This article doesn’t list every traffic strategy; it only lists the ones that are proven to work.
Let’s get to it.
My post on SEO statistics has generated consistent search traffic since it was published:
If you can rank high on Google, you can see the same results too. However, you can’t just target any random topic—you need to write about topics people are searching for.
Here’s how to find them:
- Go to Ahrefs’ Keywords Explorer
- Enter a relevant keyword
- Go to the Matching terms report
Many of the keywords you see will be super competitive. So we’ll use the “Keyword Difficulty (KD)” filter to narrow the results down to those that are easy to rank for.
Eyeball the results and pick out those that are relevant to your site.
From new ones to a top 100 business podcast, our chief marketing officer, Tim Soulo, has appeared on them all.
The easiest way to find podcasts to appear on is to Google them.
Look through the results and pick out those that are relevant. Then find the host’s email and pitch yourself as a guest.
If you find a prolific podcast guest along the way, you can enter their site into Ahrefs’ Site Explorer and find all the podcasts they’ve been on by going to the Backlinks report and filtering for results with “episode” in the referring page title.
If the top-ranking pages cover similar subtopics, they’re likely important and what searchers expect to see. So if your content is “missing” them, that can be a reason why you’re not ranking as high.
To find these subtopics, we can look at the common keywords the top-ranking pages rank for that we don’t.
Here’s how to find these “content gaps”:
- Enter your target keyword into Ahrefs’ Keywords Explorer
- Scroll to the SERP overview
- Check up to three relevant competing pages
- Click Copy
Then, navigate to our Competitive Analysis tool and go to the Content Gap report. Add your existing page to the “Target” section and the three URLs into the “Competitors” section. Hit “Compare.”
This opens up the Content Gap report, where we can see the common keyword rankings among these pages. Look through the report and see if there are any subtopics you can cover. For example, if we wanted to update our post on earned media, these could make good H2s:
- “owned media examples”
- “paid media examples”
- “earned media vs paid media”
- “owned vs earned media”
With >330 million monthly active users, it seems a no-brainer to promote on Reddit. Except that Reddit hates marketing.
If Redditors catch even a whiff of self-promotion, they will downvote you, delete your post, or ban you from the subreddit.
Yet, Tim managed to successfully “promote” his keyword research post:
Reddit enjoys helpful content. Its users are only antagonistic to spammers. So if you want to promote on Reddit, replicate what Tim did.
Take your best content, strip away all internal and external links, and share it to a relevant subreddit. Leave just one link back to your original blog post at the end. Make sure the post is valuable on its own, whether or not people clicked through the link.
Buffer is a social media scheduling tool. It was a non-competitor and targeted the same audience. So we did a joint webinar titled “How to Build Your Website Traffic With Evergreen Content and Social Media.”
Both brands heavily promoted the webinar on social media leading up to day zero. Post-webinar, Buffer created a blog post summarizing the presentation, while we posted the recording on YouTube and uploaded the presentation slides on SlideShare.
Look for opportunities to partner with brands that solve different problems for a similar audience. That way, you can each gain access to an entirely new user base.
I updated my post on free SEO tools, and traffic shot up:
SEO is not a “set it and forget it” thing. Even if you’re ranking well for your target keyword, competitors may steal your spot or Google may lower your rankings when your content becomes outdated.
So you need to keep it up to date to maintain your rankings.
The easiest way to find out which content to refresh is to install our free WordPress SEO plugin and run an audit. The audit will tell you which articles you should be updating.
Look at the top-ranking results and compare them to yours to see what aspects need to be refreshed.
Sometimes, it can be as simple as filling content gaps and updating old parts like screenshots. Other times, search intent could have changed—in that case, you might need to do a full rewrite.
Amplifiers are people with a large audience. They have the ability to share your content with their audience and send tons of traffic to your site.
The easiest way to find amplifiers in your niche is to use SparkToro. Simply enter your topic or niche:
However, just because you’ve found them doesn’t mean you can send them an email and expect them to promote your website. They’re not obliged to do that.
Your goal is to befriend them and build up the relationship. Start by featuring them or their work in your content. Then, reach out and let them know. They’ll be delighted.
In this example, Amanda Natividad graciously promised to share it in her newsletter. But don’t expect it. Treat it as a bonus—if they share it, that’s great. If they don’t, it’s cool too.
Focus on building the relationship, not trading one-off favors.
Our head of content, Joshua Hardwick, turned his post on AI content into an X (formerly Twitter) thread and got over 40,000 views: