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Using Web 2.0 Sites to Drive Traffic

February 7, 2008 Posted under: Promotion by Caroline Middlebrook

web 2.0I became aquainted with web 2.0 sites after doing the 30 Day Challenge in August of last year. This tactic involves hosting content on sites that you do not own that rank well in the search engines and have the ability to generate traffic.

The Problem With Google

Search engines such as Google have the potential to drive a huge amount of traffic so everybody wants a slice of that. However the difficulty is that once you’re past the basic ‘on-page’ SEO tactics such as an optimised title, good use of keywords and so on, the rankings are affected mainly by the authority of the domain on which the content is hosted.

Recall that in my January stats I saw a significant increase in search traffic to this blog. I speculated that it may be due to the PR5 that it now has, or perhaps due to the age of the domain it is now out of the sandbox. Either way, my domain now has more authority in Google than it did when I first launched.

However consider the amount of work I needed to do to get to that position. Of course I expected this blog to be a lot of work but I created with the long term view in mind. But if you want to drive traffic without spending 6 months up front then raw Google traffic is not likely to work well for you.

What are Web 2.0 Sites?

Basically a site can be dubbed as ‘web 2.0′ when it offers the user the ability to interact with it rather than just be a passive observer. Blogging platforms such as Blogger & Wordpress are web 2.0. Social media sites like as StumbleUpon, Facebook, Twitter are all web 2.0. Sites will user driven content like YouTube and Flickr are web 2.0.

As you can see the content varies considerably and there are a multitude of different kinds of web 2.0 sites. The key ingredient to them is that they allow you to upload your content, whatever that may be.

The kinds of web 2.0 sites that can really drive traffic though are the ones that allow you to upload full pages of written content that stays around long term. Ignoring the blogging platforms for a moment, these include sites like Squidoo, HubPages and EzineArticles.

Web 2.0 allows the masses to own a piece of the Internet without needing to host content on their own domains. For a proper explanation see this article from Tim O’Reilly.

How Do Web 2.0 Sites Help with Traffic?

In a word or three - Google likes them! Heck, Google owns some of them now! These sites are massive, they have authority which means they rank very highly in Google, and probably other search engines too.

This has two primary benefits:

  1. Content from these sites gets indexed very quickly
  2. Content from these sites tends to rank highly

Compare that to a brand new domain that you just launched - Google hates you and you’ll have to wait a while before your content even gets indexed, let alone shows up in the search results.

However, if you use web 2.0 sites to host your content it will appear in Google very quickly and if you’ve done your SEO research properly you should also enjoy a good ranking and this is where the traffic comes from.

What Can You Do With Web 2.0?

Okay this could fill an entire book, well many in fact as there are a multitude of ebooks around covering just about every web 2.0 site there is! However for the context of this dicsussion I will talk about using web 2.0 sites to drive extra traffic to some external source.

In my case, I want to use these sites to promote my WordPress ebook. How do I do that? By writing an article about how money can be made using WordPress to build niche sites and within that article encourage people to read more about the topic by downloading my ebook.

If the article ranks well in the search engines then it will get traffic from Google which in turn should drive a portion of that traffic to the link that I promote within the article.

Web 2.0 Content v Your Own Domain

Here is where I think many people miss the point of web 2.0. They get all panicky about putting their content on an external site like Squidoo and say they’d much rather host it on their own domain where they have complete control over the page, earn 100% of the revenue and so on. However, I now see a very different potential for web 2.0 sites - simply to drive additional traffic to an existing site.

In my case, I already have a high PR, good authority blog on which to host my content and the download page for my WordPress book is hosted here. So far so good. The point is, that by tapping into sources such as Squidoo and all those other sites out there, I may be able to get traffic that I couldn’t otherwise.

Now as it turns out, this strategy may not be quite as effective for the promotion of my ebook as I had first thought but I’ll explain why that is in my next post when I discuss the technicalities of building these web 2.0 content pages.


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Stumble it!

You might also like these similar posts:

StumbleUpon Course Coming Soon
Boost Your StumbleUpon Traffic with Outbound Links
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Stumble Bait - Harnessing the Viral Power of StumbleUpon
Social Bookmarking Can Kill Your StumbleUpon Traffic!

16 Comments:

Josh Spaulding
February 7, 2008

Very good explanation of Web 2.0, Caroline. One thing you’re dead-on about, which isn’t exactly Web 2.0 specific, is this:

However the difficulty is that once you’re past the basic ‘on-page’ SEO tactics such as an optimised title, good use of keywords and so on, the rankings are affected mainly by the authority of the domain on which the content is hosted.

It’s too bad so many people make SEO out to be so much harder. That’s really all there is to it! Basic on-page optimization and authority (incoming links.)

The SE’s love Web 2.0 sites because people love Web 2.0 sites. People love them because they know their voice can be heard. This creates loads of frequently update, unique content and loads of incoming links from people who own sites/blogs and love them as well.

Great article, stumbled it.

Josh Spaulding’s last blog post..Easy Blog Contest - $350, Books and Free Coaching!

Andrew Stone
February 7, 2008

Nice little write up. Web 2.0 is revolutionizing the way people use the internet, soon it will be the norm. Congrats on all the new Google Traffic and the PR5.

-Andrew

Andrew Stone’s last blog post..Adsense in a Post

Sonia Simone
February 7, 2008

I remember some well-intentioned remarks during the Tumblr Slap for 30DC with people saying, “This is why you need to host your stuff on your own domain.” No, it’s why you need to not create crappy content. (But I digress.)

