Im starting up a website what should i do to get more traffic?

I need help with getting more traffic on my website what should I do?

The most effective way to advertise on the Internet is
to first set up a website and publish its domain name
on major search directories such as Google.com,
Yahoo.com [at http://www.google.com/addurl/?...... and
MSN.com since 85% of Internet shoppers rely on these
search directories to provide them with goods and
services. In a sense, these search directories are a
very large Internet Yellow Pages.

Nevertheless, should your website or opening webpage
fail to contain "generic" keywords, then anyone using
such "generic" queries will not be able to discover
your website. Your domain name [URL] of your website,
in a sense, will be invisible, undiscoverable.

You may want to consider some simple algorithms which,
when observed and committed in designing of a website
with placement of various critical metatags that can
surely achieve a high search engine presence and
increase Internet traffic to your website. These
metatag strategies work well with published webpages
at Google and Yahoo.

Design: Should you create an extensive Flash-based
website, make sure to fill-in the property entries
such as the Title, Description and Keywords. Failing
to do so, leaves no hard HTML or ALT resource that can
be readily indexed by search robots. Also consider the
Internet audience and their incoming setup. For
example, if they are on analog/dialup, Flash webpages
take too long to load up and therefore analog users
will likely lose interest and discontinue entering the
Flash site. On the other hand, anyone on hi-speed DSL
lines, will welcome Flash pages which load quickly. So
before designing a pure Flash websitge, ask the simple
question, "Who’s my end user – is he on dialup or
DSL?" And if you had to choose between these two users
for maximum marketability, then select analog users
since 80% of most resident users are still analog
Internet subscribers and pure HTML designed webpages
is best for them.

A non-Flash-based website which relies on hard text,
is far easier to be indexed by search robots. Limit
the use of stylized text saved as .gifs since as a
graphic, they are not indexable by search robots.

Avoid use of frames since any number of search robots
are unable to properly classify textual material.

Placement of Metatags:

A ranking or search order does take place with Google
and Yahoo and it begins with the "Title" metag which
should consist of no more than 65 characters separated
by commas. The "Title" should describe in generic
terms, the goods and services, followed by a location
from which the resource is located, i.e., city, state.
The placement of a domain name which is not generic
within the "Title" is not appropriate, unless your
domain name is a major recognizable brand name.

The second metatag is the "Description" which is
usually 25-30 words to form a complete sentence which
best describes one’s goods and services.

And the very last category – "Keywords" are also
somewhat limited to 15-16 words which can be plural
and compound in nature. Again, avoid multiple entries
which could be mistaken as "spamdexed entries" which
is defined as the loading, and submission of
repetitive words into a particular metatag category.
"Spamdexing" when discovered on a webpage and reported
to Google’s spamreport.com can result in the
elimination of your website from their search
directory.

Good luck!

7 Responses to “Im starting up a website what should i do to get more traffic?”

  • Boboo says:

    You have to make sure you get alot of incoming links. This will get you traffic and ranking, all in one. Follow the 6 steps from the article below to increase your traffic and links!
    References :
    6 steps to more links and traffic -> http://www.icantinternet.org/2009/06/6-steps-to-more-links-and-traffic/

  • Jean says:

    Make sure you use keywords on your website.
    Promote your website through as many ways as possible.
    make yourself a signature file/ resource box with the url of your website.
    Use the resource box when you post on blogs, when you answer questions on yahoo answers, when you answer questions on forums.

    Depending on the subject matter of your website, try writing an article about that subject with your resource box at the end of the article and submit it to the article directories. (an article is info on or about the subject, not an advertisement)

    Place posters on local bulletin boards
    Place a small classified ad in your local newspaper.
    Place a classified ad on ebay in the classified ad section.

    this should help you get more traffic
    References :
    my own knowledge

  • Khurram Z says:

    Firstly do Search Engine Optimization, Social Network Marketing, and if you have budget do Google Adword…
    References :

  • govicseo says:

    The most effective way to advertise on the Internet is
    to first set up a website and publish its domain name
    on major search directories such as Google.com,
    Yahoo.com [at http://www.google.com/addurl/?...... and
    MSN.com since 85% of Internet shoppers rely on these
    search directories to provide them with goods and
    services. In a sense, these search directories are a
    very large Internet Yellow Pages.

