Nonsense.
On August 17th of 2016, Arthur Tubman and the team at Monday Monday Network did the impossible. Within the first 45 days of launch, their site attracted just under 9 million visitors and today their daily average visitor count clocks in over 600k.
The question is: How? Answer: By adopting a them-first approach before pushing go on a single piece of monetized content.
While much of theirย approach centered around Facebook, thereโs nothing magical about Facebook ads and there are plenty of otherย creative ways to drive traffic. The lessons from the launch, however,ย proveย that the bedrock principle of all marketing is still true: itโs not about you โฆ itโs about them. Hereโs how you can take that advice to heart.
Start with what you love.
When it comes to social media, brands are notorious for taking one of two misguided paths: โdominatingโ or โdumping.โ
With the first, businesses — particularly e-commerce — dominate their feed with heavy-handed promotions, pitches, and products. With the second, social is treated as little more than a repository for that same businessโ usual onsite content — i.e., a digital dumping ground.
Both approaches, while well-intentioned, amount to a social-media presence that screams, โMe first.โ In contrast, consider Monday Monday Networkโs approach.
Today, the site hosts 24 separate topics — basically channels to which they post roughly 30 articles a day. Each of those topics began its life not as a column or blog, but as an individual Community Page on Facebook. Some communities they took over — like Addicted 2 Big Bang Theory — others they created from scratch — i.e., I Love Meditation.
Why communities? Because, as Tubman told me when I caught wind of the siteโs massive launch, โYou donโt want to kill the partyย before the party starts.โ
For every community, they focused on creating unique content exclusive to Facebook. This included updates (like the one below) but also extended to original infographics, videos, and gifs. From July to August of 2016, that was the game they played.
The insight here is obvious, but we often miss it.
Regardless of what youโre selling, some niche — a specific group of real, live humans — lies at its core. And peopleย are the foundation, not products and promotions. Eventually, selfless content needs to be augmented with self-serving content, but if you get the order wrong, nothing else really matters.
Buy their love โฆ er, โlikesโ.
Of course, piggybacking on your audience’s current loves isnโt the only ingredient. After all, you canโt approach traffic with a โbuild it and they will comeโ mentality. If you’re leaning on Facebook to connect, then you have to pay to play.
However, rather than craft ads with the immediate goal of driving traffic, Monday Monday Networksโ ad spend aimed at two goals often dismissed as vanity metrics.
First, they set their sights on โLikes,โ which — across their 20 plus communities — eventually totaled over 5 million fans. Similar to their organic posts, the ads they developed majored on the genuine interests of the communities they were serving.
The second metric was โEngagement Rate.โย As Entrepreneurโs tech reporter Rustam Singh explains, โWhat use are high amounts of likes if your engagement rate is extremely low?โ Just like Likes, engagement is regularly regarded as pure vanity. Why? Because while it feeds your ego, it doesnโt pay the bills.
Or does it?ย Remember, if your goal is drive long-term, sustainable traffic, then your audience has to come first. Thatโs true both chronologically, which is why engagement matters, as well as philosophically in what you actually create.
Finally, turn them on.
Only after generating critical mass off-site can you then turn the traffic faucet on.On August 17th, Monday Monday Network began seeding their usual Facebook exclusive content — images, jokes, tips, infographics, and questions — with links to their brand new baby. They didnโt blast their audienceย but instead leaned on the engagement and trust theyโd already established (like this ad for their Duck Dynasty page).
In the first week, they hit 3 million visitors and crashed their servers 15 times. By day 45, visitors were at nearly 9 million and today they average just over 600k uniques a day.
Creating that level of engagement and traffic isnโt easy and I donโt want to oversell this. To fund all that activity, Tubman and his team originally raised $750k in capital. But, that doesnโt mean the same lessons donโt apply to your business.
If you want to generate traffic, start with what your audience already loves, donโt be afraid to buy that love, and — only after your audience loves you back — invite them over to your place for more.
Great marketing — just like any great relationship — boils down to one thing: itโs not about you โฆ itโs about them.
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byย AARON ORENDORFF
source: Entrepreneur








