FREE Blog Traffic Tips Newsletter
Learn how to grow your blog traffic from 0 to 1000 daily visitors. Enter your first name and email to join the Blog Traffic Tips email newsletter.
First Name:
Email Address:
I will NEVER spam you or sell your email address to anyone. You can unsubscribe anytime.

How Important Is SEO For Your Blog?

I was recently putting together a lesson for the final class in the Blog Traffic School course. This lesson is part of what I call the “advanced” materials - topics focused on taking your blog beyond the 1000 daily readers we aim for in Blog Traffic School, which are discussed in the concluding sections of the course. Essentially everything in Blog Traffic School can be used to grow your blog beyond 1000 readers, but for this particular lesson I wanted to focus on the things I have found that really brought my blog above the 1000 daily visitors mark and into the 2000+ daily readers milestone.

As I sat back and thought about it I realized there was one very powerful traffic source, one that many bloggers don’t think about too much, which accounted for a lot of my traffic once my blog had matured - the search engines. I say it had to “mature” for a reason, you see my blog received barely any search traffic for at least the first 4-6 months of its life. I had purchased a new domain name (entrepreneurs-journey.com) for it and while it was very easy to get my blog at least listed in the search engines, quite a few things had to happen before I started ranking well.

Search Engine Optimization

Search engine optimization (SEO) is an area that most bloggers will never get into in any real depth. At the highest level, very technical minded people are testing and tracking things to optimize search rankings for their websites and blogs. These people use controlled tests, playing with all the variables that make up a website - the words, code, links and so forth. Once they have results the rest of us can study their findings and apply the latest “theories” as tests for our own search engine rankings. Some things work well, some don’t.

In a lot of ways search engine optimization is an art form. It has fundamental principles which make you feel like it is a science - and a lot of people working in SEO will tell you it is and they will purport to having complete control over search engine results - but they would be lying. In reality everyone who works in SEO is guessing. Yes they have some very sound principles to work from but ultimately no direct control over the deciding factors - the search engine algorithms, which is as it should be or the system could be corrupted by those in power.

Why Does SEO Matter?

So what does all this have to do with your blog? As I stated once my blog had matured and grown past its first birthday I noticed that my articles started to show up in the first page of search engine results for some pretty relevant terms for my blog’s niche. While they don’t individually provide a lot of traffic, collectively it is a steady stream of new visitors - and this is the key - these are mostly new visitors.

Search engine traffic serves to bring in new visitors to your blog. Now I of course thoroughly recommend you work on building a loyal readership for your blog, but that doesn’t mean you don’t want new visitors coming in as well. Attracting new visitors is how your blog grows, and converting those new visitors into regular readers is the process you should be aiming to complete.

How To Get More Search Traffic To Your Blog

That’s the million dollar question isn’t it! Okay, first up if you know nothing about search engine optimization and you have time to really get your teeth into it, read this article series I wrote - The Top 8 Search Engine Optimization Techniques.

In that article I have collected the most relevant things you can do to help your blog’s SEO, however there is a lot to do and you may not be up for the task. If you don’t have the time or energy for in-depth SEO then here is my advice for you -

Focus your energies on one thing - get links from authority sites.

What are authority sites? They are websites that have a lot of links from other authority sites! Aha - catch 22 you say, and yes in a way it doesn’t sound fair does it. Authority sites are websites, and blogs are included, which the search engines consider to be authority sources of information. Generally if the site has lots of traffic, links from other authority sites and people doing searches keep finding the answers they want from these sites, you have the formula for authority status. It’s a hard thing to pinpoint but virtually every niche online has a handful of authority sites. Right now I bet every website you visit on a daily basis (perhaps besides your own) is an authority site for it’s niche.

When authority sites link to your site then your site gets some of that “authority” juice. It’s that juice that will help your blog climb higher in the rankings.

