14 Proven Ways to Drive Traffic to Your Website

  This article doesn’t list every traffic strategy under the sun. Instead, it lists the tactics we’ve used at Ahrefs.  Let’s get to it. The Ahrefs blog gets over 427,000 monthly organic visitors. No doubt, search engine optimization (SEO)...

14 Proven Ways to Drive Traffic to Your Website
Article stats

Monthly traffic 1,534

Linking websites 605

Tweets 259

Data from Content Explorer

Shows how many different websites are linking to this piece of content. As a general rule, the more websites link to you, the higher you rank in Google.

Shows estimated monthly search traffic to this article according to Ahrefs data. The actual search traffic (as reported in Google Analytics) is usually 3-5 times bigger.

The number of times this article was shared on Twitter.

Feeling overwhelmed by the infinite options for driving traffic to your website? You’re not alone.

This article doesn’t list every traffic strategy under the sun. Instead, it lists the tactics we’ve used at Ahrefs. 

Let’s get to it.

1. Target topics people are searching for

The Ahrefs blog gets over 427,000 monthly organic visitors.

Amount of organic traffic the Ahrefs blog is receiving, via Ahrefs' Site Explorer

No doubt, search engine optimization (SEO) can work. For as long as you rank high on Google, you’ll be able to generate consistent organic traffic to your site. 

To do this, you need to write about topics people are searching for. Here’s how to find them:

Enter one or a few relevant keywords into Ahrefs’ Keywords ExplorerGo to the Matching terms reportSwitch the tab to QuestionsThe Matching terms report, via Ahrefs' Keywords Explorer

Here, you’ll see >46,000 potential topics you can target. That’s probably too many, so you’ll want to narrow the list down by looking for keywords that are:

High in Traffic Potential (TP) – TP is the estimated amount of search traffic you can potentially gain if you rank #1 for that topic. We calculate it by estimating the amount of search traffic the #1 page currently gets.Low in Keyword Difficulty (KD)KD is how difficult it is to rank for the keyword in the top 10 organic search results. 

Use the filters to reduce the list down to something manageable.

Then pick out those keywords that are relevant to your site. 

Recommended reading: Keyword Research: The Beginner’s Guide by Ahrefs 

2. Fill “missing” content gaps

A piece of content can rank for thousands of keywords

Chart showing the average number of keywords the top 20 ranking pages also rank for

Most of them will be different ways of looking for the same thing, but some will be important subtopics you need to cover in your content. 

If you can cover these “content gaps”—subtopics you’re currently missing—you can potentially rank higher for your target keyword and get more search traffic.

Here’s how to find these “content gaps”:

Enter your domain into Ahrefs’ Site ExplorerGo to the Content Gap toolIn the top section, enter a few competing pagesIn the bottom section, enter the URL of the page you want to fill content gaps forHit Show keywordsThe Content Gap tool

Eyeball the list and see if there are any subtopics you can cover on your page.

Results from the Content Gap tool

For example, if we wanted to update our post on evergreen content, we’d likely have to fill in two subtopics:

Evergreen adsEvergreen content on social media

Guest blogging is where you write for other blogs. In return, the owner/editor will allow you to link back to your site. 

The benefits include:

More referral traffic.More backlinks (which correlate with rankings).Increased brand awareness.

Here’s an example of a guest post I wrote for SmartBlogger:

A guest post for SmartBlogger

How do you find relevant guest blogging opportunities? Here’s how:

Enter a relevant keyword into Ahrefs’ Content Explorer (set it to In title)Filter for One page per domain, Exclude homepages, and Exclude subdomainsFilter for Explicit resultsAdd a Language filter for the language you write inAdd a Domain Rating filter for 30–70 to weed out low-authority sites (and remove “ultra high authority” sites that you probably won’t be able to pitch to… for now)Add a Website traffic filter for 5000+ to weed out websites with little or no trafficAdd a Published filter for the Last 90 days to weed out websites that haven’t published content recentlyResults shown after applying a set of filters, via Ahrefs' Content Explorer

Look through the results to find relevant sites you can potentially guest blog for. 

Don’t worry if they don’t have a “write for us” page or are not advertising for guest posts. Most sites are willing to accept guest posts, even if they’re not explicit about it. After all, free content is free content—especially if it’s good.

Recommended reading: Guest Blogging for SEO: How to Build High-Quality Links at Scale

4. Refresh “outdated” content

I recently updated my post on free SEO tools, and traffic shot up:

The spike in organic traffic for a blog post after it was refreshed

A major SEO mistake is thinking that SEO is a set-it-and-forget-it task. Even if you’re ranking high for your target keyword, that status is not permanent. Competitors may try and “steal” your spot, or Google may lower your rankings when your content becomes outdated. 

So you need to keep your content up to date to maintain your rankings. 

The easiest way to find out which content you should refresh is to install our free WordPress SEO plugin and run an audit. The audit will tell you which articles you should be updating. 

