I’ve read a few comments here on Problogger from bloggers who are feeling low because they’ve noticed a plateau or even a decrease in the traffic coming to their blog.
While we all want to see our traffic rise the reality is that every blog has days, weeks and even months where traffic levels out or even decreases. This can be quite distressing for bloggers who have big hopes and dreams for their blogs.
Today I’d like to look at some of the reasons a blog’s traffic might decrease and suggest some ways forward for each of them.
1. Seasonal Traffic
If you’re still in the first year of your blog you are yet to see what a full calendar year looks like in terms of traffic for your niche. Most niches have natural rises and falls in traffic.
For example (see below for a chart of visitor numbers) on my photography tips blog we see spikes in traffic in December and January. December’s traffic boost is generally to do with people researching new cameras to buy and January is generally associated with people working out how to use cameras that they got for Christmas. On the flip side we often see dips in traffic over August to October.
What to Do: The first time you see a seasonal rise or fall in traffic it can be quite confusing – however the key with it is to not panic when you see a dip but to identify opportunities to maximize the rises and to minimize the falls.
For example it might be that you need to tailor your content for certain times of year and what people are doing in relation to your niche.
For me on my photography blog this meant writing content in November-December on how to buy a digital camera (to capitalize on the Christmas buying trend), writing beginner photography tips in January (to capitalize on the trend of people looking for tips on how to use their new cameras) and during low seasons (like July when it’s summer in the US) writing topical tips like Beach Photography Tips or How to use a camera in the Bright Sun.
Another Tip – one great free tool for looking at seasonal traffic is to use Google Trends to analyze what people are searching the web for. For example if I type in ‘digital cameras’ I get this chart:
There’s lots of interesting stuff in this (the downward trend for starters) but it clearly shows what I’ve observed above – more people are searching the web for that term from November-December each year. This information could confirm a suspicion you have or help you identify a trend to capitalize on in your niche.
Further Reading: Seasonal Traffic and How to Capture it for your Blog.
2. Topical Interest
At other times of year traffic events can be triggered by other current events. For example I know one entertainment blogger who has had a lot of traffic this past few weeks simply because they’d previously had a lot of content that ranked well in Google on Will Smith. Of course in coming months as the news of Will Smith’s bad behaviour at the Oscars subsides it’s likely that they’ll see some declines in traffic.
What to Do: The key with topical rises and falls in traffic is to try to capture as much of the rush of traffic as you can so that when the decline comes you’ve got new subscribers/readers to your blog (see further reading below on ‘sticky blogs).
It’s also important to be aware of upcoming events in your niche and writing content in anticipation of that. This can be hard in predicting the death of a mega pop star like Jackson but in different niches it’s possible to predict events.
For example – before the Athens Olympics I was involved in running a blog where we wrote a post in advance of the Olympics for every single event in the games. The posts included athletes names and any information we could get on the events. We updated the posts with results once they events had been run. As a result we were consistently ranking very highly for ‘Event name Results’ when people were searching for winners of events in Search Engines.
Further Reading: How to Create a Sticky Blog
3. Posting Frequency
One common reason for lulls in traffic is that a blog has had a lull in new content being published. I saw one blogger writing a post recently about how their blog was failing to gain traction and in the comments of the post a reader pointed out that the blogger had hardly been posting. The reality was that the blogger had produced very little to be read and so people were not visiting.
What to Do: Posting more doesn’t guarantee extra traffic but it can be a factor to consider. Chart your last few months of posts and see if there’s any correlation to rises and falls in your traffic – you might identify a trend!
Worth noting is that some bloggers report that when they post LESS that they actually get more traction with readers. I know of one blogger who was posting 10-20 times a day and when he dropped things back to 2-3 posts a day he noticed not only increases in comment numbers per post but that his posts were being shared more on social media sites. At 10-20 posts a day posts were coming off the front page of his blog so much that readers hardly had a chance to read and share them.
