18 Feb 2008 04:53:16 | Richard Lowe
All right, now you've created the best message board in the
world (at least in your humble opinion). You've set it up and
posted a few things and waited for herds of people to start
contributing. You wait and wait. Days turn into weeks and weeks
turn into months, and still nobody visits your board. What's
going on?
Something that is not obvious is that a message board must be
promoted just like anything else on the internet. In other
words, you have to let people know that your board exists and is
interesting. I know it seems kind of strange ... you created
your board in order to get people to come back to your web site,
yet now you have to promote the board as well?
The first thing you want to do is to link your board to your web
site. I know it seems obvious, but still it interesting how many
people forget this simple step. In addition, the link must be in
an obvious place, and it's wise to include it on every page of
your site.
The next tasks is to start telling people about the existence of
the board. You are looking for contributors, especially early in
the life of the board. You want to find as many people as you
can who will actually contribute to the community that you are
trying to build.
A good place to start is to lurk in other message boards,
newsgroups and email discussion lists with similar subjects.
Read the messages, then start posting your own to get
established as someone who is knowledgeable on the subject. You
should start to determine who is active in the board, perhaps
make a few friends and gain some respect.
You can tactfully invite people to contribute to your own board.
Personally, I think it's very tacky to issue invitations in
other boards, newsgroups and discussion lists. I believe it is
more preferable to invite people one-on-one in personal emails.
Posting an invitation to a board is a great way to get the board
members to dislike you ... and do it often enough and they may
eject you entirely.
Just choose one or two people who are interested in your topic,
who you respect and admire and would make good contributors to
your board. Don't send a personal message to everyone - just a
few selected people.
Be sure your message board has been submitted to the search
engines, just like any other web site or web page. You will want
to get it into the top engines (these include Google, Altavista,
Hotbot, Excite and others).
You can also reference your board within your newsletter (you do
send out a newsletter, don't you?) and as part of your email
signature. I would not bother with FFA (Free For All) lists,
paid advertisements and banner exchanges. My experience is these
promotional methods require a lot of work for a small gain.
You should be promoting your board just as hard as you would
promote your web site, ebook and ezine. Each of these is a
separate element and can be promoted separately as well as
together.
In summary, your board can be a very useful part of your overall
promotional strategy. Message boards are extremely useful in
getting people to return to your web site many times, but in
order to be useful they must be promoted heavily and constantly.
If you do so, then you may find your board will take on a life
of it's own and become as popular (or even more so) than your
web site.
About Author :
Richard Lowe Jr. is the webmaster of Internet Tips And Secrets.
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