Here is my Blueprint: Use it Wisely

It’s time to start the fun stuff. I am going to give you the formula that I personally use to create passive income streams.

Steal My Blueprint

We will be discussing each of these steps in more detail very soon, but I wanted to give you the big picture overview of the strategy first. So here’s the rough outline of my auto-pilot income blueprint:

1) Brainstorm a long list of niches and related keywords.

2) Plug each of those keyword groups into your keyword analysis tool of choice, picking out niches with low to moderate traffic, high KEI’s, and low R/S’s.

3) Create niche groups, with low-level sibling niches and higher level parent niches.

4) For each of the best niches, create an auto-pilot site with Hyper VRE.

5) For each keyword, create a separate page within the blog or web site, and optimize each of those pages with your keyword analysis tool.

6) Choose relevant, profitable affiliate programs for each niche. Also add contextual advertising that is relevant to the niche.

7) Use the A-B-C-A and B1-A1-B2-A1-C2-A1 linking structure within your niches.

8) Cross-promote your sibling and parent niche products.

9) Implement my indexed in one day and low-cost traffic system to kick start your organic traffic.

10) Start a low-cost Google AdWords campaign for each niche and keyword grouping. Important: Make sure you know how to use Google AdWords effectively before you try this!

11) Continue maintenance promotion while you start your next niche.

Congratulations, Trump! Your VRE empire is starting to grow.

It’s Easier than it Looks

It might look a little complicated, but the approach is very logical. You’re capitalizing on an under-served niche by snatching the bulk of the search traffic related to it, plain and simple.

I will be following up with you soon to explain each step in further detail, but I hope that gives you a good idea of where we’re going here.

This blueprint will work if you work it, so take action. The timing will never be perfect, so start building for your future while you have a chance and while you’re excited about where you can take yourself.

It won’t be easy. It will require some effort, and at times you’ll wonder if the traffic will ever come. IT WILL — provided you did SOLID keyword analysis.

Keyword Analysis Comparison: SEO, Keyword, Travis

I received an e-mail last night that I wanted to address. It doesn’t come up frequently, but I do hear it with respect to keyword and SEO software.

Keyword and SEO software tends to be expensive. It’s unfortunate, but keyword analysis and SEO is a constantly changing field, so the software must constantly evolve. That’s one big reason for the cost. The second largest factor is because the market has settled on the current price, and until one software maker lowers their price considerably, the current prices will remain.

Another service I like to use is Wordtracker, which I often plug into Keyword Elite. I love Wordtracker’s results, but it’s incredibly cumbersome to manage keyword research with their tools, so I just manage them with Keyword Elite. Wordtracker costs $60 per month, recurring every month!

Keyword Elite pays for itself many times over, but I know it can be hard to justify the cost. I also use SEO Elite, which is similarly priced.

There is another option, however. If you consider yourself a “lite” user, meaning that you run few campaigns, or only need the basic or core functionality of keyword and SEO tools, Traffic Travis attempts to find a middle ground.

The best way I can describe Traffic Travis is a slimmed down version of Keyword Elite and SEO Elite, but combined into one tool. You can read more about it at the following URL, but I’ll give you the broad feature breakdown below.

Whatever you do, I urge you to choose at least one keyword analysis tool to add to your toolkit. I don’t know how anyone can run a profitable web site or blog without one, but I can’t complain, because if everyone used them, then I wouldn’t be able to get such great results with them!

Keyword Elite

1) Analyze Pay Per Click Listings: Easily find low-cost and high to moderate traffic keywords that will make you money.

2) Create A Keyword List: Easily build 50,000+ keyword lists for your website and blog needs.

3) Select A Keyword List: Quickly grab your keyword list and prepare it for your Adwords campaigns and page builder software.

4) Analyze Keyword Competition: Allows you to quickly see how hard it will be to rank well for a specific search term. You can easily see if your competition is ranked well by “accident,” or if they’re going to be tough to outrank.

5) Spy on Adwords Competition: Monitor which keywords, and how long your competitors are bidding on them in Google Adwords. Then, take that list of guaranteed profitable keywords and plug them into your own Adwords campaign.

View Keyword Elite details

Traffic Travis

1) Create A Keyword List: Easily build keyword lists for your website and blog needs.

