2016-03-09



If you want reliable and qualified traffic, but don’t know where to begin, this post is going to be your new best friend. Some of the strategies you may know already. My goal is to provide you with enough details that you can easily implement the tactics you have not already put into practice. Every tactic is something we’ve tried, and we are only sharing what has worked for us.

Specifically, we’ll take a deep dive into these seven proven strategies we used to triple our blog’s traffic:

How to write irrefutable headlines (backed by data)

How to use smart automation to scale social media

How to measure Dark Social with Google Analytics

How to create a healthy email newsletter

How to create a Quora growth machine

How to ping 1000’s of blog directories in one click

How to turn blog post to slides and share on Slideshare

This is part 2 of the Ultimate Playbook for Growing Your Blog Traffic.

Andy Merchant, Co-founder of Bloggers Required, inspired this series. He created an impressive list of 35 ways to attract readers to your blog. After reading through his list, I was compelled to do a follow-up post that shows you how to implement many of his great ideas. We won’t cover all 35 – some don’t require much explaining. However, others require a few steps and for that reason, I’ll expand upon Andy’s ideas over several blog posts.

Let’s start: The Ultimate Playbook for Growing Your Blog Traffic – Part 2

1 – Use Exciting and Engaging Titles for your Blog Posts

Andy Merchant: Your readers are most likely to judge your content by their titles. Titles with numbers, data, breaking news or funny twists will attract readers to your blog.

The tsunami of social media updates has turned us into skimmers, scanners, and browsers. Facebook alone sees 2.4M updates every minute while 400M updates flow through Twitter pipes every day.

As if we were treading water keeping ourselves from drowning in a pool of updates, we spend nanoseconds frantically swiping, scrolling and thumbing through social media streams trying to find “the perfect one”. Whether it is smart, funny, or informative, something jumped out of the stream and demanded our attention as if it had superpowers. We click, and so begins our journey.

I am talking about the headline. As the creator, you achieved your first goal. You moved us from browsing to reading.

According to copyblogger.com, 80% of readers won’t make it past the headline. Maybe you do possess a superpower. However, your challenge now is backing the promise of the headline with substance, that pulls us into the article. (We’ll save that discussion for another day.)

Your blog content lives and dies by the headline. The headline has always been important but more so today. Competition for attention is at an all-time high. Anyone can create content. Your competitor is just a thumb swipe away. Over 50% of content consumption happens on a handheld device. These real-estate starved devices lack the space for anything more than a headline showing in your stream. It is more important than any other time since the Gutenberg Press that we perfect the art of headline writing.

For example, Upworthy.com gets serious about headlines. They brainstorm up to 25 headlines for each piece of content. Their time is well invested. The perfect headline can increase traffic by over 500% according to their analytics.

David Ogilvy, hailed as “The Father of Advertising”, said this about headlines:

On average, five times as many people read the headline as read the body copy. When you have written your headline, you have spent eighty cents out of your dollar.

The headline must awaken a curiosity and create a hunger for new information. There are many different styles of headlines (intrigue, suspense, informative). Google is full of hundreds of how-to articles on writing compelling headlines.

I wanted proof. What really works?

What drives readers to click?

-> STOP using you, your, you’re, must or need or risk a 20%+ drop in clicks according to Outbrain.



–> Use testimonials. LKR Social Media improved conversion by 24.31% using this technique.



–> The “top x of something” headline format outperforms all headline formats (e.g., 9 Irrefutable Laws for Writing Irresistible Headlines).

Headlines that contained odd numbers had a 20% higher click-through rate than headlines with even numbers.

–> Size matters. If you’re optimizing for SEO keep the headline at 65 characters max. Google shows only the first 65 characters of a title. According to Outbrain blog headlines containing 60-100 characters perform the best.

Research from the direct mail industry shows that the most effective headlines are eight words or less. Magazine copywriters have to write tight headlines due to space concerns, just like Twitter users.

–> Be extremely modest or overzealous. Avoid the middle ground.

–> Readers prefer headlines written in sentence case.

Nine irrefutable laws for writing irresistible headlines – backed by data (Lowercase)

9 IRREFUTABLE LAWS FOR WRITING IRRESISTIBLE HEADLINES – BACKED BY DATA (Capitals)

9 Irrefutable Laws for Writing Irresistible Headlines – Backed by Data (Sentence Case)

–> Tell readers exactly what they are about to read. Descriptive headlines get readers to click.

