InfoPool

Search:

Welcome Guest

Traffic Method #239 - Share

Let's go deeper, shall we?

You want to know how you can possibly get more, or better quality of
traffic from sharing - isn't pointing people to resources other than
my own giving traffic away needlessly? What if the person never comes
back? Why should I help other people who may not help me back?

I know, I know, you're not running a charity, you're running a
business. And no, I'm not going to give you any hard evidence that
this works, as I normally would.

So you scoff at this idea of Sharing as a traffic method. It's
backwards, crazy, new age, bleeding heart.

Or. It's the reason why your competitor's site goes up in traffic
instead of down by linking to your site.

Or. It's the reason the Blogosphere works so well - it's an
environment where those in the know, those who are successful, become
more open, and more sharing, which drives interaction and repeat
traffic.

Or. It could be why some sites are considered resources, and others
are seen primarily as hype machines.

And. This is the key to unlocking the need to subscribe in your
visitors.

How can this possibly work - sending a person somewhere else? Giving
your visitors free information instead of holding your hand out for
cash each time? Offering your advice for free, with only a gentle
product reminder at the end as opposed to a hard push?

I don't know.

It just does.

.

.

.

What are you still doing here? That was the end of the article.

What do you mean "Convince me"?

Fine. I'll give it a shot….

When you're networking with other business people, sharing what you
find to be of value at another site with your audience is a display of
confidence. It says "I believe in my resource enough to point you to
another, because I know that if you enjoy mine, you'll be back."

It also shows your business networking contact that you support them.
It says to them, "Thank you."

Sharing also tells the people who visit your site that you care enough
to take the risk that they may forget about you.

It's a reality that some first time visitor will do a search, come to
your site, and leave without subscribing, clicking or buying, never to
return. This could be a result of not having the proper subscription
options visible enough, or that you link to something so marvelous
that in their excitement, the surfer just… forgot about you.

And later, they may even remember you, but not be able to find you
again. It happens.

It won't happen any less if you don't share information, give free
tips, give away free advice in your podcast, link out from your site,
or splice external links into your feed.

It's a reality we all have to cope with - why not face it head on
instead of hide from it?
And really, people are naturally attracted to givers. And as they
congregate for that free bit, they are self-targeting for you. I don't
want a free hammer because I don't… hamm. Or what ever it is you do
to
nails with those thingees.

But a whitepaper on Social Media? I'm SO there. Heck yeah I'll give
you my email address. Maybe you have something I can buy that solves
my problem — there, I just self targeted for you.

You do it too.

Think back to the last resource site you went to that you subscribed
to - why did you subscribe? Was it to get something free? Or to give
yourself the best chance of remembering a place that you were about to
exit?

I could go on like this forever. The takeaway point - if you have
people in your ear trying to convince you that being more open won't
work, or that linking out of your site is folly, think of the effect
it would have on you if you were shared with, or shared by someone who
is influential in your field.

Let that be your guide. Just for a little while. Just for a week,
don't just blindly believe me. I have no hard evidence besides the
blogosphere and socialsphere.

So try it yourself.

Article Source :http://infopool.webverve.com/

About the Author

We're on Traffic Method #239 in our series on traffic generation. Come visit us at http://freetraffictip.com to see what you've missed.

Author Profile : Tinu Abayomi-Paul


Rate This Article

Current Rating: Not yet rated

Total views: 48 | Word Count: 637


Comments

No comments posted.

Add Comment

You do not have permission to comment. If you Login, you may be able to comment.

HTML Code for Publishers

Remember: This article can be reprinted for any type of publication, subject to the terms and service. The article body, title, author bio and article source links may not be changed or removed. By publishing this article, you agree to all the publisher terms in our Term and Conditions