Monday, October 22, 2018

IFTTT Applets for Bloggers

IFTTT Applets for Bloggers:

These connections are for WordPress bloggers, but there are also more connections for bloggers on other blogging platforms.
Connections you can make:
  1. Amazon’s Alexa to your phone Find your phone using the IFTTT trigger. You are too busy with blogging tasks to go looking for your phone!
  2. Blog photos to Flickr Maybe someone will see your photo and offer to link to you in exchange for using your photo. Links improve your SEO!
  3. Check on your online reputation. You can set IFTTT to let you know when you are mentioned online.
  4. Facebook Page Updates to Twitter.
  5. Feedly to IFTTT Bloggers should stay up-to-date with what content is popular in their niche. Feedly is a content curation tool that helps you keep your favorite content in one place. You can connect your Feedly content feed to IFTTT.
  6. Flipboard to Pocket Save articles you’ve curated at Flipboard to Pocket where you can read them offline.
  7. IFTTT to Medium so your blog post articles get published on Medium, the content curation site.
  8. Instagram photos to Dropbox
  9. Instagram to Facebook
  10. Instagram to Pinterest
  11. Pinterest to Twitter
  12. Post your tweets to Google Calendar. Blogger Sara Duggan wants her virtual assistant to schedule her tweets for her. Therefore, she uses IFTTT to post her tweets to her Google Calendar. Her assistant can see them and schedule them. You can schedule your own tweets or other people’s tweets on a recurring basis.
  13. Twitter to Buffer. Schedule your tweets to go out from your Buffer queue.
  14. Twitter to Pinterest
  15. Twitter posts with a certain hashtag to Facebook
  16. WordPress to Evernote
  17. WordPress posts to your Facebook page
  18. WordPress to Google Plus
  19. WordPress posts to LinkedIn
  20. WordPress posts with a specific tag to LinkedIn
  21. WordPress posts to Pinterest
  22. WordPress posts in a specific category to a Pinterest board
  23. WordPress to Reddit
  24. WordPress posts to Twitter with an image
  25. WordPress to Twitter without an image. Have IFTTT tweet your blog posts!
  26. WordPress to Twitter with a link to your bio.
  27. YouTube videos to your Facebook page.


from WordPress https://ift.tt/2OGsz7R

Wednesday, October 3, 2018

SEO Happens - A Bump in the Road

So I had a follow up article for my previous blog post on finding a ClickBank  niche and it got deleted in a format of my hard drive as I reinstalled windows.

Before everybody starts jabbering about 'backing up your work' please keep in mind: I did back everything up and I'm just to lazy to retrieve it at this time. True story - happened right here in Baton Rouge.

Besides, I want to do something different.  I want to do a case study on SEO and PLR articles.  Yes, you heard me right and before anybody starts whining about duplicate content please here me out.

Let's Do an SEO Test on PLR Articles

So what is a PLR article? It's a private label rights article, which loosely translated is an article you can buy and get resale rights on. Do a quick search on google for PLR Articles and you'll get plenty of hits. You can find them for free also. Check out this database of PLR articles

Let's look at this free PLR article:

Title: Car Repair Prices Why Your Oil Change Is Never Just An Oil Change

First paragraph:
For a repair shop, there is little profit in the $29.95 oil change. By the time a shop pays its technician, pays for the oil, the filter, and the hazardous waste disposal fees, there’s no money left.

Copy and paste the first paragraph into Google and here are the search results:




Top 2 pages ranking for a copy and paste of first paragraph (they had to match the article):

http://www.barrtransmission.com/car-repair-prices-why-your-oil-change-is-never-%E2%80%9Cjust-an-oil-change%E2%80%9D

and

http://rivr.sulekha.com/adwords_1456180

Just a footnote...according to the second URL this article is about 11 years old! Wow...

Now this part of the test is really biased as Google is just looking for a match to what I put in for a search.

Looking at the copy the key word this article is trying to rank for is oil change.  It is mentioned 3 times, twice in the title, and once in the first paragraph plus it has the LSI keywords to back it up. So how do these websites rank for the word oil change across the net?  Let's find out...

I enter the URL of the first website in LinkAssistant's Rank Tracker




Since the website isn't mine I skip the second part



These are some of the keywords that Rank Tracker recommends



I noticed that in the list the keyword 'oil change' was not present and all the words it did list were not the ones I was looking for.  So I deleted all of these keywords and simply put the one word I was looking for in its place - oil change.

