
First of all, welcome to my newly designed blog. I focused this design based on the successful build and sales I’ve made from my Lime Splash HTML template that I listed on Propelly last week.
I’ve tried my best to keep to a minimal feel and not to over complicate things as demonstrated in the past blog designs. All of my pages are displayed neatly in the header, which include my portfolio and services pages should you require to check out any of my recent work and anything I can help you out with in terms of blog and web design, graphic design and advisory work for those who are unsure as to the next step in their startup or business.
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This is archived content from 2010. Information and links within this article may be out of date or no longer in use.
Traffic has always been part of the internet. If you’re just starting a blog or website, you may find that your site traffic is like driving on a dark night in the middle of the country. Nobody on the roads and you can speed if you want to. However, on the flip side, if you’re popular on the net and you’ve built up a community of readers and visitors, you may find that you’re stuck in that traffic jam in the middle of rush hour. Your car will run down, you’ll be wasting resources just sitting there waiting for the road to clear or the traffic lights to change. What triggered this post to be written was a tweet from Cali Lewis, of GeekBeat.TV;
Why do I always assume that on a rainy day, traffic to my website would be lower? Weird…
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