–>The use of verbs result in more headline clicks according to Dan Zarrella, Social Media Scientist at Hubspot.

–> A colon or hyphen in the headline — indicating a subtitle — performed 9% better than headlines without. (source)

2 – Post Blog Content on Social Media

Andrew Merchant: Your current social media followers may be interested in your blog’s content. Therefore, as soon as you post something on your blog, share it on your social media channels so that your current followers can start reading your blog. In fact, they may also share the content and help to drive more traffic to your blog.

I don’t think I need to convince you to share blog content on your social media profiles. What I will explain is how to use Smart Automation. In this case: RSS, to significantly reduce the time it takes to do repetitive tasks like posting to numerous social networks.

The clinical definition of RSS from Wikipedia reads like a textbook (I won’t feel bad if you skip this part): The acronym “RSS” stands for Rich Site Summary or Really Simple Syndication. RSS uses a family of standard web feed formats to publish frequently updated information: e.g., blog entries, news headlines, audio, and video. An RSS document (called “feed: “web feed”, or “channel”) includes full or summarized text, and metadata, like publishing date and author’s name. (Blah, blah…)

Small Business Trends explains what RSS is in “layman” terms and why it is necessary for your small business. We prefer to explain it this way:

RSS feeds give readers a method to keep up with their favorite blogs, news sites, and other websites. Anyone can choose the sites they wish to subscribe to, and then get updates in one centralized location.

In essence, RSS allows the content to come to you. That means you do not have to go to each blog or website individually when you want to view new updates they’ve published.

Is RSS dead? Is RSS Still an Important Marketing Tool for My Business?

The answer to the first question is No! Despite Google’s decision to shut down its popular Google Reader service, RSS is not dead.

It may be true that end users are not subscribing to RSS feeds in feed readers as much these days. But it’s also true that RSS is everywhere whether people realize it or not.

One way to think of RSS is like plumbing. It works behind the scenes. It’s the pipes that make content portable on the Web. RSS is still a key way that content published on one site can be seen (either in full or perhaps with just a headline and short snippet) in other places. For instance, RSS is how a lot of content gets fed to social media sites like Twitter and LinkedIn in the first place.

The answer to the second question is Yes! For bloggers and website owners, RSS is a great Web marketing tool.

It is a means to create a loyal repeat following.

It helps you grow your site by keeping you top of mind with your readers.

As a blog owner or website owner, it’s up to you to create and publicize your RSS feed. Most blogging software platforms make this easy because the software automatically creates RSS feeds. WordPress, for example, is one content management system that automatically creates an RSS feed for the site.

Ultimate Guide to RSS to Social – The Master List

The following are expert RSS to social media solutions to enable you to boost traffic, increase views, grow reach, share your photo’s and video and ultimately, boost sales across social media.

Use these links to find the social network for which you are looking for up-to-date RSS tips, tools, and advice:

eBay

Email & MailChimp

Etsy

Facebook

Flickr

Flipboard

Instagram

Medium

Periscope

Pinterest

Quora

Reddit

Tumblr

Twitter

Slack

YouTube

Vine

WordPress

Other RSS solutions:

Automated Photo Posting from RSS Feeds

Photo Posting from Instagram, Pinterest, and RSS to Twitter, Facebook, and More

RSS Graffiti Alternative

Share GoPro Videos Across Social Media

Yahoo! Pipes Alternative

3- Use Google Analytics to Measure Success

Andrew Merchant: Google Analytics will help you to keep track of your site’s traffic while allowing you to know how each section of your site is performing. Master how to interpret the software, it will help you a great deal.

Here’s another case where you likely already know your way around Google Analytics. However, are you measuring Dark Social?

With limited time and resources, it’s crucial to know what social media marketing tactics are working. What have you missed – any untraceable links or lost referrer data hiding in a corner?

According to the website analytics provider Chartbeat, nearly 70% of ‘social’ sharing goes untracked while only 25% of sharing actually occurs on Facebook and Twitter – combined. The term to describe this is Dark Social.

What is Dark Social?