The combination of stuff hosted on your own domain *and* the Web 2.0 stuff (I am a huge Squidoo fan) is the killer combo, IMO. You’re exactly right that Squidoo, ezinearticles, etc. can drive lots of traffic–and the backlinks you create they can also really boost your visibility in the SERPs.

Sonia Simone’s last blog post..Make Compassion a Competitive Advantage

Mike Huang
February 8, 2008

Great post Caroline! My read of the day! :)

-Mike

Mike Huang’s last blog post..Back When? Back Then

Marvin
February 8, 2008

Getting good non technical info about how web 2.0 sites is something anyone interested in page rank needs to know. I certainly look forward to reading your next post on this topic.

Marvin’s last blog post..Read What I wrote on Helium

Michael Mosby
February 8, 2008

Caroline, great post. It raises an important issue.

Web 2.0 can be a very powerful tool but you must have a strategy. In my mind there are two potential options.

- SERPs for the W2.0 content, backlinks from your W2.0 content

- Direct traffic from your W2.0 content to your internal content

In your case (your niche) the traffic you can generate from Web 2.0 will result in targeted visitors to your blog. And once they find it, how could the not love it.

In smaller niche markets, W2.0 will probably not result in high volume of targeted traffic. My twitterings about “male yeast infection” aren’t winning me very many friends or getting me much traffic. But through proper integration, I am getting backlinks for my internal content.

So it all comes down to having a strategy.

I look forward to the follow-up post.

Mike

Michael Mosby’s last blog post..Affiliate Marketing Course Outline

onlinesmarts
February 8, 2008

Not too long ago the folks at Stompernet came out with a great promotional video for one of their training programs that talks exactly about this topic - the power of web 2.0 sites to drive traffic.

It’s about 50 minutes long but it’s worth it - if you’re not yet convinced that web 2.0 is the place you want to be for traffic, then watch this:

http://www.stompernet.net/goingnatural2/

onlinesmarts’s last blog post..Why 1&1 is my favorite web hosting provider

Caroline Middlebrook
February 8, 2008

@Josh, thanks for the Stumble :)

@Michael, yes you raise a very good point there - for my niche site (which I am going to abandon soon, too many problems with it), it was not web 2.0 friendly at all. There are many niches in which there is a lot of money to be made - health, credit cards, etc but that do not lend themselves to web 2.0 because they are not topics that people are passionate about.

Internet Junkie
February 8, 2008

Good timing for this article!
I have just re-discovered Squidoo thanks to another Associated Content member and spent a few hours on my lens for the last 2 days. I have the RSS feed of my blog on it (plus a few other ones), so my lens always gets great content!
Now I must link to it from my blog too, bookmark it, etc… but it should not take me more than one day: hopefully I will get more traffic to my blog through it.

Internet Junkie’s last blog post..A Simple Way to Make Money with a Squidoo Lens

Wayne Liew
February 8, 2008

What all bloggers think of social bookmarking sites is rather conservative now as they see these sites as a tool that will only get them traffic if they reach the front page.

What they had missed out is the part where these sites offer good search engine ranking positions which will indirectly offer traffic to their sites.

I think this is a new way of blog marketing and should be tapped by every blogger and webmaster. Anyway, I wonder what will be the next big thing after this method became saturated. Hmm…

Wayne Liew’s last blog post..Wordpress Upgrades - Fuss or Must?

Designer Sunglasses
February 8, 2008

Whilst being a strong advocate of social bookmarking sites, article sites (ezine articles being the main one, as mentioned above), etc, I have never been quite able to get into this Squidoo lark! Although I have a couple of lenses which were set up some months ago, I find that SEO and article writing takes up all my time. I would love to find a few spare hours to look into Squidoo a bit better but unfortunately there are only 24 hours in a day. :)

Caroline Middlebrook
February 8, 2008

@Sunglasses, yes I must admit that it is time consuming which is probably why I haven’t got around to it yet but I think it will be interesting to see if it brings in any traffic to see if the reward is worth the effort.

Tom Kephart
February 8, 2008

Very timely article, Caroline. Initially I had thought that self-hosting was the only way to go, and for the exact reasons you mention: having “complete control over the page” being my big one. But it’s not like the Web 2.0 sites have us locked into a single “look” - you may have to do some additional work to gain control of the appearance, but a little CSS work and you’re back to the level of “control” most bloggers are looking for anyway.

The remarkable - and oddly coincidental - thing about reading this post today was that I’ve spent a few hours looking into Squidoo and HubPages again this afternoon. I’ve come away more impressed than I was the first time around, and your points about driving traffic from them are well made.

I’ll be interested in seeing how effective the Web 2.0 sites are at directing new viewers to my self-hosted blog - or whether they become a significant source of writing income by themselves.

Tom Kephart’s last blog post..Friday’s featured links - 2/8/08

Caroline Middlebrook
February 9, 2008

@Tom, if possible I will be avoiding the options to monetize the pages themselves as I want as few external links as possible in order to drive as much traffic as I can to my ebook. I’m not interested in a few AdSense pennies from those pages.

Black Zedd
February 9, 2008

Nice one! Apart from exploiting these 2.0 sites for traffic, we can also use them to increase our credibility and authority over the niche subject we’re blogging about. Thanks!

Black Zedd’s last blog post..How To Promote Your (Useless) Product Using No Budget

morton
February 28, 2008

Hi,Nice information. from this site i come to know about some of the web 2.0 sites.this sites are very useful to get good web traffic.thanks


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