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By Jason Hennessey 

Here are some tools that business owners can use to optimize their websites and bring in more revenue

Small businesses face unique challenges when it comes to their marketing operations. For one, very few have dedicated personnel to manage marketing campaigns (there may be few team members wearing many hats). They might also have limited financial resources, making it difficult to subscribe to the latest and best marketing tools.

But running a small business also has its advantages. There is often far less competition within a small niche market, and successful marketing campaigns are significantly less expensive. Similarly, amazing results can still be achieved even with a small repertoire of marketing tools.

If you’re looking to increase organic traffic to your business via Search Engine Optimization (SEO), here are some cost-effective software solutions to have in your toolkit.

1. Google Keyword Planner

Google Keyword Planner is Google’s own SEO keyword research tool. Although Keyword Planner is primarily used to identify keywords to target with Google Ads, the same data can be used to inform your organic keyword strategy for your website.

Use Keyword Planner to find keywords your target audience may be searching for, validate the search volume and competition level for each and discover related keywords that can help you reach people interested in your products or services.

Cost: Free

2. Google Search Console

Google Search Console (GSC) is another Google-hosted SEO tool, but specific to your website performance and analytics. GSC measures your website traffic, identifies site issues and allows you to monitor your ranking keywords. Sign up for GSC using your Google account, add the code to your website, and start tracking. This data will allow you to make improvements to your website that can help increase your organic traffic.

Cost: Free

3. Google Analytics

Google Analytics is perhaps the most widely known SEO analytics tool, and for good reason. For one, it’s fed by first-party data directly from Google, making it one of the most accurate analytics tools. Also, it allows you to implement conversion tracking to monitor what actions users take on your website, whether filling out a form, subscribing to a newsletter, purchasing a product, etc. You can also monitor traffic from other channels, not just Google, such as referral traffic, direct traffic or social media traffic.

Cost: Free

4. Yoast (WordPress only)

With WordPress being the most popular Content Management System (CMS), it’s only fitting to mention Yoast. Yoast is a WordPress-specific SEO plugin that allows businesses to add essential on-page elements to their sites, including meta titles, meta descriptions, keywords and internal links. Once activated, the Yoast plugin displays a score (red, yellow or green) to reflect the degree to which your website is optimized. Some alternatives to Yoast include RankMath and SEOPress.

Cost: $99 per year

5. Semrush

Semrush is one of the best “freemium” SEO software options, with a wide range of keyword research functions, site auditing features, content optimization tools and more. Like Google Keyword Planner, you can research keywords relevant to your service or product and even discover the keywords your competitors are ranking for. You can audit your site for on-page and technical SEO issues and receive an easy-to-follow report on how to fix them. Semrush also includes backlink analysis, listing management and local SEO tools, which are not available via Keyword Planner or Google Analytics.

Cost: free (limited); paid starts at $129.95 per month

6. SpyFu

SpyFu is a small-business-friendly competitive keyword research tool. Its complete SEO marketing suite includes a Pay Per Click ad analyser, robust historical data, competitive analysis tools, backlink outreach and even custom reporting. SpyFu is a close runner-up to Semrush, as it provides a range of helpful SEO features at an affordable price. However, Semrush is often the preferred option, given that it includes on-page, off-page, and technical SEO tools (the trifecta).

Cost: free (limited); $16 per month (annual plan)

7. AnswerThePublic

AnswerThePublic is not explicitly an SEO tool but rather a “search listening tool,” but it made the list because it is supremely helpful when it comes to small business content strategy. And content is one of the most important drivers of organic traffic. AnswerThePublic allows you to search for a primary keyword and discover a “web” of questions and/or topics to turn into blog posts or web pages.

For example, say you sell dog toys online; some topic ideas generated could include “Are dog toys machine washable?” or “Which toys are safe for dogs?” These might make interesting blog posts that appeal to the interests of your target audience.

Cost: Free

8. Screaming Frog

Screaming Frog is an industry-leading website crawling and log analysis tool. Its purpose is to imitate a Google web crawler, “crawl” your website and identify any issues hindering its organic performance. Such issues might include broken links (404 pages), missing page titles, oversized images, unused JavaScript and many others. Addressing these issues can help you speed up your website, make it more discoverable by real search engines, and increase your organic rankings, leading to more site traffic. Screaming Frog is best paired with a keyword research tool like Semrush to ensure a holistic SEO strategy.

Cost: free (limited); paid starts at $259 per year

So now what?

In small business marketing, the challenges are unique, often stemming from limited resources and personnel juggling multiple roles. SEO can feel intimidating, especially to small business owners facing limited technical and financial resources. However, the advantages of operating in a niche market with lower competition and cost-effective campaigns are undeniable. To harness these benefits, businesses can leverage powerful yet budget-friendly SEO tools. Elevate your small business’s online presence with these tools, turning challenges into opportunities for growth and visibility. So, dig in, get optimizing and start seeing the organic payoffs for your website.

By Jason Hennessey 

Entrepreneur Leadership Network® Contributor

Entrepreneur & CEO Jason Hennessey is an entrepreneur, internationally-recognized SEO expert, author, speaker, podcast host and business coach. Since 2001, Jason has been reverse-engineering the Google algorithm as a self-taught student and practitioner of SEO and search marketing.

Sourced from Entrepreneur

By Spencer Haws

In 2022, I set a goal to publish 1,000 articles on NichePursuits.com for the year.

Well, it’s now been a year later! How did I do with my goal? Did I see traffic growth?

Overall, I went big with Niche Pursuits in the past 12 months and saw organic traffic from Google increase by 585%!

Today, I’m excited to share my full story via interview with Jared for the Niche Pursuits podcast! I highly recommend that you listen to or watch the full interview.

The Results

Did I hit my goal of publishing 1,000 articles for the year? Not quite.

But I was able to publish 878 new blog posts! In addition, we updated 119 articles in 2022.

And here’s some of the results!

Google Analytics over the last 12 months:

Google Search Console Over the Last 12 Months

(The dip is the Christmas season)

Ahrefs Organic Traffic Growth

Steps to Increasing Organic Traffic by 585%

Growing the traffic to NichePursuits.com involved SO much more than publishing a bunch of content.

I hired well over 20 writers, multiple editors, removed lots of old content, restructured internal links across the site, did a full site redesign, updated lots of content, and so much more.

Here’s a list of some of the steps and topics we covered during the podcast.

  • Removing myself as a bottleneck
  • Focus on evergreen content
  • Removing old content
  • Restructing categories and internal link structure of the site
  • Creating standard operating procedures
  • Updating 119 articles and the process
  • Setting big goals
  • Process of hiring writers and mistakes to avoid
  • Keyword research strategies
  • A strategy I call “following Google’s lead” to find new topics
  • How Niche Pursuits makes money
  • The importance of building a brand and email list
  • Connecting all areas of business
  • The importance of staying focused

This episode is sponsored by LinkWhisper.com

Watch the Interview

Transcript

Jared: Welcome back to The Niche Pursuits podcast. Today we are joined by Spencer Haws, the founder of this very podcast that, uh, you’re listening to Spencer, welcome on.

Spencer: Hey Jared. It is good to be back on my own podcast as as odd as that is, but, uh, you are now the host. You’re doing a great job. I’m excited to come back and just share an update on my story.

Jared: I think it’s great. You know, obviously you and I are in lockstep. We both got the memo and wearing green today. Yes. So green is a theme, , and aside from the V-neck versus the straight neck, you and I might be wearing the same shirt. So I think we’re uh, we’re gonna have a good one today, . That’s

Spencer: right. You also wearing pajama pants or is that just me?

That’s just you.

Jared: No. Okay. I had to retire those, uh, post holidays. I’m now back to, uh, to shorts. , that’s next level

Spencer: stuff, right? Yeah. .

Jared: Hey, so there’s so many things that we could catch up on because it’s been a, it’s been a full year since you and I. Hung out on the podcast and chatted. Uh, I, I guess s I guess in theory I’m interviewing you today,

Yeah. But there’s so many things we could talk about, but I think perhaps the most intriguing thing that we should focus on is looking back one year ago when we were last on the podcast together, and basically we walked through the process that you were gonna go through in 2022 of choosing where to spend your time, removing yourself from certain areas of the business, and then from basically to put time towards growing niche pursuits.com without burying the lead.

I mean, let’s, let’s talk about how that’s going and what happened in 2022 as a result of that.

Spencer: Right, so that’s exactly right. About a year ago I had decided, you know what, I’ve had so many projects, lots of different things that I had been working on, but I had never really put my main focus on niche pursuits.com and growing it.

What would happen if I put all my focus there, tried to remove myself as the bottleneck from the business? How much could it grow? And, uh, people can listen to that podcast that I recorded a year ago. So this is really an update on that podcast. What happened when I tried to remove myself, right? I had just sold off a couple of niche sites, niche site, project four.

I finally had the time, okay. My main focus is niche pursuits. So the, the end result is, I am blown away by the traffic growth, the traffic itself, I can get into the numbers. The overall traffic has grown like 350% and the organic traffic has grown by over 500%. Right? So the traffic from Google, and I guess maybe I’ll, I’ll try to share some exact numbers, uh, here.

So at the end of last year, right after, you know, we had kind of recorded the podcast back in December. You know, my site was getting something around, uh, call it around maybe 2,500 to 3000 sessions a day. Right now my site is regularly getting 15, 16,000 sessions a day. Right. So I guess if you look at those numbers, that’s, you know, that’s more than a five x growth.

And, uh, yesterday got over 21,000 sessions. Wow. And, uh, things appear to be on a very nice trajectory. I actually think today might be higher than yesterday, so it’s just continuing to grow. Mm-hmm. And the bulk of that is organic traffic traffic from Google. So that’s the high. , let’s jump into it. Whatever you want to ask Jared.

Jared: Okay. I have a lot of questions about the details. I have taken some notes coming here, and the beauty about it is that I’ve kind of gotten a moonlight along the way by whether, you know, seeing stuff you’ve tweeted about throughout the year, having conversations with you offline throughout the year. So I’m gonna kind of sprinkle in a lot of the things that I think you were testing, doing, et cetera, and, and kind of also see how that played into your strategy.

I mean, let me start with a big, broad question and I, I feel like maybe a lot of people might feel this way. . I don’t actually work for niche pursuits. I run my own marketing agency. I just host this podcast. That’s right. I get a lot of people who do think I work directly for you and email me about blog content and stuff.

But as a result, I get, I kind of have a third party view of niche pursuits.com and I’ve watched Niche pursuits grow over the years and I feel like my perception is that Niche pursuits was just rocking and rolling Prior to this year that you were already doing very well, that you were already getting a lot of traffic.

You’ve now five Xed it. Like what were you leaving off the table prior that you were now able to go after? And I, again, I’m asking from kind of a broad perspective kind of shape maybe the strategy you, you engaged to to, to get this growth.

Spencer: Yeah. So I’m gonna answer sort of the two to get this. Yeah, so I’m gonna answer sort of the two parts of your question is one, you thought niche pursuits was already doing well, and, and it was in terms of my email list is huge.

I, I’ve grown it a lot. I would call that almost a bigger asset than my website, for example. But a lot of the content that I’ve done previously is like a lot of my niche site projects, those things tend to not necessarily go viral, but do really well on social media, is very shareable, but does not attract a lot of organic traffic.

Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. Okay. And so it does very well in terms of, I built a, a great following, a great brand, right? This YouTube channel, the podcast, my email list is, is massive, right? But there’s not a lot of people that are continuing to search. For a lot of my old posts, they, they weren’t SEO friendly posts.

A lot of them. It was like, hey, so

Jared: NI niche site project two, call number four with Samara. Just wasn’t really ranking that well, five years later, .

Spencer: Exactly, exactly. A lot of the content wa was outdated and uh, and I, I realized that, so over the last, even the last two to three years, I knew that I needed to start writing more SEO targeted content to really turn niche pursuits into an organic traffic engine that I knew it could be because it’s got a lot of great authority, a lot of great links.

And so I started to write some of those SEO articles myself. I even hired a couple of writers, but it’s very slow when I’m doing it a lot myself. So that was a big part of it. Like I just gotta remove myself. I gotta go all in. I gotta believe in this site. I gotta believe that the authority, the process that I know of how to rank other websites that I’ve done is going to work on itch pursuits.

And so that’s what I changed is like, okay, no more producing all the content that is like, Can, can expire and is old, right? Uh, I’m focusing on evergreen content and I’m going big, right? Mm-hmm. . And so, uh, that’s the shift that I made is just producing a lot more content. I hired, gosh, over 20 writers to Wow.

To help produce all the content. And I guess since we’re talking about it, I’ll just share the numbers. I’m gonna look at it. I believe it’s, I just tweeted about this yesterday. 878 total articles were published in 2022 on niche pursuits.com. That’s a ton. And that is, I didn’t realize way more new content than, than I’ve ever published in any previous year.

That’s

Jared: substantial. That, so that makes a ton of sense. A lot of what probably a lot of people know niche pursuits for historically is these different types of things that work really well on social media, but don’t drive long-term evergreen traffic. Okay. Exactly. Okay, good. So that sets the stage you’re removing yourself and focusing on evergreen content.

You wrote 900 articles, in essence hired 20 rockers . Yep. How did you develop a process for that? And did you start by, maybe walk us through the beginning phases and the dichotomy that probably existed between going through a lot of this old content on your site that wasn’t Evergreen focused and then wanting to publish new SEO focused content and where you kind of split that up and then how you set out to, to, to

Spencer: do that.

Right. Yeah. So there, there was a ton of old content, I’ll just touch on that briefly, that I did do a lot of, uh, cleanup. There was a lot of updates. You know, nobody cared about niche site project one month three. Right. It wasn’t. Getting any organic traffic. And so, so basically I looked at two things to actually delete a lot of content is, uh, was it getting any traffic and did it have any good links?

Right? And, um, if it had good links, I might actually 3 0 1 redirect it to a relevant page. Yep. Or to the homepage. Or if it had neither of those, I’d just hit delete. Right. And so I did remove a lot of content. So there was a lot of cleanup of the site architecture wise, link wise, category wise, that went into sort of setting the stage for this, that I’m happy to dive into that in more detail as well.

But then the other part is setting up all these standard operating procedures for like, okay, it’s going beyond me. And one or two writers that I’ve kind of dabbled with in the past to like, yeah, let’s hire 20 people and, and see what we can do. Really, my goal at the beginning of the year was to publish a thou a thousand articles.

I felt just short of that, but still a significant number of articles. And so I knew that I needed these standard operating procedures, uh, so that I could hire someone not only to write the content, but to actually edit and be able to publish that content even if I wasn’t around. Yeah, right. When, when you’re looking at the number of like three, four articles every day potentially getting published, like that’s basically all I could do every day if I were to read every article and edit every article, even if I didn’t write it.

So I needed to have a team and system in place, uh, to be able to do all of that for me and. I wrote out very detailed instructions for like, here’s the voice of niche pursuits, here’s the audience you’re targeting. These are people that wanna learn specifics, be very upfront and honest, et cetera. Right. I explained everything that I try to do when I write in a nice, uh, document, and I, it’s in a Google spreadsheet that’s kind of like checklist format.

