Driving traffic to your site, should not be done simply for the ego of the numbers. EVERYTHING that we do on our blogs relflects on how we will likely operate out in the world as agents.
The true purpose of a blog is not simply to provide content people may like to read, like a magazine. It is to give the reader a glimpse at who you are and how you think.
For this reason, I DO NOT and DID NOT tell Kevin to...trick people into going to his site outside of Active Rain by saying "READ MORE... Last night I saw a comment on Ines' article asking WHY they had to go someplace else to read the full article. When I first started seeing Apprentices posting "teaser ads" to drive traffic to their new "outside" blogs, I questioned why I was not giving Kevin that advice. Were my "standards" holding him back?
To me, articles that lead the reader someplace else to get what they really came for, are mirroring a BAIT AND SWITCH mentality. "I know you came here for THIS, but I WANT you to come over HERE to my own purpose. What YOU want has therefore become secondary to what I want. I want to drive traffic to my new blog...so I'm teasing you with this great headline and story and FORCING you to come where I WANT you to go, by baiting you here and then switching you there."
Doesn't the whole concept of BAIT AND SWITCH turn you off? Of course it does. So why would someone put bait and switch tactics into their blogging strategy? It boggles my mind. Sure, maybe you will win the competition by dragging numbers over to your blog...but what does it say about you? How does it show the consumer public that you are in it for them and their goals, and not you and your goals?
If your blogging blatantly "uses" tactics to get the reader to do what YOU want them to do, might not a consumer read into that effort that you may also be willing to drag them to the property that better suits the agent's needs rather than theirs? Think about that.
Don't think for a minute that the consumer isn't smart enough to know "link bait" when he sees it. Credibility is key. Link baiting will cause you to lose credibility among your readers and prospective clients. Other Active Rain people may think it is cool and smart, but the general public will read it for what it is...LINK BAIT!
P.S. The third paragraph of this post demonstrates the appropriate way to link to other sites. The links are part of the story, and the reader can go there or not, and does not NEED to go there to read and comprehend this article. The links are "extra" reading to demonstrate the point. Not bait links.
Further, at times I may want to blog a bit about something but there's lots more information on one of my (many) websites. It seems reasonable to me to offer the "more" feature there too.