11 responses to “Tips for improving traffic to your freelance blog”

  1. Charmian Christie

    Great topic. I’m what you suggest and traffic is building — but slowly.

    Posting comments on other blogs with a similar topic can increase traffic.

    In addition to various RSS feeds, I have an email subscription option at the top of my blog.

    And finally, whenever I blog, I post the permalink on Facebook. I always get a few hits a day directly from this one.

    Other than that, posting daily in itself seems to be one of the biggest boosts. Sporadic posting drives traffic away.

    Charmian

  2. Michelle Rafter

    Charmian: Thanks for the comments and suggestions. I know you’ve been at this longer than me, so it means a lot. I’ll definitely investigate adding an email subscription option. I’m also contemplating starting a monthly e-newsletter to send to sources, etc., with lots of pointers back to the blog. Good point about consistency, that’s definitely key.

    Michelle R.

  3. Susan Weiner

    Michelle,

    When I write articles for my e-newsletter that are more than 2-3 paragraphs long, I point readers to my blog for the continuation.

    Susan

  4. Michelle Rafter

    Susan, that’s a great idea – and yet another reason why I need to start a newsletter.

    M.R.

  5. Leah Ingram

    Michelle:

    I find the best way to drive traffic to my blog is posting about something that’s hot in the news that day or week. Recently, when it came out that the oil companies were still raking in record profits, yet they were claiming that our rising gas costs at the pump were not their fault, I posted something about that. I saw a huge spike in traffic that day.

    Also, another blog I’d read said that a great way to drive traffic is to write “evergreen” posts from time to time, and also to write posts that are actionable–that is, instead of navel-gazing, woe-is-me posts, give your readers something they can take away. So when I write about rising gas costs, I’ll often write about ways to stretch your gas mileage as I did here:

    Leah

  6. Leah Ingram
  7. Michelle Rafter

    Great suggestions Leah. I also read the daily news looking for items to turn into blog posts. But I don’t always blog about that item on that day, especially if I’ve already got another post queued up and ready to go. If I want more traffic, maybe I need to do a better job of blogging about the day’s events and save the evergreens for slow news days.

    M.R.

  8. Dawn Weinberger

    Michelle,
    I didn’t know about the new status feature on LinkedIn. Thanks for the info!
    -Dawn

  9. Kim Olson

    Great tips! I especially like the idea of adding a little teaser to your e-mail signature.

  10. Carolyn Erickson

    I love these tips, Michelle. You bring together what is for me a confusing mass of tech applications into focus for freelancers. What a timesaver!

  11. How to write blog posts that get comments « WordCount/by Michelle Vranizan Rafter

    [...] how to get people to leave comments? First you have to get them to your blog. I’m working on that. But once they’ve arrived and read what they’ve come for, [...]

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Michelle V. Rafter

Reporting and blogging about business, tech and media.

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The Blogathon is coming! The Blogathon is coming! The 3rd annual WordCount Blogathon is just around the corner. This May, freelancers, writers and bloggers of all stripes are invited to join me in a blogging marathon - posting 31 days straight. This year's Blothathon promises to be better than ever, with participant badges, giveaways, a guest-post exchange, and real-time recap. Look for more details coming soon. Meanwhile, check out Blogathon resources here. Read. Comment. Enjoy.