Aug 25

Today’s lesson is a day in the life of an internet marketer. And what successful internet marketers do every day is create GREAT content and post it on prime real estate on the internet.

Content is writing, photos, presentations, audio, and video (think YouTube).

Main lesson today is if you give people exactly what they seek, they will probably buy from you.

One phrase, one product link on your phrase site (will be a blog in the 30DC case).

Action Items:

  • Write or create three more pieces of content about each of our two topics
  • Continue reading and taking notes from what we’re following on Bloglines
  • Can add Technorati blog feed to Bloglines.

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written by joubess

Aug 11

We have days 11 & 12 off.

It’s the weekend, and I’ll be using the time to read up on my two niches. I’ve done a lot of reading already and can see the niche topics can go in many directions with possibilities of many products related to them.

I’m already seeing why market research up front is so important. If I just picked a niche and jumped in, it would be like jumping out of a boat in deep water far from shore without first learning to swim and becoming a strong swimmer. No wonder so many people fail at this. They fail because they haven’t been mentored properly.

A ton of metaphors apply:

  • You have to crawl before you walk, and you have to walk before you run
  • You have to learn to throw the ball and swing the bat before you can play in little league
  • You have to play in little league for years, then play on school or intramural teams, and then be good enough to play at the high school level before you can play at the college level
  • You have to play at the college level before you can play in the minor league
  • You have to play in the minor league before you play in the major league
  • You have to play really well in the major league before you become a baseball star

We are probably at the “walk before you run” stage right now. When we started, we were probably having to learn to crawl before we walked. By the end of next week we’ll be at the “learn to swing the bat and throw the ball” stage. By the end of the challenge we’ll be at the end of our little league careers and entering the intramural sport level. Then it’s up to us to work our way into the major league.

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written by joubess

Aug 10

Today we had to have our two keyword phrases chosen. I had 5 possibilities and chose my two based on acceptable traffic, wide audience, separate industries, and affiliate programs associated with them. My top two were in very similar industries, so I had to leave one for later.

After we had our top two (or top one if we didn’t have two), we learned a couple of quick techniques for learning about those markets using Bloglines and Google Notebook (I will abbreviate Google Notebook in the future as GNotebook or GN). Using these techniques is all about leveraging your time and letting your technology tools work hard for you so you don’t have to.

First, we typed our first keyword phrase into the Google Search box and clicked [News] to get all the news available on those keywords. If your keyword phrase didn’t have any news, you can go to broad search or leave out one of the keywords that makes the phrase a niche and read on the broader topic. We don’t want to have to perform this same search every day, so we used the RSS feed button in the address bar that we set up during pre-season to subscribe to those search results in Bloglines. I put each of my keyword phrases into its own folder to keep things a little more organized. Now, when we go to Bloglines, all the recent news on our keyword phrase is waiting for us to read. It updates automatically.

Second, while we were still inside the Google News search area, we clicked on [blogs] for our keyword phrase and subscribed to blogs on our topic in Bloglines just as we subscribed to news using our handy RSS feed button in the address bar. This way we don’t have to perform the blog search every day. We just go to Bloglines and read up on the latest blogs about our keyword phrase.

Lather, rinse, repeat for the second keyword phrase. Subscribe to news and blogs for that phrase.

As we read we’re supposed to take notes. We can take notes in GNotebook or on 3×5 cards. I’ll be using GN because it’s so easy to use and is by far more powerful than using handwritten 3×5 index cards. For one thing, it’s searchable, and to search 3×5 cards can take a lot of time if you have a lot of cards. This is about leveraging time, so as far as I’m concerned, the 3×5 cards are out of the picture when doing online research. They’ll probably be out of the picture with other research as well. They will probably still be a good, solid study aid for my tutoring students, however.