Further Reading: What is the Ideal Post Frequency for a Blog?
4. Shifts in Search Rankings
Many blogs see the way that they are ranked by Google (and other search engines) rise and fall over the years.
A Personal Example – Back in 2004 (just before Christmas) I woke up one day to find that my main blog at that time had all but disappeared from Google. I’d not done anything to the blog that wasn’t allowed by Google and hadn’t made any major changes to the site – I just disappeared. My heart sank (actually I felt quite sick) because that blog was the main source of income from my blogging and 75% of my traffic had vanished.
The lull in traffic lasted about 6 weeks before it magically reappeared. In that time I got myself another job and diversified my blogging and learned a lot.
What to Do: Sometimes search engines change their algorithms and occasionally they seem to lose sites from their rankings for no apparent reason. The key with this type of loss of traffic is to not panic, make sure you’re abiding by Google’s guidelines (not selling text links or doing anything else considered to be black hat) and then apply for re-inclusion using Google’s webmaster tools.This has happened to me a couple of times over the years and each time the traffic came back – it wasn’t quite as good as when it disappeared but things seemed to right themselves.
Further Reading: Search Engine Optimization for Bloggers
5. Poor Quality Posts
Of course another factor to consider when looking at the traffic to your blog is whether you’re actually building a valuable site for readers and producing high quality, engaging and useful content.
This one can be a little confronting to think through and might take you getting an outsiders critique or feedback (sometimes it’s hard to be objective about something you’ve put so much work into). As I look back on my own blogging I know there have been definite times where traffic has suffered when I’ve struggled for inspiration as a blogger and where this has impacted the quality of what I was able to write.
On the flip side there have been times where I’ve been inspired to write series of posts that have connected with readers and helped them in practical ways which has driven a lot of traffic to my sites.
What to Do: Ask yourself (and others around you):
- Are You Being Relevant and Useful to Readers?
- Is your blog helping your readers by providing them with value, solving their problems, entertaining them or giving them a sense of community?
If the answer is no then it is likely to impact the number of people reading it.
Further Reading: How to Write Great Blog Content
6. Promotional Activities
As I look at some of the rises and falls in traffic to my blogs I know that some of them can be directly tied to my own marketing and promotion of my blogs (or the lack of promotion that I’ve done).
Writing great content doesn’t guarantee a blog’s success. You can’t just build it and expect that ‘they will come’. Sometimes you need to get out there and promote yourself.
Perhaps the lull in traffic on your own blog is partly to do with taking your foot off the accelerator in your own marketing.
What to Do: This means different things for different blogs but could include investing into social media sites like Twitter, promoting your posts to other bloggers, networking with other bloggers, running a competition on your blog, leaving comments on other blogs and forums, guest posting on other sites, doing promotions in main stream media, doing some giveaways….. etc
Further Reading: How to Find Readers for Your Blog.
Keep Moving Forward – Don’t Give Up
There are many other potential factors that could be at play (I invite you to share others below) but the key is to not be paralyzed by the declines and plateaus in traffic that you experience but to spend a little time trying to identify the reasons and then keep on motoring on with your blog.
You can see from the first chart above that my photography blog has had quite a few months where traffic has plateaued and dipped – but I’ve kept to the vision that I have for the site and continued to keep working. A decrease in traffic from one month to the next is not pleasant but it’s not the end of your blog. If I’d allowed the dips to determine whether I’d keep blogging or not I’d probably have lasted 2-3 months on that blog and failed to see it grow to the point that it has.
If you’re serious about building an audience for your blog and want to supercharge your traffic ProBlogger’s Find Readers Course will give you the roadmap and guide you through 6 clear steps to find readers.
This article was first published on July 15, 2009 and updated April 28, 2022.
Great advice. Thinking back only a week or two for fourth of July. My blog had been gaining traffic for a while then the 3 -5 of July it dropped to literally 0. It felt pretty discouraging but I just kept posting and sure enough everyone came back from vacation and i’m back on the up side again.