For the sake of clarification I want to state that your blog’s search engine ranking is dependent on a lot of variables and just focusing on authority links is only part of the picture, but in my opinion it is the most crucial and the most difficult to accomplish. To get a link from an authority site, or preferably lots of them, and from many different authority sites, you really need to be doing spectacular things or saying spectacular things or helping people in spectacular ways or have a spectacular PR person working for you. It’s by no means easy and it doesn’t (nor should it) happen over night. This is something that you build up to over time.

So essentially, once again my advice to you regarding your blog’s search engine rankings is to become spectacular. As simple as that :)

Yaro Starak
Spectacular Blogger and The Blog Traffic King

Technorati Tags: , , ,
Internal Tags: , ,

Comments

  1. August 14th, 2006 | 7:02 pm

    Good article. Link building is very important for SEO. Link building is art. But If you have good content, other bloggers links to your blog.

  2. August 18th, 2006 | 7:53 am

    Another great article, Yaro! I am planning to get a little deeper into SEO but I’m taking it slowly…baby steps. It just so happens that building links is my first step. There are numerous methods to acquiring links from authority sites. In fact, I’m getting a little of your authority juice right now by posting this comment!

    Much Success!

  3. August 20th, 2006 | 12:44 am

    Yaros - Too true. I was linked from www.problogger.net and my visits and page views have soared. It was also a great way of getting readers to see some of my old content. Chad H.

  4. September 17th, 2006 | 8:30 am

    Thanks Yaro
    Your information is helpful on what is a very confusing topic. Well, at least for me. Doing effective business - and specifically value-adding your marketing in a way that prospective clients get something worthwhile when taking the time to read what you put out - is one of my most important aims. However, growing that interested traffic takes not only the effort (which I don’t mind) but savvy - with which you assist.

  5. October 8th, 2006 | 1:47 pm

    One thing I wonder, Yaro. Do search engines differentiate between links in articles on blogs and links in the comments … for instance the link that will be formed when I submit the comment?

    (I’m not interested in comment spamming people, of course. But I wonder.)

    I do know that Technorati differentiates, of course. I wonder about Google and Yahoo! and MSN search.

  6. October 8th, 2006 | 2:01 pm

    Hi John - my gut feeling is that comment links don’t have as much weighting as content further up. I think Google is smart enough to know what is a comment and what is content in the article (the word “comment” should be enough of a give away).

    Of course the nofollow tag has an impact too which a lot of blogs have on as default for all comment links.

    All that being said comments do count as content being added to your page and the search engines love it when a website has constantly updating pages so simply having comments being added to your blog on a regular basis is good for your blog’s SEO.

    Of course comments are best when people have a discussion they really care about because you get the best comments and you get lots of them. As a by-product this helps your SEO too. Yet another reason why blogs are naturally good at ranking well in search engines.

  7. October 28th, 2006 | 11:15 pm

    yes. getting linked by big sites is a big plus. Its not easy but if you add real value to the content, then traffic will come.

  8. November 29th, 2006 | 10:29 pm

    Is there any special techniques that can be used to optimize a wordpress blog on my server for SEO. One issue I see is no way to change the title tags on each page, where it seems to take the blog name for the home page.
    I have several hundred 600+ inbound links.
    I have pinged Technorati manually and used pingoat as well as pingomatic every time I add a new blog.
    There is plenty of content, about 30 articles.
    What else can I do? What else should I do to optimize my blog?

  9. December 6th, 2006 | 11:13 am

    Hello Nathanael,

    First up for the WordPress title issue you should install the optimum title plugin:

    http://elasticdog.com/2004/09/optimal-title/

    After that I suggest you read my introductory SEO article series here:

    http://www.entrepreneurs-journey.com/331/search-engine-marketing-part-1/

    and finally stay tuned as I have a book coming out that should be exactly what you are looking for.

    Regards,

    Yaro

  10. December 15th, 2006 | 2:08 am

    Hey Yaro~

    Great tips and advice!

    I agree…be spectacular…I’ve got almost 200 posts on my blog (been blogging there since Mar. 06) and just in the last 6 months have I really started creating a “buzz”.