Have you ever copied and pasted a link into email? If you have, you just participated in Dark Social. Dark Social is the blind spot in website analytics. In many cases, you can tell which sites people were on before coming to your site. This is helpful in determining where to spend your time and marketing money.

Dark Social refers to traffic not attributed to a source. It’s hard to measure because it happens when users copy, paste, and then share a link through email, apps, bookmarks or on chat. It’s outside the basic core of the social media ecosystem. This means a huge goldmine of valuable traffic and customer data remains untapped and bypasses traditional analytics system. Alexis C. Madrigal, a senior editor at The Atlantic, coined the term Dark Social.

Sharing activity through email, instant messaging and forum posts, aka Dark Social, is three times larger than the sharing activity on Facebook, globally. 69% of all sharing activity takes place via Dark Social globally versus 23% via Facebook – RadiumOne

Most analytic systems report Dark Social as either unknown or direct traffic. The ‘direct traffic’ category implies that someone typed in your URL directly. That might not be the case. The truth of the matter is that the information we get from web analytics tools is limited. The vast majority of social traffic may be invisible to most analytics programs.

Quantifying Dark Social Traffic

Credit to Chartbeat for this tip. Dark Social is all those visitors who don’t have a referring site but excluding those people who arrived at the home page.

Using Google Analytics as an example, the left image below shows the ranking of our “Direct” traffic for a given period. Clicking on the link displays the landing pages in which the direct traffic entered the site (see image on the right). If we assume direct traffic to mean someone directly typing in one of our URL’s, that would mean a visitor would have to know the exact URL of one of our articles on the blog. This is not likely.

What is more likely the case, this traffic represents visitors originating from a Dark Social source – email, apps, pasted links or on chat. On the right image below at number two, the slash (/) you see is traffic that is more likely ‘direct’ – people typing in blog.dlvrit.com (as well as other links pointing directly to our blog homepage).

According to RadiumOne, 93% of consumers share content via Dark Social. This iceberg under the water is an incomplete picture and can cause marketers to dump resources into the wrong channels. However, is it realistic to identify all this hidden sharing activity and the users behind it? The short answer is no. However, you can create a bit more of an aggressive plan to classify the unknown or direct traffic.

How to Decrease Dark Social

Here are three low-tech ways to gain a clearer picture of the source of Dark Social traffic.
Step 1. Add trackable codes to URL’s shared on social

The most common referral tag is the UTM Code. Using UTM parameters is a way to track the performance of a custom campaign from the origination point (tweet, email or website). A link with a UTM parameter looks like this:

http://yourdomain.com/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=Facebook&utm_campaign=SPRINGPROMOTION.

Of course, this relies on a reader to copy and paste the entire link.

Learn how dlvr.it automates the process of adding UTM parameters to ALL the links you share across social media.

Step 2. Create shortened URL’s

When sharing content outside your site, mask the link with a shortened URL. When combining trackable codes (from step 1 above) and a short URL, you will have a barrier of protection. The short URL is short enough to paste into email, chat and text. When clicked, you will know where the link originated from because you have the UTM parameter enabled. This will then register with your analytics program.

Step 3. Track the Copy and Paste Activity

A large portion of Dark Social traffic comes from readers copying and pasting content from your website. Services like Tynt have been trying to solve the copy and paste tracking issue for some time. Tynt is a code you can add to a website, and their WordPress plugin makes installation easier.

Without copy and paste tracking, when a reader copies a portion of a page, the text alone is pasted into the destination. No other metadata is attached. With Tynt installed, now when the user copies a portion of a page, the copied content is automatically wrapped with a URL.

Below is an example of how a piece of copied content would appear. I copied product information from Tynt’s site. You can see the added information (URL with trackable code plus ‘Follow us’:)

==========

Get credit for your content

33Across powered by Tynt ensures your brand travels with your content wherever it is pasted

Encourages users to source your content when sharing via copy & paste

Read more: http://www.tynt.com/product_copypaste#ixzz3UIqoB2zr

Follow us: @tynt on Twitter

==========

Nothing is full proof but you can make great headway in classifying traffic correctly in your analytics program. Dark Social is a big enough piece of the pie that taking the time to quantify and identify the source is worth the extra effort.