Awesome. ! A blogger must keep a waves of good post regularly and connected with them.
Shajib
http://www.ebooksdock.co.cc
I think the “keep moving forward and don’t give up” hit me! really what gives traffic or the key to a blog’s success is PERSEVERANCE. Keep on whatever happens. if there’s a plateu, just keep on it will soon rise up but along the way: LEARN.
Thanks Darren!
Agree with the “too many posts can hurt”… I actually saw a decrease when posting too many articles daily.
Good advice.
I believe even when the traffic fluctuates since there was a massive increase recently due to any reason, if the posts quality is good, people will return. There are good chances that apart from that one post which the visitor landed; he will give another one post a try which he doesn’t know about and you don’t know which post he will click. If the second post strikes the right chords, you make a great impression. :)
Moral of the story good quality always works !
You hit the nail on the head Darren on every point. All of those points are just as important as each other.
I am brand new to blogging, which is funny because I am a software engineer. I have read several articles from your site and it has help me start my own blog (only 3 days old) at http://www.womenwantingitall.com.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge. Shari
Darren, Thanks a lot for listening to us… the readers. I was one of them that teased you with the plateau in traffic.
I was quite surprised that you treated plateau and decline in the same way, I have to say… I was expecting to read different tactics to make your traffic keep growing instead of “re-gaining” it… but at some point I think it’s OK… these tips can make you reach more readers that, with time (and quality content) can make your audience grow.
Have a great day and thanks again!
G from Ottawa, CA
You can dismiss this entry, just wanted tu subcscribe to comments on this post.
This is exactly what I needed to read.
My traffic has plateaued and at very small numbers, and it is rather disheartening.
I’m going to come up with a plan of action based on your advice. I report back after a month. Hopefully I’ll have something to show for it!
Great information! I just started my own blogs, and this definitely helps me get started.
hmm…nicely said. Lack of time or not able to spend good time on blogging, is another greatest factor that blocks the growth of your blog & its traffic. Because, i am hardly finding time for blogging but trying to make the best in the available time. lets see whats gona happen with me.
Looks full time bloggers like you are enjoying the time good with blogging. :-)
Thanks !!!
-Mr. Ven
Seasonal traffic. Never thought of that. Pretty important at my Study Blog I guess, When the students stop studying, they won’t be looking for ways to study of course. That is why I’m now more focussed on personal development on my blog..
Great post Darren, have to read some articles you link to!
I think this is bang on. Great tips! Thanks for sharing!
“3. Posting Frequency”
On ablogaboutnothing.com I used to post almost daily, 3 to 5 posts a day and was lucky to get 100 unique visitors a day for my trouble. Now I post once every few months on it and I easily get 300 to 500 unique visitors a day. Wish I could figure that one out…
On the other hand at pet-snakes.com I average a post every few weeks and I get consistent traffic that is steadily increasing day by day. Not to mention it is actually targeted traffic.
Projecting six months ahead – because the country I live in is a tourist destination, I’ve also found that people look for information six months ahead. So for winter activities (dog sledding, reindeer sleighing etc) people are searching now for those things – and I’m getting many people looking at Christmas posts too – yikes!
I also noticed that during this years 4th July weekend my page views halved – I guess everyone in the U.S. was out partying ;D
Thanks for the read.
Darren, once again you’ve covered every angle. My current blog is not even 2 months old but I monitor things very closely.
I got to a point where traffic was increasing steadily on a daily basis then my host had a blowout, the database corrupted (all in the same week) and I was stuck fixing things and wasn’t able to keep to my regular posting schedule that my brand new readers were used to.
Since getting things sorted out, the posts are now coming out as they should be and readers and traffic is slowly returning.
On a side note, I just noticed that ProBlogger has N/A PR today. Has something happened again?