So when, mm-hmm. authors write an article, they can look at here’s like 30 points and here’s some loom videos, right? That explains things from voice to formatting, to how to add links, et cetera, all that, all of that. And so we can jump into that process, but I had to truly just, um, change my mind, shift of, okay, it’s no longer me doing this.

How can I make it as easy as possible for people to do this for me without a asking me questions every day? So I had to do, Tons of documentation.

Jared: I, okay. I wanna ask you about that. I wanna, I think let, let’s just camp really quickly cuz I think we can get through it quickly on this topic of deleting and purging old content.

And then we can move into all the new content because I think that that probably was an initial thing that was done. And then you didn’t really have to do it any longer. You cleaned up the site architecture, you got rid of a bunch of stuff. How could, can that be, did you outsource any of that? Can that be outsourced?

Cause I mean, a lot of people will have sites and have websites that are, you know, either they’ve bought and so there’s a lot of old content that maybe wasn’t tended for. Or maybe it’s just stuff that they’ve done over the years, kind of like you, and it’s no longer the focus of the site, but updating content and deciding to delete it and all that, it’s, it’s very nuanced and very difficult to outsource, I’ve found.

So I’m curious if you were able to outsource any of that or if you just decided to roll up your sleeves for that one time project.

Spencer: Yeah, I did all of that myself. I did not outsource it. Um, I suppose it’s, it’s maybe possible to outsource for a more standard website, but niche pursuits being my own blog, I had written almost a hundred percent of every article on the site.

I just had so much, I had such a good understanding of every article that was published and even some, like, I made decisions to not delete that. Like it just meant a lot to me. it is personal. Yeah. Like I wrote this, I know nobody reads it anymore. It doesn’t have any links. I don’t care. I’m leaving it. I just, I really enjoyed writing that, or it’s, it’s really great.

Right? And so there’s just too much nuance there that I, I felt I couldn’t outsource it. So I went through every article. I created a whole spreadsheet and I, what I, what I did is I actually export. All of the, uh, articles from Google Analytics, you, you can do that into a Google spreadsheet. They have a nice way to do that.

And so it showed all the traffic, right? And so I essentially went to all the articles that didn’t get a certain threshold and I don’t remember what that was. Maybe, maybe a hundred visitors a month or something. Okay. Mm-hmm. , right? Everything below that is what I kind of looked at. Everything that was getting more than a hundred visitors a month or a few visitors a day, I just kind of kept for the most part.

Um,

Jared: so you deleted a bunch of content. Yeah. And then obviously we’re gonna get into all the new content you created. What about. Was there any work? Did you put any effort towards, okay, this content stays, but maybe it could be better. Maybe I need to update it, maybe I need to target a new keyword. Did you do any content updating throughout 2022 and, and then we’ll get into all the new content, all the, yeah.

900 articles you published and all that, right?

Spencer: Yes, we did, uh, update a ton of content. Um, I also have that number, I, it, it’s like 119 or something like that. Um, so it was over a hundred articles were updated, refreshed. I don’t know if I have the exact number. Yeah, well that’s fine. But it was, it was over a hundred.

Yeah, it’s like 119 is what I wanna say. That’s, uh, articles. Yeah.

Jared: What was a content update process like? What did that look like for you? Were there certain things you were focusing on doing? Uh, were there certain things that those 119 articles, like why they stood out to you to update certain things you were looking

Spencer: at?

Yeah. Uh, so I have a, again, a whole spreadsheet for this. It. I actually, uh, looked at two different things, uh, for updating, for, for choosing the articles to update. One was, I, I just looked at my highest trafficked articles, right? I took like my 50 highest trafficked articles on the site. It’s like, these are winners.

Um, can we make them even bigger winners, right? If, if they weren’t number one for like every keyword, which I don’t know if any articles are ever number one for every, every keyword your agreed, your ranking, right? Um, and it’s older than a year. Uh, we, we would go back and update that. So that was at least half of them.

Um, then the other half was more review type or, uh, money type pages, right? Maybe they’re not getting a lot of traffic, but these are articles that have the potential or are making a lot of money already, and we’ll go back and update that. The process again, I had a spreadsheet. Um, I had a couple of my authors that I as assigned to do this, that I would allow them to choose which article they wanted to update.

So if something caught their eye, they’d just put their name next to it. They would go in and updated it, update it using, uh, surfer SEO or Market Muse. I’ve used both throughout the year they’re doing with H two s, that sort of thing. Right. So needs more

Jared: words or needs less words or something like

Spencer: that.

Exactly. Um, and then sort of the final step of that is we would look at, can the article be, be monetized better? Mm-hmm. , are we missing affiliate links? Do we need to add a button in the introduction that says, Hey, go try out this product, uh, or add something in the sidebar. We, we do some custom sidebar call to actions.

Right. So we’d look at that as well. I’ve gotta

Jared: imagine you track . You said you tracked pretty much everything so far. I’ve asked you about did you track any, um, of the performance that came with the articles you updated? Did the, did those get, or is that a result of some of the organic traffic lift, the numbers you were

Spencer: sharing?

Absolutely. That is definitely some of the lift. I did track some of it initially. I wish I could say I had those updated numbers. Um, I used to go in and, and sort of after I believe it was 90 days check, I was check, I was checking and seeing, and I may even still have a spreadsheet, but I, I don’t know that I have any handy numbers to share.

Well,

Jared: I know that a lot of your growth did come, I, I remember you posting a screenshot somewhere where you, and correct me if I’m wrong by the details, but you do track how much of your organic traffic was coming from your newer articles. And I saw that graph and I was always amazed. But I’m, you know, it’s so great when you’re working with a site that’s so authoritative.

You can probably publish an article and you know, you’re ranking. within a day, and you might be on page one within a week, and you might, so I’m sure that a lot of your traffic did come from new content, but I’m always curious for an older site that has so much history, um, how effective article updating can

Spencer: probably be.

Yeah. It, it’s, it’s very effective. I, and, and so I can just say, I can’t give you specific numbers, but I can tell you generally that absolutely updating content has driven, um, a lot of the, the traffic growth, uh, updating content has worked. Um, and I’ve seen a nice lift on that. Um mm-hmm. , and I do, I do also track, I have a custom report, and this is an old Google Analytics.

I don’t know how to do it in Google Analytics four just yet, but you can create, um, I, I have a custom report that every new article that gets published in like 2022 gets added to this report. And so I can see the trends of, okay, my content that was published this year, How much traffic has, is that bringing in?

And, uh, I should have done this right before the call, but I, I think I’m missing the last few weeks of articles on this report. So the, these numbers are higher, but I can tell you about 7,500 sessions a day are coming in from content that was published in 2022.

Jared: Well, that’s because you were saying outside of yesterday, basically you’re average about 15 to 16,000 sessions a day now.

That’s right. And that’s almost

Spencer: half, that’s almost half. That’s basically half, I mean, yeah. Yep. Wow. That’s what happens when you publish almost a thousand articles. Right? All, uh, doubled, doubled the, the content on the site. Right. So more, more than doubled the content on the site, actually. Yeah. But to your point,

Jared: if we take out, uh, just looking at my notes, if we take out the, the new articles, the seven and a half thousand page views a day that come from the new articles, you’re still sitting at seven and a half or 8,000 pages a day, which is still more than double the 3000 page views.

Yep. Or sessions a day you had a year ago. Yep, yep. That’s absolutely. So we just used back in the napkin math updating content. Definitely

Spencer: works. Definitely worked. Um, and I think there’s more to the story. Um, part of it, it, we touched on the restructure of the site, the categories. There was a lot of internal linking audits that, of course I used Li Whisper to do that, but that was part of my, uh, process when I removed content.

A lot of the content that I kept, um, that, uh, was performing well. And also when we do content updates, I go in and I audit the internal links and go, these are not relevant links. I’m gonna re remove a bunch of links that are pointing to this article, or I’m gonna add new links to that. Right. So I think that helps site.

Um, lift even stuff that we didn’t update. Right. Um, so some of the articles got lifted as well by restructuring a lot of that. And just to piggyback on that, I also, midway through the year, did a whole site redesign. Um, that’s right. I did a new brand. Um, it looks more professional. I feel like it’s more shareable and it’s a lot more mobile friendly.

So I think all of that, yeah. You know, the site restructured, new design, more mobile friendly and everything else we’ve talked about, all, all comes into play.

Jared: Yeah, it all plays in, right? Yeah. It’s hard to. Say it’s just one thing when you’re working on a ton of things on it. I will say, um, and, you know, this is, this is not a, a a, a plug for link whisper, uh, that we talked about ahead of time, but I shared this on Twitter, I think last month or a couple months ago about how I, um, obviously it’s a great tool for building internal links.

I had never used it for removing internal links, but we got a client that, um, had a ton of generic internal links, right? So every time. You know, a general word was used in an article. They would internal link it to a variety of different places. And so the internal linking was really poor and we were able to use Lin Whispers really quickly to remove a lot of those internal links.

And, um, it definitely had an impact because now Google could better understand what each page is about because it wasn’t just getting generic anchor text sent to it. So anyways, it’s really powerful for that . I can imagine. Speed it

Spencer: up. Absolutely. And, and just the reporting overall, you know, it, it helps when you’re, um, looking at your site.

Overall, what do I need to improve? One thing is I, I just go into my reports and you can see every link, you know the number of inbound internal links. Yep. There’s a report for that. You can just hit expand. And very quickly browse to see, is this really the anchor text? Right? You, you’ve got an article about A, B, C, and the anchor text is X, Y, Z and you’re like, you know, that’s really not what this article’s about.

Remove it. Right? And so it makes it easy to remove a bunch of those or just analyze to go, gosh, this has 50 inbound internal links. Do I really need to be putting all that link juice on this article? I actually don’t wanna rank that much. Um, and you know, side note that that happens a lot. I, I have an article on niche pursuits.

Um, it’s, people can try and find it if they want, but it was a guest post that somebody, you know, published on niche pursuits.com many years ago, eight, nine years ago, that was about building white hat internal links, right? Um, but for whatever reason, a lot of my writers thought that would be a good article to link to.

It would, it’s an article that has never ranked well, I. I’m not really trying to get it to rank well, you know, it’s just a guest post. So finally I did an audit and , so it’s got like, I don’t remember how many, you know, 30, 40 internal links. I’m like, yeah, I don’t wanna be sending link juice from these articles.

I am trying to rank on Google. Let’s remove that link. So they keep their pay rank. Mm-hmm. , you know, instead of passing it to this other article. And so Li Whisper made that easy, uh, to do and just remove that. And again, not a, not a plug for Li Whisper, but this was part of my process for that particular case.

Uh, there’s a setting you can go in and I finally just did this. You can put that. U r L is do not ever suggest internal links to that page. Oh, I didn’t know about that. Yeah, so I, and, and you can do categories. So I’ve actually got categories and, and that page that I. My authors will never see that as a suggested internal link again.

Right. And,

Jared: and like, well, and I, I brought it up again just to kind of fine tune the point, but I brought it up because I think there’s the classics you do when you update content, right? And we don’t need to dive into all those, but there’s a lot of times things that people do miss when they’re updating old content.

And one of those is those internal links that are pointing to it. And unless you’re, like, you don’t log into WordPress, open the page up and know what internal links are coming to us. So unless you’re actually including that as a part of your process, that could very easily get missed in your update, uh, updating of all content.

Spencer: So, yeah. Yeah. Absolutely. There’s, um, it, it’s just important to look at everything, right? Have a fresh set of eyes, look at Yeah. The content, the structures, new images maybe need to be added, you know, um, just looking at that content every year-ish. Um, especially your best performing content. Yeah. Um, , you know, and then of course the internal links is just so important.

Jared: Well, let’s get into the 878 new articles you published. Um, again, quick, back in the Apple math, you were 88% of the way to your, your goal of a thousand articles, which is a tremendously lofty goal. When you set out to do a thousand articles, was this like, did you sit down and kind of put together a keyword map, um, and say like, based on all of this, I think a thousand articles is the right number for us.

Was it more based on, um, like a, an internal metric, or was it just kind of a big pie in the sky goal that said, we wanna move the needle forward, I wanna start publishing optimized content and let’s just come up with a nice big.

Spencer: Yeah, it’s the latter. Um, just coming up with a big number. Um, I, I do, well when I commit to specific goals mm-hmm.

and I, I like to go big when I’m feeling confident, . Um, and sometimes setting a big goal actually makes me feel more confident. Um, I do this a lot with running, right? Setting a goal to run a marathon or run a marathon under a specific time. It’s sometimes not until I set that goal of like, , I want to qualify for the Boston Marathon and I want to do it in six months.

It’s kind of scary. I set this big goal and then all of a sudden I get really motivated to train really hard and work towards that goal. Right? Um, it’s the exact same thing with what happened here on niche pursuits is I need to set kind of a big scary goal. And a thousand articles is like five times beyond what I thought maybe should be normal.

Um, so let’s do that. Why not? And I, I’ve got some other friends that maybe encourage me to set big goals cuz they’re setting big crazy goals with their websites as well. Uh, one friend in particular that also was publishing about a thousand articles and he’s just crushing it, right? I’m like, gosh, I wanna see that trajectory of growth.

Growth. And he just says, in order to do that, you gotta publish a lot of content. There’s just no way around it. And so I bit the bullet, I set the goal. And I just, I set the number of, of a thousand because, you know, it’s just that nice round number. It’s this huge goal. Um, and so once I committed to it, I had to hire.

Yeah. There’s just no way around that. No. Crowded. Yeah. Did

Jared: you, um, this is a, a decision that, I mean, guy, probably every website owner, our listening right now has to face at some point, which is, do I start outsourcing to hit that next goal or do I keep doing it because I’m probably the best, I’m probably the most qualified.

I know the brand and all those sorts of things. And there’s a classic recommendations you could give on how to hire. And you already touched on some of the, the procedures you created, the processes you created. But I mean, were there any, any mistakes you made or things you might have learned along the way with outsourcing content on niche pursuits for really the first time ever, at least

Spencer: at scale?

Yeah. We went through a lot of growing pains. Um, One, gosh, lot of mistakes. . Um, one thing you wanna share? All of them ? Yeah. One thing that I guess we, we maybe did, did well, and then I’ll share the mistake that this didn’t fix all of that. But one thing that, that I like to do is just higher, uh, quickly. You can spend a ton of time, and I’ve made this mistake in the past of, um, you know, asking for all sorts of writing samples, maybe even, you know, exchanging tons of emails or maybe even getting on a call, right?

Um, w with authors, right? If I, but if I’m trying to hire 20, 25 authors, that is like a full-time job. And so what I did is I, I posted the job and do my best to filter and say, this looks like a decent writer. And then just give them an assignment, a a paid, paid article. That is just the best way to know if they’re actually a good writer.

And so, based on mistakes I’d made in the past, I pretty quickly just hired people and said, here, write this article. It’s going live on niche pursuits, right? Like, you’re, you’re an author, I’m paying you for it. And then firing quickly, right? If they, they produce the article and it’s not that great either, maybe don’t publish the article and, and just let ’em, you know, pay them anyways.

