3 Tips To Make Twitter The #1 Source of Traffic for Your Blog

This is a guest post by Luca Filigheddu from Twimbow.com.

Gaining Twitter followers is, in my experience, way easier than gaining RSS readers or, in general, regular and engaged readers. For this reason, making Twitter an important source of traffic for your blog is becoming more and more strategical for every blogger.

How to achieve that when you are starting from scratch? How to leverage Twitter in order to grow your audience?

Today, I would love to share with you three simple tips to make this happen as quick as possible.

Twitter Traffic Generation

1. Monitor Your Niche

First of all, you must try to figure out who your potential readers are. The best way to do this is to track all the tweets that contain blog posts from other blogs in your space.

On Twimbow you can easily do that with the “Monitor”. Create one monitor for each blog and simply track “www.[blogname].com”. This way, all the tweets containing the name of those blogs will appear. You can also configure each “monitor” to generate a visual notification and a sound (on Chrome only, but it’s worth it).

After that, it could be very interesting to insert all the users who are tweeting /retweeting those blog posts in a list or mark them with a colored label (eventually, follow them with the Twitter account of your blog or with your personal account). This way, you can easily identify them in your stream and engage them lately.

In the image below, I am tracking a few blogs about cars (for example). The green speaker icon in the central monitor means I will get a visual and audio notifications when new tweets are available (that is, someone tweeted an article from that blog).

Twimbow Monitor

2. Schedule Posts Of Your Articles To Twitter

In my experience, if you want to give your blog posts proper visibility on Twitter, you must post them on Twitter 2-3 times a day, at least 3 days / week. Of course, it is very important to find the right compromise, otherwise your followers could be annoyed by your multiple posts.

Moreover, if you target an international readership, you must make sure to properly cover the different time zones. Good times to post are 9am, 2pm and 2am (targeting another time-zone).

You can use Twimbow Slots to schedule your posts. You have a slot for each hour of the day, set to your timezone. Just calculate the right time zone and insert each post you want to promote at least two-three times during the day. You can also choose a few blog posts to test different times and see what is better for your blog.

You can short URLS with Bit.ly from within Twimbow or with any other service that lets you track the clicks. This step is very important, since measuring the conversion you get from this activity is crucial.

At this point, make sure to go back to (1) and track who is retweeting and sharing your stuff. It is essential for (3).

3. Engage, Engage, Engage

Last but not least, be active on Twitter. No, better, be VERY active on Twitter. You should engage all the people who are reading and sharing your posts (yes, all!), asking for feedback and, eventually, telling them about other related content from your blog that could be potentially interesting for them.

For example, if you blog about technology and wrote a post about the latest cool gadget, tell people (tweet people) who shared that post on Twitter that you (you did, right?) wrote another post and the previous version of that gadget or about the brand in another post.

Even better, add a comment to that tweet. It is very useful to make people aware you are expert in your field and this increases the probability they will follow you and bookmark your content. Nothing new here, people want to feel important, want to have the perception that behind that blog there is someone who cares of them and use Twitter actively to engage readers and be helpful. I firmly believe this is very important for a blog as well as for any customer care who actively work with social media.

Ok, are you ready to start making Twitter the #1 source of traffic for your blog? It is incredible how some bloggers still underestimate the power of Twitter despite it is a wonderful way to make people know about your blog and create and manage a faithful readership. What do you think? Please drop me a tweet, happy to discuss. I am @filos 😉

Bonus: for a complete analysis of the best time to tweet, check this post.

43 thoughts on “3 Tips To Make Twitter The #1 Source of Traffic for Your Blog”

  1. I was planning to use Twimbow as I don’t see much traffic coming in from Twitter. Thank you for providing information about Twimbow. I hope I would get more followers on twitter.

  2. engagement with the readers and our followers is the must do thing because engagement produces good results always.

  3. Luca, great tips. I am way behind when it comes to twitter and social networking in general. I think the most important part of being able to use social media for traffic is the engagement part. You have to build relationship if you want to succeed with social media.

    And frankly, thats the part that has slowed me down from using social media, because I am always afraid I wont have enough time to really build relationship with people.

  4. Hi Luca Filigheddu,

    Great article man. Especially, I loved the second point ‘Schedule Posts Of Your Articles To Twitter’ because I never used to do that, but now I would do that as you said and lets see I can find any difference 🙂

    I have started a new social networking site called ‘Bloggers Digest’ especially for blogging. Don’t miss to check it out. I have also promoted your article there. 🙂

  5. Nice tips, but still for it to work you probably have to have some twitter followers, which is a big problem for me. My old twitter account is a mess to, I tried to join one of those twitter automatic downline building sites and now it’s following random people and getting random useless followers.
    I probably have to start a new twitter account. Wish there was an easy way to get more followers.

  6. I have tried and been successful at the timing of tweets – it is much better to tweet a couple of times a day, thrice a week (as you’ve pointed out) than 6 times at once. It acts as a constant reminder to folks that you’re active and helps get more traffic.

  7. I have about 750 twitter followers and hardly get any traffic from twitter. I need to be more active in my niche and start scheduling tweets/ engage the users.

  8. What a good informative post. With twitter being one of the best places to market your blog or website this info is very useful. Beging active is truly the key.

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