Facebook Pixel
Join our Facebook Community

21 Ways to Make Your Blog or Website Sticky

Posted By Darren Rowse 18th of July 2008 Blog Promotion, Featured Posts 0 Comments

Does the traffic coming to your site come in a Yo-Yo like cycle of ups and downs that never really seems to go anywhere in the long run?Glue

Yesterday I wrote about a common problem that many bloggers face – spikes of traffic followed by flat-lines and promised a follow up post today on how to break this cycle by building ‘sticky’ sites.

My point yesterday was to encourage readers not to see spikes in traffic as the ultimate goal but as a stepping stone to ongoing growth.

What is a ‘Sticky’ Site?

A sticky website is one where a first time reader arrives and finds it difficult to leave.

Not because the site owner captures them in a ‘RickRoll’ or a series of windows asking them if they REALLY want to leave – but because something about the site motivates them to explore it further – and more importantly to make a decision to (and takes some steps to ensure that they) return again to it.

21 Techniques to Make Your Site Sticky

The following 21 techniques are ways that you can make your blog or website more sticky. They come from my own experience of blogging over the last 5 years. As a result of basing this on personal experience I’m going to show you quite a few examples of what I’ve done (after all i know my own sites best). I’d love you to add your tips and show examples of what you’ve done in comments below to make it a more useful resource for readers.

1. Make Your Invitations to Subscribe to your blog Prominent

One of the most important things to do is to have a prominent call to action for readers coming to your blog to subscribe to it.

In fact I’d recommend having more than one invitation – one prominent one above the fold and prominent in your sidebar or navigation area and then a second one below your post. This means that people are triggered to subscribe whether they have just arrived on your blog or if they’ve just finished reading a post (a ‘pause point‘).

This is what I do on my blogs and my tracking shows that both get a fairly even number of people using the two options.

prominent-invitations-to-subscribe.jpg

By the way – if you’re not already subscribed to ProBlogger’s RSS feed – here it is!

2. Educate Readers about Your Subscription Methods

One of the most read posts here on ProBlogger is my ‘what is RSS‘ post which I have below my Subscription link. It’s there simply to educate readers on what RSS is and in doing so sell them a way to connect with my blog. Interestingly enough – quite a few other bloggers around the web now link to the page to educate their readers too.

Similarly – I occasionally will write a post on my blogs that invites new readers to subscribe. Sometimes I think we mistakenly assume that all of our readers have been with us for a long time and all know how to use our site – however many of your newer readers might not know the full story.

Here’s one of these posts that I ran on DPS last year. The day after I did this my RSS subscribers jumped considerably. It was just a matter of educating my newer readers of the blog on how they could connect better with it. You’ll also note that at the end of the post I asked readers to let me know how they follow the blog. This was for two reasons:

  • Firstly I wanted to involve older readers who already knew all the information in the post. It somehow seemed to make the post more relevant for them as it invited them to participate.
  • Secondly it was about social proof and showing newer readers how others used the site. I think the comments section reflected some of this.

3. Good Blog Design

I’ve always believed that a good blog design is an important part of helping readers to decide whether they’re going to hang around and track with your site over the long haul.

Readers make judgements about your site within seconds of arriving at it – if they see something cluttered and confusing they’ll be less likely to want to return.

Good design highlights your content, helps people navigate your site well and creates a good impression – and first impressions matter!

Keep your design simple, familiar and obvious and you’ll be on the road to a sticky site.

PS: A common mistake that I see bloggers making is to crowd out their content with too many ads above the fold. If a reader arrives at your site and has to scroll to see the content you’ll increase the numbers of people who simply hit the ‘back’ button on their browser.

4. On Site Branding

Work hard at building a brand that is attractive and draws people in.

First time readers should know what your blog is about at a first glance. Use your blog’s title, it’s design, taglines, post titles, about pages, logo and navigational elements to communicate what your blog is about.

Also – do something to differentiate the brand of your blog. It could be a logo, image, color scheme, blog name….

5. Make Your Blog Personal

One thing that I’ve seen a number of bloggers do really well over the last year or two is brand themselves well on their blog. While it’s not essential to have a blog that is centered around your personal brand I find that when you do add a personal touch to your blog that it can connect with readers in a powerful way.

personalize.jpg

The fact is that some readers are more interested in connecting with a person than a collection of content.