So I learned that through some of the mistakes. . Um, but even that, uh, once I turned over the reins to allow, um, my senior editor to start hiring, because there is a lot of turnover with writers. Yeah. We, we kept a nice core set, but there’s still always two or three on the fringes that we need to be replacing.

I turned over the reins of hiring to my senior editor and uh, he did a good job, but, uh, allowed some writers to stick around longer than they should have been allowed to stick around with. So that’s some of the growing pains that, that we made this year is not being more strict with some quality guidelines on certain authors.

We probably should let them go when we saw some initial mistakes in the first, you know, two or three articles, just let ’em go and try to find somebody different. Um, so that is definitely some of the mistakes that we’ve made because now we’re left with. Several articles that need updates, Uhhuh, that really weren’t written that well, that probably just need to be scrapped or rewritten.

And, and so that, um, has been one growing pain. Um, I’m trying to think of other things

Jared: that, well, let me ask you about that, cuz that dovetails nicely. Mm-hmm. I mean, hiring 20, well more than 20 writers, cuz if you have about 20 writers and, you know, you’ve had to let a few go along the way. You’ve obviously hired even more than that.

Like, what are some things at scale you’ve seen that Can that Mark A. Good writer? Have you seen any consistencies or anything stand out in the, in the, in the people you have that, like you said, make up your good core team of writers? Uh, you

Spencer: know, it’s one of those things, you just know a good writer when you see him.

It’s, it’s hard to explain, but I know when I. Start reading an article. I can tell, you know, within the first few paragraphs that this person just gets it right. They, they write in a conversational style or just a style that’s easy. Mm-hmm. . Um, it’s, it’s easy to read and understand. There’s no fluff. That’s a huge one.

Um, you might get authors that say all the right things and they’re smart, but, uh, there’s just a lot of fluff. You can, yeah. You can read, you know, half the article and I was like, well, that could have been said in a paragraph, you know, what did I really learn? And so a good article, uh, a good writer, you just know it when you see it.

I, and that’s so bad to say, uh, because I’m trying to train other people to do the same thing and I haven’t been able to successfully do that a hundred percent. Yeah. Um, so for me it’s kind of, I, I no fluff, um, easy to read, meaning that their, their sentences are structured well. Um, they’re short. Um, and then the third is content knowledge or, you know, sort of niche knowledge, expertise and, and expertise.

You know, niche pursuits is hard to hire for that. Somebody that just kind of gets the affiliate marketing world, SEO world. Um, I can very quickly when I read an article go, you know what, this person has probably never done keyword research or actually tried to rank an article and the writing about something that’s kind of, sort of related to that.

Right. And so just, um, yeah, expertise. Um, ki kind of shows through, uh, pretty quickly if you are an expert Yeah. In your

Jared: space. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. No, that makes a lot of sense. That makes a lot of sense. I, yeah, I was curious if you had gone like, on this big kind of training program or if it was really more about.

Hire experts and let the ones that want to, uh, write a lot of articles, like if they’re doing a good job and they wanna write a lot, let them just continue to, to pour over the content.

Spencer: Yeah. That’s the more, uh, accurate statement there is. When I find. People that are experts, um, I really latch onto them, give them as much work as they want, um, and, uh, yeah, try to focus on on those good quality authors.

Jared: So you mentioned keyword research. Perfect transition. Who did all the keyword research? Was it you, uh, uh, doing all the keyword research? I gotta feel like that’s something you was probably one of the last things that you would wanna let go of , just knowing your background. Yeah,

Spencer: it is, it is. Um, I did pretty much all the keyword research.

Um, I went through and, uh, you know, developed a nice keyword plan. I, I would kind of do it in batches of a hundred to 200 keywords at a time, is really what I would do is go, okay, here’s the next a hundred keywords. I’d put it in a spreadsheet. Uh, the authors all had access to that spreadsheet so they could pick any of those at 100 or 200 keywords that were available.

And assign themselves. So I would not, it, it eliminates a step, right? Mm-hmm. , I shared access to a Google spreadsheet where authors could do a lot of stuff, um, was helpful. So I would do all the keyword research, uh, towards the latter half of the year. Um, I did have a senior editor help me do some keyword research, but I was still very much involved in, I would look at every single one of those keywords and approve, or decline them before the author saw those.

So,

Jared: I’ve gotta ask you because, and, and I’ll give you, I’ll give you a little context for it. I, um, preparing for this interview, I, I popped, I knew we were talking about growth. I knew you published a lot of articles, uh, this year, and I knew we were gonna be talking about that. So I popped niche pursuits into H Refs and was looking at the keywords.

Um, and I was kind of blown away. There’s all sorts of topics I didn’t even know about that, uh, that niche pursuit has published articles on, uh, ha now ranks really high. Some of these are number top, number one spots for high volume keywords. And it got me thinking about, man, there’s some, uh, it feels like there’s some real strategy, not just to finding good keywords, but when you’re writing upwards of a thousand articles, I mean, were you, like, maybe just talk about the bigger picture of the research process because it seems like you’ve almost gone on an entirely new topical silos.

It seems like you’ve really gone down, uh, into, into depth on. On, on really in-depth silos. I guess that’s probably the best way to keep coming back to that I didn’t even really see prior to this year. Niche pursuit’s talking about.

Spencer: Right? Yeah, that’s a great question. And that opens up a whole topic here that, uh, yeah, I haven’t really mentioned.

And, um, so historically, niche pursuits.com, you know, it has been all about building niche websites. Yes. Affiliate marketing, right? That is, that is the core and still, I feel is the core. Um, but that is an incredibly difficult market to rank for when you start and a fairly, fairly

Jared: thin or, uh, uh, uh, narrow one.

Spencer: It, it, it is, right? So the fact that I was getting, you know, call it 3000 visitors a day in that space, it still put me as, you know, one of the top blogs in, in that space, right? Um, when you start looking at SEO blogs, right, like Backlinko or WordPress blogs like WP Beginner or Moz, or right. All of a sudden you’re competing in this.

Insanely competitive market. Mm-hmm. . And so I, I had to take an honest look and it was like, okay, am I fine with getting 3000, 4,000, 5,000 visitors a day, but, but getting this great, targeted, super valuable traffic, or do I wanna build niche pursuits into something bigger that can get a lot more traffic and make money in perhaps other ways?

Right. Um, and I, I chose the latter and the only way to, to do that is to expand the topics that I would be covering. Right. Uh, and so I decided, you know, what, what’s tangentially related to affiliate marketing? Well, there’s digital marketing as a whole, and that can over uncover all kinds of topics.

YouTube, Twitter, social media, right? So if you look at a lot of content I’m ranking for, it’s, it’s stuff related to some of that. Uh, it al also opens up sort of the silo of side hustles, right? What are some side hustles that people can be doing online besides affiliate marketing and seo, right? And that opens up a ton of keywords.

Um, right? And so that did open up a lot. And so a lot of the traffic is coming from like, okay, what are, what is a side hustle that a team can do online? Right? Maybe that’s not what the niche pursuits podcast listener, you know, wants, wants to hear about. Ok. We haven’t had one of those on,

Jared: uh, we haven’t had one of those on yet.

Spencer: right? Um, you know, is is topics like, oh, a team could flip sneakers online, right? Um, but there is a lot of people that do wanna do that. And so I want niche pursuits to be kind of an authority on like, Hey, these are legitimate business opportunities online that you can pursue. And if you happen to be ever building a website, join my email list and, uh, I got lots of great digital marketing tips, right?

Um, yeah. So, so that was part of it. And then the other big strategy was what I guess I’ll call following Google’s lead on that, right? So say I published a few hundred articles, then it’s going back and looking at what worked really well with those few hundred articles, what type of article, um, you know, is, is doing well, right?

And so, and then follow that rabbit hole, right? Like, okay, if I publish some articles about YouTube, uh, or, um, you know, sort of low-cost business ideas, find more keywords related to that mm-hmm. and or that, you know, type of keyword, um, that keyword structure if you will. And so that became a lot of what I did as well.

It’s like, okay, Google’s telling me that I should write about, X, y, Z topic. I’m gonna do that and just publish a ton of content about that. We’ll, I’ll in on that.

Jared: Yeah. On what Google’s rewarding you with initially.

Spencer: Exactly. Yep. Exactly. Y

Jared: when you came up with these, uh, new related silos, were you looking just at the keyword opportunities?

You know, I mean, I, we don’t need to get into the rabbit hole on, you know, volumes and difficulties and all that stuff, but was it more about the keyword or were you also trying to align new and highly, highly profitable monetization methods with those keywords as you were kind of looking around at which silos to go after?

Spencer: Yeah. Um, so it was, uh, sort of three different strategies. One is, um, like I said, what’s already, uh, working well on, on niche pursuits and how can I produce more of that content, right? Uh, the other type of keyword is exactly like you said, what can I monetize? Well, what has a good. You know, affiliate program that is related to, to my niche, right?

Can I do a review of this software tool? Um, and, and that can be a well monetized article. And a lot of, you know, reviews, especially in the digital marketing space, don’t get a lot of traffic, right? They, they’re just low, typically low, um, volume keywords that are hard to rank for, unfortunately, especially in this space.

Um, but they, they can be valuable. Mm-hmm. , right? And so that’s, that’s the other type. And then, um, the third type I guess is really just what, what is my, um, core audience? Um, that, that gets a lot of oppor, that, that has a lot of opportunity. Uh, high search volume, right? Can just get me a lot of traffic, um, and, and sort of fits my, my core audience.

And again, it,

Jared: it probably goes without saying for you, but I’ll say it cuz a lot of people, you know, listening forget, potentially can forget how interconnected. Niche pursuits is right? Like it’s not just about ranking the article and getting the affiliate commission from that article, but you also have an email list that you drive people to the email list, and then from the email list, uh, podcast grows from the email list.

You can also move into other products and other types of things. So it’s really so interconnected that it’s not just about, say, ranking that best of article, getting the affiliate commission and moving along

Spencer: a hundred percent. And so, um, you know, people probably generally understand my business model, but just to say it explicitly, right, is yes, I want a ton of traffic and I actually just added, um, display ads on, I was gonna ask you about that.com.

I was gonna ask you about that, right? And so, um, informational articles are now making money. You know, every day I, I make affiliate commissions. Uh, from that I make affiliate commissions on my email list, right? I can send an email related, um, to a product. So, Even if, uh, traffic is coming to an informational article that is not monetized, I’m cool with that.

Right? If it’s related to digital marketing, they might get on my email list. They might, uh, then eventually buy a digital product. But the real kicker here is that those people might be interested in my products Link whisper, right? They, they might, if they’re initially searching for something about WordPress, you know, how do I fix this in WordPress?

And they land on an article on niche pursuits.com, that’s a great visitor. And if they end up on my email list, even if they don’t buy anything for a year, if they turn around and then buy Link Whisper, um, that’s, that’s a huge backend, um, product for me. Right? And so, so it’s all very connected. Um, and so, you know, even though I’ve got display ads that is, you know, sort of bottom of the.

End of the spectrum of like what I really care about. Um, but it is bringing a nice amount of money just because I have a ton of articles that, um, as I follow Google Leads, right? There are some articles that’s like, eh, I don’t know if that person is ever going to Yeah. Be interested in link whisper. Like it just, it’s kind of sort of related, but I’ll just make the display ad revenue on that visitor.

Well, it’s really

Jared: taking , you almost, I don’t wanna say when about it backwards cuz that would, that would absolutely not be the right way to say it, but, Niche pursuits was a brand well before you embarked on this growth strategy, but you’ve used, you’ve really like what you have in front of you, especially over the last year.

And then the interview we have here, recapping the last year is a lesson and how to create a brand online, not just how to grow a blog. You know, and your blog has grown tremendously, but the traffic pales in comparison when you compare that to what the impact has been on your traffic. Your email subscribers, podcast growth.

Lin Whisper growth probably, you know, and, and, uh, and revenue. Because, because, because you’ve built a brand that benefits multiple layers from each thing that you’re doing. And it’s just, again, it’s a great walkthrough, everybody listening. It’s, um, you know, if you’re brand new at starting a website, yeah, getting, um, a hundred dollars a day for media Vine is a huge accomplishment.

But think about all the other ways you can monetize and grow that traffic down the road. Because at some point, you know, it could just be the tip of the iceberg, like you’re saying, for, for, for your traffic.

Spencer: Right. And so if I were to give advice to anybody sort of starting out is I think the better route is to build a brand right to almost.

E even though it’s taken me so many years to really like tap into like huge Google traffic, like in the beginning, maybe don’t worry too much about SEO traffic. Build a brand, do something interesting. Get people to join your email list, to follow you on Twitter, to, to, to recognize you as the face of your brand because they become loyal to you as, as a person and as a brand.

And if you sort of share your personality, even if it’s. You know, sharing, um, income updates, right? Or things that are never gonna rank in Google like I did. I don’t, I wouldn’t call that a mistake, you know, of, of everything that I did that’s, that’s built a very healthy brand, um, a great following podcast listeners, people that look to me for advice and tips and strategies, right?

And now that I have that base, I can kind of build and, and grow traffic and, and do a whole lot more. But, uh, I really am funnelling all of that back into the, the, the email list and the bigger brand so that I’m not just reliant on Google, right? Because if I had, uh, this website that’s getting 20,000 visitors a day, and it’s all from Google and I don’t have an email list, I don’t have a brand that’s a very scary business, but me putting a thousand articles to try and grow the Google traffic, I can do that because I’ve got this nice base.

Right.

Jared: You almost answered the question, but I’ll ask it if you could. What do you think out of the different areas of, of the niche pursuits brand, the, the traffic to the website, um, the email list, uh, the YouTube channel, the podcast probably missing one or two, but what do you think is the most valuable out of all those to the brand?

Spencer: Yeah. Hands down it’s the email list.

Jared: Yeah. And that’s what you kind of were hinting at earlier.

Spencer: Yeah. Which, which is crazy, but uh, you know, so it’s like if I were to put my, my whole website and all the traffic on a table and my email list on another table, and I can only choose one table, like, I would probably give up the whole website and just say, , I’m keeping the email list.

As crazy as that sounds like, wow. That’s how valuable it is because, um, I can’t really reach everybody with my, you know, if I pub, like if I didn’t have my email list and I just published an article on my blog, a thousand, 2000 people might read that. Mm-hmm. . Right. But if I. Send one email, it reaches significantly more than one or 2000 people.

Jared: What, um, I don’t need exact numbers, anything like that, but what has, um, like we’ve talked so much about how you’ve grown the website traffic. What have the effects been in other areas like h what kind of email growth have you gotten? What kind of growth on YouTube or the podcast or maybe revenue, like what other numbers have changed as a by-product of your focus on growing organic traffic?

Spencer: Yeah, so the email list has grown. It’s, um, probably grown, you know, 20, 25%, something like that. Uh, which maybe doesn’t sound like a lot. And, uh, I wish it was higher. I wish I was getting more opt-ins every day. But the number of opt-ins every day are definitely going up. Mm-hmm. , thanks to the increased traffic, um, the YouTube channel has grown primarily Thanks to you Jared, and the podcast.