4 – Never Forget Email Marketing

Andy Merchant: Email marketing is a powerful tool for building a steady audience for your blog. Start building your email list as soon as possible.

Having a healthy email newsletter should be a priority of every small business.

Consider these facts:

Email marketing is one of the most heavily used communication channels to date and is considered the third overall most effective channel for lead generation for marketers, producing 13% of all leads.

According to the Direct Marketing Association, email sees the highest ROI for direct marketers at $39 for every dollar spent.

An Adobe study says millennials check email more than any other age group, and nearly half can’t even use the bathroom without checking it. In fact, 98% of millennials check their personal email, at least, every few hours at work, and nearly 87% of millennials check their work email outside of work.

Top Reasons People Opt-in

For most people, submitting an email address is like handing over cash. As a newsletter publisher, you should view the transaction as such.

Put yourself in the shoes of your audience:

→Does your opt-in process look safe?

→Do you feel confident leaving your email address?

The reasons people opt-in in the first place are varied. GetApp surveyed 500 people between the ages of 25 and 44 to determine motivations of subscribing to a newsletter.

Answers to the question: “What’s the most common reason you subscribe to an email newsletter?”

#1: Auto-subscribe, I didn’t choose to (24.8%)

#2: For deals or special offers (22.6%)

#3: To get news updates (21.4%)

#4: Interesting articles or content (21%)

#5: To get access to restricted content (7.6%)

#6: Other (2.6%)

6 High-Converting Places to Add Email Sign-Up Forms to Build Your List

Early in my marketing career, a wise ole marketer gave me some sage advice. A small group of us were sitting around a table guessing what our customer’s wanted. This marketer said, “Just ask them.”

Want more opt-ins to your newsletter? You need to ask visitors to sign-up and make it super simple.

Here are six great places to put in an opt-in reminder:

Sidebar

Footer of your website or blog

The end of a blog post

Content upsells (example – see yellow call to action on this page)

Very top of your website

Exit Lightbox (when a visitors mouse leaves the screen with the intent of browsing away, an opt-in box appears)

The Anatomy of an Effective Email Newsletter

There are many elements to consider when creating the perfect email newsletter. Knowing what they are will help you optimize them for best performance. We tested each of the following components, and they have proven to have an impact on open and click-through rates.

1 – From name and from address

The “from name” can be as important as the subject line because subscribers won’t open emails from people they don’t recognize. Use the “from name” to say who you are as the sender, and keep it consistent over time. For example, our “from name” for the dlvr.it blog is ‘debra at dlvr.it’ (one of our blog writers). We experimented with different writers names, and ‘debra’ had the highest open rate.

2 – The subject line

Mailchimp’s team analyzed emails sent from users to find what subject line formats resulted in the best open rates.

Avoid Sales or Overused Words

Most people know to avoid words like “free” in their subject lines because they trigger spam filters. But you should also avoid common words that are associated with sales, like “help,” “percent off,” or “reminder.” These words don’t always trigger a spam filter, but many subscribers will ignore them.

Include Localization

Personalize a message with a recipient’s first or last name to improve open rates. MailChimp research suggests including a city name is even better.

Use Different Subject Lines

Newsletters tend to start with high open rates, but these decrease over time. Keep your content fresh, and don’t repeat the same subject line for each campaign. If subscribers can’t tell something about your content from the subject line, they probably won’t open your campaign.

Keep Subject Lines Short

Most people quickly scan subject lines to decide if they’ll open or ignore the email, so don’t expect subscribers to dig through your subject line to figure out if they’re interested. Keep your subject line to 50 characters or fewer.

Tone Down Promotional Emails

Keep the message straightforward and avoid splashy promotional phrases, phrases in all capital letters, or exclamation marks in your subject lines. Subject lines framed as questions often perform better.

3 – The pre-header or snippet

The pre-header is is shown as the subject line in Gmail and inboxes on mobile phones. Most email clients allow you to customize this.

4 – The header

According to emailmonks.com, the top part of your email is one of the most valuable areas of your email. It plays a significant role in engaging subscribers.

