The Neophyte Webmasters’ Guide to TRAFFIC
Traffic: 1. [noun] Social or verbal interchange (usually followed
by `with') 2. [n] Buying and selling; especially illicit trade
3. [n] Pedestrians or vehicles or messages coming and going in a
particular locality – such as a website. 4. [n] the people who
visit your website site. 5. [n] ‘Net Surfers. WebRingsRing around the WebWhat is a WebRing? Say you have a site on
midget bondage or something similarly unusual… You may have a hard time finding
traffic. You’re best option would be to find someone with the same sort of
site and do a link trade… The WebRing is
basically just that! It’s an organized bunch of similarly themed linked sites
that trade their traffic with each other in one big circle-jerk of happiness.
Sound cool? Heck, you probably discovered WebRings as a surfer, hanging
out on an Elvis memorabilia site or something and you found the little graphic
link that popped you over to a bunch of other Elvis sites; one right after the
other, after the other, after the other… “Wow! A whole Bunch of Elvis
memorabilia sites!” I'm sure you thought you found the greatest thing since
Yahoo. Way back when, when you
built your very first “Hey look at Me!” site I’ll bet you remembered traveling
along those WebRings, and ran around signing up to everything you could find -
like all the other first time webmasters. Good for you! An Original Source of Traffic:
If you have never used
WebRings then you need to keep reading, as you’re about to learn a thing or two
about this nifty source of traffic. WebRings have been
around for a very long time -- it’s one of the oldest sources of traffic on the
‘net -- and it is probably the most common place for new webmasters to get
start-up traffic. You go to one central site ( http://ringsurf.com/ ) and do a topic
search through the rings for something that meets your needs. Once you
find something, you fill out a simple form and grab some code to put on your
site. This code will make it possible for someone in the same ring to
click NEXT and land feet-first in your site. Once the RingMaster
activates your code, you’ll be included in the next- “Surfer ‘Round the
WebRing…” WebRings: A Good Place for Newbies!
WebRings are handy when
you first start out, as getting links from other people’s sites can be very
difficult when you start and getting traffic from search engines is a challenge
that More often than not,
your traffic problems are all centered around the fact that your site is ugly
(and amateur) and nobody (with the exception of the WebRings) would ever deal
with you. Not an attack on you – you’re just new and we all have to
start someplace. Cuddling up and camping out:
If you’re small and
playing with websites for fun and attention, as opposed to profit, then you can
cuddle up and camp out on the WebRings. No need to look any further boys
and girls because the WebRings can provide you a steady source of eyes. It
doesn't take any time to get this little bit of traffic and you can feel warm
and fuzzy about building your site. If you’re just doing
this for fun and not for profit then you have found you’re new all time best
traffic source. WebRings are an excellent source of small volume, targeted
traffic - surfers find you, because you are offering exactly what they’re
looking for. If you’re looking to make money off of your site, then
this is not a permanent solution to your traffic woes. While WebRings will get
you traffic, it will never get you a ton of traffic. Most webmasters learn to
set up an entry page strictly for their WebRing surfers, so the rest of the
surfers never even see them. Wanna go big time…
But haven't got a budget or a clue:
The WebRings can be a
clever a tool to get a little bit of traffic today in order to generate a ton
of traffic later. You can actually get a fair little chunk of traffic
from the WebRings but you have to know how to play it. You don't want to have
10-20 WebRings all going to the same site because you have to post the link
graphics for each ring. It doesn’t take much to junk up your site something
fierce with a ton of WebRing graphics. This is how you do it:
Build lots and lots of carbon-copy sites and make the signup form at the WebRing your new hobby.
Fill out a ton of forms all at once. Sign up for every “on topic” ring out
there, but only assign 2-3 “on topic” WebRings per copy-site. This way your
site is on every “on topic” ring and you’re pulling traffic from all over the
place for years to come. Sure you have to update
a bunch of sites but you didn't have to work hard to get the traffic. It’s
not a lot of traffic by most people’s standards, but it’s a nice steady and
targeted volume forever and ever more. Nifty huh? When to just say: NO!
So, you’ve been running
your little website for six months or a year, and you have noticed that the
little counter on your site is really humming along. Your tracker says
you’re getting traffic from directories and maybe from people’s web-logs (blogs)…
On top of this, you’re well ranked in the search engines – in fact you’re now
getting more traffic from the search engines and other sources than you are
from your WebRings. Your WebRings are now
doing more harm than good. Once your traffic from other sources exceeds the
traffic from your WebRings - It is time to remove them. When you first start
out, WebRings are a nifty source of traffic, but they are also a traffic leak. Any
link that leaves your site and doesn't go to a sponsor or affiliate, that makes
you money - is a traffic leak. Don't feel bad about
pulling them down it is the natural evolution of things. You’re
growing! Congratulations! How
to stop the WebRing train:
You have come to the
conclusion that you have finally outgrown the use of WebRings… What to do
- what to do? Well, take the little buggers down and close up that
traffic leak. It is only polite to
contact the WebRing administrators and let them know you’re removing your
link. If you fail to do this then you are going to be stealing traffic
from the ring until they notice that your link has been removed and close the
hole from their end. Let the admin know -
It's the right thing to do to. They have been a solid source of traffic
for your site for a while. It’s the least you can do for all that steady
service. Begin again Finnegan?
Now it’s time to
consider doing it all over again. Are you making money off your
site? If the answer is “yes” then you can see how that WebRing gig wasn't
a bad deal huh? Consider this: Your site
is all grown up and standing on it own – supporting itself! You used the
WebRings for exactly what they were designed for generating traffic - and you
profited from the exposure you received. If your still not
making any money off the site but you’re enjoying yourself and your visitors…
Well, hey… Leave the rings up and keep on – keeping on. More power to you! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ By Jo Hawke – AEBN.com, - http://www.aebn.com - Adult Entertainment Broadcasting Network, is the original Pay-Per-View provider on the Internet. They were the first content provider to offer full-length, adult videos in a Pay-Per-Minute format. AEBN has gathered over 18,000 top-quality videos representing over 800 studios - literally the largest and broadest selection of adult videos available from one provider. |