Uh, the podcast has seen growth. Again, because I’ve removed myself and now it’s finally consistent and it’s got a great structure and, you know, uh, people can, can turn to that and, um, get, get value from that. Um, and so the podcast is, and really the YouTube, the

Jared: YouTube channel really is like the podcast I think it is.

I don’t check it religiously, but , I don’t need to see myself. Yeah. But, uh, there’s, that’s most of what the YouTube channel really is, so you could probably kind of merge the podcast and YouTube channel together into one

Spencer: channel. Really. Yeah. And, um, so those have seen growth. Uh, I, I, I’ve seen growth on Twitter.

That’s not because of me publishing more content on niche pursuits, though, that’s just because I’ve been more active on Twitter. Um, but maybe I’m more active on Twitter because now I have time to be active on, uh, on Twitter finally. Um, and, uh, yeah, just the final thing I’ll, I’ll say is that, uh, you know, I said maybe my email list is the most valuable.

Probably the podcast is the second most valuable, um,

Jared: may after all that growth. And I, I just think it goes back after all the growth you’ve had on the website. I, it’s just, I. Maybe the bigger highlight is how you’ve done a really good job connecting that traffic to the other areas of your business.

Because if you hadn’t connected that traffic to the overall brand, then you probably wouldn’t be sitting here saying that. I’ve gotta imagine, you know, but the fact that it’s not just about getting the traffic, but how you’ve connected that to the other areas of the brand, that probably really makes the success story even

Spencer: better.

Yeah. Yep. Absolutely. So, um, it’s, yeah, the, the, the, the brand, the podcast, the email list, those are great. Those have driven a lot of, um, growth in, in Link whisper and, and other businesses that I’ve been involved with. And, um, this year is all, again, been all about, you know, growing, uh, the traffic finally and turning, you know, just the traffic into a.

Source of revenue, you know, a great source of revenue. Um, and uh, I’d love to continue that over the next year. You know, I’d love to double it again this year. If I can be getting a million visitors a month, um, on niche pursuits like that would just be amazing. Um, well,

Jared: 2023, are we, I mean, you like big goals.

Should we just, uh, throw it out there? 5,000 articles? Uh,

Spencer: there you go. Take my goal five x that. I like the way you think . Um, You know, I do have big goals. Um, it’s not quite a thousand articles, but it still will be a very healthy, um, you know, I’m probably gonna do close to 700 articles plus a lot of content, uh, updates.

So I’m gonna kind of keep that machine running at what I think is an efficient, um, process, uh, to, to do there. Um, and then I, yeah, I have some, some other big ideas as well outside of just publishing more content. Um, in terms of, you know, I’d like to maybe invest in some other ideas or try some other, um, sort of fun, um, side hustle ideas and maybe even do some more, um, dedicated YouTube videos, produce some more, uh, interesting content on YouTube and grow that, uh, channel because I do feel like video it’s, it’s already here.

Um, you know, I feel like video is the future. Um, I love blogs, I love reading. I love content. That’ll always be near and dear to my heart, but I have to be honest, when I look at the younger generation, I look at my kids, they go to YouTube as a search engine, you know, they type in something, they go there for entertainment.

And uh, so if I truly want to tap into that younger generation, um, the video search, I need to be on YouTube. And so I feel like I’m gonna put a lot of effort into growing that channel, uh, this year,

Jared: 2023 maybe the year of video for niche pursuits. That’s right. Yep. Very good. Um, any final thoughts on 2022 in recap and, uh, where you know where things are going, uh, in 2023?

Spencer: So, I will just say that people shouldn’t be afraid to set big goals, set a big goal, find some people to motivate you, maybe a little mastermind group. You know, I’ve had a couple bloggers that I’ve worked with, you know, buddies that, uh, we chat about this and, um, I went through the first half of this year.

Seeing very little growth. Hmm. I, I was publishing, you know, 80, 90 articles a month and seeing very little growth. Um, it, it was growth, but not like, oh my goodness, I’m spending this much money on 80 articles a month. Is this really worth it type growth? Yeah. Okay. And so I had a couple buddies that are like, you just need to stick with it.

Trust me, this SEO game takes a long time. And I know that you know that. But again, people can do the calculations in their head for how much money I was spending. Right. Um, unfortunately

Jared: I was just doing it and I’m like, woo, .

Spencer: And these are not small little articles, right. These are not, uh, and this industry, you can’t get away with publishing a thousand, 1500 word article.

It just. It doesn’t happen. Right? Yeah. And so these are, these are in-depth, you know, good writers and so it’s very scary. Um, and so having, so setting, real, setting goals that you can’t achieve, having people to like, encourage you not to do anything stupid, um, but to stick with your goals. Yeah. And then it was really in July, August, September that I finally started to see all of this growth.

And by then I was like, I am so glad I stuck with this. Yeah. Because had I not, this growth probably would not have happened. And so that’s sort of the final tidbit that, that I guess I’ll share is just that, um, set big goals, stick with it, have people around you to, to keep you motivated. And the the growth can come, uh, in time.

And I don’t remember if there was a second part to your question there, uh, or not.

Jared: No, I ju any final thoughts on 2023? You’ve shared about YouTube and you’ve shared basically the engine, you’re gonna keep going at 700 articles plus the updates. Yep. Um, I would dovetail that also, like, and maybe this will be my final question for you on it, is, It’s funny because we started the conversation today by recapping what we talked about a year ago and a year ago.

It was really all about removing yourself from a lot of processes. There’s a tendency when you see people at the top of an organization start to remove themselves, there’s actually a tendency because they have more time for more projects to get created, you know, and you seem to have done a good job about staying really focused on niche pursuits, link whisper, and just really letting the other things, not just, not that you’re not just a part of them, but you actually let them really just take care of themselves.

And you didn’t dive into any new projects, I, you might have, but from, from what it looks like, you really stayed focused on niche pursuits. And I think that’s also something that, um, like avoiding the shiny object syndrome to some degree and staying true to your goal. Yeah, you needed motivation along the way, but you actually had to stick with something for a full year and not, not see a new idea along the way and

Spencer: deviate.

Yes. That, that has been my mantra all year is don’t start any new projects. is, I’m looking at a, you know, potentially huge business. I’ve got a great brand, invest in this brand. Uh, and that, that’s what I decided, you know, before, um, 2022 started is I will not start any new projects and I did not. Um, and that’s really hard because I was presented with a lot of really great opportunities.

Um, I invested in a couple of ideas Yeah. But I was very clear that I am not going to operate or be involved in these businesses. Right. Here’s some money you do it. Um, and, uh, so I’m gonna, uh, probably continue to do that in 2023, where my. Biggest focus is on niche pursuits. It’s Onlin whisper, growing those.

But I’m going to allow myself, um, I shouldn’t say start something new because everything that I’m going to start will dovetail and be content for niche pursuits.com. Yeah. Right. So if I start a little site hustle, like for example, I’ve tweeted about this, I learned about the Amazon influencer program and create, you can create videos and make money directly on Amazon.

Maybe I’ll talk about this more in the future, but that’s a little side hustle that, uh, I think the niche pursuits audience would like to hear about. Mm-hmm. . And so I’m gonna try that on my own. I’m gonna create some videos. I’m gonna try and make a little bit of money with the Amazon influencer program.

Then I’m gonna share what I learned through YouTube and blog, right? So anything new that I do start, that’s my requirement, is it has to be good content for niche pursuits. Makes

Jared: sense. Well, congratulations on five Vaccine Ugan Traffic, . Maybe that’ll be the headline for the story for the, uh, the interview.

But I mean, like you said, like, uh, 20,000 sessions a day at the time of recording is, is absolutely amazing. And um, like with every good story, like, you know, halfway into this year, it sounds like it was not crickets, but just nowhere near the kind of growth that we’re talking about today. So, and I’m glad you shared all the details, like you really got into some of the details.

So I learned a lot. Thanks for coming on and hopefully. We’ll do this again before 2023, uh, is over .

Spencer: Yeah. No, this has been a lot of fun. Jared, thank you everybody for listening to the podcast. I really appreciate your support as listeners. Jared does a great job. Um, and, uh, yeah, here’s to great 2023 to everybody in their goals and hopefully what I’ve shared with NI pursuits can just be a little bit of inspiration for people as they set their goals, whether that’s big publishing goals or otherwise.

Um, I’m gonna just keep trucking along and hopefully see some more growth here. That’s

Jared: great. That’s great. And, and the fun thing about it is we all know how to follow along on what you’re doing, you know? Um, and so, uh, it’s, it’s really, it, it really is a build in public kind of, uh, kind of scenario here,

Spencer: Absolutely. Yep. Follow [email protected]. So thanks a lot. Thanks Venture. We’ll talk soon. Thank you. Hey everyone, it’s Spencer Haws here, founder of the Niche Pursuits Podcast. So I recently read a Twitter thread asking about the most underrated strategy in SEO. One of the most common answers given was internal link building.

The reason, well, sometimes people put so much emphasis on external links, they forget that not only do internal links provide relevancy in SEO benefits, but that Google actually encourages you to build internal links. Now I get it. Building internal links can often feel time consuming and boring, and that’s why I created Link Whisper.

Link Whisper is a powerful WordPress plugin that makes building internal links so much faster and easier. You can quickly get relevant internal link suggestions as you write. And with the simple check of a box, add one or multiple internal links to your articles. And perhaps my favourite time Saver is the ability to see how many internal links all my articles have and to quickly get new internal link suggestions to articles.

I want to boost in Google with comprehensive internal link reporting and the ability to add links with the simple check of a box. I can’t even imagine going back to building internal links manually. Link Whisper is by far the most powerful, effective, and easiest to use internal link building tool out there.

Give it a try and if you don’t agree, I’ll give you your money back, no questions asked. In fact, for podcast listeners only, I’m offering a $15 off discount. Just go to link whisper.com and use discount code podcast at checkout to save $15, so as the creator of Link Whisper, I might be a little biased, but I highly recommend that you head over to link whisper.com today to check it out.

Again, that’s link whisper.com and be sure to use Discount code podcast at. Thanks again.

By Spencer Haws

Sourced from Niche Pursuits

By

We know this – quality content that attracts lots of organic traffic takes time to write. And you don’t want to sit for hours writing a post that collects dust on your blog.

I surveyed professional content writers on LinkedIn to know how long they research and write a 1000-words blog post.

The result – 33% of writers use a staggering 6 to 8 hours.

How-Long-Does-It-Take-To-Research-And-Write-A-1000-Word-Content-Piece

Sadly, many blog posts do not get read because they fall for several content marketing mistakes. According to research by Ahrefs, 90.63% of pages get zero organic traffic from Google.

90.63-0f-Pages-No-Organic-Search-Traffic-From-Google

Your posts can be among the 9.37% of content that gets organic traffic from Google. To achieve this, you need to avoid the content marketing mistakes in this post, including those of 2012 and 2015. They are all capable of suffocating your blog posts among the millions of posts published daily.

So let’s dive in.

Content marketing mistake #1 – Targeting keywords instead of topic clusters

In the early days of Google, it was easy to grab a keyword, write a post on it, and boom, the content ranks. The story is different in 2021. Many websites are competing for Google’s top spots by targeting keywords. Rather than join the crowd, use the topic cluster model.

The topic cluster approach has been around for a while. It was introduced and first tested by HubSpot in 2015. This approach requires the creation of pillar and cluster content.

Topic-Clusters

Pillar content: Pillar content is detailed posts or pages on your website. These posts contain a broad range of keywords that you want to rank. An example is this Google Tag Manager guide.

Cluster content: Cluster content is posts or web pages that thoroughly discuss topics on the pillar page.

According to Anum Hussain, a former growth marketer at HubSpot, focusing on topics rather than keywords resulted in a better organic ranking.

In-Fact-The-More-Links-To-Related-Content-We-Had-Across-Our-Site-The-Better-We-Ranked

HubSpot isn’t the only brand that benefits from adopting the topic cluster model. Ninja Outreach had a 40% increase in organic traffic a few months into an internal linking campaign similar to the topic cluster method. And yes, good ol’ Google wants you to implement this SEO strategy. According to Google Webmaster guidelines, your website should have a clear conceptual page hierarchy.

Google-Search-Central

Keep the following in mind as you use the topic cluster model:

  • Your pillar page should link to all cluster content once
  • Your cluster pages should link once to the pillar page
  • Your cluster page could link to other cluster pages once (where the text fits naturally. Don’t force it!)
  • Cluster pages should cover only one subtopic in detail. Don’t discuss something else. Instead, create another cluster page
  • Write your cluster pages like regular blog posts while following SEO best practices

Content marketing mistake #2 – Zero voice search optimization

Voice search is on the rise. And many voice search stats show you should capitalize on this emerging trend.

Here are some of the interesting statistics:

  • According to a PWC survey, 50% of respondents use voice search to buy or order an item.
  • The average voice search query contains 29 words
  • Pages using Schema Markup provide 36.4% of voice search results
  • 40.7% of voice search answers are pulled from a Featured Snippet
  • Voice search result pages have an average of 2,312 words

Failing to optimize your pages for voice search is a content marketing mistake capable of reducing your organic traffic. There is a claim that websites using schema markup rank an average of four positions higher in the search engines than those without schema markup. Also, less than one-third of websites use schema markup. This offers massive SEO real estate for improving your organic traffic.

So, how do you optimize your website pages for voice search:

1. Find Long-tail keywords

Long-tail keywords are search terms of three or more words. You can find them with keyword research tools like Answer the Public or Long-tail Pro. For instance, after typing my seed keyword (voice search) in the Answer the Public search bar, it returned 321 results.

  • Questions – 55
  • Prepositions – 43
  • Comparisons – 23
  • Alphabeticals -192
  • Related – 8
Voice-Search-192-Alphabeticals

This data has lots of questions like:

  • What is voice search?
  • What is voice search optimization?
  • What is voice search app?
  • What is voice search SEO?

Here’s why you should care about these long-tail keywords framed as questions.

  • According to a voice search SEO study by Brian Dean, many voice search queries are question-based
  • Since 40.7% of voice search answers are from featured snippets, it means you should answer questions that your audience is asking

So, how can you effectively use the long-tail keyword data?

  • Use them to form headings for your posts
  • Use them to answer questions in your Frequently Asked Questions pages/posts
  • Use them to create long-form content that satisfies your audience

2. Schema markup

We have discussed how schema markup can increase your organic ranking and traffic. If you don’t have trouble with coding, you can apply schema to your posts by following the Google schema markup guidelines.

But if you are not good with code, you can use a plugin like Rankmath, assuming you use WordPress as your content management system.

This is how a recipe blog post looks after schema markup implementation.

The-Best-Vanilla-Cake-I've-Ever-Had-Sally-Baking-Addiction

It is important to note that there are different types of schema markups and you should choose the one that applies to your page.

Structed-Data-Markup-Helper

Content marketing mistake #3 – Lack of content promotion

You’ve sat down for hours to write and edit a post. You finish and hit the publish button.

Now you are waiting, hoping, and praying that your ideal audience searches for your target keyword and finds your blog post.

