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6 Reasons Your Blog Traffic Might Be Declining [And What to Do About It]

Posted By Darren Rowse 28th of April 2022 Blog Promotion, Featured Posts 0 Comments
6 Reasons Your Blog Traffic Might Be Declining [And What to Do About It]

Photo by Luismi Sánchez on Unsplash

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.

traffic-rises-falls.png

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:

traffic-seasons.png

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

6 Reasons Your Blog Traffic Might Be Declining [And What to Do About It]

Chris Rock and Will Smith | CREDIT: ROBYN BECK/GETTY

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

6 Reasons Your Blog Traffic Might Be Declining [And What to Do About It]

Photo by Egor Vikhrev on Unsplash

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.  search-traffic-fall.png

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

6 Reasons Your Blog Traffic Might Be Declining [And What to Do About It]

Photo by Thom Milkovic on Unsplash

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

6 Reasons Your Blog Traffic Might Be Declining [And What to Do About It]

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.

How to Use Advertising to Promote Your Blog

This article was first published on July 15, 2009 and updated April 28, 2022.

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. I have really been taking my foot of the accelerator with my blog. I’ve fallen into that skip this today trap. I ended up not posting for a week.

    I’m glad I read this post attentively, I’m going threw all the other posts that this is linking to and making notes.

    The key to most things in life is consistency and not to give up. We just need to keep going.

    Thanks Darren!

  2. Thanks Darren for reminding us to listen to our target audience/niche. We have to determine what makes our readers coming back for more. Research, analysis and perseverance are tools that will help achieve that.

  3. I think for new blogs and bloggers your 7th point is the most important: Keep moving forward – Don’t’ give up. I wouldn’t expect my new blog to take off week after week and month after month without temporary retreats in traffic but in the long run I expect it to continue growing in traffic and readership so long as I continue offering high quality content.

    Those other points 1-6 I’ll worry about don’t the road after my base has been put it. Thanks for the quality prose Darren.

  4. Excellent advice Darren. The one that stood out for me was keep moving forward. Perseverance tends to be a major ingredient to any project, goal or dream.

  5. The first To Do is tell friends & family about your blog, use a signature with your URL and brand in your emails, be creative… Pacience!

  6. Posting more does seem to help and get more interest back in the blog.

  7. thanks for this nice post, i really benefited from it.

  8. Hello ,
    Gr8 Advice for sure .What I felt with this surge is such surges are the time for each blogger to look into the blog in deep to find some mistakes of ourself and correct them .
    Its like the time when a racer car is bought for 30 sec to check if everything is fit or not during the formule One race.

  9. My advice: just keep your head down and produce good content. They Will Come.

  10. Could the decrease in traffic be down to Google reviewing websites / blogs page rank every few months?

    My websites / blogs seem to nose dive in traffic every time Google review my page rank’s and drop me down a few.

    Just a thought.

  11. Keep blogging forward, that’s right. Everything needs process and takes time. But when you said “keep moving forward”, you sounded like a motivator Darren, perhaps you should try to be a blogging motivator :D

    Isaac Yassar

  12. A pure content article, thanks Darren. I found it very helpful.

    When it comes to traffic, tracking and analyzing the results comes into play. That’s why we should run a reliable tracking system in order to find out the increase and decrease rate in the website traffic.

    Checking out the trends on resources like Google Trends would give us some thoughts and ideas to keep the traffic live and growing.

    I agree with you about the seasonal traffic and I really liked your tip regarding writing relevant posts at spacial times.

    In months like December, people are in mode of buying, so to speak. That’s why they come online and search for products and services they want to purchase in any niche. We need to provide a content that could address their needs and give them solutions.

    Also, following the upcoming events would be a plus in traffic for many blogs by choosing relevant subjects and titles and getting high rankings at the time of event. Sometimes, those events are predictable such as sport events; sometimes they suddenly happen.

    One tip I can add here is variation. You have mentioned the quality of the post which is so important. On top of that, giving some variation to the blog itself could save the traffic flow and even increase the quantity of the traffic.

