My suggestions are these. Can you add items to it?
Cite your past work when it is relevant to a new manuscript. However, do not reference every paper you have written just to increase your citation count.
Carefully choose your keywords. Choose keywords that researchers in your field will be searching for so that your paper will appear in a database search.
Use your keywords and phrases in your title and repeatedly in your abstract. Repeating keywords and phrases will increase the likelihood your paper will be at the top of a search engine list, making it more likely to be read.
Use a consistent form of your name on all of your papers. Using the same name on all of your papers will make it easier for others to find all of your published work. If your name is very common, consider getting a research identifier, such as an ORCID. You can provide your ORCID in your email signature and link that ID to your publication list so that anyone you email has access to your publications.
Make sure that your information is correct. Check that your name and affiliation are correct on the final proofs of your manuscript and check that the paper’s information is accurate in database searches.
Make your manuscript easily accessible. If your paper is not published in an open-access journal, post your pre- or post-publication prints to a repository. Check SHERPA RoMEO to find your publisher’s copyright and self-archiving policies regarding sharing your published manuscript.
Share your data. There is some evidence that sharing your data can increase your citations. Consider posting to data sharing websites, such as figshare or SlideShare, or contributing to Wikipedia and providing links to your published manuscripts.
Present your work at conferences. Although conference presentations are not cited by other others, this will make your research more visible to the academic and research communities. Check out these tips for making the most of your next research conference.
Use social media. Provide links to your papers on social media (e.g., Facebook, Twitter, Academia.edu, ResearchGate, Mendeley) and your university profile page.
Actively promote your work. Talk to other researchers about your paper, even ones not in your field, and email copies of your paper to researchers who may be interested. Create a blog or a website dedicated to your research and share it.
Is the promotion of products as the principle of trade in science,
but good research does not need the principle of bidding, good research imposes itself., Old research is still quoted but not presented in several locations
Adaptation to the mainstream is decisive; therefore, you have to do 'normal science', which falls into the ballpark of the accepted matrix. For this career aim, your 10 commandments are comprehensive and instructive.
In my experience, the number of citations of an essay does not only depend on its scientific quality, but on whether the topic fits into the paradigm that is current in the discussion of the subject. If (1) I research a peripheral field that interests no one, (2) I find myself in a minority position vis-à-vis the majority of subject experts and myself still largely unknown in the discipline concerned, one will not hear too much echo. I see this rather as an advantage for one's own autonomy.
In addition: If you have edited a simple textbook, with articles of others (und your short introduction) which hasn't much to do with reserarch, normally this is often quoted because students use it.
Experience of life as a univerrsity teacher says to me: You shouldn't care about that I am quoted by colleagues trying to sunbathe in your work eagerly.
In my experience, the number of citations of an essay ... [depends] on whether the topic fits into the paradigm that is current in the discussion of the subject.
With this excellent, incisive observation, I suggest adding that the citations count depends on whether cited research speaks to others and helps others solve an important problem.
The basic motivation in revealing research results is to share a discovery. Moreover, the hope is that published research results that catches the attention of others is that you shed light on some phenomenon that many others have wondered about.
We cite somebody’s work in our documents mainly to acknowledge that person’s impact on subsequent works and on our work. If a person's document do not give novel or relevant information, nobody is going to cite it. Researchers should be cautious about their works as well as the journals they select for publishing results. Run-of-the mill kind of works attract less or no citation at all. It has also been observed that journals listed in Journal Citation Reports or Scopus database attract more citations than others. Go through these databases, and select journals with high ranks and be visible!
It should have more conclusions technically so that every body refer your paper and cite the paper for details regarding concept conclusion. Along with it should be in good demanding research area and understand by every body. Moreover, it should be novel idea.
Everyone has their own ideas. For me, the primary career wish to be quoted as much as possible is a regressive behaviour, it is contrary to any ethos of science. even if as a scientist you have the feeling that you are under competitive pressure. It is an act of self-exposure to constantly repeat the known advice on how to increase one's own fame. Let me say ironically: if you have a doctoral student and are supposed to advise him, it's best to start with such advice, that's enough to write a dissertation.
citations increased by you and your students and co-authors refer to your last publications , by make it share it at many webs to make it more visible .
Cite your past work when it is relevant to a new manuscript. However, do not reference every paper you have written just to increase your citation count.
Carefully choose your keywords. Choose keywords that researchers in your field will be searching for so that your paper will appear in a database search.
Use your keywords and phrases in your title and repeatedly in your abstract. Repeating keywords and phrases will increase the likelihood your paper will be at the top of a search engine list, making it more likely to be read.
Use a consistent form of your name on all of your papers. Using the same name on all of your papers will make it easier for others to find all of your published work. If your name is very common, consider getting a research identifier, such as an ORCID. You can provide…
I don't think it is necessary to have more citations count. Yes sometime it helps you to some extent but quality of your works remains same. Please try to write more authentic and contemporary works, your citation will increase automatically. Thanks