Adding your photo, writing in a personal tone, using video/audio and including personal details and stories of how you engage with your topic can give your blog personality which will draw some of your readers into a relationship with you.

6. When you get a rush of traffic to one particular post….

When the spikes in traffic come along you need to be ready to act (and act fast – because they can be momentary).

  • Add invitations to subscribe to your feed within your post. Something along the lines of ‘enjoy this post? Get more like it by subscribing to….’ can work really well.
  • It can also be worthwhile adding links at the end of your post to ‘further reading’ on posts that are getting lots of reader to them.
  • Sometimes when you get a spike it can even be worth writing a ‘welcome’ post. For example if I get a mention in a mainstream media publication that sends significant traffic I’ll often do a post that welcomes people but also gives them a ‘tour’ of the site (example).
  • Another clever move is to quickly write up a followup article to the one that is getting all the traffic. For example – if this post suddenly got a burst of traffic I could quickly write a post ’10 more ways to make your blog sticky’ and then add a link to that post at the end of this one (update: actually I wrote one called 7 more ways to make your blog sticky). This shows readers that you’ve got more to say on your topic than just one post. Every extra page view is a step closer to them subscribing (if the pages they view are good quality).

These ‘hot posts’ are really important to optimize (learn how to optimize popular posts).

7. Get Interactive

Getting someone to DO something on your blog means that they’ve invested something into your blog and increases the likelihood that they’ll return.

Interactive blogs are often also sticky ones. Interaction could include

  • Comments
  • Competitions
  • Polls
  • Projects and Memes

As a result it’s worth spending some time Learning how to get readers to comment on your blog – and exploring other ways to make your blog more interactive. Get your readers involved as much as you can!

The other bonus for ‘giveaways’, ‘special offers’ and ‘competitions’ is that when you do them regularly some readers will subscribe because they don’t want to miss out on future giveaways. The current competition might not interest them but they sure want to know when you do one in future.

8. Add a ‘subscribe to comments’ feature to your blog

This draws those who comment back to continue the conversation and increases the chances of them becoming loyal readers.

You’ll find that only some readers will ever use this – but even if just a few do you’ve had a win.

subscribe-comments.jpg

I have this enabled here at ProBlogger (I don’t have it on by default – those leaving comments have to choose to subscribe because I don’t want to inundate them with comments) and at any given time there are several hundred people subscribed to comments on posts. I use this subscribe to comments plugin to run mine.

PS: just be aware that if you get a lot of unmoderated comment spam it can be a little embarrassing to have this feature – I learned the hard way.

9. Respond to Comments

This is a particularly effective way to draw readers back to your blog – particularly in the early days when you don’t have a lot of readers commenting to follow up.

There are two main ways you can do this:

  • respond to comments with comments
  • respond to comments with emails to the comment leaver

Showing those that comment on your blog that you’re interacting with them can make a real impression and will often draw them back time and time again.

10. Offer alternative ways to subscribe

subscription-alternativesSome readers will respond well to your prominent invitation to subscribe via RSS (see #1 above) but others will be more open to connecting in other ways.

I generally offer three subscription methods:

  • RSS
  • Daily email updates (RSS to Email)
  • Weekly newsletter (summary of the blog from the last week plus some exclusive content)

More recently I’ve also been offering readers the ability to track with my blogs via Twitter and send my latest posts to my Twitter account via TweetBurner.

Why so many options? The answer is simply that each reader has their own systems in place to consume content and connect with websites – so offering a variety of methods increases the chances that you’ll be doing something that they are familiar with.

11. Promote social media connecting points

Similarly – some of your readers will respond very well to your invitations to connect on other social media sites.

For example I have some readers on DPS who are Facebook junkies. They refuse to subscribe via RSS or email but religiously read my blog by following my Facebook profile which pulls in my latest posts.

Another small group of readers here at ProBlogger follow this blog through Technorati’s favorites feature. While I prefer to read blogs using an rss reader like Google Reader – their rhythm of reading content revolves around Technorati. As a result I’m happy that I promoted my Technorati profile (you can favorite ProBlogger here).

While you might not see the sense in people following your blog in some of these social media sites others do and at the very least promoting them can potentially reinforce your brand.