To find out exactly what aspects you need to refresh, look at the search results to see what the top-ranking posts have that you don’t. Often, ranking drops occur because certain parts of your content are outdated. For example:

ScreenshotsProcessStatsLinks (broken, etc)Year in the title

Depending on the target keyword, sometimes refreshing the outdated sections will suffice. In other cases, you may find that you need to do a full rewrite of the article. (Don’t worry, we do this often too!)

Recommended reading: Republishing Content: How to Update Old Blog Posts for SEO

From new-ish podcasts to a top 100 business podcast, our chief marketing officer, Tim Soulo, has appeared on them all. 

Tim Soulo's appearance on Pat Flynn's Smart Passive Income podcast

There are currently 850,000 active podcasts. And many podcasts need guests. So why not pitch to be one of them? Share your knowledge and, in return, you get brand exposure, referral traffic, links, and more. 

The simplest way to find podcast opportunities is to search for “top [your niche] podcasts” in Google. 

The SERP for the query "top marketing podcasts"

However, some of them may be out of your reach (for now). So here’s how to find podcasts that are likely within your wheelhouse:

Find someone in your industry who has been a guest on many podcastsEnter their domain into Ahrefs’ Site ExplorerGo to the Backlinks reportSet the search to Referring page title and search for their nameThe Backlinks report showing referring pages that contain "Laura Roeder" in their title, via Ahrefs' Site Explorer

Look through the results and pick out those that are relevant podcast opportunities. Then find the host’s email and pitch yourself as a guest. 

6. Collaborate with other brands to tap into their audience

For most businesses, there are plenty of non-competing brands with the same or similar target audience. So why not work together to cross-promote to each other’s audience?

That’s what we did with Buffer, a social media scheduling tool. 

We arranged a joint webinar titled “How to Build Your Website Traffic With Evergreen Content and Social Media.” Then 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.

Takeaway: 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.

7. Share barebones posts on Reddit

With over 330 million monthly active users, it seems a no-brainer to promote on Reddit. 

With one exception: Reddit hates marketing. 

If Redditors catch even a whiff of self-promotion, they will not hesitate to downvote your post, delete it, or even ban you from the subreddit. They may even blacklist your domain.

Yet, Tim managed to successfully “promote” his link building post:

Tim Soulo's post on the subreddit, r/bigSEO

Reddit enjoys helpful and valuable content. Its users are only antagonistic to spammers. So to promote on Reddit, you can replicate what Tim did:

Take one of your blog posts, strip away all internal and external links, format it in markdown, and share it on a relevant subreddit. Only at the end do you leave a link back to your original blog post.

Notice that even though it was a “tl;dr,” it was still meaty with tons of helpful information for Redditors. The post was valuable on its own, whether or not people clicked through the link. That’s what you should be aiming for. 

Sidenote.

Don’t promote every new post you publish on Reddit. That makes you a spammer. Choose only the ones you’re truly proud of. 

Recommended reading: Reddit Marketing: How to Self Promote on Reddit and Get More Traffic

People usually have tons of related questions when researching a topic. While you should strive to answer most of them, sometimes it’s just impossible to weave them naturally into your content.

You can solve this by adding an FAQ section at the end of your article. That can potentially help your content rank for more long-tail keywords and get more search traffic. 

The FAQ section in an Ahrefs blog post on H1 tags

The easiest way to find these questions is to Google your target keyword and look for the People Also Ask (PAA) questions that appear. 

People Also Ask questions for the query "improve gut health"

You can also look at the Questions report in Ahrefs’ Keywords Explorer.

The Questions report, via Ahrefs' Keywords Explorer

9. Create Twitter threads

Threads get a lot of engagement on Twitter. Take, for example, this thread from our head of content, Joshua Hardwick: 

If you’re trying to solve keyword cannibalization, you might be cutting off your nose to spite your face. 🔪👃😱

Here’s why.

//THREAD//

— Joshua Hardwick (@JoshuaCHardwick) December 8, 2021

He hardly even tweets!

You don’t have to do this from scratch. Just take one of your existing blog posts and repurpose it. Paste your content into a tool like Typefully and edit from there.

An example of a Twitter thread on Typefully

Then add a link back to your blog post at the end of the thread.

Recommended reading: How to Write a Tweetstorm 

10. Post regularly on LinkedIn

Our posts on LinkedIn generate a ton of engagement and clicks. 

A post on Ahrefs' LinkedIn page

Yes, LinkedIn may not be the sexiest social media platform. But don’t sleep on it. More and more people are rediscovering LinkedIn’s ability to send tons of traffic.

The good news is that you don’t have to create content from scratch. Simply repurpose your existing content, which is what we do.

Even better: repost what you’re already posting on Twitter. It works really well.

Yesterday I made an experiment and posted the same content on both Twitter and LinkedIn.

On Twitter I have 38k followers and it got 21k impressions.

On LinkedIn I have 400 followers and it got 7k impressions.

Pretty wild.

