Many attorneys create a site thinking, hoping, that they will get
search engine traffic out of it, but it's not automatic.
Not exact matches
If you are lazy to fill
out all information or think that Google + can't drive loads of
traffic to your business, then do it for
Search Engine crawlers.
Besides,
search engine traffic is
out of my control and my
traffic would probably decline beyond the 75 % if I stopped writing.
I get some
traffic from
search engines like Google, and while back, they dropped my site for about a month... I couldn't figure
out why.
Bill Cloutier suggested an alternate approach for SetforMarriage: target the Christian
search engines for
traffic and approach other Christian sites and work
out traffic trading deals.
If not, you could potentially be missing
out on a lot of free
traffic from the
search engines.
I also did something like
search engine sponsor on FAA, but turned
out promote to get exposure for other veteran artists more than getting
traffic for my artwork.
While Google organic
traffic is the largest single source of
traffic (remember my total
search engine traffic is only about 25 % of my total
traffic), 8
out of 10 of my top
traffic sources are other websites (h / t to Lawyerist at # 4).
Call tracking reports can even tell you what
search engines your
traffic came from — it may turn
out that your website has a huge presence in AOL
search...
Turns
out that the majority of your website's
traffic may be thanks to non-human
search engines, scrapers, hacking tools, and spammers.
He says, «Even though you may not be thinking that you're going to be blogging or driving
traffic to your website through
search engine optimization (SEO), or pay - per - click (PPC), your website is
out there promoting your business 24/7.»