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I saw someone else ask this question recently but it was closed as spam before many decent answers appeared because they included links to their site.

I am however interested in genuine answers to this on a more general basis.

Avoiding talking about specific websites, what techniques and practises can people recommend to raising the level of quality traffic that a website receives?

[I'll post some of my ideas, but I'm interested to read what more experienced web developers can suggest]

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In my opinion, it's pretty hard to consider this question as programming related. Even though some possible answers might be programming related (SEO obviously is), the question itself is more of a social one. – balpha Jun 14 at 12:39
Voted up. Perfectly valid question. – roosteronacid Jun 14 at 12:48
It's a shame, I thought this would be a good question. I was disappointed to see the other question closed so quickly as I wanted to read the answers, so I stripped the offending spam links out and repeated it as I assumed others would also want to see answers without the spamming. I do see that it's not directly "programming", it is quite closely related though as any good web developer would certainly use skills like this. If this isn't in the spirit of this site, then do please continue to close it. (I am quite new here so I'm still learning what is considered acceptable) – Simon P Stevens Jun 14 at 12:51
Simon, don't feel bad: This is a very grey area question, so for the benefit of the doubt, I'm totally for leaving this question open, despite my opinion stated above. – balpha Jun 14 at 12:56
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I don't imagine that this is the first (or even second) time anyone has asked this question on SO. The inability to find an example suggests a firm consensus that such questions do not belong here. – dmckee Jun 14 at 14:32
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closed as not programming related by paxdiablo, Martin, jrockway, David Basarab, dfa Jun 14 at 13:22

3 Answers

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You mention good content. However what is "good" content is still unanswered? In my opinion it should be frequently updated and new material should be added. To get and keep users attention there should be a way to participate (like stackoverflow, feedback etc) and to keep track of all those changes (RSS-Feeds/email notification). Make all the information available to YOUR audience and don't make them suffer. What does it mean? Don't force them to use anything special (Silverlight/Flash/Javascript?!), don't popup anything, don't bug them with surveys and first and foremost deliver valid pages and deliver them fast!

Not exactly my opinion, but here are a couple other common things: With your keywords and content you should fill a niche, because everything else is already taken and you will not get high ratings on google. It helps if the site/domain is already a couple of years old, so don't drop or change domains too fast! Put yourself on every map and in every free service out there, but don't try and do some link farming thing. Search engines will punish you. Most (?) search engines don't understand CSS so you can add additional text to your site and make it more attractive for them (and hide it from the users via display:none), however don't exaggerate! Put your most important text/message to the TOP of the page.

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Some nice tips there. I like your ideas of what constitutes "good content". Thanks. – Simon P Stevens Jun 14 at 12:57
Hidden texts for attracting users are against google's "law". – svens Oct 24 at 22:15
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SEO, high pagerank (by having high-pagerank sites pointing to you). Ads on google search results. Having something to offer of course (good information, fun, selling good stuff).

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As with any business proposition you must have good content (provide a good service, useful information, or a good product), and then make sure enough people know that you have good content. If your content is something that relates to particular services or products people look for, you need to make sure your site is optimised for search engines to index it by common descriptions of those services. Google's SEO guide is a good place to start for how to do this. If your website sells second hand cars, don't forget to include the words "second hand cars" on your page somewhere, it sounds obvious, but it's an easy mistake to make, particularly if you use a lot a graphics.

Secondly, you should consider advertising. You need to get the message out to people that your site exists and what type of content it hosts. There are all sorts of forms of advertising ranging from the relatively cheap (paid for links in Google searches) to the very expensive (TV adverts). Obviously the type of advertising that will work for you very much depends on the type of business you have, the profile of your customers and the amount of raw cash you have available to spend on it.

Finally, don't underestimate the power of social networking. Particularly if your site provides something that would be popular with the general public. Make a Facebook fan page for your brand, create a twitter account, blog about it, etc. Anything to raise public awareness of your brand. (Do however be careful not to 'spam' people. Too much invasive or unwanted advertising can have a negative effect and damage your brand image)

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Epic fail answering your own question. You know we can see that the same person who asked it is answering it right? – samoz Jun 14 at 12:38
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Of course I do, I even mentioned in the question that I would post some of my ideas, but wanted to hear others ideas too. It also mentions in the FAQ that it's perfectly acceptable to ask and answer your own question. (stackoverflow.com/faq) Perhaps I've missed something here. – Simon P Stevens Jun 14 at 12:42
Actually, Simon indicated he would be posting some of his own ideas. – Arjan van Bentem Jun 14 at 12:44
@samoz & @Simon: It's perfectly okay to answer your own question. There's even a "Self Learner" badge to encourage you to do so. stackoverflow.com/questions/209329/… – Bill the Lizard Jun 14 at 12:45

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