    Changing the blog template, adding other types of content, putting contest, polls, surveys, etc could help your blog remain outstanding and decrease the risk of losing readership.

    Darren, thank you again for such a high qualty post. I hope everyone else find it useful, too.

    All the Best!

    Hooshmand Moslemi

  13. Thanks for posting as I’ve been wondering about this myself.

    My redesign and then a hosting crash saw my blog drop quite dramatically and its been frustrating trying to build it back up again but I think keeping on marketing in like I always have has led me to see the traffic rise again.

    Some times new designs (especially black background-white text ones) can turn some people off but attract new readers.

  14. It’s better not to get hung up on little dips in traffic. You need to look at the bigger picture.

  15. Interesting point. You mentioned seasonal traffic in a post about 5 years ago and, until then, I had never considered it. The problem is you need two years’ data to see if it is, in fact, seasonal.

    In my opinion your website traffic should always be going up… always. If it is going down I don’t think you have the right mix of marketing/new content.

    Thanks Darren.

    Ramsay

  16. Traffic depends not only from season but also it is different during week. On most web sites there is lower traffic on weekend and higher in the middle of week. So you shouldn’t be worry if suddenly it will be very quiet on weekend, that only means your audience is out of town for the weekend :)

  17. I am a photographer and post each day, with a new photo and commentary. I think it is important to use tags that will be relevant and that people will be looking for. My blog traffic has been increasing but not where I would like to see it. I try to create blogs and tweets that people will respond to.

  18. I’ve found, for my blog, posting 2-3 times a week is all it takes to keep readers coming back for more and sharing posts. I also invest about an hour or two a day into promoting individual posts on social networking sites like Twitter and Facebook. I get quite a few unique visitors each and every day just doing simple things like that on MyLifeFinance.com

  19. Awesome tips and information. Thank you for posting this article Darren…

    Sincerely,
    Felix Albutra – SighNetDollars

  20. Question: If a site goes down, what’s the best way to get them all to come back?

  21. Thanks Darren for your post.

    I recently decided that I wanted more people to start blogging under my name and the guy that installed WP-MU for me told me that I would most likely see a decrease in traffic to my site. This has indeed happened and I hope it will start to pick up soon.

    Johan
    http://www.planyoursafari.com

  22. Hi Darren,

    Thanks for posting this article – it is a very interesting read.

    I think you should never under estimate the power of seasonal traffic. My recipes websites often have spikes of traffic at times of the year when food is important – Christmas, Easter, 4th July etc

  23. One of things I do is actually add specific keyword phrases to each blog post. I use Market Samurai to find the best keywords (i.e. balance between number of searches, website competition and money sales) and add them to each post.

    It adds about 10 minutes extra time per post but I believe it is worth it.

    Andrew

  24. thanks for the info, let me add 2 more tips

    i have three websites and here is what i noticed:

    1) traffic in summer drops more than 30% (june, july, august) then it shoots up again in September . people go the beach,spend less time in front of a computer especially if your website was educational

    2) people who depend on social media for traffic will have quite unstable traffic since getting traffic from stumble ,digg or any similiar website is a process that can hardly be controlled. on the other hand stable traffic can be got from search engine optimization since the only variable there is the number of searches which depends on the seasons as you mentioned

  25. Some absolutely fantastic advice. I like the fact that not only have you explained why the lull in traffic but you have also listed ways of getting out of it.

  26. This is very informative post..No doubt about that. I read all the points number of time so that I can keep them in my mind all the time…:)Thanks

  27. I just wanted to add that I’m one of the bloggers who commented that they hit a plateau in traffic last week. The good news is that my coffee blog hit a new traffic record high yesterday, so I busted through the glass ceiling, but I’m going to take action on a lot of the things mentioned in this post.

  28. Shifts in Search Rankings is an interesting point, I will keep in mind, thanks for posting.

  29. i know that my blog has a poor quality of content due my english ability…but it’s ok…i ‘ve to learn a lot…thanks for this great advice…i’ll also consider gtrend to boost my traffic…

  30. you have touched a bunch of factors in this article which i think very useful points to start with.

    i always want to invest more time on updating my blog but just can’t make very often. so i decided to update once a week. hoping that one day i will be able to do it seriously.

