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Brent M. Jones - Connected Events Matter

11400 W Olympic Blvd Ste 200
Los Angeles, CA 90064-1584
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Exploring the unexpected connections that shape our lives

 

 

 

Book Reviews, Comments & Stories,       Quotes, & Poetry & More

 

 

 

"Connections and Why They Matter"

 

 

 

 

 

 

Most of what happens in our life will spark a connection.  Life connects with what has been found in books. Books connect with what happens in life. Use the connections to help you see more clearly. A love of reading and writing is what motivated the creation of this blog. Thank you for coming to the blog. 

 

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Brent M. Jones - Connected Events Matter

  • Home |
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    • Finding the Best Version of Ourselves: The Interview of Self
    • Why Professionals Use LinkedIn
    • Networking With a Purpose: The Informational Interview, It's Use ...................l
    • Work Matters It takes Technology..
    • Philosophers are Self Help Authors
    • Embrace Life’s Randomness: Path to Personal Reinvention
    • Interviewing Yourself and Asking The Right Questions
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Platforms don’t create visibility. They reveal how clearly we express what we know and how we think. (1).png

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Learning to understand and use LinkedIn in your job search, networking and research.

Maximizing Website Traffic: The Social Media Paradox

April 24, 2026 Brent Jones
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Social media has become one of the most common tools for sharing ideas, building visibility, and driving traffic. But its role is often misunderstood. It can create connection, but it can also create distance. It can bring people to your work—or keep them moving past it.

Traffic for a website is often compared to blood flowing through the veins. Without it, the system weakens. But unlike the body, where circulation is continuous, social media does not recycle attention. A post appears, gains brief visibility, and then disappears. Left alone, it becomes a one-way trip—messages pushed out with little returning.

That is the paradox.

Social media promises connection. Yet many people find themselves scrolling through updates from people they rarely see, while real conversations quietly fade. The experience can feel interactive, but often remains surface-level. For the person posting, it can be a release. For the person scrolling, it can become a steady stream of noise—information, emotion, and reaction that rarely settles into something lasting.

If that is where the interaction ends, social media does not build much. It moves attention, but it does not hold it.

That is why a website matters.

Your website is not just a destination—it is a place where attention can slow down. It is where ideas can be explored more fully, where visitors can move beyond a single post, and where a more meaningful connection can begin to form. It is where someone becomes more than a viewer—where they become a reader, a subscriber, or part of an ongoing conversation.


That deeper connection—the movement from interaction to understanding—is something explored more fully in The Human Factor.



Social media, then, works best when it is not treated as the destination. It is a tool for introduction. It creates entry points. It raises questions, highlights ideas, and invites curiosity. But for it to do more than that, it must be used deliberately.

Instead of broadcasting, it can engage.

A post can ask a question instead of making a statement.
A response can invite reflection instead of reaction.
A conversation can lead somewhere—back to a deeper idea, a longer piece of writing, or a place where the discussion can continue.

When that happens, social media stops being a one-way path and becomes a bridge.

This shift matters not only for traffic, but for how we experience these platforms.

Used passively, social media can reinforce isolation. It keeps us observing rather than participating, reacting rather than connecting. Used deliberately, it can create a different kind of interaction—one that leads to thought, response, and continuity beyond the feed.

For writers, authors, and anyone sharing ideas, this distinction is important.

Social media can introduce your work.
Your website can sustain it.

One creates visibility. The other builds depth. The way small interactions accumulate into something more meaningful is a theme I explore further in What Matters.

see what matters

Neither works as well without the other.

The goal is not simply to post more. It is to create a connection between where people first encounter your ideas and where those ideas can be experienced more fully.

That is where the one-way trip changes.

And that is where attention becomes something more than momentary—it becomes something that lasts.

Source: https://connectedeventsmatter.com/using-li...
In Platforms & Visibility Tags Social Media Strategy, Website Traffic, Author Platform, Content Strategy, Blogging, Communication, Digital Presence, Writing & Publishing
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Using Social Media, Blogging, and Your Website to Build an Author Platform

April 24, 2026 Brent Jones
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Social media, blogging, and websites are often discussed as separate tools, but in practice, they work best as a connected system. Each plays a different role, and understanding how they interact is more important than focusing on any single platform.

Website traffic is often compared to blood flow—without it, the system struggles. But unlike circulation, social media does not naturally recycle attention. A post appears, gains brief visibility, and then disappears. If social media is used only to broadcast messages, it becomes a one-way path. The more effective approach is to use it to engage—inviting responses, conversations, and ongoing interaction that can lead people back to your work.

In my experience, platforms such as LinkedIn, Pinterest, Facebook, and Twitter (now X) have each played a role in driving traffic. However, the results are not always proportional to follower counts. For example, having thousands of followers does not necessarily translate into meaningful traffic or book sales. Social media can create visibility, but visibility alone does not ensure conversion. The content itself still has to resonate. Platforms like LinkedIn can be used more effectively when approached with clarity and intention.

see Why Professionals Use LinkedIn for Networking and More



This is where blogging and a website become essential. While social media is transient, your website is stable. It is where your ideas live in a more complete form. A blog allows you to demonstrate your thinking, explore topics in depth, and give readers a reason to stay longer than a few seconds. Over time, this builds familiarity and trust—something that short-form platforms struggle to do on their own and that I explore more deeply in The Human Factor.


see The Human Factor A Reflective Guide for Seasons of Change and Personal Clarity



The distinction between a blog and a website is less important than how they are used. Technically, blogs are regularly updated sections of a website, often presented in reverse chronological order. But in practice, the two are often the same. A website can function as a blog if it is updated consistently, and a blog is simply a type of website designed for ongoing content. What matters is not the label, but the presence of consistent, thoughtful updates.

Blogging continues to be widely used. There are hundreds of millions of blogs globally, with millions of posts published daily. Many bloggers report meaningful results, particularly when their content is supported by social media distribution. In fact, most rely on social platforms to bring readers to their sites. This reinforces the idea that neither blogging nor social media works best in isolation.

The role of social media, then, is not just to promote—but to connect. It introduces your work to new audiences, provides entry points into your ideas, and creates opportunities for interaction. The role of your website or blog is to deepen that connection by offering substance, perspective, and continuity.

For authors, this combination becomes part of a broader platform. Social media creates awareness. A website builds credibility. A blog demonstrates insight. Together, they allow readers to move from a brief interaction to a more sustained engagement with your work.

That does not guarantee book sales. A book still has to stand on its own. But without this ecosystem, it is difficult for readers to discover it in the first place.

If you are writing—whether books, essays, or reflections—these tools are no longer optional. They are part of how ideas are shared, how audiences are built, and how connections are formed. The question is not whether to use them, but how deliberately they are used together.

see The way small interactions accumulate over time is something I explore further in What Matters.


Source: https://connectedeventsmatter.com/using-li...
In Platforms & Visibility Tags Social Media Strategy, Author Platform, Blogging, Website Traffic, Book Marketing
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About

Brent M. Jones

Brent writes with quiet confidence and curiosity, exploring communication, reinvention, and what truly matters. His reflections invite readers to slow down, reconsider their stories, and reconnect with the values that guide them. Through books, essays, and his What Matters Substack Articles and Notes, he offers writing that doesn’t shout—but still speaks clearly.

A Lighter Side of Brent

Not every dragon is meant to be slain. Some remind us of imagination, curiosity, and the unexpected turns that make life meaningful.

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