    Been tagged and linked by some key “authority” players and yes indeed, the traffic and SEO ranks are soaring!!

    I’m with you…write quality content, on a somwhat regualr basis, make friends with the “big dogs” (or at least bigger than you) and share the link-love…bloggers are pretty cool people, most like spreading the wealth!

    Stay passionate,
    Kam

  11. December 15th, 2006 | 5:32 pm

    Hey Kam, great to see you at this blog.

    Yes, spot on with everything you said and are doing at your blog. It’s funny on paper (digital paper in this case) it reads so easy, but successful implementation isn’t easy.

  12. December 18th, 2006 | 2:45 pm

    Wow, Kam, I checked your blog. Nice work! Easy read, great comment response and a nice 3/10 PR by Google. Pretty impressive for a blog which just started in March 06. Will have a closer look. Hope I can learn something for my ‘young’ Hawaii blog.

    Yaro, I went into your link about Brad Fallon’s Stompernet SEO CDs. It was loaded with comments, which I need at least 2 days to make my way through. It also says that it’s sold out at the moment and one has to put his/her name on a waiting list. What are the chances to eventually get it? Anyway, what stompernet has to offer
    sounds really promising and enticing?!

    Anybody out there in the blogger community who joined Stompernet, received all the ‘great’ SEO advice, online and by CD, and is willing to give me a short (if possible) feedback???!

    Thanks in advance. Aloha, Pua

  13. January 7th, 2007 | 4:38 pm

    Pua - Unfortunately I doubt the old stomping the search engines product will be released anytime soon.

    Stompernet is their replacement product but the first round is closed after their huge 10Mil+ launch. I have not seen the insides of Stompernet so I do not know how good it is. Reports so far are good though.

    Yaro

  14. January 9th, 2007 | 2:58 am

    hey yaro thanks for your input on stompernet. i will still keep an eye on it.
    right now i try to stay on top of what’s going on with pipeline-profits. after i had read your post http://www.entrepreneurs-journey.com/608/pipeline-profits/ with pipeline-profits claiming everybody can make big money online without SEO, PPC or Affiliates!!!! ijust received the info from pipeline profits that their 4th video is out http://www.pipelineprofits.com/blog/ have not watched it yet. will a.s.a.p. no product yet though! 26,000 + people have signed up just for watching the videos! this is getting interesting! let us know when you know more. your are somewhat closer to the source. thanks, pua

  15. March 13th, 2007 | 10:37 pm

    Be spectacular - haha. Easier said than done.
    Not everyone has it in them….
    I’m not even sure if I can provide “spectacular” content on any subject. So, I’ll just keep plugging along and posting slightly less than spectacular articles.

  16. April 9th, 2007 | 7:19 am

    […] to optimize a wordpress blog on my server for SEO. … Posted in Advertising | Trackback | del.icio.us | Top OfPage […]

  17. May 25th, 2007 | 9:38 pm

    Very honest and true points. Well done. Last paragraph is excellent.

  18. Pua
    May 26th, 2007 | 2:16 am

    back to the basics again. can’t hurt. thanks yaro for reminding us of the ‘Top 8 search engine optimisation techniques’. read them all over again, more thoroughly this time though. what really hit me is that i really need to define my title and description (same applies to keywords) more precisely and visitor oriented in order to show better SE results for my hawaii blog. some brainstorming with SEO experts would help. pua

  19. August 22nd, 2007 | 11:35 pm

    Google tends to turn the tide on Bloggers.

    New Blogs aren´t indexed in the main index but in the supplemental index right from the very start.

    The Blogs need to get links first to get into the main index.

    Month ago it was the other way around, using Google to get links.