Social-Media-1

12. Highlight Your Best Content

A great way to convince readers to become loyal is to get them reading more than one of your posts (especially if they are your best posts). You can do this by linking to other posts within your content but also suggesting further reading and ‘best of’ posts around your blog.

For example – here at ProBlogger on my front page the ‘best of ProBlogger’ section is one of the most clicked upon parts of my site. This small section of the site sends people deep within the blog to some of my best work – hopefully resulting in quite a few new loyal readers.
Best-Of-Pb
At DPS I have a small section on my sidebar called ‘Digital Photography Tips’ which is a list of ‘sneeze pages‘ (or compilation pages of my best posts in certain categories). Again – these are there simply to draw people deep into the site and get them viewing some of the best the site has to offer (and hopefully to convince them to subscribe).

Best-Of-Dps

13. Create Momentum With Your Content

AnticipationWhen you give readers a sense that you’re creating more content that they’ll want to read you give them a reason to subscribe.

For example when a reader reads the first part of a series of posts on a topic that they find useful you can count on them wanting to read the rest.

I wrote about this in a post on creating a sense of anticipation on your blog.

14. Consider Removing Dates on Old Posts

This one could be a little controversial but I find that when old posts are not dated that it doesn’t create a ‘oh this is old’ type reaction in your readers.

I’ve seen this numerous times here on ProBlogger where posts written back in 2005 have attracted comments like ‘this is old’ or ‘out of date tips’ – even when the content has been of a ‘timeless’ or evergreen nature.

Personally I think that you should consider the type of blog you have before doing this. For me it works on DPS where I’ve never had dates on posts – but not here at ProBlogger where I have a topic that is more time specific (I’ll write more on this topic in coming days).

15. Give Incentive to Subscribe

 IncentiveOver the last few days I’ve had a small competition going on Digital Photography School where I’m giving 3 subscribers to my newsletter there a copy of a great photography book.

1500 new subscribers later (and counting that small incentive is one of the best $50 I’ve ever spent.

Give away a book, free ebook or report, download or some other incentive to those subscribing to your blog’s feed or newsletter and you could give some readers the little extra incentive to connect that they needed.

It need not be anything expensive (or that costs you anything at all) – just make it a small bonus and see what impact that might have.

16. Keep Posting Frequency Up

One thing that I do as a blog reader deciding whether I’ll subscribe to a blog or not is to head to the home page and see how often they’ve updated recently.

There’s nothing more frustrating as a reader than to find some great content and be hungry for more only to find that the blogger hasn’t update in 3 months.

I don’t think you need to update every day – but something in the last week shows that your blog is up to date. You can also highlight this by showing your most recent posts somewhere in your sidebar.

17. Create an Engaging About Page

About-PageAnother thing that I often do when I go to a new blog is to look at it’s ‘about page‘.

I like to know who is behind a blog, what their goals for it are, how it started and other information about what the blogger is on about.

This is an opportunity to sell your blog to and make a connection with prospective readers who are going out of their way to find out more about you – so use it to tell your story and draw readers in to journey with you.

PS: whatever you do – don’t let your about page be the default about page that comes with your blog.

18. Add a Community Area or Forum

One of the best things that I ever did with my photography site was to add a forum.

I cannot express to you just how sticky that area of DPS is!

While readers come to the blog once a day to read new content – some of them come to the forum ALL DAY – racking up literally hundreds of page views a week.

Forums won’t attract all of your readers (I suspect they attract some personality types and not others) – but they will connect with some and help make your site a lot stickier.

19. Social Proof

Feedburner-Subscription-Conters-2Does your blog have readers already? If so (and even if it’s just a few) highlight this in any way that you can and you’ll show other first timers that they’re not the only one reading your blog.

People attract people and a site that is obviously being read by others will draw others into it.

This can be difficult in the early days of a blog when you don’t have a lot of activity – but as it builds show it off.

Highlight new comments, show subscriber numbers when you have them, quote readers comments, find a way to slip your stats into a post occassionally etc.

It’s a bit of a snowball effect – once you have readers they’ll bring others in.

One thing that I occassionally do at DPS on my subscribe page (a page dedicated to talking readers through 3 subscription options) is to not only highlight the options but to tell people how many people are using them. In this way those considering subscribing get a sense that they’re actually becoming a part of something that has momentum and thousands of others joining.

