5 Easy Ways to Promote Your Website and Grow Your Business
Search, social, email, and more ideas for driving visitors to your website.
In today’s world, creating a website is one of the most important steps towards small business success. It’s the necessary foundation to build an online presence and grow your business.
When people come to your site, you can potentially learn more about them, and you can turn them into an advocate, partner, or client. If any of these things happen, it’s a win. Now, how do you get visitors to your website?
Using Mailchimp’s all-in-one Marketing Platform, you can seamlessly promote your website across all your marketing channels. Try these 5 approaches to drive site traffic.
1. Optimize your website for organic search
Many business relationships are formed after someone types a word or phrase into a search engine to find a website. That’s organic search at work. When you know the search terms people use to find your website currently, it’s easier to draw in more visitors.
These terms might be specific to you, such as a brand or product name. Or, they can be attributes or benefits like “all natural,” “free delivery,” or something else that sets you apart.
In Google Analytics, you can view what terms your website visitors have used to find you in the past, and use those keywords to help you optimize your website content. It can also be instructive to take a look at the terms your competition uses on their websites, in social media, or in emails.
“The keywords you focus on should be the regular words a person would use,” says Wade Burrell, Senior Product Marketing Manager at Mailchimp. “Think about how your customer would describe your business and what you offer in plain, simple terms. Then, make sure those words are used throughout your website.”
Google Search Console is another free tool you can use to see how often your website appears in search results, which search terms drive the most visitors, and how many people click on your site in search results.
Do this, and you’ll be on your way to search engine optimization (SEO). These tips can help you do your best work.
- Make your website findable. Be sure your site has thorough descriptions of your offerings and their benefits, so that search engines like Google and Bing can surface them. Also, create a descriptive SEO title for your website. This can be added as you build your website and provides one more way for people to find you.
- Leverage your website content. Blog posts, articles, audience testimonials, and other content helps improve your search rankings and brings visitors to your website.
- Optimize your visuals. While search engines are much better at indexing words than visual elements, images and videos can help boost your Google ranking if they’re optimized for viewing on mobile devices. And, make sure every image includes short alt text describing the image to give the search engine a text alternative to interpret.
2. Greet visitors with a targeted landing page
Directing a website visitor to a dedicated landing page featuring just what they’re interested in helps them engage with your website and, ultimately, your business. Use audience data to create pages that highlight content tailored to website visitors’ priorities. This might be a special promotion based on the posts someone’s been reading, or updates on new features of a product they’ve been researching.
You can build this personalized messaging into your ongoing marketing by creating tags for your contacts. A tag is a label for a contact which can inform the content you serve up when they visit to ensure that it’s relevant.
If you build a landing page with a signup form, you can create a tag for that page, so everyone who joins your audience there is tagged for future personalized email outreach. Tags help you easily send targeted emails, including everything from automated welcome emails for new subscribers to a series of campaigns that highlight links to content on your website.
3. Promote your site with digital ads
You’ve seen them all over the internet: ads promoting everything from online courses to sunglasses and much more. Those ads are called digital or banner ads, and they’re designed to drive traffic to a website or a campaign-specific landing page. Even if you’ve never clicked on one yourself, they work because they can be placed on websites or blogs that attract a specific audience, like home project DIYers or outdoor enthusiasts.
On websites like Facebook or apps like Instagram, digital ads can be targeted to extremely specific groups, broken down by things like age, gender, interests, or education level. The data you have on the activity of visitors to your website—such as what pages or products they looked at and when—can help you easily build and manage ads to target people who are in-market for something you offer.
You may want a consultant or an agency to help with things like paid media strategy and where to place your ads, how long to run them, what kind of results to expect from a campaign, and how to improve their performance over time.
4. Drive traffic to your website with email
A tried-and-true way to generate traffic is email. Email can be a powerful outreach tool to target and inform your audience and to drive people to specific pages on your website. There are 2 main forms of email promotions.
- Email newsletters can feature useful information and promotions, like sales or events. They can drive audience members to your website to read an article or take advantage of an offer. While these might not bring you lots of new website visitors, they can be a powerful way to generate visits and sales from your best audience: those who already know you.
- Promotional emails can highlight specific sales or events. For example, you might promote a wine tasting or a trunk show in your store, or a new video you’ve posted.
In both cases, you can segment your email audience based on data to send tailored versions of your newsletter or offer to the most receptive segments.
“The most important thing in email is that you’re talking to people who want to hear from you,” says Sean Fletcher, Product Marketing Manager at Mailchimp. “And you don’t have to blast the same thing to everyone, because you have access to data that allows you to send targeted content that’s relevant to each person. Let’s say someone purchased shoes from you recently. You can create a segment based on their purchase history and send them email campaigns with your latest shoe styles.”
5. Engage your audience on social media
You may be using social media to post some of the same kinds of content that you host on your website, such as articles, photos, or promotions. Did you know that in addition to amplifying your message, social media can drive website traffic? For example, if your website supports e-commerce, you can promote a sale on social media and drive traffic to it.
A key is selecting the social channel that works best for your message—and that you can manage effectively. This will vary, depending on your business model and the audience you want to target. For example, LinkedIn is a good choice if you want to promote a white paper or webinar to a professional audience, while Instagram lends itself more to visuals, like product imagery.
“You can test to see where you get the most awareness, and that will help you see where you should devote time and resources,” says Jon Holbrook, Product Marketing Manager at Mailchimp.
When you build and maintain your website in Mailchimp, you can easily use that content in social posts, which you can also create and publish on the platform.
No matter where you post, make sure that you drive users to targeted pages, so there’s a clear connection between what they saw in the social post and the link they click on, notes Jon. “Your homepage is designed for a broad audience, so be specific with your landing pages.”
It’s worth the effort
Every small business owner is busy, but making time to promote your website is important. “You can have the best website in the world, but if you don’t drive traffic to it, no one will know how great the site—or your company—is,” says Wade. “It’s an essential part of growing your business, and it will pay off.”