5 – Email body and offer

Use images, short sentences, and paragraphs

Use design elements like spacing and dividing lines to distinguish the content sections from one another

Use bold typeface and subheads to make certain words stand out

Use bullet points to showcase benefits

Use web-safe standard fonts (i.e. Arial, Comic Sans, Courier New)

Ideal font size for body copy is 14 pixels and title is minimum 22 pixels, which provides a better mobile experience

6 – Footer

The most important element to include in your footer is the line that reminds your readers how they subscribed to your newsletter. Having a footer will help decrease chances of someone calling you out for SPAM.

Other items to include in your footer.

Contact details

Unsubscribe link

Link to your website

Links to share email with a friend

Reason how subscribed was opted in

Optimizing for Mobile

With most people having smart phones at their side, it is no surprise that 90%* of people are accessing email on their mobile devices, and 42%** of them are opening email newsletters on their phones.

Your newsletter needs to be mobile ready.

Most email clients will automatically create a mobile version of your newsletter, but there are some things you need to keep in mind:

Keep email width under 600 pixels

Clearly state call-to-actions and make them tappable, centered and minimum size of 44×44 pixels

Use a single column Email template design

Make sure your email vendor uses Responsive or Scalable email coding standards. Using these standards allows for better shaping of your newsletter on various screen resolutions.

* Exact Target

** Litmus Email Analytics

8 Email Newsletter Success Metrics

Your email has been sent. You agonized over the content and layout. Now you cross your fingers. Is an open rate of 15% good? What about a click-through rate of 4%? Sounds good, right?

The biggest question I have is: How does the performance of our newsletter compare to other businesses in our market?

Mailchimp put together an excellent resource that allows you to compare your performance to your industry and company size. They scanned hundreds of millions of emails to determine the performance data.

Email performance data by industry:

Email performance data by company size:

The overall strength of your email list is more than just looking at open and click rates.

There are many other factors to consider. FulcrumTech put together a great plan to monitor the true strength of your email list.

-> Bounce Rate

This metric measures the portion of recipients who didn’t receive your email message. The bounce rate is further broken down into “soft” bounce rates and “hard” bounce rates. Typically caused by such issues as network problems or a full mailbox, soft bounces are likely temporary and eventually delivered. Hard bounces, however, will never be delivered. They’re returned to the email server because the email address is invalid or doesn’t exist. Typos in email addresses are frequently the cause of hard bounces, for example, indicating that your list needs some cleaning up.

Bounce Rate = # Hard Bounces / List Size

According to MailerMailer’s email marketing metrics report, bounce rates vary by industry, ranging from .9% in banking to 4.3% in real estate.

-> Unsubscribe Rate

The unsubscribe rate measures the number of people who “opt out” of your email list. In addition to measuring the quality of the subscribers on your list, it’s also a good indicator of how relevant your audience finds your content.

Unsubscribe Rate = # of Unsubscribes / List Size

Unsubscribe rates higher than 1% indicate that there’s a problem that needs to be identified and addressed.

->  List Growth Rate

This metric measures how rapidly your list is growing. To determine your list growth rate, subtract the number of unsubscribes and bounces from the number of new subscribers and divide that number by the previous number of subscribers on your list.

List Growth Rate = (New Subscribers – Unsubscribers – Hard Bounces) / List Size

-> Inactive User Rate

The inactive user rate measures the number of recipients on your email list who haven’t opened your emails over a period that you believe indicates they’ll likely never open again (e.g., six months for a monthly newsletter list). Sending to people who repeatedly don’t open your emails can lower your email reputation and decrease your inbox delivery rates.

Number of Subscribers Who Haven’t Opened Your Emails for > 6 Months / Total Number of Subscribers

If you determine that you have a high number of inactive users on your email list, you may need to take action to help re-engage them.

-> Unique Open Rate

This open rate metric measures the number of people who open an email message. Are your subject lines effective? Is your message resonating with your audience? That’s what this metric helps to determine.

Open Rate = Number of Email Messages Opened / Total Number of Email Messages Sent

See the open rate charts above to compare your open rate to industry averages.

-> Click-Through Rate

The click-through rate measures how many times the links in your email message were clicked. The more relevant your content and marketing messages are to your audience, the higher the click-through rate. If your open rates are high, and your click-through rates are low, you’re doing a great job of generating interest in your emails, but the content is not resonating.