20. Target Readers with Specific Messages

Here are a few tools and plugins out there that enable you to present specific messages to certain readers coming to your blog based upon where they’ve arrived from and if they’ve been to your blog before.

  • LandingSites is a WP plugin that shows readers arriving from search engines related posts on the search term that they’ve searched for.
  • What Would Seth Godin Do is a plugin that welcomes new readers to your blog with a special message and invitation to subcribe.

Got any other plugins and tools for targeting readers with specific messages? Feel free to share them in comments below.

21. Sticky Content

Lastly (and most importantly in my mind) – the key to sticky sites is sticky content.

You can have the best designed site in the world with lots of the above features – but unless readers who come to it find something that connects and brings them life in some way – you’re unlikely to get them back tomorrow.

Writing engaging content needs to be your number one Priority.

What Have I Missed?

As I wrote this list the ideas just kept coming (I originally set out to write a list of 10 points… then 20…. then I just had to slip in one more) – but I’m sure there is more to say on the topic of sticky sites.

What would you add? What have you done on your site to add stickiness?

Looking forward to hearing your ideas in comments below.

PS: Welcome to StumbleUpon readers

This post has gone crazy on StumbleUpon today. If you’ve surfed in from there thanks for dropping by. If you’ve found this post helpful I’d appreciate you stumbling it. You might also find future posts on ProBlogger helpful – so don’t forget to subscribe (you know I had to do that on a post like this!)

Lastly – this post has led to some great conversation in comments below which has triggered a lot of other ideas for creating sticky blogs in my mind – so I’ve written a followup post – 7 More ways to make your blog sticky.

About Darren Rowse
Darren Rowse is the founder and editor of ProBlogger Blog Tips and Digital Photography School. Learn more about him here and connect with him on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn.
Comments
  1. Great tips like always Darren!
    Now i need to tweak my blog a little bit more!

  2. Great post Darren! I’ve used a lot of these techniques on my blog, and they definitely work. I’ve got the subscribe option and related post links below my posts, a popular post section in the sidebar, we’ve done series, have a pretty solid about page, etc. Because of the nature of our blog and our posts we have been a victim of the traffic spikes too, but those spikes have certainly helped us in the long run, as it gains our site much needed exposure. I think viewing those traffic spikes and irregular traffic patterns isn’t necessarily a bad thing.

  3. Great article… you know quality is always better than quantity… who wants a bunch of one time visitors?

  4. Thanks for the tips, we plan on implementing some of the tactics that you suggested. We just started a blog, and we plan to launch on Monday (start advertising). I was wondering if anyone would be interested in taking a look at it and giving us some feedback on the layout/design and interface, and if you want, the content. It is a political blog, and we are two UNC – Chapel Hill seniors. THanks in advance for the feedback, and thanks a lot for problogger. You guys are making it easy on us new guys

  5. This post is awesome. I have found previously on my website my shoddy content was the thing holding me back from my site becoming sticky. I had a lot of post which were not my own and this didn’t entice readers one bit. I am now trying to write my own original content because I feel readers respond to this better and want to come back for more

  6. I agree with James. Darren – What is the best way of doing your ‘best of’ widget looking thing? I really want to have that on my website!

    Rich Page (web analytics fantatic)
    http://www.rich-page.com

  7. Great post…! I’m going to implement the subscribe to comments feature on my blog

  8. Stephen Page says: 07/18/2008 at 8:17 am

    (Am I falling into my own trap by leaving this comment?, probably, LOL)

    What I am tired of is hot air. You said:

    “Over the last few days I’ve had a small competition going on Digital Photography School where I’m giving 3 subscribers to my newsletter there a copy of a great photography book.

    1500 new subscribers later (and counting that small incentive is one of the best $50 I’ve ever spent.”

    OK, Lets say tomorrow I am going to give away a car, yes a brand new car on my blog (i’m not, dont get excited!) now at first glances, yeah, sure people are going to rush at that competition. Probably get 3,000 new readers…..erm, no.

    Why not? Well I could give away a solid gold elephant with ruby eyes but if no one knows about the competition or I am selling that competition to the people that already subscribe what is the point?

    What I really need to now is, I have a great competition, how can I convert that into new readers?

    That is the problem I have.