My friend, that is how blog posts stay within the confines of page 2 and beyond of search engine results. They don’t attract organic traffic from Google… even though they are well-written.

Many people now know the benefits of publishing blog posts. But only a few get the desired results because they care to promote what they write. Here are two ways of avoiding this content marketing mistake and putting your posts before your audience:

1. Find broken links

Broken links are links displaying a 404 error message and they are bad for SEO. Finding broken links is an easy way of attracting quality backlinks to your content and getting organic visitors to your website. You can use a tool like screaming frog to find broken links.

After identifying a broken link in the target website, you can send an email to the website owner. Here’s a sample Backlinko email template you can model.

Brian-Dean

2. Write Guest Posts

Writing guest posts is an efficient way of proving your authority to your target audience. It also adds the benefits of getting you at least one link to your website. Take the Jeff Bullas blog as an instance. This blog has 459 articles on just the B2C website alone.

B2C-JeffBullas

And the B2C website get a tremendous amount of organic monthly traffic – 507,469

Traffic-Overview

This amount of traffic means a lot. For instance, as people read any of Jeff’s 459 guest posts, they could view his website as well. As they check his website, they could subscribe and join his email list. If they love the content they receive from his list, they could buy any of his products or subscribe to a product or service via any of his affiliate links. This and other ways of content promotion is how a post can make you money through guest posting.

Content marketing mistake #4 – Publish, forget, and don’t update

Write it, promote it, then forget it.

Here’s the result of such a dreadful SEO effort – Google will send your content to the pile of posts resting on the other side of search results where no one reads them.

What if you update them. Any benefit? Of course.

According to Pamela Vaughan, HubSpot achieved the following after refreshing its old content:

  • Doubled their monthly leads
  • Had a 106% increase in organic traffic

This is why marketers like Neil Patel update and sometimes rewrite up to 90 of his articles monthly. But don’t go on a content updating spree yet. Before updating any content, ensure it has organic traffic potential. There is no point in updating an article that won’t get you the results you want.

So, how can you update an old post?

  1. Use Google Search Console and Google Analytics to find posts with organic traffic potential
Overview

2. Read the posts you’ve identified and look out for the following:

  • Can the introduction be better?
  • Are there outdated stats and facts in the article?
  • Can you include videos in the article to better explain a concept and attract traffic through video optimization?
  • Can you change any image?
  • Can you tweak a section of the post to read better and sound more human?
  • Can you add more keywords to get found in search engines?

Once you’ve updated an article, the next step is to monitor your results with a free tool like Google Analytics.

Navigate to Behaviour >> Site Content >> All pages. This gives you an overview of your “before and after” organic traffic based on the selected timeline.

Content marketing mistake #5 – Poor user experience

Writing quality content is not good enough to attract organic traffic from Google. You need to provide users with an excellent experience on your website. From May 2021, Google will implement its page experience update.

This update will take the following into cognizance and impact your organic search rankings:

  • Core web vitals
  • Mobile-friendliness
  • HTTPS-security
  • Intrusive interstitial guidelines (aka annoying popups)

Here are some ways to avoid reducing your organic rankings due to poor user experience.

1. Check Your Website on PageSpeed Insights

PageSpeed Insights gives you a quick scoop on what you need to fix.

PageSpeed-Insights

2. Optimize Your Images and Videos

If you use WordPress, you can use a plugin like WP Smush to reduce your image size. A better alternative is reducing the image size with an online tool before uploading them to your website. When using videos on your content, copy the video link and embed it in your post.

3. Use a CDN

A CDN (Content Delivery Network) like Cloudflare helps speed up your site and quickly deliver content to your audience.

4. Eliminate Render-blocking CSS and Enable Browser Caching

If you don’t use WordPress, you’ll have to do this manually. For WordPress users, you can use a plugin like WP Rocket. WP Rocket also has other awesome functionalities that help speed your website.

Final thoughts

Writing quality content is great. But what’s the point if no one reads it?

The first page of Google search results accommodates only ten blog posts. And that’s when ads are excluded. Many website owners want to gain page one rankings because that could translate into revenue for their brand. You could be among such website owners if you care to avoid these content marketing mistakes.

So what’s your next step – take action and start implementing.

By

Guest author: Precious Oboidhe is a Copywriter and SEO Content Writer at Content Estate. You can learn more about Precious at contentestate.com and connect with him on LinkedIn.

Sourced from Jeff Bullas

By Devansh Khetrapal

Aren’t you tired of skimming through the internet and not being able to find a Digital Marketing Strategy that would help you scale up your business and generate steady growth? We were all looking for that magic pill, until now!

What I’m about to share with you is a thought process most elite marketers wouldn’t dare to talk about, just so that they can keep the cream to themselves. I started researching about this a year ago and the information I’ve gathered during this period is every last drop of the good stuff that I’ve shared below.

The Holy Trinity of Digital Marketing

Did you know that global B2C eCommerce sales are expected to reach $4.5 trillion by 2021? As more and more businesses are growing, Digital Marketing Experts are constantly calibrating and testing their own strategies to stand out and grow.

However, no matter how unconventional their methods may be, you don’t need to worry. All you have to do is optimize the following 3 aspects of your website and you’re bound to see substantial growth.

Traffic

One of the main focuses of a Digital Marketing Strategy is to drive traffic to your website, and not just any traffic, but relevant traffic. In order to make sure that happens, you have to incorporate keywords throughout your landing page that are relevant to what you’re selling, whether directly or indirectly.

There are 2 ways to drive traffic to your website:-

Paid Traffic

Let’s be honest. Most of the niches are highly saturated and in order to stand out, you either have to come up with something entirely new so you’ll organically thrive or advertise your services. Most successful businesses rely on both. However, advertising seems to be an effective revenue-generating tool if done right.

A good advertisement involves a headline that hooks, and a landing page with an attractive banner and sufficient information about your product.

There are 5 typical sources wherefrom you can drive paid traffic to your website:-

  • Display Ads – The ones that you see when you’re reading a blog. They’re around the edges, adjacent to the blog, usually in a square or rectangular box.
  • Search Engine Ads – The ones that pop on top of other search results. They look like the first search results but you see a little “ad” icon to signify that it’s an advertisement.
  • Discovery Ads – If you’re ever scrolling on Google, YouTube, or Gmail, then you have come across a Discovery ad. On YouTube, it has a panel with an image and “Learn More” is written below it. In Gmail, you’ll find it in Social and Promotion Tabs.
  • Sponsored Content – When you’re reading a blog and there’s a panel that looks like another blog but it’s actually a landing page, which could be anything from a blog to a product advertisement.
  • Influencer Marketing – Using social media influencers to promote your product. Lately, this has become just as mainstream as other forms of advertising.

Organic Traffic

When someone discovers your business on the internet when you didn’t advertise it, it means you were able to drive traffic organically on your website. Growing your business organically is a discipline in itself. The fact that people were able to discover you organically, indicates that you did a good job with SEO.

People find you either when they’re searching for you (or for similar services) on Google, or on Social Media platforms (could be Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, etc). According to Search Engine Journal, 70% of the links people click on are Organic. Even though ads work, it’s clear that a lot of people just skip the first 3 links on Google because we habitually understand that they’re advertisements.

How Do I Maximize Traffic On My Website?

Create a Keyword Database

In generating both organic and paid traffic, you require keywords that resonate with your target audience. What most people underestimate is the power that these keywords hold. Using tools like SEMrush, Ahrefs, etc will help you find the right keywords by offering several parameters.

Any SEO expert can tell you that you should use keywords with high search volume and low keyword difficulty, but knowing what keywords to target is a refined process, and if you’re serious about your business, then here’s what you should do:-

Make 5 columns in an excel sheet. One for the keywords, and the other 4 for “Intent”, “Relevance”, “Trending”, and “IRT Score”. Refer to the excel sheet below:-

In the above image, I have taken an example of a web development company and used 4 keywords. Each of these has been assigned a corresponding score between 1 to 4 and has been totalled in the column IRT score. Let me explain what these are and what their implications are:-

  • Intent – This signifies how transactional is the intent of the keyword. If the keyword is highly transactional, it has a score of 4, and if it’s not at all transactional, it has a score of 1. In the above image, the keyword “Hire Web Developer” is highly transactional, and the keyword “ReactJS vs Laravel” isn’t transactional at all and hence, they’ve been assigned scores 4 and 1 respectively.
  • Relevance – This will signify how relevant the keyword is for you. If the keyword has a product or service that you offer, then you may rate it between 1 to 4 in terms of relevance. In the above image, the keyword “Hire a .Net Developer” is rated as 1 because the web development company isn’t relevant to the kind of development services they’re offering.
  • Trending – The more the keyword is trending on Google or any other search engine, the higher will be its trending score and vice versa. In the above image, “ReactJS vs Laravel” is a keyword that has a significantly high search volume on Google and hence, has a trending score of 3.
  • IRT Score – IRT is simply the aggregate score of the columns “Intent”, “Relevance”, and “Trending”.

If you make a list of all the relevant keywords, you can segregate and prioritize them on the basis of these 3 parameters. The IRT score will serve as an extremely quick and reliable guide since the higher the IRT score, the more important the keyword will be for you.

Optimize Technical Performance

Did you know that the first 5 seconds of page-load time have the highest impact on the conversion rate? According to Portent, website conversion rates drop by an average of 4.42% with each additional second of load-time.

Optimizing page loading speed is only a factor and not a Digital Marketing Strategy in itself. However, improving the overall architecture of your website can help you make sure that your target audience doesn’t wander away from your landing page. Besides, the longer the page load time, the worse it is for SEO performance.

Here’s are some questions you need to ask yourself:-

  • Are internal pages getting enough internal link votes?
    The internal pages of your website should have at least 10 internal links. The more links, the more will be the Page Authority.
  • Are all pages 3 (or less) clicks deep?
    No pages should be more than 3-clicks deep. This is to make sure that your pages are being crawled and indexed well. For Google, more clicks mean less valuable, and vice versa.
  • Are all internal links using effective anchor text?
    Always use exact match anchor text with your links. Here’s a catch though – If you have a huge site, you will end up using several internal links for a keyword in pursuit of site navigation, in which case you need to dial down on external links. You need to make sure that you avoid getting external links otherwise it will lead to over-optimization of the anchor text. Eg. if you have 1000 internal links for “chamomile tea”, be less aggressive on having external links with the same anchor text.
  • Are there any pages with existing backlinks?
    Your top internal linking targets should be pages with high Page Authority. You can boost the page authority by linking pages that already have high authority.

Create Intelligent SEO Content

Having intelligent SEO content serves you in 2 ways – It will help you rank your content and will be interesting to read as well. Most writers can’t get the right mix of these 2 tangents in their content.

Ideally, 80% of your content should be keyword targeted and 20% of it should be a link bait (designed to attract backlinks). This is a long-term strategy to improve the Domain Authority of your website. This means that you’ll be able to rank on highly competitive keywords.

Here are the steps you need to follow:-

  • Select a qualified keyword – We already discussed this in the above header “creating a keyword database”.
  • Map the keyword to an existing page – If you don’t have a page targeting this qualified keyword, create a new one. Update and optimize the existing pages before creating a new page.
  • Only target one keyword on one page – If you have multiple pages targeting the same keyword, you either consolidate those pages, and/or delete or redirect the pages that don’t have good quality content.
  • Create an SEO content brief – In the SEO content brief you’ll hand over to your writer, you can mention the estimated value of this keyword (CPC x clicks), the SERP features that need to be kept in mind, the estimated organic CTR of the keyword, target word count, search intent, how many backlinks you need to rank, etc.

Conversions

Did you know that 92% of your website visitors aren’t ready to buy? We’ve talked about how you can generate traffic to your website to generate more leads, but that wouldn’t mean anything if your leads aren’t getting converted.

What you need to do is nurture these visitors until they become a qualified lead. The majority of those remaining 8% visitors are highly motivated to buy, so even if you use decent keyword targeting and copywriting, you can easily convert these. However, to get the rest 92% on board, you need to create a nurture sequence.

Here’s what you need to do:-

Create a Lead Magnet

Anything that incentivizes the visitor to sign up for your email list is called a lead magnet. It could simply be a free training webinar, a video series, or an ebook. The key is to keep these incentives really simple.

Segregate the Qualified and Unqualified Leads

Just because some visitors signed up via email, doesn’t mean they’re qualified. You can find out which leads qualify and which don’t by using 2 ways:-

  • New Subscriber Survey – This can include all the basic questions relevant to your target customer.
  • Use Trigger Links – Send a welcome email with 2 or 3 links and when the subscriber clicks on one of those, they get tagged based on what they clicked. For example, if you send an email saying “What best describes you?” and give 2 or 3 options, and based on what they click on, they get tagged accordingly, so that you can send them relevant content from that moment on. You can use Drip to accomplish this.

Created Automated Nurture Sequence

Now that you’ve qualified those leads and have segregated them into relevant categories, it’s time to nurture them. You have to accept the fact that leads convert instantly. Realistically, you have to treat them as if they don’t plan on buying for the next 6 – 12 months.

You can lay back and take your time to plan how you can add value to these people’s lives every now and then during this period. What you should do is to create an automated nurture sequence and send them value-added material, which will develop trust over time. Next thing you know, they’ll already be sold.

If the nurture sequence is solid, then these leads will be moved into a different automated sequence. This is highly dependent on your business model, but with a successful digital marketing strategy, the goal is to gradually build up and pitch them when the time is right.

Remarketing

You already understand that 92% of your website visitors aren’t interested in buying anything, so basically, they’re just bouncing away from your website without taking any action. This means that there’s so much untapped potential that you’re missing out on, unless you’re remarketing.

Remarketing is the way to reach those 92% by reaching them even when they aren’t on your website. This can be achieved through the following ways:-

Enable Tracking Pixel

A tracking pixel is an HTML code snippet that is loaded when a user visits a website or opens an email. It is useful for tracking user behaviour and conversions. At a bare minimum, you should have Google and Facebook tracking enabled on your website. Depending on the nature of your business, you could enable it on Bing, Instagram, Quora, Reddit, or even TikTok.

Create Intent-Based Campaigns

Based on what pages a visitor is viewing, you can understand their intent and should target advertisements that are designed accordingly. For example, if someone visits your website, read a blog, and just exit, then you shouldn’t advertise to them to buy your service right away.

What you can do instead is move them down your sales funnel and target with a lead magnet that’s related to the blog that they were reading. Heck, you can even split test your visitors, see what induces a favourable response for you and then use that as the main campaign.

Wrapping Up

If you were trying to understand how to reduce marketing costs, I wouldn’t blame you. All these tools can be costly and when you’re starting out, it can be an unexpectedly high expense. You can rely on free tools or consult a Digital Marketing Expert as well.

Hopefully, this Digital Marketing strategy served as an all-encompassing guide for you to understand how marketing really works, and how vast the role of relevant targeting can be. You can do your own litmus test to figure out what works for you.

By Devansh Khetrapal

View full profile ›

Sourced from Business 2 Community

 

 

By

One of the most important ROIs that marketers track is organic traffic numbers. Apart from sales and conversion rates, this number ultimately defines how well you are connecting with your target audience.