Why do we need to read news and blogs and take notes on our keyword phrases? Because we will need a good grasp of the all the information we can absorb so we’ll have reference material for letters and website content later. You can’t just throw up a site and say nothing about what you’re selling. Your copy is important to the sales process just as much as finding a good niche. What you write and how you write it may make the difference between making a sale and not making a sale. But, if you have to “sell”, you don’t have the right keyword phrase to begin with. I guess what I mean here is you don’t want to turn anyone off from buying from you by not doing your homework and sounding dumb. People buying in your niche already know a lot about it and are coming to you to make a purchase, so you don’t want to give them any reason not to make that purchase.

Ed Dale also pointed out the SEO (Search Engine Optimization) information under our Google Searches. We don’t really know what it all means right now, but we are assured to learn later and by experience. This information is a gold mine and can tell you why you aren’t in a top-ranked spot in a search if you know how to read them. I don’t know, so I’ll have to go on faith and trial and error for the time being.

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written by joubess

Aug 10

It means we have a license to print money because we can confirm Wordtracker traffic in Google Trends.

Worst case, it takes 200 unique page visits to your site to get one sale. If you get 50 hits per day, it will take you 4 days to make a sale, but if you know you get that many hits/day, you will make a sale every 4 days like clockwork. Have 2 sites with the same traffic and you make the equivalent of a sale every other day (two sales every 4 days). Lather, rinse, repeat and you can really rack up the money over time. You have to get a lot of these things going, but once you do they make you money continuously.

Today we reviewed what we learned on days 7 and 8 and were reminded to go back further to all the data we have for each of our keyword phrases.

Many of us were confused and thought our keyword phrases should make it on the GT chart. With <30,000 hits of competition, that's not likely, but we could still compare our phrases in GT against a known phrase using the language lines below the graph area. In our case, our known phrase gets right around 500 hits/day. If we put in our keyword phrases to compare to the known, we can see about what ratio our keyword phrases measured up to a standard of 500.

I came out with 5 acceptable keyword phrases and the assignment for today is to pick two to move forward with.

Criteria so far:
Wordtracker: minimum 50 hits/day
Google keyword phrase search: <30,000 hits
Google Trends: minimum 50 hits/day
Do Wordtracker and Google Trends traffic results compare well? Which one is higher?

Notice:
Wordtracker: do you get at least a few keyword phrases with 80 or more hits/day?
On Google searches, how many hits do you get for all the words?
How many ads appear?
How many broad keyword searches have affiliate programs associated with them?

Now I’ve got to pick the two phrases I want to continue with in the 30DC….

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written by joubess

Aug 10

Along with day 7’s data, we went on to collect a little bit more information about traffic. We used Google Trends and a phrase with known traffic to compare our keyword phrases to the traffic numbers we get in Wordtracker. Is the Wordtracker traffic real? We can check if we have a phrase with a known amount of daily traffic that’s pretty steady.

Known phrase goes first, comma, your keyword phrase in quote marks goes second.

Sometimes Wordtracker and Google Trends agree. Often they don’t agree. I’m finding that GTrends often comes in with lower traffic than WT, but not always. With my own phrases I’ve gotten numbers like 80/day in WT and <20/day in GT. If I used a keyword phrase that gave me these results, I probably wouldn't get much traffic or business. Sometimes I've gotten 50-70 points higher on GT than on WT. You want Google traffic, so if GT is nearly non-existent you need to scratch that one and go on to another phrase.

Good traffic is 100 visits/day or more on both GT and WT. Acceptable is at least 50 visits/day or more on both. One may give 50 while the other gives 80 or so. That’s great!

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written by joubess

Aug 10

Day 7 moved us from the noticing or observation stage to the judgement stage. We started working with keyword phrases and looked at how much competition each has.

You search your 7 keyword phrases in quote marks and look at the number of hits you get in Google. Our target for the thirty day challenge is <30,000>50-60 searches per day for that phrase (100 or more is better)
Google keyword phrase search: <30,000 hits

This gives us some competition and we’re still in a niche.

I’m still keeping all my notes in Google Notebook, and I love it!

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written by joubess