    I found the ONLY way I got new readers and with a 90% fail ration was to use Google Ads and that cost me a fortune.

    Is there a better way? HOW?!

  9. @James: I had a similar problem (infrequent posting) with an older blog of mine that I eventually decided to retire. Now that I’ve recently launched a more targeted blog, I’ve found that it helps to draw up an “editorial calendar.”

    Now, I have a schedule I adhere to that guarantees one post a day, Monday through Friday, with how-tos on Mondays and Wednesdays, product reviews on Tuesdays, book reviews on Thursdays, and group discussions on Fridays. It’s something to hold myself accountable to…

  10. Sequels which are related to your topic, but cover a hot topic could be a way to make your site sticky. New and fresh videos, created by you, that illustrate how to do something, also works well.

  11. Geek’s Dream Girl – I’m in Australia and we’re always ahead of the rest of the world :-)

    Elizabeth – yes, sneeze pages rock. They really are very very powerful

    Brian – interesting, not sure what plugin runs that one but hopefully someone else will have an answer.

    Pete – so glad that this helped and that you’re finding Chitika useful.

    Alex – great tip – will add that to my followup post

    Raag – some excellent points there and I’ll include one in my followup post

    AIAM – nice stats there! 100 a day might not be massive but you’ve been trending up for a year now and if you keep that rate of growth up you’ll be seeing some fantastic numbers if you stick at it (read this post on exponential growth).

    Jeroen – thanks for linking up – glad you found the what is RSS link helpful.

    Mike – just try to implement one or two at a time.

    John Young – I think having icons and text can work well. I try to have a variety of different ‘signals’ for people to subscribe on a page – some icons, some text etc

    Kirk – can I direct you over to Chris Garrett at chrisg.com – he offers his subscribers a free download – not quite sure how he did it but I’m sure he’d answer that question for you.

    1HappyBlogger – thanks for that – will check it out

    Jayaprakash – good point – I think you’re right.

    B. Durant – Yes targeted readers are very good to have and what you’re really after – however a big rush of traffic from social media can be good too as it will also bring some targeted readers. I’d go for both.

    Paul – tough one. I think I waited til I hit 300-400 on DPS (can’t really remember). I’d probably not show it if you have only a handful of readers but even at low numbers you’re showing that some are subscribing which for ‘normal’ web users will mean something. It’s probably only real web savvy people that will look at lower numbers and have a snobbish reaction.

    Stephanerd – hope someone can answer that for you – I’m not the most smart tech person either :-)

    James and Rich – the best of section is populated largely by a plugin called Popularity Contest by Alex King. I had my blog designer Ben Bleikamp hack it a bit though to add my own hand picked selections and to present it in that style.

    Stephen – yes you’re right – a competition isn’t much good unless you have new people arriving at your site from somewhere. For me at DPS I have a lot of search engine traffic (almost completely first time readers) so a competition on my front page works really well. But for bloggers not getting new readers a competition will only really work if you’re going to promote it off your blog somewhere (advertising, getting links from other bloggers, guest posts etc). In terms of finding NEW readers for a blog – I wrote a 5 part series of posts on what I’d do to promote a blog if I were starting out again that I hope you’ll find useful.

  12. All great tips to sticky my blog up.

  13. props on this post man. You really are a pro blogger….

  14. Great tips! Getting people to stick around is the hardest part, as I’ve learned many times…I’ll be revisiting this post often.

  15. Good article Darren.

    I’ve set up my blog almost 3 months ago. I’ve always been interested in blogging but never decided to start it serious until now. Well, I wouldn’t call it serious, it’s just a personal blog where I stream all the stuff I like: Internet, Blogging, Webdesign, Digital Art and Cinema, in common they have the love for ART and Information.

    At the beginning was rough. Few visitors, I hadn’t tweaked my design yet… But as soon as I started to write some key posts a great flow of traffic arrived at my Blog. Most of this traffic comes from Social Networks, specially StumbleUpon an Digg Like Sites. I’ve been reading Blogging techniques for quite some time now and So when this traffic arrived I tried to “grab” it and spread it all over the website. On good days of “Spikes” I can get around 7 – 10K Pageviews per day, on “Normal” days I can now sustain around 2K Pageviews per day, What isn’t bad considering the time my Blog has.