This number will often fluctuate quite a bit throughout the year. For instance, during the busy season (like the holidays), organic traffic numbers may spike. Some companies also experience slower periods where their products or services are not needed as much.

A general rule of thumb is to keep your organic traffic numbers growing by at least 10% year over year.

If your growth rate has been declining or remaining stagnant, it is a sign to act.

Thankfully, growing organic traffic is something that marketers can do – and do quickly – if they use the right strategies.

Here are four things you can do to help grow online traffic and reach wider audiences if your numbers have dropped recently.

1. Ramp up your external link content

If the organic traffic numbers on your website have been dwindling or your rankings have slipped, focus on building external links. Publishing more content on your website may not always help you to drive traffic – but building links can.

Inbound links and the linking domain authority make up nearly 28% of ranking factors for organic search results on Google. By building up your presence on other authoritative sites, you could boost your own site’s ranking while also driving traffic through those links.

To increase your external links, consider pitching content ideas to other related blogs in exchange for outbound links. Contact blogs that reach similar audiences like you and see if they are accepting guest posts. This can also be a great opportunity to give your company or marketing writer better credibility and establish thought leadership.

2. Hunt down new keyword opportunities

Keyword trends are changing all the time. The COVID-19 pandemic is a perfect example of how hundreds of new keyword opportunities can appear over a short period.

For instance, take a look at some of the phrases that exploded in growth from February to April of 2020:

New-Keyword-Opportunities

Image Source

Who would have thought that phrases like how to cut your hair, make bread, or find cute sweatpants would be in the top searches on Google?

While these searches may not be totally relevant to the keywords you tend to target, it is a good time to re-evaluate your keyword lists frequently. There could be ways to incorporate SEO-optimized content or even update your current copy with new keywords.

You can also take this as an opportunity to refine your current targeted keyword list and see if there are some lower-ranking phrases you can start to target. Narrow down your niche content by finding specific search phrases that are relevant, but not highly popular.

If you’re using a keyword research tool like Ahrefs or Ubersuggest, your best bet is usually to go for keywords with a Difficulty of less than 30, and a search volume of more than 100 hits/month.

Remember, these might not be at the top of the list in terms of search volume; however, if the competition is low, it could be worth pursuing.

3. Give new social trends a try

It should come as no shock that the use of social media is at an all-time high. According to recent research from We Are Social, the number of people actively using social media grew by 10% in 2020 – and is expected to continue to rise.

It’s no secret that social media is a major marketing tool. But, you must pay attention to how and why people are using it.

The same study concluded that the average person spends nearly 7 hours a day online. The majority of this time is split between chat apps and social networks – as well as watching videos, shopping, and playing games.

New-Social-Trends-Organic-Traffic-Drops

So, in addition to staying connected with friends and family, most people used social media for distraction. This means that it is not effective to create content solely to convert customers with obvious promotions.

Instead, focus on creating content that captures your audience’s attention and gets them familiar with your brand. Pay attention to the shift in platform usage as well. Video streaming has exploded in recent years, so you may want to expand into additional networks like TikTok or YouTube to engage.

For instance, the San Diego Zoo has been jumping on popular trends and engaging with followers. When the zoo was closed to visitors during COVID-19, this outlet allowed people to stay engaged through viral TikTok trend videos. It also kept the zoo at the forefront of people’s minds, which likely drove in donations and excitement for its re-opening.

Sandiegozoo-Rhinos-Original-Sound-Alec-Towsend

Image Source

When traffic numbers or conversions are starting to dwindle, it may be a good time to launch a YouTube channel or focus on more interactive content creation. It’s also a great time to consider testing a rebrand if you want to launch a new “aesthetic” for your social media presence!

4. Consider podcasts

Consider expanding your content library even further by trying content mediums like podcasts or live streams. Overall, podcast listenership has risen by 29% since 2019. Moreover, niche topics are favored among subscribers as the majority of people turn to podcasts for education or entertainment.

Once again, this is a great way to target niche keywords, audiences, and build awareness about the topics your business specializes in. It is highly recommended that you focus on current topics; 60% of podcast listeners use this content to stay up to date.

Listening-Podcast-In-The-United-States-February2019

Image Source

Now could be a good time to launch your own if you feel so inclined!

Consider reaching out to other podcasts and pitch them an idea for an interesting collaboration or a reason why you or someone on your team should be featured on their show. Podcasters are always looking for ideas for their next episode.

Not ready for podcasting or want to test the waters before diving in? Other options could be trying your hand at hosting or participating in webinars or social media live streams.

Conclusion

Marketers must be able to adapt and pounce on new opportunities to stay relevant. If your organic traffic numbers have been decreasing lately, it is a sign that your strategies need an update.

The best way to grow your organic traffic numbers is by understanding how to attract customers in the current climate. Now is the perfect time to expand and change – and these are just a few ways you can do it.

What are some other marketing strategies that you have used to grow this year?

By

Guest author: Jack Shepler is a Marketing and Search Engine Optimization expert. He founded Ayokay, award-winning marketing, and web design firm in Indianapolis, Indiana that has built brands and increased sales for businesses since 2011. He uses his decades of experience to educate through the Ayokay blog and through public speaking. You can follow him on LinkedIn.

Sourced from Jeff Bullas

By

Traffic…the lifeblood of any online business.

Think about it:

No traffic = ZERO sales.

And ZERO sales = ZERO revenue.

Now:

There’s always the option to pay for traffic (i.e. PPC).

BUT:

In some industries, the cost of PPC traffic is so high it’s damn near IMPOSSIBLE to turn a profit.

The solution?

Organic traffic.

I know what you’re thinking…

“I’ve read a million blog posts about getting more organic traffic…what’s so different about this one!?”

Simple…this ISN’T the fluff and “because-I-said-so” BS that gets regurgitated time and time again with zero application or data to back it up.

This is an actionable guide filled with step-by-step playbooks to help you increase organic traffic in both the short and long term. Anyone should be able to take away at least one strategy and implement it immediately in their business.

I’ll be sharing case studies demonstrating how I’ve used the strategies outlined below to get real results for clients and personal projects across a number of different industries.

To help make this post super actionable, and speed up the implementation on your end, I have included a downloadable toolset below. It contains several videos and templates for some of the strategies outlined in the post.

Bonus materials to increase organic traffic

Let’s dive in!

#1: Eliminate “organic anchors” with a data-driven content audit

Lots of low-quality pages = bad news for SEO.

Why?

Because they weigh down the rest of your website. This causes (better) pages to underperform in the SERPs.

The solution?

Pruning.

In simple terms, pruning involves auditing and removing “dead weight” content from your site.

I.e. any pages that have ZERO links, ZERO traffic and ZERO conversions (and/or contain irrelevant/tin content) are prime candidates to be deleted.

These types of pages offer nothing of value to your site, and are actually weighing down other important assets by eating up precious crawl budget (meaning new or updated content gets crawled less often).

Note: There are some outliers in the pruning process. For example, if you have an important resource on your site that gets little traffic or inbound links, but does get a lot of internal links, you might want to still keep it.

Here’s an example:

At the start of 2017, my agency started working with one of the nation’s leading defamation attorneys.

When he came to us he was getting around 3,500 organic visits and 130 new leads a month from organic traffic. Not too bad. But, he wanted to do better.

So – the first thing we did was follow the content audit process outlined below:

At a high level:

  1. He had two different websites competing for the same keywords, so we consolidated the two sites and merged all competing assets. (More on this in tactic #2 “”)
  2. He had dozens of the “dead weight” pages we discussed above, so we removed those pages from the site
  3. He had a bunch of pages on the site already ranking page 2 for valuable search terms, so we improved those assets (More on this in TACTIC #4 “”)

Here are the results 10 months later:

Content audit case study

He’s now getting over 11,000 organic visits and 300 leads a month. In fact, business is so good he has now started his own firm.

Note: These results were achieved writing very little new content, and only a handful of new backlinks.

Here’s an overview of my decision-making process during a content audit:

Content audit decision matrix

During the audit phase, we’ll make one of four page-level strategic recommendations:

  1. KEEP content that is relevant and getting a lot of traffic and conversions.
  2. IMPROVE content with the potential to either get more traffic (tactic #4), or more conversion from the existing traffic.
  3. MERGE content with backlinks that is competing for the same keywords as another higher ranking piece of content on the site.
  4. REMOVE content with no links, traffic or conversions.

Now:

For all the visual learners out there, think of this process in terms of an iceberg analogy (hat tip to Everett Sizemore over at GoInflow):

Pages appearing above the water line are top-performers (keep these!), whereas those just below the water line have potential, but need some improvements – updated content, re-promotion, conversion optimization etc – to reach their “full potential”.

Any pages deep down at the bottom of the iceberg are the ones you need to get rid of—they’re generally low-quality assets providing no added value, and weighing down the rest of your website.

Ok:

So, how do you identify which pages to keep, improve, merge or remove?

Follow this workflow:

Note: there are a few different ways you can pull the data for this audit. I am going to focus on one that allows you to scale the process relatively quickly, and avoid having to use a lot of paid tools.

You can grab a copy of the content audit template used in the example below:

Bonus materials to increase organic traffic

First, you need to check whether or not the pages/posts on your website have any inbound links. You can use URL Profiler and Ahrefs to quickly scale this part of the process.

Here’s how:

Copy the URL of your sitemap (hint: this is usually found at yourdomain.com/sitemap.xml or yourdomain.com/post-sitemap.xml)

In URL Profiler, right-click on the URL list area and hit “Import from XML sitemap”:

Import XML sitemap into URL Profiler

You’ll then be prompted to paste your sitemap URL in the box:

Adding sitemap into URL Profiler

Hit “Import” and URL Profiler will automatically pull in every URL it finds in the sitemap.

URLs scraped from the sitemap

Note: If you have more than one sitemap (e.g. pages and posts sitemaps), you’ll need to repeat this process to pull every page/post into URL Profiler:

OR:

Use a tool like Screaming Frog to extract all the indexed content on your site with a single crawl:

Screaming Frog site crawl

The free version of Screaming Frog will allow to crawl 500 URLs. But, you will have limited configuration options.

Here are the basic settings I use when collecting the indexed content from a website:

And the “Advanced” settings:

SF - advanced settings

You’ll be left with a list of the URLs that can be crawled and indexed by search spiders like Google Bot.

Regardless of which approach you take above (sitemap extraction or Screaming Frog crawl), the next step is to export all the URLs and paste them into URL Profiler:

Connecting services in URL Profiler

Next, connect your Ahrefs account (instructions on doing so can be found here) to URL Profiler.

Check the Ahrefs box (under URL level data), then hit “Run profiler”.

Within a few minutes (depending on the number of URLs), URL Profiler will spit out a spreadsheet that looks something like this:

URL Profiler export

This includes a lot of data, including the number of referring domains pointing to each page/post on your website.

Copy/paste all the data from this spreadsheet and paste it into the sheet labelled “URL Profiler” in this Google Sheet:

Content Audit document

OK, so now you know how many inbound links (if any) are pointing to each page on your website—the next step is to check which of these pages actually have traffic/conversions in Google Analytics.

Go to Google Analytics > Customisation > Custom Reports > New Custom Report:

Create a custom report in Google Analytics

Set up your custom report so it matches the screenshot below (note: I’ve highlighted the super-important parts!)

Configuring Custom Report

Hit “Save” and view the report—it should look something like this:

Note: I recommended setting the date range for the report to the last 3 months.

Export the report—just make sure to set the number of visible rows to the maximum amount (5000) first:

Copy/paste all data from the exported .csv into the sheet labelled “2. GA Export” in the Google Sheet:

Content Audit doc

Finally, navigate to the “DONE” sheet and you should see something like this:

Final audit findings

This compiles all the data and gives a recommended action (e.g. “keep”, “consolidate”, etc.)

Note: This recommended action doesn’t take into account the relevancy of the page, so you will need to double-check that manually before making a final decision

BONUS: This is a modified version of my content audit process. If you want to get access to exact processes, templates and tools we use at our agency, I’m including a “playbook” in my new course. You can find out more about it here.

#2: Prevent Your Website from Competing with Itself by Identifying (and Removing) Keyword Cannibalization

“Keyword cannibalization” occurs when two or more pages on your website are competing for the same keyword.

Here’s why this is such a BIG problem:

  • Google will struggle to figure out which one of your pages actually deserves to rank, so they’ll often choose to rank neither of them.
  • Links/shares/etc will be split between two or more pages, leading to less authority for each page (this is bad, as pages with higher authority tend to rank better).

To put it simply, because your website is effectively competing with itself, you’re significantly diluting your chances of ranking at all!

Keyword cannibalization should, therefore, be avoided at all costs!

This process captures the “MERGE” aspect of the content audit covered above in greater detail.

Here’s how you can identify (and fix) keyword cannibalization issues in 3 simple steps:

  1. Use SEMrush to see which keywords your website is ranking for
  2. Look for keyword duplication (i.e. multiple pages ranking for the same keyword)
  3. Solve the issue by either merging the two (or more) resources together, OR deleting/404 one of them (note: only do this if there are ZERO links/traffic to that page!)

Example:

One of my clients had an article targeting the search term “marketing technology stack” that suddenly fell from position #4 in Google, to page #4.

At first, the client thought it might have been some kind of page-level algorithmic penalty.

After running the process outline below we found 5 different articles competing for the same keyword. Each competing article had links pointing to it.

So, instead of spreading the link equity across 5 different pages we took all unique content from the lower ranking pages and merged it into the canonical (highest ranking version), and then 301 redirected all the other posts into it to consolidate the link equity.

The page became a much more in-depth authoritative resource on the subject, and got added authority from the links that were 301’d from the other articles.

The result:

SnapApp consolidation

The page has gone from ~200 organic pageviews to almost 1,000 /mo. And, it now ranks #1 for it’s target search term:

Rankings gained from keyword cannibalization removal

This is without writing any new content or building any new links.

Now, imagine what happens when you scale this process across websites with lots of competing articles 🙂

Let’s walk through the process:

To begin, enter your domain (e.g. robbierichards.com) into the Organic Keywords report in SEMrush, then select “Positions” from the sidebar:

Finding keyword rankings in SEMrush

This will show you every keyword your website is ranking for. It also tells you which page ranks for each keyword and the position in which it ranks:

Export this entire report to a .csv:

Exporting Keywords from SEMrush

Next, copy/paste all the exported data into the sheet named “1. SEMRush Export” in this Google Sheet.

It should look something like this:

Finally, navigate to the “DONE” tab and it will show you all keyword cannibalization issues on your website.

Cool, right!? 😀

Here’s are a couple of ways to solve these issues:

  1. If the two pages competing for the same keyword are very similar, and both offer unique value, consider merging them into one canonical resource. Just make sure to 301 redirect one of the pages to the new canonical resource (especially if it has links pointing towards it!)
  2. If the competing page offers nothing of unique value, delete it. If the deleted page has links pointing towards it (check this in Ahrefs), add a 301 redirect to the competing resource, otherwise just let it 404.
Bonus materials to increase organic traffic

#3: Uncover Low-hanging Ranking Opportunities by Performing Keyword Research for an Existing Website

Keyword research only needs to be done when you’re starting a new website, right!?