  31. I think a lot of bloggers are feeling the “summer lull” right now. The truth is that people are out traveling and taking vacations right now, so blog traffic is going to be down just a bit during the summer.

  32. For the past one year, my blog has seen a steady growth, but considering the minimum time unit as a week, my traffic has NEVER gone down!

  33. I’m guilty on “post frequency” thing. Suffering from blogger’s block can really be a nightmare.

    I got so many ideas now bubbling in my head but they seem to all disappear whenever I face a blank post page.

  34. Social media can rise the traffic in a magical way ! believe me i tried it !

  35. Interesting information, will try some of them on my blog, thanks!

  36. The comment on posting frequency was an interesting point. Many, including Darren iirc, will point out that most traffic comes from key old posts that have become the authority answer to certain questions. I strongly believe that it is better to have a small number of quality posts that are well promoted.

  37. The last part is really important for me.. just keep going! Thanks Darren for opening this very informative topic to us.

  38. Thanks Darren! I always feel as if the stuff you have mentioned above was happening, but seeing it in writing really solidifies the problems that people perceive they are having with their blogs. The way i look at it, perception or not, if your blog is doing badly, which mine has, it is time to look at what’s happening, instead of assuming there isn’t anything that you can do. Thanks again.

  39. Yeah too much post per day can hurt because majority of people who read blogs are subscribed to so many, they are likely to miss some of your posts if you post too frequently. Its always good to give your readers an opportunity to consume all your writing.

  40. It seems that the traffic slows in summe somewhat.
    great post

  41. Love the look of your site – are you having fun with it? Keep up the good work and good luck with your site!

  42. Excellent advice Darren. Writing seasonal topics is something I haven’t done much yet, but the times I did (example during Valentine’s Day I wrote a post about singlehood), I got great traffic from it. I’ll factor that in as I write new posts in the future.

  43. I’m glad I read this. I rarely reply to peoples comments…not because I don’t like them…but because I thought it was self-serving.
    Thank you
    sagar
    Download free CSS templates

  44. Really awesome blog. I enjoyed reading this review from you. I found that you really update your site regularly that made me more interesting. I’ve bookmarked your site for my future use.

    Thank you
    sagar

  45. Hey this is right on like always thanks for the everlasting source of knowledge. You seem to always have the answers I am looking for thanks Daren, you got another hooked blogger.

  46. Darren,

    This post was very rewarding for me. I was able to take a step back and analyze what I do with my blog. It also gave me some really solid tips to help increase traffic. I think the use of promotions and giveaways is a good idea that I will implement soon. Since, my blog is young I don’t have much traffic nor many subscribers. Although, I do provide high quality content that is engaging for the readers. I’m just wondering what else I can do to increase my traffic. The many things you suggested in this post are worth doing. I have done most of them, but I will try a few of them that I haven’t done. What do you suggest when you try everything, but still nothing seems to work? I know it takes patience and time for a blog to become popular, but everyone wants people taking interest in their content.

  47. Darren, you offer some really good advice. Our blog and website both suffereed similar dips it was an awakening that we needed to be doing things better. And sure enough, by doing some of the same things you just listed here, we were able to get traffic back up. Hopefully by keeping up on these things, we’ll be able to avoid bigger dips in the future.

  48. One thing that you did not mention, was to PING your blog. It’s very important to do that, as your blog gets indexed, as well as indexed quicker. Just my 2 cents.

  49. awesome advice definately gonna take some of your tips into action

  50. Darren – Can you address how to role out a “physical” redesign of your blog? I have a small readership but am really excited that in August, my blog will have a whole new look that I think will be more exciting and user-friendly (and that I have paid for!). How can I get the word out on this to people who may have visited once or twice in the past but aren’t subscribers? And what can I do to “celebrate” or promote my new design?

    Thanks for all of your tips, advice and strategies –

    Kim

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