    I think another key part of bringing more people to your website is writting content like you say, and the more content you have the more chance you also have from people to arrive at your blog, be it from Social Networks or from Google Indexation.

    Some of the things you’ve mentioned I’m doing it allready. Some were nice points that I will try to add to my website. Specially a good About Page and a What is RSS Page, I will probably take some inspiration from yours if that is ok. :)

    Oh, and that plugins seem very good, I will try them out.

    Thank you. Nuno – Lisbon, Portugal.

  16. Thanks for the great tips, once again!! My blogging experience has improved dramatically since discovering your site. All the best, B

  17. Great post!

    I find this particularly useful since I just launched my blog last week even though I’ve been an avid blog reader for a few years. I have been devoting a lot of time to scouring for tips and tricks to help make the blog better and I continue to try to improve it since its launch.

    I will definitely be using some of these suggestions as the blog continues to mature.

    Thanks!
    Justin

  18. I always enjoy reading your tips reading the forum one though I got an idea myself. Not sure how to implement it right now other then doing a post that you keep updated.

    The idea is to put together a list of the best forums in your niche. As some of your regular readers join these they may mention some of your own posts thus the potential of bringing in new readers from these forums.

    Sort of expanding your ability to participate in forums.

  19. Just took a look at Chrisg’s blog. I figured out how the free download works. In Feedburner you can customize your feed and E-Mail forms look. All he did is place a download link within this customization process. Actually let me say I believe this is what he did just in case he did it a different way.

  20. thanks Darren,
    I’m going to take some of your points and use them. I did try a competition, and embarrassingly I’ve only had 3 people enter! How depressing…My disillusionment grows bigger each day – I am almost ready to give it up, but each day I come back to problogger and I get that little bit of hope…that little bit of motivation to just keep going….I know I probably sound pathetic , but thanks for the help…
    jess

  21. I remember reading a while back that bloggers should not display their subscriber number unless it was over one thousand. However, I have to agree with you and I think sometimes it works better being a small number.

  22. “… but not here at ProBlogger where I have a topic that is more time specific (I’ll write more on this topic in coming days).”

    Ah, that’s a very good example of your own #13: Create momentum with your content.

    As for the about page, I tend to always read them on the first visit. I like to know who’s behind each blog. In fact, in my RSS reader I like to file feeds under the author’s name instead of the blog’s name.

  23. Interesting and spot-on thoughts, Darren.

    I’ve been using twitterfeed to update my Twitter account every time I post, and I also make sure to advertise my writing to my Facebook-junkie friends as well.

    After writing one semi-controversial post, I was (pleasantly) surprised to see how many hits I got from a link I had posted on a forum I frequent. The day after said semi-controversial post, I wrote a little “welcome” to all the people who had popped over from the forum. I’m glad to hear I did something right! (And it seems as though those readers have continued to visit ever since! Woo!)

  24. Great article, thanks a lot!

  25. I’m certainly sticking to this post. There are so many techniques to implement. The book is very helpful as well.

  26. Awesome post as usual Darren, going to employ some of these ideas to see if I can get my spikes to be sticky lol… and Jess dont give up! Cheers!

  27. Every blogger should read this post to improve there blog.

  28. Darren, thank you ! What a fantastic post.

    For relative beginners like me this is one post to print out and put on the wall for reference for a very long time.

  29. Darren, I wanted to add my thoughts to the collective bandwagon that you rock.

    Let me write that again:

    Y O U R O C K !!!!

    I’d been looking for a reason to change my blog design and you planted that seed in my head. I switched to a completely new template, and of course linked to this post in my subsequent post about it. I used to have a deep blue background and now it’s white. More reader-friendly. And I owe it to you.

    So, thanks, man.

  30. Great Post,

    I have found out that the best thing to make my site sticky is————–Great Content and You Get Great Content by loving what you do.

    If you do not like food then don’t blog about it.
    If you don’t have the slightest clue about SEO leave it to the pros or learn it well then teach it!
    Bottom line if you are blogging about something just to blog-remember garbage in-garbage out.

    I love comedy and thats what I present to my visitors-Damn Good Comedy, Funny Pictures,Videos yada yada.

    Now I know everybody doesn’t have the same sense of humor so I diversify and try to have something for everyone.

    I don’t laugh easy,so thats good because when something makes me laugh then I know some people are definitely going to enjoy it and share with friends.