NOPE!

This couldn’t be more WRONG.

Improving rankings for keywords you’re already ranking for is the quickest and easiest way to get a TON more traffic to your website.

Want proof?

I recently increased organic traffic 402% to this post within 30 days after implementing this strategy:

Increased organic traffic

It went from position #8 to #2 overnight, which is why the traffic shot up like a rocket!

And this was after optimizing ONE page…if you were to do this across your entire website, traffic would go through the roof!

Here’s how to do it:

  1. Identify “low-hanging” keyword opportunities (i.e. those that you’re already ranking for on page 2 of the SERPs, OR low down on page 1)
  2. Optimize the pages and relaunch for MASSIVE traffic boosts

Here’s the process:

Go to SEMrush, enter your website, then go to the Positions report:

Finding keyword rankings in SEMrush

This will show you EVERY keyword you’re ranking for, along with the ranking position.

BUT, we’re not interested in every keyword—we want to focus on the ones with the most potential. To do that, apply these filters to the report:

SEMrush report filters

Note: Set the search volume threshold to something that makes sense for your industry. i.e.
You may need to lower it a bit more to find more opportunities.

Export the results to a .csv, then copy/paste the data into the sheet labelled “1. SEMRush Export” in this Google Sheet.

Now, go to the next tab labelled “DONE” and you should see something like this:

Keyword opportunities template

All of these keywords are low-hanging opportunities, but the rows that are the most green are the opportunities that are likely to yield the BEST results with the LEAST amount of effort.

After you’ve found keywords that have (1) search volume, (2) existing rankings, and (3) can be realistically ranked for in the next 60-90 days, you need to prioritize.

When I do this final part of the process, I always rely on a bottom-up view of the funnel.

(i.e. start with the “money” keywords at the bottom of the funnel , and work my back up to the top):

Funnel

(Source)

Here is a quick overview of how I would optimize these posts to move up the rankings:

  • Update existing tactics with new screenshots and additional information
  • Add 3-5 new strategies to the post
  • Re-promote the post across social media
  • Run a paid social media campaign to build social signals
  • Launch a light outreach campaign to capture additional backlinks
  • Add internal links from several other related posts on the site

To find the best internal linking targets, navigate to the “Best By Links” report in Ahrefs and filter by either URL Rating or Referring Domains. This will surface the most authoritative pages on your site:

Best by links report in Ahrefs

For example:

Since this post is about increasing organic traffic, you bet I’m going to add a few internal links from this post and this post.

Note: I have a full post dedicated to this strategy here. But, if you want to go deeper into specific relaunch tactics I use for clients, I’m pre-launching my new SEO course here.

#4: INSTANTLY Boost New Pages by Linking to Them from Existing High-Authority Pages

Want to give EVERY new piece of content you publish an INSTANT boost!?

As soon as you publish your new post, add a link to that post from an existing, related piece of content on your website that already has a TON of authority (i.e. a high UR).

This is tactic was briefly mentioned above. Below, we will outline several ways to mine solid internal link sources for your new content.

Example:

Because this page is clearly about increasing organic traffic, it would make perfect sense to link to it from this SEO case study on the date of publishing.

Why? Because that post is ALSO related to increasing traffic, and already has some authority:

Ahrefs page authority

Linking to my newly published post from that one would be sure to give it a nice boost!

Easy, right!?

BUT, how do you find worthy pages from which to add internal links from?

Here are a couple of methods:

1. Use the “Best by links” report in Ahrefs —this will show you every page on your website ordered by number of inbound links (as mentioned above). Work your way down the list and find a suitable post from which to add your link!

Ahrefs Best by Links report

2. Use the Search Console “Links to Your Site” report — this will show you all the pages being linked to from other domains:

Search Console links report

2. Use the “top pages” report in Google Analytics — this will show you the pages with the most traffic on your website. This can be accessed via: Behavior > Site Content > All Pages.

Search Console links report

2. Use the “top pages” report in Google Analytics — this will show you the pages with the most traffic on your website. This can be accessed via: Behavior > Site Content > All Pages.

You know pages getting a lot of organic traffic are ranking highly in the search engines, which is a good indicator they have authority (and links) attached to them.

4. Use search operators to find solid internal link sources. While tools can make this process easier, you don’t need them to find some good targets.

Here’s a workaround:

Search for the following:

site:yourdomain.com + keyword

Basically, just replace the “keyword” with a keyword related to the content you’ve just published.

So, if I wanted to add an internal link to this page, I could use the following Google search:

site:robbierichards.com + increase traffic

This will show me the pages on my website that are most related (in Google’s eyes) to increasing traffic:

Search results

Add a link from one or two of these pages (note: don’t force it in, make sure it’s natural!) and you’ll see a nice boost to your new post.

#5: Boost Traffic by Increasing SERP CTRs (with Search Console data)

Not only is SERP click-through rate (CTR) a proven ranking factor, it’s also super-important for translating rankings into traffic:

CTR ranking factor

Example:

Let’s assume you ranked on page 1 for the term Best SEO Tools (btw, I do rank for this!):

Ranking position 5

According to Ahrefs, this keyphrase has 1,500 searches/month:

Ahrefs keyword search volume

BUT:

This doesn’t mean I’m going to get 1,500 visitors a month from that search term — it all depends on CTR:

SERP click through rate

In the search engines, you’ll see around 2/3 of all the clicks going to the top 3 positions. Anything outside the top 3 and you’re looking at a single digit CTRs.

Back to our example:

If 10% of searchers click my website in the SERPs, I’ll receive roughly 150 visitors/month.

(Pretty sweet!)

However, if only 2% of searchers click through to my website, I’ll receive a measly 30 visitors/month.

(Not so sweet!)

So, the question is: how can you increase your CTR?

Two ways:

  1. Improve rankings—pages that rank higher are generally clicked more. For example, most searchers will click the 1st or 2nd result in the SERPs, and virtually nobody will click through to the second page of results.
  2. Sell your content in the SERPs—use your title and description tags to effectively “sell” your content in the SERPs and entice a click through.

The second method is the one I want to focus on right now, as it’s super low-hanging fruit most SEOs never think about!

Here’s how to do it:

  1. Identify pages on your website receiving below average CTRs for their ranking position.
  2. Change your title/description tags to entice more people to click through to your website from the SERPs.

OK:

The first task is to identify the pages getting lower CTRs than they should be—this can be done by analyzing search console data.

Go to Google Search Console > Search Traffic > Search Analytics, then set up the filter to match this:

Search Console data

Download the results (note: the download button is at the bottom of the page).

Copy/paste the data into the sheet titled “1. Search Console Data” in this Google Sheet:

Low hanging CTR wins in Search Console

Finally, go to sheet labelled “DONE” and you should see something like this:

Basically, this shows you the CTR for each page (column B) ranking in position 10 or under. It also shows the Average CTR for rankings in that position (note: these numbers were taken from here).

SERP CTRs

If the row is highlighted green, the CTR for the page is better than average for webpages ranking in that position. LEAVE THESE ALONE!

If the row is red, the page is performing worse—consider optimizing the title/description tags for these pages.

Here’s a guide on exactly how to do that.

Bonus materials to increase organic traffic

#6. Identify lost link equity in 404 pages

Links have a HUGE impact on rankings:

Domain authority

If you want to rank for any keyword, you need page authority. And, the way you get authority is by building quality links.

Now:

There are a million and one ways (depending on your niche) you could go about building backlinks to your website.

And, it’s tempting to dive right into a new campaign and go after the big wins. Why not, right?

Big wins are great! Everyone loves them – clients, boss, the team. Nothing better than landing a massive link from a site like Huffington Post or NBC.

While those links really move the needle, and should be a focal point, they require a lot of time and hard work.

So:

Before you start directing all your energy into landing BIG links, make sure you are first collecting all the “quick links”. This will get you some quick wins for your client, and help build trust at the beginning of your campaign.

One of the easiest ways to do this is reclaim lost link equity from 404 pages.

Websites change over time. Products come and go. Information is updated. URLs are modified. Pages are edited, shifted, and moved.

While all this sounds like on-page SEO, it affects off-page SEO as well – specifically links.

For example:

If you’ve ever landed quality links to a piece of content on your site and then updated the URL or folder structure, you’ve just affected that link.

Where it hurts you is when you make such a change and don’t put in the right 301 redirects. Basically – the links you worked hard to get are still pointing to the old URL.

The result is lost link equity.

So, one of the best things you can do when starting a new link building campaign is ensure there aren’t any dead/404 pages with external links pointed at them.

Reclaiming even a few of these links can give your content a nice bump, and provide a significant win that builds trust with your clients.

Here’s how to do it:

Head over to the Ahrefs “Best by Links” report. Filter by “404”, and sort referring domains (RD) in descending order:

Finding 404 pages with links pointing to them

The first result in this example has 6 referring domains pointing to a 404 page.

After clicking the RD link, I find out some of these links are from high authority domains like Search Engine Watch (DR 71):

RD report in Ahrefs

This is a MASSIVE link that would normally take a lot of time and effort to get, if at all.

Once you’ve identified the 404 pages with external links pointing to them, the final step is to reclaim the link equity.

Note: You should first examine the quality and relevance of the external links before reclaiming them.

Some things to look at:

  • Domain/ Page authority
  • Page relevance
  • Page quality
  • Link placement
  • Anchor text
Low DR sites

This is a screenshot from a backlink audit we’re working on for a client. There were a lot of low DR sites link from irrelevant content. Not links we’re interested in reclaiming.

The last thing you want to do is start redirecting a bunch of garbage links to your site. You’ll likely do more harm than good.

Ok:

Once you’ve identified the linking pages and verified they are safe to reclaim, you have a couple options:

  1. ​​​​301 redirect the 404 page to another relevant piece of content on the site
  2. Contact the author of the page linking to your site and notify them your page has moved. Ask them to update the link.

I usually go for the first option 🙂

#7. Create Strong Content Silos and AVOID Orphaned Pages

Google HATES messy, disorganized websites.

Why? Because it makes it very difficult for them to understand what a webpage is about. And if they don’t know what it’s about, they probably aren’t going to rank it highly!

So, how do you solve this?

Silos.

In simple terms, “siloing” is nothing more than the act of grouping content into distinct categories, ensuring a clear hierarchy that makes sense, and linking logically between the pages.

Here’s a simple example of a silo structure for a yoga website (taken from this post):

Example of a content silo

You can see there’s a clear content hierarchy—the pages are grouped into main categories (i.e. silos) and linked-to from the main category page.

This is commonly referred to as parent and child hierarchy.

In this example, the “new york”, “chicago, “dallas”, and “orlando” pages each have the same parent: “yoga studios”. They’re all children of the “yoga studio’s” page:

Note: It’s good practice to link back to the parent category from child pages, too.

This hierarchy will help dictate the URL structure.

Example:

http://www.yogawebsite.com/studios

  • http://www.yogawebsite.com/studios/new-york/
  • http://www.yogawebsite.com/studios/chicago/
  • http://www.yogawebsite.com/studios/dallas/
  • http://www.yogawebsite.com/studios/orlando/

http://www.yogawebsite.com/classes

  • http://www.yogawebsite.com/classes/yoga-rx/
  • http://www.yogawebsite.com/classes/pilates/
  • http://www.yogawebsite.com/classes/vinyasa/
  • http://www.yogawebsite.com/classes/hot-yoga/

Note: It is best practice to have support pages linking back up to the silo landing page (as shown by the red links above in the Yoga studio silo).

Cross-links between silo sub pages should be avoided because they weaken the “theming”, and relevance of the silo:

Content Silo 2

This graphic from Search Engine Land further illustrates how content silos can help better organize site content:

Silo vs flat information architecture

A couple more reasons why siloing your content can improve the user experience, and help boost your organic traffic:

  1. It increases relevancy: Siloing ensures all topically related content is connected, and this in turn drives up relevancy. For example, linking to each of the individual yoga class pages (e.g. Pilates, Yoga RX, etc) from the “Yoga classes” page helps confirm—to both visitors and Google—these pages are in fact different types of yoga classes. Google can then feel more confident ranking these pages for related terms, as it is clearer the pages are relevant to the search query.
  2. It helps the flow of “link juice” around your website: Because you’re creating a hierarchical structure, siloing ensures authority flows around your site more efficiently. (i.e. links to blog posts and sub service/product pages can flow up through the website to the “money” pages.

BUT:

What happens if you don’t implement content silos?

You’ll end up with “orphaned pages”:

Orphan pages

(Source)

An orphan page is a page with zero incoming internal links, and thus can’t be reached by users or crawlers while navigating your website. This usually hurts UX and ranking performance.

If you have a page that is underperforming, it’s worth running it through Search Console to check for internal links—here’s how:

Search Console > Search Traffic > Internal Links > enter your page URL:

Looking for internal links in Search Console

It will then show you the number of internal links the page has; it even shows you exactly where these links come from:

If the page has no internal links, check to make sure the relative URL paths are not being used on the site.

Relative URLs

You can find out more about relative vs. absolute URLs in this Moz Whiteboard Friday:

Bonus tip:

You can use a tool like SEMrush to scale the process of identifying orphaned pages across your website.

Go to the “Site Audit” report and enter your domain:

SEMrush site audit

Wait for the website to be crawled.

Go to the ‘Issues’ tab and click the ‘Select an Issue’ button. Check the ‘Notices’ section to see whether any Orphaned Pages have been detected on the site:

SEMrush site audit check

You can also use the tool to detect Orphaned Pages through your XML Sitemap or Google Analytics data. Check out the full tutorial on how to do that here.

Ok, we now know:

Content silos = good.

Orphan pages = bad (unless deliberate).

In a nutshell, here’s how you can silo your website:

  1. Identify the overarching topic groups of your website. What content do you have, or plan to have? What products or services do you plan to promote on your website? What are the main categories on competitor sites? Your keyword research should help flush this out.
  2. Plan your link structure. Start with the main navigation and decide how to best connect pages both physically (URL structure) and virtually (internal links) to clearly establish your content themes. Try to include at least 3-5 quality subpages under each core silo landing page. Link internally between the subpages. Link each subpage back up to the main silo landing page.
  3. Strengthen silos with relevance and authority. Continue to add contextual content into your silos. One of the easiest ways to do this is add related blog categories. Add content into the categories, build links to the content, and channel it back into the silo subpages through targeted internal linking.

#8. Identify Keyword Gaps (and Quickly Scale Organic Traffic)

Keyword research is the foundation of most successful SEO campaigns.

Rank for the right keywords, and you’ll drive a passive stream of targeted traffic to your website.

But, keyword research is a MASSIVE topic. I mean, just google it and you’ll get 16M results!

Search result

So, where do you start?​​​​

The competition.

Or more specifically, all the keywords your competitors are ranking for, but your are not. This allows you to plug any holes in your current content strategy, and start capturing more organic traffic.

Here’s how to do it:

Open up SEMrush, and go to the “Keyword Gap Analysis” report.