Final Result


The site is not ranking for the keyword oil change at all - at least not in the top 50.  Are there any backlinks to their pages contain this article? According to SEO SpyGlass the answer is no, however, looking at the base URL for http://www.barrtransmission.com/ the answer is 128 plus 56,100 more.


A lot of those links lead to 404 pages...Looks like this site use to sell products or offer digital downloads of the espanol variety.

The Test for PRL Ranking

The article is not half bad for an 11 year old piece of work.  It offers some common sense tips on changing oil.  If someone were to :

1. Put it on a car site
2. Add a table of contents with at least 1 heading containing the word "oil change"
3. Have another article on the website linking to it (contextual)
4. Add some pictures and a video of an oil change
5. A few backlinks from some medium to high DA sites?  Maybe?

We'll Never Know Unless We Try

In my next article we'll build that website I was talking about in my last article and also play around with the SEO PowerSuite a bit more.




Wednesday, September 26, 2018

The Easy Way to Finding a Profitable Niche on Clickbank

I read this older post from 2016 - Niche Hacks - Clickbank Niche Finder
Found it while I was cruising nichehacks.com.  It looks promising since I use ClickBank stuff so I decided to give it a try. You know what the problem is with most people when it comes to doing this kind of work?  They don't follow instructions and they never follow all the way through. Everybody wants the quick easy way out. Like I say if it was easy then everybody would do it.


Let's follow this article  all the way through and see if we can't find a niche. The first step will be the read the article.  Next, I'll go back and break it down into a step-by-step process. after that I'll work the process.  follow along and let's see how it goes.


So...did you read the article? Basically you pick something interesting on the left hand column, select a sub-category then look for something with high gravity...Seriously?


Try it this way:
  1. Select ‘Marketplace' from the top header menu
  2. To the right of ‘Find Products’ select ‘Advanced Search’
  3. Put a checkmark next to ‘Show items with gravity:’ then select ’Higher Than’ from the drop down then 50 for the value.
  4. Finally click ‘Search’
There you have it...A list of all programs higher than 50 Gravity.


For a final step you can leave it on Popularity or select ‘Gravity’ to sort your results.  


Luckily the article has links to building a website. Can’t wait to see what that has to offer.

Later...

Monday, September 24, 2018

Welcome to SEO Notes

seo, search engine optimization


I started this blog because I needed a place to sort out my thoughts. I don't even know where to start. Maybe the beginning will help…

Awhile back me and a friend of mine had an idea to buy a whole bunch of really good domain names, SEO the hell out of each website, and then throw in some Adsense, Amazon affiliate stuff or whatever to the pages and make a whole bunch of money online.  Sounds good, right?

Things didn’t exactly turn out that way…

I kept watching these guys on YouTube and they made it look so easy making a $2,500 on Instagram per day and even more on their YouTube channel and sky's the limit!
So I would try their techniques and and fail,  try again and fail...it really sucked

One of the techniques that I tried out actually didn't fail though it did exactly what it was supposed to do and that was making a new site which had different article headings like MSN’s lifestyle, money, health and fitness - stuff like that.

So I bought a domain, some semi expensive plug-ins from Themeforest, started blogging and it started drawing a lot of traffic and then it got hacked and it just never seemed to recover from that. Hostgator shut me down twice and I finally moved to a different provider. To this day I think it had a lot more to do with HostGator than it did me.

I had about 12 other domains but providing content and also entering into a category like diet and weight loss was a huge mistake.The diet and weight loss category for SEO and trying to get ranked on Google is super tough.

If you're just starting out in SEO work I would highly recommend finding a niche market and working with that first. Something with low competition but high traffic.

It would be different if you were part of a large company that had graphic artist, content creators IT department, web designers Etc. However most of us start out as a one man operation.  and buying content is expensive, as a lot of us start out on a shoestring budget.

Let's face it. In today's world where domains are super cheap, talent is super expensive.
You end up being the web designer,  the SEO guy, the analytics guy, the web console guy, the AdWords guy -  you have to do everything on your own.

It's tough work but worth it if you can stick it out. As for me I'll keep trudging along and follow my own advice... I'm going to find that niche market.