The Power of your Community

Posted on December 4, 2008 08:00 AM by Joel Comm

It happens even before your site really starts to make money. You post articles, market your content, pick up comments and find that other sites are talking about you. All of a sudden, you've moved from being one person with ideas you want to share to being the center of a community, part of a circle of online friends with a keen interest in what you have to say.

Write something clever and you'll find that on related sites across the Web, people discuss it and link to it. And whenever you add new content, people will treat it with respect and follow your advice.

The results of that can be tremendous. But they're more than that. They're also measurable.

Suggest that people read an article on another website and you'll be able to look at your stats and see just what percentage of them follow the link to do it. Recommend that they buy a book you've read, and you'll be able to look at your Amazon affiliate stats and see how much that recommendation was worth.

Put your knowledge into an information product and you'll be able to sell it for large sums to people who value your advice.

We like to talk a lot about users and visitors. But in fact, when your site is successful what you end up with aren't anonymous visitors you never see but loyal members of a community. Many of the people who visit your site each week will be the same people who visited the previous week. You'll find that the same names turn up time and time again in your comments, the same bloggers mention you whenever you write something particularly interesting, and if you're lucky, you'll even get to meet them at conferences and workshops.

Building an online business then doesn't just mean writing pages of content. It means building a club that's open to anyone to join. It's a responsibility - the club members will look to you for information they can trust - but it's also a huge amount of fun... and of course, the best way to build a stable customer base.

See Also

Affiliate Inferno - Jun 08, 2006

1 Comments For This Post

  1. Kevin Puls Says:

    When we created our first, original site, we had it in mind to have a website for military personnel as a medium to express their gratitude (via our blog) to the military.

    The people who submit their stories and let readers know how the military strengthened their characters by making them better leaders, managaers, & organizers.

    The goal of the site is to help promote veteran's current endeavors; whether they are now in business for themselves, or whatever.

    As we have no autoresponder to opt into, there is no e-mail marketing taking place. I figured the audience is military personnel. The last thing they want is for us to e-mail them about marketing & selling stuff to them.

    That said, our site is now up for ten weeks and we have an Alexa rank of around 1.132 million. Not too bad for a site that I need to "manually" drive traffic to. Plus, the site isn't even optimized for keywords yet!

    But, that is not to say that I do not have customers. We have a shop page and we donate 10% of after-tax proceeds to military charities.

    I have nearly 1300 other domains and nearly all will have a charitable element tied to them.

    Thanks!

    Best,

    -K

    http://www.for-the-troops.com/about/
    http://www.for-the-troops.com/shop/

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INFORMATION

Joel Comm is an Internet entrepreneur who has been online for over 20 years. In 1995, Joel launched WorldVillage.com, a family-friendly portal to the web which enjoys thousands of visitors each day. Joel is the co-creator of ClassicGames.com, which was acquired by Yahoo! in 1997, and now goes by the name Yahoo! Games. Since then, Joel's company, InfoMedia, Inc., has launched dozens of web sites which offer online shopping, free stuff, website reviews and more. Joel is the author of many popular books, including the NY Times Best-Seller, The AdSense Code. He regularly makes appearances at Internet marketing conferences and seminars.