I’ve had my blog up and running since 2006, but have yet to make it past the 300-visitors-per-month mark (how embarrassing!). You pointed out the flaws I’ve been making, and now it’s time to try get the ball rolling again. Useful advice (as usual); thanks.
And regarding that blogger who made 10-20 posts a day … Aye carumba! Talk about information overload.
Recently at LaptopMemo ( A tech news and reviews site run by me, a 12 year old) I’ve been having almost weeks of drought. 2 days ago I tuned my site a bit, left a comment at Engadget, and wrote a nice article. And I reached the most views in one day (649) and the next day was 201. I always thought that in the summer, people are traveling (if you have the funds), so you lose traffic. At the same time people are running out of cash so their Internet connections are down.
Great post, Darren, as usual. It helps to keep us, the amateur bloggers, motivated and on track.
I have been blogging about ‘Best Hawaii Vacation’ for about 3 years now. Can’t believe it’s that long and I am still doing it and enjoying what I am doing.
The traffic to my Hawaii vacation blog is definitely influenced by seasonal aspects – our high vacation season is winter – and big Hawaii events coming up like the Ironman on the Big Island.
I learned to adjust to those by writing more related fresh content posts of interest for Hawaii visitors and really ‘exploit’ the extra traffic during these periods.
There are factors though which are beyond our magic blog posts like the ‘economic slowdown’. Hawaii tourism suffered big time for this summer and blog traffic did get slower but Hawaii always ‘recovers’ and will this time too.
Important through during those ‘slower times’ to keep posts attractive and blog visitors interested!
Aloha Pua
Best Hawaii Vacation Blog
p.s.
BTW I love your tweets on twitter! @puahawaii
This is actually pretty timely for me. I’ve recently started writing more again and using the social media. I have definitely seen a correlation between posting frequency and traffic. The best thing I take away from this post is to keep at it. It’s amazing what happens when you do.
Stephen
I have a horse blog that’s a little less than a year old. I find watching traffic ebb and flow very interesting.
My readership dipped once spring arrived in the northern US because people are spending more time outside. I expect it to return once the weather turns colder.
The Kentucky Derby gave my blog a tremendous spike, and I got to keep a few of the visitors as RSS subscribers.
Mentioning a popular celebrity who’s in the news also gets me a spike. I wrote an essay about James Bond when “The Quantum of Solace” was released. And I’m grateful to Daniel Radcliffe for baring all in “Equus” on Broadway. I’m also grateful to Katie Price, who got me my first search engine-generated blog comment.
I do know that the people I have as regular readers love my blog. If I can attract more with “shiny” timely content, all the better.
Awesome post Darren.A blogger must know all this and then every blogger will achieve success
I’am 100% agree with you :)
I’d be curious to know if there is a traffic surge each August as college freshman jump into a new sphere of influence.
I plan to take advantage of some seasonal traffic next winter. I’ll be creating a Olympic content. I did something similar tin 2008 amongst a few friends. You assembled a fantasy team, with a few restrictions (needed X non-US athletes, only X athletes from swimming, etc). Points were earned for each medal. I’ll have a bit more time to fine tune the details for the 2010 games, though. I made up the Beijing rules in about an hour.
That was a great advice on what to do when traffic goes down.
I think that first you need to find out what happen (so you will not make the same mistake again). Second is to check with the major search engines, whether you have violated their regulations.
A lot of things can happen when traffic is not increasing but decreasing. But do not lose faith for there will always be a way.
That’s a great insight into the traffic decline many of bloggers face one time or other. I have been confronted with the drop in traffic due to shift in Search engine ranking but after few weeks its become normal again.
thanks ! gotta do something to fix my blog too !
I guess a couple of those points are applicable to me at the moment :) As for the sixth point, it can be on the other side as well – I mean, over promotion or over selling with stuffed referral links etc.
Great post Darren!
