Trying to create a new website, my sister-in-law called me to help her through the steps of the process. Bewildered and frustrated, she had become extremely irritated with the whole thing. Not really schooled about making a website myself, I still agreed to help in any way that I could. It made me feel good that she thought I might know something about building a web page; however, I don't know how she got that impression.
Finally, I realized that my brother's wife probably assumed I could help her build a website based on my personal blog. Like many people, I feel she may have mistaken a blog for a website. Creating a blog, however, does not necessarily make you an expert able to tutor others in website design. Unfortunately, several new computer users are under the same impression not knowing the difference between the two.
I am no expert, but I think I can explain the difference between a blog and a website. Not ever having created I website, I'm not positive about what all of the differences are. I do know that a blog is more like a journal that is kept online rather than in a traditional paper notebook. The "blogger" writes brief articles, posts pictures, and adds other interesting things to make the blog more complex. Creating a blog involves a minimum amount of work. You can create a blog for free on user friendly sites that will guide you through the format step-by-step.
Since websites are a great deal more complex, I would think that there is a much more involved process in creating one, especially considering that professionals get paid good money to design websites full-time. I was familiar with Bravenet, a service that provides all the tools a user needs to build a website. Suggesting that my sister-in-law use this as a starting point, I felt that with Bravenet's information and support we would be able to make it through the process of creating a website.
I might consider building my own website if we are able to get hers created well. Until I am more familiar with it, though, I'll be comfortable staying with a blog. Since they are free and user friendly, I don't feel like I need any more than that at this point. Once my sister-in-law gets more into her website, maybe she can help me build one sometime down the road.
How To Make A New Website
'How can you generate traffic to a brand new website?'
Of course, there are a number of different answers to this question and what I would do myself is probably very different to what a completely new Internet entrepreneur would do. The reason I say this is that the first thing I do when launching a new site is make use of my existing website traffic by advertising the new site on my other established sites. In addition, I have the luxury of a large mailing list which I can use to drive traffic to the new site.
I appreciate that anyone starting out in online business won't have these options open to them (and in fairness, neither did I when I first started), so let's look at things from the beginning. Day one of your first website.....
It is a fact that the quickest and probably most effective way of bringing targeted traffic to your website is by paying for it. Now before you rush off and sink $50 into one of those '50,000 hits for $50' schemes, DON'T, this isn't what I mean. Those schemes are largely a complete waste of money. Even if you get the traffic that you are promised (as opposed to some software script visiting your site and pretending to be a visitor), it will not be targeted and therefore there is a very low chance that the traffic will generate sales. When I talk about buying traffic, I mean by using the pay- per-click services offered by most of the big search engines.
You probably already know the sort of thing I mean - for example, Google Adwords. Pretty much any search on Google will display a list of adverts down the right-hand side of the page and these are all paid adverts. Every time you click on one of them, the advertiser pays Google a fixed amount which could be anything from 5 cents upwards (depending upon how competitive the keyword is).
Pay-per-click allows you to be very selective about which keywords your advert is shown for and this allows you to target your advertising perfectly. Other big names in the pay-per-click market include Overture, Espotting and Findwhat.
Now, before you all start emailing me and saying that you already knew about PPC let me just say that I am well aware that people know about it. The problem (as I see it), is that people aren't using this type of service because of the fact that they don't want to spend any money on advertising. That's all well and good but the fact is that the Internet is getting more and more competitive each day and the chances of you building a successful website business from scratch without investing any money are tiny to say the least.
If you want to attract a decent level of traffic to a brand new website in a short period of time, it is almost a necessity that you use pay-per-click on one of the main search engines. If you don't, then the growth of your traffic levels will be painfully slow and inconsistent at best.
When I launched my very first websites I invested heavily in pay-per-click advertising. At one point, I was spending over $6000 a month on Google Adwords alone!!! Seriously I really was spending that much money. It was a constant battle to tweak the website sales copy and continue to test the advertisement text just to make sure that my sales were covering the advertising payments each month. At the time I was probably just about breaking even but buying traffic in this quantity meant that I was able to fine-tune my sales pages and start to build up a list of mailing list subscribers.
Once you have got to the stage where you know your sales pages are converting visitors into buyers, then you can start to gear up with other methods of getting traffic to your site - writing articles, linking strategies, viral methods (ebooks etc), using your eBay 'About Me' page, using your link as a signature when you post on forums etc. All of these methods will win you traffic (and in most cases it will be completely free) but it will take time for the traffic to build to a worthwhile level. If you rely solely on free traffic, you really will be building your business one hit at a time.
Of course, once the free methods of gaining traffic start to pay off, you can begin to wind down your paid methods, though you may not want to - after all, if you are earning more in sales than you are paying for your pay-per-click traffic, why stop it?
As your portfolio of websites grows, you will also be able to share the traffic around a bit by linking to your own sites and of course, if you are capturing your visitors email addresses, you will be building a mailing list of people interested in the products you are offering.
Like I say, I appreciate that the above may not be the ground-breaking secret that you were hoping for but as with so many things online, there really is no secret. Achieving success is simply about taking action and whilst you can succeed online by spending very little money, the chances are that you will succeed a lot quicker by making a bit of an investment. You don't have to be spending thousands of dollars a month as I was but any new business owner should be prepared to invest a few hundred dollars a month in order to get things off the ground....
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