Click-Through Rate = Total Number of Unique Clicks / Number of Links in the Email x Total Recipients

See the click rate charts above to compare your click rate to industry averages.

-> Click to Open Rate

This metric is the ratio of unique clicks as a percentage to the unique opens. It measures how effective your message is in motivating recipients to click a link once they’ve opened your message.

Click to Open Rate = Number of Unique Clicks / Unique Number of Opens

Click to open rates should be in the range of at least 25% to 30%.

-> Conversion Rate

Are you getting the results you’re looking for? That’s what this key metric tells you. The conversion rate tells you how many of the people you sent the email to actually clicked all the way through to complete the desired conversion – such as making a purchase, completing a survey, or signing up for your e-newsletter.

Conversion Rate = Number of People Who Converted / Total Number of Recipients

Reducing Unsubscribe Rates

You worked so hard to get visitors to subscribe to your newsletter. Email subscribers are valuable. However, like death and taxes being a sure thing, so are opt-outs.

The question is how do I reduce my overall churn rate. If you receive less than a 2% unsubscribe rate, you are within industry norms.

“List churn” refers to how many subscribers fall off your list every year. They can fall off due to:

Hard bounces (e-mail message that has been returned to the sender because the recipient’s address is invalid)

Changed email addresses

Because they unsubscribed

The Direct Marketing Association states that list churn can erode up to 32% of a list each year. It takes a lot of list building to stay ahead of losses like that. The number one reason people unsubscribe is because they’re getting too many emails. A MarketingSherpa study found that 86% of people would prefer to receive an email from a company once per month.

Simple changes to the frequency of emails can help to reduce churn. There are many ways to get a sense of how frequently your customers want to receive an email from you.

MarketingSherpa suggests the following:

Have several newsletter or email sign-up options available when customers opt-in to receive email. The more options they select, the more frequently they receive email.

Clearly list the cadence of your different newsletters and email lists on the opt-in form so customers can self-select how often they want to receive email.

Have a single email sign-up and send less frequently, giving customers an option in those emails to sign-up for more frequent emails (perhaps even just during your high season, e.g. from Thanksgiving to New Year’s Day).

For customers who click on the unsubscribe link, give them the opportunity to opt down (receive email less frequently), not only to opt out.

Test different frequencies, and see how they affect total revenue and unsubscribes.

The following infographic by Litmus offers a visual breakdown of some of the most common reasons why people unsubscribe from emails. Litmus and MarketingSherpa found frequency is the number one reason people unsubscribe.

A study from MailChimp has established that frequency and engagement are negatively correlated, meaning that as businesses send email more frequently, their customers tend to engage less with each campaign.

What can you do to reduce email churn?

Follow these best practices from email service providers:

1 – MailChimp: Survey unsubscribers for feedback

Set up a survey for when people do unsubscribe to poll them on why they decided to leave your list. Make any necessary changes to keep current subscribers happy.

2 – AWeber: Repeat your brand name

Instead of simply including a company name in the “From” field as most email marketing campaigns do, repeat your brand name in both the “From” and the “Subject” field. Repeating your name can result in a 20% gain in open-rates and an overall 15% improvement in click-through rate.

3 – CampaignMonitor: Avoid over-communicating

The general rule of thumb is to send no more than one email every 10-15 days. Of course, this depends on the business you are in and the expectations you have set with your subscribers. If you are emailing more than once every ten days, you may want to consider reducing the frequency of your emails.

5 – Increase your Blog’s Visibility Through Q&A Forums

Andrew Merchant: Question and answer sites such as Quora and Yahoo Answers can help you to attract readers to your blog. Just visit and sign up with these sites and then answer questions related to your blog. Leave behind links to your blog.

In reviewing our Google Analytics, we noticed referral traffic from Quora was starting to grow. Quora is a question-and-answer site where questions are asked, answered, edited and organized by its community of users.

The discovery of a previously untapped traffic source engaged us to come up with a strategy to see how we could increase traffic specifically from Quora. We’ve documented the steps below. But first, the results:

Our referral traffic from Quora grew an impressive 3x between February and April!

Why Quora?

First, you have to decide if Quora is the right place for you to spend time on.

Are your customers there? Quora contains questions and answers for over 500,000 subjects and popular categories including technology, economics and personal health. You should be able to find a niche to participate in.

