3 Overlooked Ways To Get Hundreds Of Links And Prospects To Your Blog
No matter what you market on the internet at some point you’ll face the issue of increasing the number of visitors to your site. What most people don’t know is that there are literally hundreds of ways to get free traffic and links back to your blog overnight. Here we’ll focus on three overlooked ways to get additional traffic to your site using a blog.
1. Read and Comment on other Blogs - The most overlooked way to bring traffic to your site with a blog is to read and comment on other blogs. If you are concerned about being considered a link-spammer, leave a link to your site after your comments, instead of in the comment form that hot links it.
Besides, getting clicks from people who read comments, or visits from search engine spiders through your comments, isn’t necessarily your direct objective, though it’s definitely a plus.
What you want to do via commenting is to enter the blog community that corresponds to your target market. Get to know who the players are and make agreements with them to cycle traffic between you or lurk to find out where your target market typically hangs out when they’re online. These links are worth ten times a reciprocal link because they send targeted traffic from established sources, and come from experts with records of proven results.
2. Trackbacks - Trackback is kind of a remote commenting system that incorporates linking. It allows the reader to follow a topic around the web to see other bloggers remark on the same subject. It enables the publisher to remotely cite references to the issue on which they’ve written.
Once you’ve made yourself familiar with the blogging community you have entered, you can often pick up the pulse of conversations within your site’s theme. Then, when you see issues that you want to expound on, you can send the other site a notification to let them know you cited them on your blog. That link will appear on their site, and often draws visitors to you. Bloggers who use Trackback often enjoy greater control over this function in their blogs than they do over linking, as they have the option to reject your reference - so there is a lesser incidence of fraudulent linking. That also gives your link a greater chance of being displayed.
So why don’t more people use Trackback?
a) One reason is that what is arguably the most popular free blog system, Blogger, doesn’t have Trackback.
b) Many new bloggers don’t get what it is and how it differs from commenting. But learn to use Trackback properly, and you won’t need to beg for links to your site ever again.
c) It’s harder to estimate an exact number of visitors that come as a result of trackback links. But if you posted five days out of seven, and was able to get a trackback link to your site three times a week, by the end of the year you’d have almost 150 topical links back to your site, which are more valued by search engines than a typical link trade with an unrelated site.
3. Article Submissions - The most overlooked source of traffic for a blog is through article submission. To start with, turn your longer posts into articles and submitting them to ezines or directories. Look especially for directories that ask for the direct link to the article on your own site, and input the permanent link to the post on your blog.
Make sure that your Auto-Discovery tag is in place and it can mean hundreds more prospects, links and subscribers. These aren’t normally the highest quality links, as they rarely make sure of anchor text. However, bloggers are citing me using Trackback, sometimes in lieu of linking to the site where they originally found the article.
There are, of course, plenty of other ways you can leverage the content in your blog or RSS feed to increase the traffic to your site. The methods outlined here may be a bit outside the norm, but, as you’ll soon find, that’s part of the reason they are so effective.






