Proven Fast and Easy Traffic Generation Methods
by Willie Crawford
Published on this site: October 28th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month

One of the most perplexing questions faced by webmasters,
especially those with new sites, is "How do I get traffic
to my site?" Here are a few easy, inexpensive, and relatively
fast methods I use to generate traffic.
- Write and distribute ezine articles. This article you're
reading right now will send visitors to the site mentioned
in my resource box at the end of the article. You can do
the same thing. Write articles on topics that you know your
target market is interested in, and then distribute them
to ezine publisher and websites that publish others
content. People will read your articles, and if the articles provides value to them, they
will visit your site to learn more. It's that simple.
The key to getting your articles published is to write something
that provides genuine value to your readers. Actually teach
them something. Potential publisher will see the value,
and know that their readers will appreciate the articles...so
theyll publish them.
The key to getting your articles read is writing about something
people want to know more about. For example, this article
is about generating more traffic. Monitor any online marketing
discussion forum, or email discussion list, and you'll see
that every webmaster is interested in getting more traffic.
So, I know that this article will be read.
Writing articles that will be published is both an art and
a science. However, you can become proficient at it fairly
quickly. I've written over 350 articles in the past 4 years,
so it's not that hard. The best system I've encountered
recently on how to write and distribute effective articles
is called Article Announcer. You'll find it at:
http://TheRealSecrets.com/article-announcer/
- Posting others related articles on content sites.
You can create a website around a very focused niche topic,
and then post others articles on that site. You can
search article directories such as ArticleCity.com or IdeaMarketers.com
and find thousands of articles others have written and give
permission for you to use. Usually, article writers do this
in hopes of generating traffic and sales from their articles.
You can search through these sites and find articles on
your topic. Then you simple copy and paste them into your
website template, to create a site that will rank well in
the search engines because the site is focused.
When I personally create these content sites, I use software
to both locate appropriate articles, and to turn those articles
into webpages. I have templates that are in my basic site
layout. The software that I use can find dozens, or even
hundreds, of articles and automatically insert these articles
into the correct place on the page. It can even break up
the articles, adding comments or AdSense ads in the middle.
An example of one such site that I've created is at:
http://cheapest-merchantaccounts.com
On that site's homepage is a link to "Articles."
Following that link will take you to literally over 100
articles related to merchant accounts and ecommerce. ALL
of those pages were created in less than 5 minutes. I used
a piece of software called Content SiteBuilder, found at
a site called Content Desk. Basically I set up a template
(inserting things such as my AdSense code, and links to
affiliate products) and then I told the software where to
put the articles. In a snap it output the article pages.
Then I merely had to upload the pages to my server and link
to them from my homepage.
"But does this generate traffic?" you ask. If
you search on the term "cheapest merchant accounts"
at Yahoo.com you'll see that this site ranks number 5 out
of over 1 million pages targeting that term. If you continued
digging, you'd discover that the number 1 site for that
term is a blog that I own, and the number 2 site also belongs
to me... it needs lots of work :-) All of these sites generate
traffic... people looking for the lowest priced merchant
account. So yes it does work. These visitors earn me revenue
by either applying for the merchant account I recommend
or by clicking on AdSense ads.
A key element in the success of the sites above is that
I got them indexed quickly by linking to them from sites
that were already indexed, and that were frequently visited
by the search engines. I also didn't put a lot of time into
building any of these site because of the Content Desk software.
You can find out more about that software at: http://TheRealSecrets.com/content-desk/
- I like free traffic, but often when a site is first erected,
you need to use pay-per-clicks to get that initial surge
of traffic. Articles and the other methods I use are so
effective that I'll only use pay-per-clicks if I'm in a
hurry to refine the conversion rate. With pay-per-click
traffic, since they are all responding to the same ad(s)
you get more homogenous traffic. So it's easier to separate
elements in your testing and determine what's effective.
After refining the conversion process, whether or not I
