Here within
zoomshare we’ve been talking a
lot about
sharing interests and what that
means for us and our users. Why, do people want a
website? Because they have something they wish to
share. Perhaps photos and videos via our new
widgets feature or maybe to sell what he or she
has, which can be done with our shopping cart
feature. Or maybe one’s wish is to share
information such as I do via our blogging tool?
At some point anyone who has ever created some sort
of web presence, a whole web application or a
single web blog, faces the same set of questions;
will they come, where will they come from and how
will they know to come? For example, let us take
this blog,
pdw @ zoomshare. This blog is
dedicated to covering some of the internal happenings @
zoomshare and until recently it was inactive for
the most part, receiving about 25 absolute
unique
visitors from Jun 18th to Jun 24th for example.
From Jun 25th to Jul 1st the number of visitors
jumped to 4,303 for an average of 615 visitors per
day. For the sake of clarity when I refer to some
common web metrics I’m referring to numbers
generated from
Google Analytics. I’m using Google
Analytics since it’s a common industry tool.
However, I do want to note that zoomshare does
offer a ‘stats’ tool for zoomshare hosted sites as
part of the paid for services.
Anywho, this is where the sharing aspect comes into
play. After I starting getting into a groove of
posting entries, I started seeking out people and
places that might make up my
target
audience, in order to get people to visit and
hopefully return as time goes on. My audience?
People who share an interest in the topic(s)
covered in this blog. For the most part that means
people who have an interest in the workings of
zoomshare. That audience can be broken down into
two distinct groups, zoomies – zoomshare users -
who wish to know a bit about the workings of
zoomshare and, perhaps to a lesser extent, other
techies who are looking for bits and pieces of
shared knowledge.
Reaching out can be a bit difficult alas. For
example, to reach
out to zoomies we do have our
forums, but forum
page views account for only 13% of total page views
per day from logged-in zoomies. We recently
launched
All About Zoomshare to help
fill in the
gab, but that just brings us back the same
question, how does one get the word out and
generate traffic? Thus our focus on how people
share so that we can develop tools that allow
people to connect and share with each within and
without Zoomshare. As I’ve discussed
elsewhere the
Flipbook Widget for example, provides a method for
sharing photos on Zoomshare and non-Zoomshare sites.
While we work a bit more on those pieces within
zoomshare there is something zoomies can do today.
Doubt me? How do you think I got people to start
viewing my site? That’s right, after getting the
site together and posting information, getting a
feel for my new site and the potential audience, I
started seeking viewers out. To reach the target
audience, those who share my interests, I started
posting to forums and email lists I already
followed, groups I already belonged to. Before I
knew it, I generated quite a bit of initial
interest. Of course I’m not done, traffic since Jul
1st is slowing down, now its averaging around 111
new visitors per day instead 615. More important,
however, in the long term is not so much new
visitors, but getting repeat viewers, right now
only 7% of the 6,000+ total visits to my site come
from repeat visitors.
Right, so what exactly did I do? I posted to
tech sites (source of 38% of my
recent visitors) I read
and sent a few emails (source of around 21% of the
visits to this blog) out to friends and family.
But I didn’t simply ask people to view my site.
Nope, I tried to entice viewers in by providing
them a reason why to view the site, Of course,
before sending any emails or
submitting any posts,
I wrote up a few
articles of
interest, to share as
well as to attract.
Yeah, it’s a lot of work and one has to keep at it.
spooniep
notes that one “has to be
persistent”
adding to the website and
promoting the website on
a regular basis. Getting listed in search engines
can help, but that’s not a cure all. Less than 1%
of all visitors to pdw @ zoomshare came by way of a
search engine.
Naturally, I also
posted to zoomshare forums so
zoomies could discover this new place where they
can find out more about features @ zoomshare and
how they work. Again, I tried to give potential
visitors a reason, laying some bait. Alas, the
zoomshare forum is source of less than 1% of all
visitors currently. Which means one also needs to
be patient, as the word starts to spread between
audience members.