    Regards,

    René/ProbloggerWorld

  20. August 27th, 2007 | 2:36 am

    Traffic from search engines is an important source. Effective SEO techniques plays an important role in gettting traffic. My blog is not cached by all search engines, i am implementing some seo techinques to get more traffic. I have found that static url are prone to get more traffic than dynamic url’s

    regards

    Once upon a lifetime in kerala

  21. October 14th, 2007 | 3:28 pm

    Don’t fall into the trap of blogging about your what you like - all very well to do so, but your first concern should be, “is it what other people will like?”

  22. October 31st, 2007 | 5:58 pm

    Great info Yaro!
    I tried to claim my blog at technorati but it seems like there is a conflict between hubpages and technorati, so my hubpage blog is still pending.
    Do you any advice for me Yaro?
    perfumer

  23. November 4th, 2007 | 12:26 pm

    Hi Perfumer,

    I’m not sure what hubpages is, so I don’t think I can help you.

    You should contact technorati about it.

    Yaro

  24. November 21st, 2007 | 10:24 am

    Yaro,

    I like your tips, but I always feel a bit left out in the dust. How do you monetize a blog such as mine, wikilaw.blogspot.com, which is not a product or service related blog, but is rather a news and commentary based one; more over, one that is geared towards a particular market (law students, and people who edit wikipedia)?

  25. November 24th, 2007 | 7:51 am

    Wikilaw - you just need to think laterally. What type of products and services do the readers of your blog use.

    Think in terms of demographics and you will come up with plenty of ideas. Your blog doesn’t have to be about a product to sell products. As long as you attract human beings who buy things you will have options of things to sell.

    Yaro

  26. January 20th, 2008 | 11:21 am

    A bit late, I know, but I’m sure this post is not dating too quickly. To respond to John Koetsier’s comment (#5) from my own experience, I have done an alexa and similar searches for who links to my page, and it does not show up any blogs where I left comments, it only shows forums where I participated in a discussion (as well as sites linking to mine). However, apart from being part of a community when joining into a blog discussion, there are some traffic benefits all the same, but it follows the same rules as blog posts - write a comment which is of use to someone. This does not help directly with search engine placement, but someone may visit your blog by clicking on your link, and you never know who that may be. It is a small trickle of traffic, but it can add up and the knock-on effect has the potential for growth.

  27. February 25th, 2008 | 11:52 pm

    Hi Yaro,

    Thanks for all the tips. I can help with more traffic to my blog so I’m going read up your “The Top 8 Search Engine Optimization Techniques’- again.

    Peter

    Home Business Ideas

  28. March 11th, 2008 | 5:14 am

    Hi Yaro,

    Great article. I’ve read through some of the comments and I have a couple of answers I haven’t seen yet.

    I use siteexlorer.search.yahoo.com to track the in-links to my blogs. It is updated almost constantly compared to other tracking services. It shows every in-link I generate, whether automated or from comments I leave on another blog, in forums, or what have you.

    Also, Hubpages is like Squidoo, a site where you build a “hub” about your blog or other website to help generate traffic and revenue. I personally like Squidoo lenses better because they get a lot more traffic than my Hubpages do, and I’ve started reaching my minimum payout monthly on all my Squidoo Lenses. Hubpages hasn’t generated as much traffic or any revenue yet. I also haven’t worked on my hubs much. I spend the time working on my blog posts instead.

    You can feed your blog content to your Hub or Lens with your RSS feed to keep the content fresh without having to update your Lens or Hub very often.

    Best regards,
    Sherri

  29. April 11th, 2008 | 9:40 am

    Your website is a great

    thanks

  30. August 7th, 2008 | 2:36 pm

    […] As I’ve written about previously the number one goal if you are working on your blog’s search engine optimization, is to gather all those incoming links from authority sites. Will proposes that some of the old fashioned ways of link building - namely directory submission, link exchanges, article marketing, etc - are just not cutting it anymore, and that blogging potentially could be the best way to encourage incoming links from authority sites. […]

  31. March 8th, 2009 | 4:20 pm

    Ephedra liquid gel products.

    Connecticut ephedra lawyers. Where to buy ephedra. Ephedra.

Leave a reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.