— Andrea Bosoni (@theandreboso) July 20, 2022

11. Reach out to amplifiers

Amplifiers are people with a large audience on email, social, and more. Most importantly, 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. The free version allows you to run up to five searches a month, which should be enough to get started.

An example of a query on the tool, SparkToro

From there, you can look at who these amplifiers are following—and pursue the trail to find more amplifiers. 

However, it’s not as simple as sending them an email and asking them to promote your website. Not only are they not obliged to do so, but they also get no benefits. 

This means you need to give them a reason. 

There are two ways to do this. 

One, show them something new and valuable. If you have something that’s truly unique (e.g., original data), then they may appreciate a heads-up. For example, Rand Fishkin tweeted about our Google Search Console study (even though we didn’t ask him to!).

If Google Search Console is your source of truth about keyword referrals, you’re getting bamboozled. Swindled. Hoodwinked.

Then again, it’s Google. So if you trusted their data after all these years, shame on you.

Superb work by Ahrefs: https://t.co/Jl437Ab1gV pic.twitter.com/1XFgBRMCMO

— Rand Fishkin (@randfish) July 9, 2022

Compare that to his response a few years ago, when Tim asked Rand to check out his blog post that was, in hindsight, not unique:

Rand Fishkin's reply to Tim's pitch in 2015

How do you create something unique? Here are some ideas:

Do you have personal experience with something? If not, can you test or experience it yourself?Do you have access to data? Alternatively, you can find someone who has and work with them. Then analyze the data and present your findings. Can you interview experts? You can talk to thought leaders in your field and share their expertise and knowledge. 

Two, feature them. If your content featured one of their quotes, articles, or even themselves, then it’s a legit reason to tell them. 

A Twitter DM conversation

They’ll be delighted to know they’ve been featured. 

One final tip: Don’t expect that they’ll share your content with their following. If they do, it’s cool. If they don’t, it’s cool too.

Focus on building the relationship. It may eventually lead to something more: a link, a partnership, or even a future business collaboration. 

Recommended reading: Who Will Amplify This? And Why?

At Ahrefs, we offer plenty of free SEO tools.

Ahrefs' Free SEO Tools page

Combined, they generate almost 400,000 monthly search visits.

The amount of organic traffic Ahrefs' free SEO tools get in total

Don’t write this off as a tactic only for software businesses. Other businesses can do it too. For example, Crunch provides accounting services and offers a free “take home pay” calculator.

Crunch's free take-home-pay calculator

However, don’t simply go and create any tool. If you’re going to invest time, effort, and money into this endeavor, you want it to do well. So you should create tools that actually have demand.

Here’s how to find such opportunities:

Enter a relevant keyword into Ahrefs’ Keywords ExplorerGo to the Matching terms reportIn the Include box, search for terms like tool, tools, calculator, checker, template, report, etc (choose Any word)The results after filtering for words like calculator, via Ahrefs' Keywords Explorer

Look through the list to find the most relevant free tool you can create that will send you traffic and business. 

13. Rank videos on Google

Meet Sam Oh, our YouTube master. Not only did he help build our YouTube channel to 330,000 subscribers, but he also managed to drive traffic to our videos from Google.

The amount of views Ahrefs' YouTube channel is receiving from Google search

How did he do that?

Simple: YouTube videos rank on Google too. 

The Video SERP results for the query "how to make kefir at home"

To rank your videos on Google, you need to find topics that people prefer to watch videos about. Here’s how to find them:

Go to Ahrefs’ Content ExplorerRun this search: site:youtube.com inurl:watch title:topicSort the results by Page trafficResults in Ahrefs' Content Explorer

This will give you a list of YouTube videos that currently get search traffic from Google. Look through the list to find relevant topics you can cover.

Follow our resource below to create a video that’ll rank for these topics:

If you have the budget and are willing to invest, don’t forget that you can always buy paid traffic from platforms like Google and Facebook. 

In fact, that’s what we do at Ahrefs.

An example of a Facebook Ad from Ahrefs

However, you’re not only limited to just Google and Facebook. Given how popular they are—and therefore expensive—you can always consider running ads on other social platforms like Pinterest, Quora, YouTube, or even TikTok. 

For example, we run search ads on YouTube, and they only cost us $0.01/min.

If you create YT tutorials that feature your product, consider spending 💰 on ads. Doesn’t have to be a lot. In July, we spent 154.62 SGD (~112.75 USD) for 174.8 hours of watch time (10,488 minutes).

That’s $0.01/min or $0.65/hour. Name a cheaper medium for relevant/focused attn

— Sam Oh (@samsgoh) August 16, 2020

We also run ads on Quora and are getting relatively cheap(er) clicks.

Examples of Quora ads from Ahrefs

Expand your view, consider other platforms, and you’ll realize that online advertising may not be as expensive as you thought.

Final thoughts

Experiment with the above traffic strategies and start generating traffic to your website.

Did I miss out on any cool tactics? Let me know on Twitter