continue with pay-per-clicks often depends upon return-on-investment.
I dont like to put a lot of time into managing a site!
- Create viral tools. Rebrandable PDF special reports work
well, especially if you have an affiliate program. If you
don't have an affiliate program, you can create these same
reports on hot topics, and sell or give, the reprint rights
to others. In these reports you include links to your "backend"
products, or to websites you want to generate traffic to.
Key to the success of getting others to spread your viral
tools is incentivizing them. Structuring your PDF document
so that publishers and webmasters can profit from distributing
it is the easiest way to do that. Money is a great incentive
In fact, you can even structure your articles so that publisher
profit from distributing them. The way to do that is simply
to allow affiliates to substitute their affiliate url for
yours in the articles.
If you don't run an affiliate program, you can even write
articles for programs that you are an affiliate for. Then
contact the affiliate program manager and offer to allow
them to provide the articles to their affiliates. Since
you are allowing their affiliates to change the url for
that product (to their affiliate url), you need to have
a link somewhere in each article that points back to your
site too. Most affiliate won't have a problem with this
if it's a good article. It's a win-win situation.
- Just as you use PDFs to generate viral traffic,
you can do the same thing with Camtasia videos. You can
create short videos demonstrating how to do something, and
then you make these available to publishers. Camtasia has
a feature that allows you to automatically redirect the
viewer to a specified webpage at the end of the video. You
can either send them to your website, or you can create special videos for your affiliates that
take the viewer to that affiliates url. The possibilities
are endless.
To see an example of how I use Camtasia video to both educate
and generate traffic, watch my video entitled "Secrets
of The Internet Marketing Titans." In this video I
explain why top Internet marketers seem to have an "inner
circle," and then explain how to break into that inner
circle as a welcomed member. Because the video does educate,
many ezine publishers are happy to tell their readers about
it. You can view this video at: http://TheRealSecrets.com/titans/titans.html
- Offer 5 to 20-part email courses to your website visitors.
Often your website visitors who won't subscribe to an ezine
will subscribe to a course. That's either because the course
has a higher perceived value, or because the course covers
a topic they're interest in more in-depth that an ezine
would. In the course, you invite your readers back to your
website for additional resources, to see how something is
implemented, etc. This generates repeat visitors to your
website and give you many opportunities to convert that
subscriber to a customer.
- Publish an ezine or some type of list from your website.
An ezine allows you to have repeated contact with a person
who may otherwise never return to your site. As you build
the relationship, you can offer them various reason for
returning to your site. As an example, I try to keep my
ezine to a reasonable length. Things that I can't fit in
my ezine - I post on my blog. So I invite my subscriber
to return to my site to read those extra gems available
only on the blog.
Publishing a list doesn't have to be hard work. For example,
I publish a list from a cooking related site that is written
entirely by my readers. It's a recipe exchange mailing list.
Readers submit recipes or requests for recipes. These reader
submissions are compiled into a twice daily digest that
is edited for quality control and then sent out to the list.
My editor inserts two sponsor ads in each issue. Those sponsor ads
not only drive traffic to my site, they drive six-figure
sales of a cookbook that I wrote.
The cooking list, written by the readers, creates such loyalty
that if we ever miss a day of publishing, hundreds of readers
write in to ask us to confirm that they haven't been dropped
from the list. Some subscribers have been on this particular
list for over 5 years. Aside from a little editing, the
list is on almost total autopilot. You can check out how
this list is set up by visiting my cooking site at: http://Chitterlings.com
You'll notice that the number one focus of the homepage
is to build the list, so that we can generate the repeat
traffic. It works beautifully!
So there you have seven ways to generate website traffic
relatively fast, easy, and inexpensively. I even gave you
example that you can examine and model. Implement just a few
of these ideas, and you'll get a nice steady flow of website
visitors.

Willie Crawford has taught proven Internet marketing
techniques to thousands of successful Internet entrepreneurs
since late-1996. Subscribe to his free, weekly ezine, which
helps you cut through the clutter and time-wasting hype.
Subscribe now by visiting: http://WillieCrawford.com

|