Things You Learn from the Referrer Logs
by Brendon Carr
I read Korea Law Blog’s referrer logs every day for clues as to how people found me. I want more people to find me.
Last week while in Singapore, I threw up a page on Saturday about the recent amendment of the Korea Franchise Act, and by the following Tuesday discovered that entry top-ranked for the Google search terms “korea franchise law”—which surprised me. But it means that anyone who is looking for information about that topic will definitely find something relevant. However, today I found that my entry “Read Korea Law Blog and Have More Sex!” is the fourth highest-ranked item in a Google search for the terms “korea sex”, which a Chinese user of the google.cn search engine ran this morning. Fourth! This despite little, if any, sex-related content.
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Korea Law Blog is brought to you by Brendon Carr, an American lawyer working as a foreign legal consultant for more than 10 years in Seoul. (Brendon is not admitted as an attorney in Korea. But you knew that.)
Ha, I found you via the “bloggers have more sex post”. As a veteran blogger I have learned that the quickest way to get more traffic to your site is to put sexual references in the titles to your blog posts, then have a laugh at all the searchers for say “hot porn” that come to your blog, who are then confronted say with a sentencing commentary and analysis on the law relating to pornography