Joanne Xu from Crazy Egg explains why social media marketers should get involved with Quora:

Quora is a great way to find out what issues are puzzling your current and potential user base. Use this information to determine the direction of future content.

By answering questions related to your industry, you can demonstrate your expertise in the space and improve your company’s brand image.

You can influence people to start thinking about the problem in a new way—one that considers your product niche.

As long as you’ve clearly stated who you work for, you can also explain how your product can help solve someone’s problem.

Quantcast estimates nearly 800,000 people access Quora each month. Their traffic has been steadily growing.

Quora Growth Strategy

Mastering Quora isn’t complex, but it does take time to build momentum.

Step #1: Follow topics and build your profile(s)

Try a few approaches. Follow narrow and broad topics and fine tune over time. You will get notified when there is a new question on the topics you choose.

Build out your profiles. With each topic you follow, you can create a unique profile that highlights your expertise on that topic. This is a great feature that compliments a diverse background and further adds creditability to your answers.

Configure your Quora profiles at:

https://www.quora.com/INSERT-YOUR-USERNAME/about

Using myself as an example below, you can see I have seven different profiles – one for each topic I follow.
Step #2: Create a Quora blog(s)

We decided to create a Quora blog with the idea of exposing our existing content to a new audience.

For instructions, Quora provides the answer: How do I start a blog on Quora?

Next steps – On a daily basis, we performed the following tasks:

Task #1: Answered questions

Strategy: We pinpointed 2-3 targeted questions to answer that would drive traffic back to our blog. Although our answers were precise, we included a link back to our blog for more information on the subject. See example below:

How did we choose which questions to answer? We asked ourselves the following questions:

Do we have domain expertise in the area being discussed?

Do we have data to back-up our answer? Do we have a blog post as a reference?

Are we one of the first to answer the question? We wanted to be one of the first to answer. We noticed this increased the upvotes on our answers.

Time spent: 15 minutes, Monday – Friday

When I responded to questions in each category, Quora had already populated the correct profile in my response – again highlighting my expertise in that subject area. Most social networks only allow for one generic profile. This is a unique advantage. I can showcase my many talents that expand beyond just my professional activities at dlvr.it.

Task #2: Republished blog posts

Strategy: When we added a blog post on the dlvr.it blog, we would turn it into a question to repost on Quora. Each Quora blog post included a summary of the main points and link back to the dlvr.it blog for more information.

Time Spent: 5 minutes

Task #3: Shared answers on Twitter and Facebook

Strategy: Build awareness to the Quora answers with our existing social media audience. We used smart automation to build awareness of our answers. When I answered a question, the answer was automatically shared with our social media audience using Quora-to-RSS.

Time Spent: One-time set-up in dlvr.it using RSS. How to create RSS feeds for Quora.

We found that starting with “My @Quora answer to…” was the best format when sharing on social media.

6 – Use Pingler to Distribute Your Blog Posts

Andrew Merchant: Pingler provides a free service for distributing posts to News Reader sites and search engines. In fact, Pingler will boost the chances of your blog posts being found through search engine results.

Pingler is a pinging service. Pinging is a way for your website to tell the world you have new or updated content. WordPress has this feature built-in and automatically notifies (pings) update services each time you add, modify or edit a post. The update services then take the information they receive from your site and tell other search engines, blog directories, news websites, feed aggregators, social networks, and all subscribers to those services, that your blog has been updated.

Why Ping?

Three words: Traffic, Reach and SEO

Notifying “the world” of fresh content the instant it is posted helps improve the following:

Helps in getting instant traffic from a variety of sources = INCREASED TRAFFIC

Getting indexed faster by major search engines = INCREASED REACH

Increase your blog’s exposure and SEO benefits = INCREASED SEO

Can you Add Additional Ping Lists?

By default, WordPress uses Ping-O-Matic to notify all major ping services about your blog update.

However, you can always extend your blog reach by pinging more services by adding them manually. A simple Google search resulted in many updated 2015 WordPress Ping lists including the Recommended WordPress Ping List 2015 from Genesis Themes.

To update your ping list:

Step #1. Login to your WordPress admin area and navigate to:

Settings > Writing

Step #2. Scroll down to Update Services

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