    Nevertheless, should your website or opening webpage
    fail to contain "generic" keywords, then anyone using
    such "generic" queries will not be able to discover
    your website. Your domain name [URL] of your website,
    in a sense, will be invisible, undiscoverable.

    You may want to consider some simple algorithms which,
    when observed and committed in designing of a website
    with placement of various critical metatags that can
    surely achieve a high search engine presence and
    increase Internet traffic to your website. These
    metatag strategies work well with published webpages
    at Google and Yahoo.

    Design: Should you create an extensive Flash-based
    website, make sure to fill-in the property entries
    such as the Title, Description and Keywords. Failing
    to do so, leaves no hard HTML or ALT resource that can
    be readily indexed by search robots. Also consider the
    Internet audience and their incoming setup. For
    example, if they are on analog/dialup, Flash webpages
    take too long to load up and therefore analog users
    will likely lose interest and discontinue entering the
    Flash site. On the other hand, anyone on hi-speed DSL
    lines, will welcome Flash pages which load quickly. So
    before designing a pure Flash websitge, ask the simple
    question, "Who’s my end user – is he on dialup or
    DSL?" And if you had to choose between these two users
    for maximum marketability, then select analog users
    since 80% of most resident users are still analog
    Internet subscribers and pure HTML designed webpages
    is best for them.

    A non-Flash-based website which relies on hard text,
    is far easier to be indexed by search robots. Limit
    the use of stylized text saved as .gifs since as a
    graphic, they are not indexable by search robots.

    Avoid use of frames since any number of search robots
    are unable to properly classify textual material.

    Placement of Metatags:

    A ranking or search order does take place with Google
    and Yahoo and it begins with the "Title" metag which
    should consist of no more than 65 characters separated
    by commas. The "Title" should describe in generic
    terms, the goods and services, followed by a location
    from which the resource is located, i.e., city, state.
    The placement of a domain name which is not generic
    within the "Title" is not appropriate, unless your
    domain name is a major recognizable brand name.

    The second metatag is the "Description" which is
    usually 25-30 words to form a complete sentence which
    best describes one’s goods and services.

    And the very last category – "Keywords" are also
    somewhat limited to 15-16 words which can be plural
    and compound in nature. Again, avoid multiple entries
    which could be mistaken as "spamdexed entries" which
    is defined as the loading, and submission of
    repetitive words into a particular metatag category.
    "Spamdexing" when discovered on a webpage and reported
    to Google’s spamreport.com can result in the
    elimination of your website from their search
    directory.

    Good luck!
    References :
    Webmaster article from google.com.

  • Internet Junkie says:

    Here are a some things you can do to start getting traffic to your website.

    1. Submit to search engines. Start off by submitting your site to the major search engines such as google, yahoo, and bing. You can submit to some of the smaller search engines later. Google the phrase "free web submission" and that should help.

    2. Create content. Place original quality content on your site. This will make people want to actually view your website and come back again for more information.

    3. Exchange links with other sites. This increases your visibility on the web and the more sites that link to yours the higher you will rank in the search engines.

    4. Submit articles to article directories. This will give you the chance to publish your content on other sites and it will provide a one way link to your site.

    5. Submit to directories. Submit to quality directories such as DMOZ. This will create one way links to your site which helps with your search engine rankings.
    References :

  • Rebecca H says:

    The first thing is to have a website worth visiting — it needs to be interesting, fun, or useful. All three would be the best thing of all.

    Then you need links, as others have mentioned. Submit your site to the major search engines, and to your local business directories (if it’s a business). I’m going to link below to a blog post that has the links for the major directories and other suggestions.

    Then tell people about your website. Use Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn, mention your new website at the forums or blogs where you regularly comment, and tell all your friends.

    Good luck!
    References :
    http://www.rebeccahaden.com/blog/2009/06/when-your-new-site-launches.php

  • Just Googled and read the whole article and i must have to say that me and my husband loved reading your post. I liked your site because of the easy language you used to explain things here. Now i can stop my research having found my answer in this awesome article. We bookmarked and will regularly check more quality tips to come from your website. Thanks alot.