You are always going to have traffic go up and down on your blog. Just keep on trucking and everything will come back up. Greg Ellison
Evergreens could help to smooth your traffic volatility or reduce decrease of traffic. (Evergreens are not music in this case, but post with timeless content.)
Point 3 holds very important. I have has personal experience with it.
usually I post 4-7 blog post/day. For some reason if I’m not able to post my traffic for the day sink by 200.
Ex : With Daily update my Daily traffic is 2.4K
Without any update for 2 days : Daily Traffic goes down to 1.8 K. :(
So The point is keep posting daily. Use WordPress and blogspot schedule feature to make most out of it.
I certainly relate to promotions (give-aways,) and traffic spikes. People like free stuff – but I don’t think it’s sticky overall.
Yet another great article Darren, your site rocks!
I recall reading somewhere that overall Internet traffic tends to decrease during the summer months, so the timing of this particular post is quite appropriate :D
This article itself is a great testament to understanding seasonal traffic and what your target market (in your case other bloggers) might be dealing with (e.g., traffic plateaus/declines).
That said, I plan to “Keep Moving Forward – Don’t Give Up” :D
Excellent tips as always! Trying to keep relevant and keeping the quality of your post up can be daunting, but it helps to write from the heart.
Very nice and to the point. And yes most of the times the readers do pull themselves back if they feel the content is of no use to them at all.
So the key obviously is to do a proper check of the things one is writing and ask others if the entries are any good at all.
Hi Darren,
I have a request that I hope you can fulfill. Could you make a post on how how to increase your traffic depending on what type of blog you have? For example, you could list the best ways to bring traffic to a tech news and reviews blog.
Stef
12 year old blogger
http://www.laptopmemo.com
This is a big issue for me, since I’m writing about autos. In the winter, long-term projects for cars that are sitting in the garage tend to minimize traffic loss. In the summer, exciting posts that inspire people to work on their cars and just enjoy driving are the key to great traffic.
Awesome post. I love coming back here everyday and getting a fresh dose of this stuff. I’m always trying to figure out how to enhance my blog and how to help my friends to enhance theirs. Thanks
Darren
This post is right on the money and so informative. It gets nerve racking to see traffic decline once you get some momentum.
Great advice to keep on going as if you are providing value driven content, they will come back or new ones will catch on.
Really good post to share!
If I lose the search engine rankings, I think I’d just pack up and leave. That’s a serious blow!
I am so happy I found your blog!!! Now I hope I can finally solve the mystery why I have traffic and people are visiting my blog, but nobody leaves comments.
Really helpful information! Keep up the great work!
Thank God that my numbers have been steady since I launched it.
yes it heavily causes, Great post to Darren
Blogging Tips, SEO and Money Making tips by http://teratips.com
What? More than 10 blog posts a day? How does the guy do it? Was he autoblogging or something like that? Holy cow, I barely can make blog posts once every 2-3 days, much less blog over ten times in a single day. That’s crazy.
http://www.catholic2christian.com/
great you just solve my problem, i will post the information to my friends. thanks
I now post only 2wice or perhaps 3 times a week – it’s much more manageable and it appears to drive more traffic as well.
It’s one of those things you have to personally evaluate….
Another reason for a drop in SEO is because some pages could have picked up a duplicate content. Lets say you post the same amount of articles on a social bookmark with multiple redirects to the same content…that social bookmarking site reports back to Google, and your website will be blacklisted, even though it is not de-indexed and still shows up in the search engines.
There are many ways blog traffic decreases – but you’ve pinpointed the main causes. I believe it’s important to get into a writing “schedule” – whether you write in the morning, at night, or inbetween – in order to increase posting frequency. Readers like some consistency in what they read, so it’s important to stay on top of your writing tasks.
Another great post. I definitely agree with the season traffic. For me it seems like traffic comes most during the summer and pre-holidays.
What I didn’t know and thank you for is the Google Trends as that looks like some awesome stuff that can really help someone spot an upcoming niche or tell where a current one is headed.