Keyword gap analysis

You should now see space to enter up to 5 domains for comparison. Enter up to 4 competitors, followed by your own website.

Example:

If I was doing a keyword gap analysis for my blog (robbierichards.com), I could enter ahrefs.com, backlinko.com, and webris.org as competitors, followed by my own website:

Entering competing domains into the keyword gap analysis tool

IMPORTANT: You MUST enter competitor domains first, with your own domain last on the list.

Once you’ve got your top organic competitors entered into the tool, you’ll notice a venn diagram icon listed next to each of the domains.

Click the icon and you’ll see four different options to choose from – (1) All Keywords, (2) Unique to the first domain, (3) Common keywords, and (4) Unique keywords:

This UX isn’t super intuitive, so let’s work through a couple quick examples of how you could use this tool to find untapped keyword opportunities for your business.

Note: Regardless of the keyword option you select, when performing a keyword gap analysis make sure the last venn diagram icon between the last competitor and your website is set to “Unique to the first domain’s keywords”:

With the settings shown above, I’d get the following results:

Keyword gap analysis results

All of my competitors are ranking for these keywords, but I am not.

This insight is extremely valuable because if all your competitors are able to rank for those keywords, there is a high probability you can too (provided each site has a comparable domain rating).

You can export these keywords and start prioritizing which ones should be added to your content calendar.

Ok:

That’s just one use case. Let’s pretend I want to broaden the scope and look at all the keywords ANY of my competitors are ranking for.

Easy – I’d use the configuration below:

Now I can see all the keywords at least one of my competitors rank for:

Now, I know what you’re probably thinking. Most of the results in the examples above are keywords ranking super low in the search results.

One might argue this information is pretty useless.

So, use the filters shows below to find all the competitor keywords ranking in the top 10 results:

Keyword gap analysis filters

This search will return some great topical keywords for you to explore further, and possibly incorporate into your content calendar:

When performing your competitor keyword gap analysis, start with competitors who have similar domain authority ratings as your site. This way, you know any keywords your competitors are ranking, you can too.

Important: Don’t focus your entire keyword strategy around your competitors. You want to go after opportunities they are missing out on too.

One way I do this is using the keywords identified in the gap analysis to seed ongoing topical keyword research.

Basically – enter the competitor keyword topics into the SEMrush “Keyword Magic Tool”:

SEMrush keyword magic tool

It will return a list of hundreds or even thousands of related long tail keyword variations.

You can even filter out the question-based queries:

Question-based keywords

As you enter in different seed topics, simply click the box next to any keywords you think might be a good target and they’ll be added to a master list which you can export once finished with your keyword research.

This is an easy way to leverage your competitors to rapidly expand the keyword set:

#9: Use “Barnacle SEO” to Align Your Brand with Authoritative Sources for High SERP Visibility

“Barnacle SEO” is a term coined by Will Scott of Search Influence.

He describes it as: “attaching oneself to a large fixed object and waiting for the customers to float by in the current.”

BUT, what does this mean in relation to SEO?

Simple…rather than competing with the BIG sites that dominate your niche, you instead align/attach your own brand with them.

That way, you can effectively piggyback on their success!

Example:

Let’s assume you were a lawyer in Brooklyn, NYC…

You would probably want to attach/associate your business with sites such as:

  • Avvo.com
  • Superlawyers.com
  • Justia.com
  • Etc.

This is because the websites absolutely DOMINATE local search:

Big brand sites dominating local search

So, whenever anyone is looking for the services you offer, chances are they’ll end up on a website like Avvo.com.

BUT…

I know what you’re thinking…“why not just rank for these terms with my own website!?”

Simple…these BIG brands will be almost impossible to outrank with your own website (because it’ll have much less authority!):

Barnacle SEO

In this case, it’d be better to simply piggyback on the authority of the larger sites to rank for highly competitive keywords, at least in the short term.

Here are some of the big brands that dominate search in other verticals:

Real Estate: Zillow, Rent.com, Trulia, Zoopla (UK), RightMove (UK), etc:

Hotels: TripAdvisor, Hotels.com, Timeout.com, etc.

Obviously, some of these websites are more difficult to associate your own brand with than others.

For example, TripAdvisor rankings can’t really be manipulated (unless you’re providing EXCELLENT service), but you can easily post on forums like Warrior Forum or Quora; you just have to sign up and post an answer.

That’s why I recommend looking for keywords in your niche where forums (e.g. Quora) or niche directories dominate the SERPs.

Here’s a quick hack for doing this:

First, go to SEMrush, enter quora.com in the search box, then go to the “Positions” report (located under “Organic Research” on the sidebar):

This will show you each of the 29 million keywords Quora.com ranks for!

BUT…

Most of these keywords will be completely irrelevant to your niche; that’s why you need to use the filtering options to find keywords that fit the bill.

Example:

Let’s say you were a lawyer…

Just filter for threads containing the word “attorney” that also rank in the top 5:

Filtering SEMrush keyword reports

This will result in a TON of threads that rank well for industry related terms:

It’s then a case of plucking out the ones most related to your business, signing up for a Quora account, and answering the questions:

Do this right and it can drive A LOT of targeted traffic back to your website!

Now:

In industries dominated by aggregator sites, my advice is to leverage them, not fight them. They have already done all the hard work to rank for you:

Avvo rankings

You just need to “attach” yourself to the appropriate category of the site, and optimize your profile for high placement.

If you can get your profile ranking in the aggregators, you can quickly build visibility for a lot of your “money” keywords.

For example:

Here are the listings on Avvo for “personal injury attorney” in Boise:

This keyword is a ultra competitive in both local and organic search. Plus, you could be paying up to $100 per click in AdWords.

Take a close look at how businesses in ultra competitive markets are optimizing their profiles to rank. It might even make sense to pay for top placement in some of the niche directories.

Here is a helpful checklist from Phil Rozek to follow when deciding if barnacle SEO is a good strategy for your business:

Barnacle SEO sheet

The most critical things to consider are:

  • Does the site rank top of page one for the target search term?

  • Does the site allow visitors to leave reviews?

  • Does the site allow you to link to your page?

  • Are your competitors already present on the site?

  • Can visitors contact you directly from the site?

  • Can you pay to elevate your listing on the site?

#10. Use “Parasite SEO” to Rank for Super-Competitive Search Terms

Ranking for BIG “money” keywords isn’t always possible with your own website.

That’s because the BIG keywords are often super-competitive and ONLY super-authoritative brands stand a chance at ranking for them.

Example:

Take a keyword like “SEO tips”

According to Ahrefs, it has a KD score of 60:

Ahrefs keyword competitiveness score

And unsurprisingly, the SERPs are dominated by big brands:

Bottomline: you probably ain’t going to stand a chance at ranking for this keyword with a DA30 website….no matter how great your content is!

So, what’s the solution?

Parasite (or Tenant) SEO.

In simple terms, parasite SEO is where you piggyback on the authority of other websites to rank for super-competitive, “money” terms.

But wait, how is this different from Barnacle SEO?

With Barnacle SEO you are basically adding profiles or comments to top ranking aggregators, directories and forums in your industry/market.

With Parasite SEO, you’re publishing new content (i.e. blog posts NOT profiles) on high ranking sites and publications.

Here’s how it works:

  1. Identify key industry publications that accept guest posts (with CRAZY authority!)
  2. Pitch an article targeting a money keyword

Example:

Let’s go back to the “SEO tips” keyword I mentioned earlier…

You might remember that one of the pages ranking in the top 3 was this post on the Ahrefs blog.

Here’s the interesting thing about this post…

It’s actually a guest post!

Ahrefs guest post example

Yes, guest posting means you’re effectively ranking for the keyword on their website (rather than your own), but it’s still a GREAT tactic for the following reasons:

  1. It’ll send a TON of referral traffic your way
  2. It’ll generate leads/sales
  3. It’ll help you build a name for yourself (i.e. authority by association)

Want proof?

Ryan Stewart wrote this post (which now ranks #1 for the value search term “SEO services”) a couple of years back and it still generates leads for his business:

Ryan Stewart tweet

​Here is another example:

Steve Webb wrote this SEO audit article on Moz to rank for the highly competitive search term “SEO audit”.

This article has been ranking #1 for over 4 years!

Matt Barby used parasite SEO to rank his client for the keyphrase “app makers” (22,000 monthly searches).

The Business News Daily article generated 74,783 referral visits and almost 4,300 user registrations:

Here’s how to do it:

  1. Find a list of websites in your niche accepting guest posts
  2. Pitch them posts relating to competitive keywords you want to rank for

Note: Obviously, you’ll need a list of competitive keywords you want to rank for in order to do this. If you don’t have that already, check out my post listing a TON of ways to find keywords with SEMrush.

Or, watch the video below:

OK, first things first…you need to find websites accepting guest posts.

This is easily done—just enter the follow search operators into Google:

KEYWORD intitle:”write for us”
KEYWORD inurl:”write-for-us”

Scrape the results with this Chrome extension and you’ll have a huge list of industry websites that accept guest posts:

Scraping URLs from the SERPs

It’s then just a case of pitching them your topics.

IMPORTANT: Make sure the website you’re pitching is actually authoritative enough to rank for the keyword you’re targeting. The quickest way to do this is to check the KD score in Ahrefs, then check to see if the website is already ranking in the top 5 for other keywords with a similar KD score. If it is, you’re good to go!

Example:

Let’s say we wanted to publish a guest post that ranked for the keyword “long tail keywords”.

According to Ahrefs, this has a KD score of 52:

KD score in Ahrefs

So, we need to publish our post on a website that is capable of ranking for keywords with a KD score of 52 (or higher).

We can do this with Ahrefs Site Explorer.

Just enter the domain of website you want to publish the guest post on (e.g. AgencyAnalytics.com), go to the “Organic Keywords” report, then filter by keywords ranking in positions 1-5.

If you spot the website ranking for keywords with a KD score of 52 or higher (or whatever number you’re looking for), you’re good to go:

In this example, we can see that they’re ranking in the top 5 for a KD 72 keyword.

Perfect!

Here’s another alternative method:

Get DR for target site (using Ahrefs Site Explorer):

…then compare it to the average DR of the top 5 ranking sites in the SERPs for the target keyword. This can be done with the SERPs report in Ahrefs Keywords Explorer:

Checking competing domain ratings

If the average is similar to the DR of the target guest post website, go for it!

#12: Propel Organic Growth with Ongoing Backlink Acquisition (+ 3 Simple Tactics)

As mentioned earlier in the post, links are MEGA important when it comes to ranking.

(Google actually confirmed this a few months back!)

And both domain-level and page-level backlink factors consistently top the ranks in Moz’s search engine ranking factors survey:

Ranking factors

BUT…

You aren’t going to rank by acquiring a few backlinks and leaving it at that…

You NEED to be acquiring backlinks on an ongoing basis!

Unfortunately, this is the exact opposite of what most people do!

Most people focus all their time and effort into content creation and ZERO effort into link building.

It looks something like this:

Graph showing importance of link building

No authority is being built to help rank all the content being reduced. #facepalm

So, what should you be doing?

Simple. You need to put most of your resources into acquiring links in the early stages of a website.

Why? Because without building some authority, you aren’t going to rank for anything (not even low competition keywords!).

Here’s a great illustration by Matthew Barby showing how every SEO campaign should begin:

(Source)

The initial focus is seeding site authority in parallel with content creation efforts.

Here are 3 “quick win” link building strategies to get you started:

  1. Steal your competitor’s links
  2. Keep a database of people likely to link to you (with custom search engines)
  3. Perform “shotgun” outreach

These three tactics have propelled the growth of my link profile over the last 6 months:

Link growth

OK, let’s start with the first link building tactic…

1. Steal Your Competitor’s Backlinks

There are TONS of ways to steal links from competitors (I even wrote a full post about it here) but here’s a quick and dirty tactic to get you started:

Go to Ahrefs Link Intersect tool and set it up like this:

Ahrefs link intersect tool

The first three domains should be domains of your competitors, and the “But doesn’t link to” field should be your own website.

Hit “Show link opportunities”.

Ahrefs will now show you who’s linking to any of your competitors, but not your own website.

Reach out to these people, build a relationship, and see if you can get them to link to your website, too!

2. Keep a database of people likely to link to you (with CSEs)

People who have linked to you before will probably be open to doing so again in future.

So, wouldn’t it make sense to keep a database of these people, then reach out to them whenever you publish something that may be of interest to them?

(YES. Yes it would!)

Here’s how:

Go to Ahrefs Site Explorer, enter your own domain, then go to the Referring Domains report:

This will show you EVERY domain currently linking to your website.

Export the results to .csv:

Export backlinks in Ahrefs

Next, import all the domains into a Google Custom Search Engine (CSE).

Note: You can find instructions, along with a bunch of templates for automating this process in this post.

Once you’ve done this, you will have a custom search engine that searches ONLY the websites that have linked to you in the past.

So, whenever you publish a new blog post, you can simply go to your CSE and search for a keyword related to the post (e.g. if I published a SEMRush review, I would type “SEMrush” into the search engine):

You can then reach out to these people, tell them about your post, and ask if they’d be happy to link to you!

Here’s a video with a more in-depth demonstration:

3. Perform “shotgun” outreach

(Hat tip to the guys over at Authority Hacker for introducing me to this process).

Have you heard of the “skyscraper technique”?

(“Um, who hasn’t, Robbie!?)

Well, “shotgun skyscraper” is like the skyscraper technique on steroids.

Let me explain…

Here are the basic steps for the skyscraper technique:

  1. Find a piece of content with a TON of links
  2. Make something even better
  3. Reach out to any website linking to the old piece of content, tell them about your new improved piece, and ask them to change the link

Simple, right!?

The “shotgun skyscraper” approach follows a very similar process…

BUT…

Instead of trying to steal links from just one piece of content, you instead steal links from many pieces of content (hence the “shotgun” approach).

Here’s a screenshot from one of the link tracking templates we used for a client in the customer support industry:

Shotgun skyscraper links

We managed to build over 50 quality links to the client’s website within a 60 day period.

Pretty cool, right?

Let’s go through a quick working example…

I recently published this in-depth SEMRush tutorial/review.

But, a quick search in Google shows TONs of other (much less comprehensive) SEMRush reviews…

And according to Ahrefs, a LOT of these pages have a good number of backlinks:

BUT:

I believe my review is more comprehensive than ALL of these other review.

So, I can use the “shotgun” skyscraper approach to steal links from ALL of these pages.

I’ve been using this tactic to build links to several of my articles over the last few months:

I’m seeing about a 3-4% conversion rate.

Here’s how to do it:

  1. Export the backlinks for ALL the pages your “skyscraper” content is better than (using Ahrefs)
  2. Find the contact details for each of the websites
  3. Reach out to them and ask them to replace the old link with a link to your new “skyscraper” content.

Ready to Get More Organic Traffic?

There you have it – 12 actionable strategies to get more short and long term organic traffic growth.

Always start with the quick win opportunities – content audits, removal of keyword cannibalization, link reclamation and quick keyword wins. Then, build on the moment to scale up for long term organic traffic increases.

Also, make sure you leverage the bonus templates and videos to get a quick start on things.

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