How to Promote Your Blog (There Are Only Three Ways)

After half a decade of blogging experience, I’ve learned that when it comes to promoting your blog, there are only three ways.
No matter how many listicles you browse, every tactic you see falls into one of these three categories.
2. Borrow an audience

Blogging is similar—You need visitors to build an audience, but you need an audience to get visitors. Unlike the job conundrum, you can fix this by ‘borrowing’ audiences.
Borrowing an audience means finding places where your target audience already hangs out online and getting your content in front of them.
Here are some tactics you can use to do this:
Optimize your content to rank in GoogleGoogle is the best place to borrow an audience. Search traffic is predictable, compounding, cheap, and targeted.
To get traffic from Google, you can’t write about random topics. You need to write about topics people are searching for.
Here’s how to find topics people are searching on Google:
- Go to Ahrefs’ Keywords Explorer- Enter a topic relevant to your blog (e.g., if you own a blog about the ketogenic diet, enter ‘keto’)
- Go to the Matching terms report
- Switch the tab to Questions
- Go to Ahrefs’ Content Explorer
- Search for your topic
- Set a minimum Page traffic filter (>500) so you can only target pages worth your while
- Toggle Filter explicit results
- Set a Language filter to your target language
- Check Exclude homepages and subdomains
- Set the Trends dropdown to Last year

Go through the list and look out for pages with declining page traffic.
For example, this article from PureWow looks like a good candidate:

Reach out to the editor and see if they’d be interested in updating the post. Sweeten the deal by offering to do the work for them and optimizing it to rank higher on Google, like what Irina Maltseva, the former head of marketing at Hunter did:
Share barebones posts on RedditThere is a subreddit for almost anything. If you do it right, you can borrow Reddit’s massive audience and drive lots of visitors to your blog.
But you can’t just waltz in, drop a link, and expect to get a flood of traffic. Redditors hate advertising and marketing more than anything. If they catch a whiff of self-promotion, they will not hesitate to throw you out and ban you.
However, Reddit does love useful content. So, to bypass the hate brigade Redditors may deliver your way, share a barebones version of your content. Strip everything out, especially your internal and external links. Leave only a link back to your original post at the bottom, so anyone who’s interested can check it out.
For example, here’s what our Chief Marketing Officer (CMO) Tim Soulo did on r/bigSEO:

Four years later, this post is still one of the top posts of all time in the subreddit.
Build relationships with amplifiersInfluencers, podcasters, YouTubers, journalists, and newsletter writers will have significant audiences you can borrow.
Source: SparktoroBut these people have an audience for one reason: They consistently share interesting and quality content—not just anything from anyone and everyone.
So, to ‘borrow’ their audience, you need to cultivate good relationships with these people. You need to practice what my friend Visakan calls ‘good reply game’.
There is an art to replying and commenting, and probably like 60-70% of people I’ve seen on the internet fail at it. The important thing is not to speak your mind, but to “support” the OP. You can support them by disagreeing well & you can “mis-support” them by agreeing stupidly
— Visakan Veerasamy (@visakanv) September 11, 2018You want to support their work: by consuming, sharing, and complimenting. But you don’t want to fawn over them (everyone does this) or sound like an AI.

In fact, if you disagree and share your opinion intelligently but not belligerently, you will catch their attention.
Building a friendship with amplifiers doesn’t mean expecting them to share every article you publish. That’s transactional and people can smell it from far away. It’s a surefire way to lose friends.
You’ll want to share only your best work with them. Do that with no expectations. If your work is good, you’ll find that they’ll naturally share it with their audience, just like Rand Fishkin did unprompted when we published our article on podcast advertising.
3. Buy an audience
If you have enough money to solve a problem, then the problem doesn’t exist.
Final thoughts
In blogging, all roads lead to Rome. And the “Rome” in the blogging world is owning your audience.
Got questions? Ping me on LinkedIn.
https://www.leadbuildermarketing.com/how-to-promote-your-blog-there-are-only-three-ways/
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