it actionable, with dates covering when you accomplished each stage or each goal.
For example, if you want more traffic, set your sights on how you'll bring that traffic in. Write it down. You'll join a network? Write down which network, when you joined and whether you made any connections. Everything is much clearer when it's charted.
Write an outline for articles and keep track of where you publish them. Keep records of any webmasters you've contacted for link building. List your meta tags and descriptions, where you've posted comments, what you've done from day to day in your efforts. You'll quickly find out which efforts work and which methods are a waste of time. Those that do work (and this is most important), keep testing on ways to improve the output (in terms of meeting your goals).
I hope that helps Bonnie
.-= Gabriella recently posted: SEO My Site =-.
I think it is critical to measure and examine your weblogs so that you *know* what is working. Then adapt what you are doing to focus on the things that ARE working.
Indeed, it's all about what works for you & your traffic.
.-= Gabriella recently posted: SEO My Site =-.