- Write an article and submit it to websites like www.ezinearticles.com
- Ping your blog after every post. You can use www.pingomatic.com for this.
- Comment on other people blog, and put a little information about your website.
- Join forum and post thread in the forum. Don’t forget to set your signature. Joomla forum and wordpress are good.
- Create a video and post it at www.youtube.com. Put your url in the video.
- Put your website url in social networking like myspace, facebook, friendster.
- Buy traffic using PPC (adwords).
- Do SEO on your page. http://www.smallwebsitehost.com/seo
- Post in Yahoo groups or Google groups
- Answer question at Yahoo answer
- Link exhange with related website
- Submit website to directories
- Ask people to review your website. Search “website review” at google.
- Create article at squidoo.com
- Post at hoobly.com
- Create article at hubpages.com
- Create article at zimbio.com
- Submit to directory and search engine.
- Sign up for mybloglog.com
- Create a ebook and give it free at your website
Woven into everything discussed so far is the broader question of what happens when digital behaviour crosses a legal threshold, and how few people truly understand the severity of those consequences before it is too late. From personal experience dealing with a cyber-related allegation, I found that having a skilled internet crime attorney defending charges in New Jersey changed the entire trajectory of what could have been a devastating situation. The team’s background in prosecution gave them a clear-sighted understanding of exactly how the state builds these cases, and that knowledge translated directly into an effective defence strategy. It is the kind of insight that simply cannot be improvised under pressure.