    Who would have thought comedy would be hard work, it is but I love it and we need it in our lives (takes you away from the craziness and bad times of this world).

    Good Content = Good Sticky

    The Funny Man from

    http://thecomedynet.com

  31. Thanks Darren this is worth being absent from work today!

    Cheers!

  32. Thank you for this post Darren,

    There’re so many questions in my mind about how to gain traffic to my blogs.

  33. Good entry.

    Another one, which you’ve proved yourself, is to compile lists. People love to discuss them and produce their own additions.

    Looking at the number of comments here, you’ve proved just that.

    The Red Rocket
    http://www.theredrocket.co.uk

  34. Ive seen that having useful scripts, tools, or simple games, related to your niche can also keep your site nice and sticky…. the better the tool the more your readers will come back to use it :)

  35. Absolutely stunning, fantastic, splendid post…!
    Thanks a lot Darren. Now i realised that there is lots more to learn in this arena..

  36. Darren follows his own advice. He produces really great content, and that is why I come back here nearly every day.

  37. Wow, awesome post.

    I happen to be undergoing a 3X spike in traffic right now due to a multi-level marketing company I criticized threatening me with cease and desist emails and threatening legal action.

    While I posted on the saga and outcry from the web is spreading, I haven’t been able to capitalize on the spike via monetization or subscriber increases. Your article here provided some great ideas.

    And by the way, anyone looking to thwart this silencing effort on the part of litigious companies with something to hide; track this saga as it unfolds!

  38. Darren,
    Fantastic post … the best yet. Thanks for many great tips. It looks like I have a little work to do today improving my site.

  39. Great post, this post has really helped me, it has given me plenty of ideas to be getting on with to improve my blog, because it is at the early stages, and haven’t really had many visitors, so this really helps.

    Can I ask? you said adding a number of subscribers to your blog would be a good idea, but when your at an early stage, wouldn’t this put people off? seeing that barely anyone has subscribed?

  40. These are very helpful tips on how to get your visitors’ attention…just like what they always say that traffic gives life to your blog but not only ordinary traffic..what’s more important is having a recurring and targeted traffic.

  41. Nice post, thanks a lot for sharing those very helpful and interesting tips.

  42. As always, great post.

    BTW, I picked up a copy of your book… LOVED IT.

    Thank you for all the inspiration and guidance.

  43. Darren: Interesting on Popularity Contest. I’ll have to give it another whirl. I tried it on my celebrity gossip blog, Gone Hollywood and got absurd results, so gave up on it.

  44. Great post as always Darren. I’ll have to implement some of those tips, like educating my readers on RSS.

  45. Thanks to ProBlogger, I took the time to implement a creative layout to present my latest post with.

    I blog at a very popular South African site and the template is default for everyone who blogs there. So, I added other features necessary for developing a readership!

    :)

    Thank you once again, brilliant post!

  46. Wow, your timing’s great on posting this.

    My blog’s only four weeks old. Yesterday, I got bookmarked in StumbledUpon and had views that were an order of magnitude higher than my average views. Then today a new post got picked up by one of the source’s I linked to and volume is double what it was yesterday.

    Two good days with two very different audiences. If only my site were already sticky! Thank you for showing how to get it done.

  47. Book marked and doing one by one ;)

    added feed links on side bar and single.php .. have a look and tell me if its good :D

  48. Darren,

    I like the Analog shirt! Makes a great first impression. Do you snowboard? Surf?

  49. This has been 100% helpful to me so I thank you. I personal bookmarked this page for the near future because a know I’ll been it. Thanks again. Ronald H. at http://www.revenueherald.com

  50. Thanks for the tips Darren! I’ve been subscribed to your site for several months now but this is the most relevant post for me for really implementing features to keep readers interested; as I’m as prone to those quickly disappearing spikes as anyone else! I’ll invest time in a few of your ideas and definitely be writing an RSS how-to (my advantage is that my blog is in some uncommon languages so I may even write the first ever RSS how-to in those languages :P ) and working on changing the site design etc, since admittedly it’s quite pathetic right now even the content is coming along nicely!
    Great post!! Stumble thumbed up!!! :)

A Practical Podcast… to Help You Build a Better Blog

The ProBlogger Podcast

A Practical Podcast…

Close
Open