Leave a Reply

Free SEO Report…
Proud Contributor…
  • Facebook IPO By the Numbers May 18, 2012
    Facebook made a change in the price of the stock for its initial public offering that had an interesting effect on the number of shares that stakeholders decided to put up for sale. The biggest IPO ever for a tech company is happening today. What can we expect? […]
  • Using Semantics for Keyword Research May 15, 2012
    Semantics concerns the meaning of words – historically a weak area for search engines. Over the years we've seen vast improvement in Google's ability to understand what searchers mean when they enter keywords. You can capitalize on this fact by changing the way you conduct keyword research. Following these tips will also strengthen your website […]
  • Yahoo CEO Scott Thompson Resigns May 14, 2012
    Just ten days after the revelation that Scott Thompson did not, in fact, hold the computer science degree he claimed on his resume, the new Yahoo CEO is resigning his position. Thompson, who replaced Carol Bartz, held the position barely four months. He will in turn be replaced by Ross Levinsohn, the company's global media head, as interim CEO. […]
  • Bing Launches Social Sidebar May 11, 2012
    When Microsoft cleaned up Bing's results pages earlier this month, a number of observers wondered if it was trying to imitate an earlier, less cluttered version of Google. In actuality, the software giant was clearing the decks for a new interpretation of social search. Meet the Social Sidebar. […]
  • Write Content For the Four Buying Personalities May 9, 2012
    In my previous article I talked about four main goals or “personas” you should keep in mind when writing content for your website. Your visitors display a lot more variety than that, though. Four different visitors could have the same goal, but approach it in completely different ways. If you want to sell to all of them, you need to write with their buying p […]
  • Write SEO Content for Your Visitor`s Goals May 7, 2012
    How do your website's visitors spend their time online? That can vary not only from person to person, but at different times with the same person. Why? Users pursue a variety of different goals. If you keep this in mind, you can write effective content to optimize your site for the most likely goals. […]
  • Guest Posting: How to Find and Seduce Your Editor May 3, 2012
    You know all the benefits that writing a guest post for a well-read blog in your niche can offer. You know you can write great content because you're an expert in your field. But how do you get into guest blogging? Let me give you a few clues from the blog editor's perspective. […]
  • Title Tags: Not Just for Keywords Anymore May 1, 2012
    I very nearly titled this article “The Truth About Keywords in Title Tags.” I didn't because I'm no longer sure that anyone has all of it. If you're ready to rethink one of the most basic things you've ever learned about SEO, and stop simply reacting to Google, keep reading. […]
  • Penguin Joins Panda in Google Web Spam War April 30, 2012
    Early last week, Google began using a new algorithm to help it combat webspam from black hat SEOs. Dubbed Penguin, it aims to eliminate from the search engine's listings websites that engage in certain shady practices. But how well does it work? […]
  • Facebook Releases Negative Report Before IPO April 26, 2012
    Could Facebook's cash machine be slowing down? That's one possible conclusion observers can draw from the paperwork the company recently filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. While it's not likely to slow down investors, it's not the best news to get so close to the social media giant's IPO. […]
  • 6 Tools to Manage Your Twitter Followers May 18, 2012
    Managing Twitter followers can become a time consuming task, taking time away from actually sending messages and growing your influence. Here are a few free and paid tools that will save you time and provide all the important data you need. […]
    Duncan Parry
  • 4 Ways to Rethink a Facebook Advertising Campaign May 18, 2012
    Facebook is a different medium than paid search advertising, with entirely unique advantages. Learn ways to restructure your paid social advertising paradigm without over-committing to media spend and track results and ROI on Facebook. […]
    John Lynch
  • For Better Facebook Engagement, Post on Topics Related To, But Not About, Your Brand [Study] May 18, 2012
    Facebook shares tips for Page managers looking to increase fan engagement with specific types of content posted to drive different types of engagement. Find out what they learned in an internal brand pages study of 23 brands across six industries. […]
    Miranda Miller
  • Google Launches Knowledge Graph, 'First Step in Next Generation Search' May 17, 2012
    Three new Google Search features are part of their “next generation search” project, Knowledge Graph. Info boxes, segmented results based on query context and suggestions based on popular queries negate the need to even click off the SERP for info. […]
    Miranda Miller
  • Mobile Sites: Choosing an Implementation Process & Strategies May 17, 2012
    No matter your approach, the mobile landscape is a tricky, expansive space of uncertainty filled with twists and turns that would give even the most solid minded developer or site owner points to pause. Here’s a guide to help you go mobile. […]
    Kristine Schachinger
May 2012
M T W T F S S
« Aug    
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031