How to use Social Media to drive Blog Traffic

benlreed —  February 10, 2011 — 5 Comments

Ever wondered how you can use Facebook or Twitter to drive traffic back to your blog or website?

If this is the question you’re asking, then I hate to burst your bubble, but you’re asking the wrong question.  You’re starting off on the wrong foot with your approach to social media.  Because social media is about giving, not getting.  And when you approach an outpost (Twitter, Facebook, etc.) as a means to an end, social media folks can sniff you out a mile away.  And they’ll quit following you.

But I do think that, utilized well, social media outposts can help drive traffic to your blog.  And providing potential readers/customers (depending on the goal of your site) with information on how to better reach your site can be a great form of customer service.  But how do you use them to effectively drive traffic to your site?

What you should do

  1. Remember: social media is about giving, not getting. Be generous with ideas, quotes, stories, and praise of others.  If you’re using outposts as a means to simply drive traffic flow to your blog or website, your voice becomes a noise that people will tune out.
  2. Post about other things. It’s okay to alert people that you have a new post…but make sure you don’t do that twice (or more) before you update with something other-than your own site.  Don’t be a social media robot, only telling people about your awesome site.  Let us know you’re a real person.
  3. Alert potential readers whether this is a new post or a re-post. Most people don’t mind clicking on a re-post, especially if they haven’t read it already.  But it’s common courtesy to let people know that this post isn’t hot off the press.
  4. Follow-up: if it’s more than 1 day old, it’s not a new post. Social media is rapidly changing and growing.  And if something is more than a day old, it’s hardly considered new.
  5. Use a leading question or statement. Make it a bit provocative.  If all you say is, “New post! Check it out! http://…” then I’m less inclined to click through.  Give me a reason to click the link.
  6. Use a link shortener. It allows you to add in that leading, provocative question, because you’ll have more characters to use.
  7. Read and respond to your followers. Everywhere you post updates, comments, thoughts, and replies, you’re branding yourself.  Because everywhere you do this, you have to login.  And when you leave quality responses, it encourages others to read your posts.
  8. Share.  Share.  Share. Have I mentioned that social media is more about giving than getting?  Your generosity and encouragement encourages the same in others.

What you should not do

  1. Don’t just talk about your site. If all of your updates are links back to your site, it feels like you’re not entering the conversation, but that all you care about is padding your own site’s stats.  It smacks of self-centeredness.  And, like I said above, nobody likes a social media robot.
  2. Don’t post an outpost update more than twice, linking back to the same blog post. It may sound confusing, I know.  But all I mean is that if you post the same link on Facebook or Twitter more than twice, you’re going to drive traffic away from your site.  At least in the long-run.  I think it’s fine to post twice, but if you do it more, you seem to be reaching.
  3. Don’t be a sneaky ninja. Posting two completely different thoughts on Twitter that each link back to the same blog post, causing me to click through twice…not cool, my friend.  Nobody likes being duped.

Have you found that social media outposts drive traffic to your site?

Have you found yourself frustrated by those who publicize their site too much?

 

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benlreed

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Christ follower, husband, father, writer, pastor of small groups at Long Hollow Baptist Church. Communications director for the Small Group Network.
  • http://www.abrahamchronicles.com Dustin

    Great thoughts, Ben.
     
    I’m new to the blogging world, so I feel like I’ve ‘built up’ my social media presence before I even started ‘promoting’ my blog.
     
    I agree with you wholeheartedly about the “read and respond” to your followers. If not, then you’re just broadcasting a message or opinion. Ehh.

  • http://twitter.com/jasonvana Jason Vana

    I really like your thoughts here, especially about how social media is about giving, not getting. I find myself quickly unfollowing someone who is all about getting me to go to their site or talking about how awesome they are. Not to mention if they never seem to engage in a conversation. If you don’t have any @ signs on Twitter, “talking” to other people, you’re getting unfollowed.

    There’s only one area I do a bit differently – I try to post a link to a new blog post 3 times a day: once in the early morning, once in the afternoon and once in the evening, in order to reach people who get on Twitter at different times.

  • Pingback: Tweets that mention How to use Social Media to drive Blog Traffic | Life and Theology -- Topsy.com

  • http://twitter.com/rkinnick59 Randy Kinnick

    Great points, Ben. I have been experimenting with an automated tweet generator for old posts that has “From the Archives” as the leading text. It only tweets posts more than 30 days old. It does this every 6 hours. I may adjust that to a less frequent interval. I also have an automated tweet generator that tweets a new post once. I will usually tweet it manually once, as well.

    I find that tweets do attract traffic to my blog, but I interact on Twitter far more with personal and conversational tweets. I also find that commenting on other blogs attracts views of my site even more. Thanks for your thoughts!

  • http://davidlermy.com David Lermy

    Great points Ben. I have tried to practice all of them and even made a few mistakes along the way. Hope new bloggers read this info to avoid the heart ache.

    Between Facebook and Twitter, it seems that I get many more views from Facebook. I think it has to do with the fact that I know most of my Facebook friends, but Twitter has a totally different audience for me. So I guess using both correctly is a bonus, as you explain.
    The three best ideas that have helped me is commenting on other blogs with similarities to mine or which have high viewer base.

    Another is switching my blog to a service that build in SEO for you like Standard Theme (as both of us use). This works to help drive traffic for me from sites like Google. Most of my hits come directly from search engines.

    Finally, guest posting has helped whether they guest posted for me or I guest posted for them. People trust their friends to give solid recommends, even online.