2) Analyze Keyword Competition: Allows you to quickly see how hard it will be to rank well for a specific search term. You can easily see if your competition is ranked well by “accident”, or if they’re going to be tough to outrank.

3) Find Candidate Sites: Find the best people to link to. This is similar to a feature in SEO Elite.

4) Monitor Positioning: Monitor your status and ranking in the search engines. This is similar to a feature in SEO Elite.

5) Misc. Tools: Manage backlinks, manage AdWords campaigns, Whois tool, create surveys

View Traffic Travis details

Conclusion

All-in-all, for my money, I use SEO Elite and Keyword Elite. But Traffic Travis is a good way to get some of the core functionality of each of these tools at a lower price point.

Free Keyword Research Tools

Well, you’ve heard me go on and on about keyword research, and I’ve showed you the tools I use for my research, along with my reasons for using them. But today I wanted to share with you some free
tools for keyword research.

These tools are powerful, but very cumbersome. While I like the data that they spit out, they require far too much time and their results are far less actionable than the ones I get with Micro Niche Finder and Keyword Elite. However, depending on your needs, and the volume of keyword research that you do, you might find them helpful.

So here they are, in no particular order. Try them out on a niche that you’re investigating — they’re all free:

Google Keyword Metrics Tool

Searches for PPC maximum bid, search volume, competition, sample ads, and expected AdSense revenues for a niche keyword. This is one of my favorite free keyword tools, but I find that the data tend to be misleading.

http://www.technobloggie.com/keyword-tool/index.php

Google Sets

This is a neat tool from Google Labs that creates sets of keywords revolving around a main keyword. No search or competition data is made available, so you wouldn’t use this for keyword research; rather, you’d use it to make sure your latent semantic indexing was optimized (advanced search topic).

http://labs.google.com/sets

Google Trends

This is a tool I frequently use when validating a chosen niche that I’ve found through keyword research. It shows you search trends over time, so that you can tell if your niche popularity is on the upswing or if you’re too late to capitalize on it, or if your niche receives more search traffic during certain times of the year.

http://google.com/trends

SEO Keyword Density Tool

You can use this tool to analyze your pages and posts to determine their keyword density. A “natural” density tends to be around 1 percent, but for an optimized post or site, you’ll want to shoot for 2 percent or more.

http://websitetips.com/seo/tools/keywords/#freekeywordanalysis

Keyword Spy

If you are targeting a niche, type your keywords in here to see who your largest paid competitors are (those using AdWords).

http://www.keywordspy.com/

Blogging in Action’s Keyword Sheriff

“Wait, you guys have your own keyword tool, but you still use Keyword Elite?” Yes, that’s right! The biggest problem with our keyword research tool is that it doesn’t paint a complete picture. But it might provide you with just the information you need to move forward.

http://www.BloggingInAction.com/files/Keyword-Sheriff.zip

I hope you find these tools helpful. They’re certainly no replacement for a proper keyword research tool, but they can give you some additional information that you can use for research or validation.

Keyword Advantage #2: Piggyback your Competitors’ Efforts

The topic of this e-mail is near and dear to my heart because it has saved me tons of money and countless hours of frustration over the past two years.

Google AdWords is a tremendous advertising platform. It has never been easier or cheaper to gain new customers than through the use of AdWords. But getting the most out of your AdWords campaigns can
be brutally difficult.

Keyword selection is paramount. You must choose keywords that will attract the right number of clicks, but you want to avoid those keywords with too much competition or you’ll find yourself paying an astronomically high cost-per-click rate. And it’s also imperative that you break your keywords into logically related campaigns, or you’ll have great difficulty getting your bearings.

Then you have to worry about ad copy. It takes thousands of impressions and hundreds of clicks just to test a few ads. What if you need to target several audiences? You might find yourself paying for several thousand clicks to determine which ad leads to the most clicks and which ad converts the best.

What if you could select the perfect keyword groupings, with high search traffic but little competition? That’s a few problems solved.

But better, what if you could let someone else — let’s make it your competitors — pay for testing the perfect ads for you? It doesn’t sound possible, does it? But it is, and the answer is obvious, but just as painful to carry out — unless you have Keyword Elite.

If your company is selling widgets with Google AdWords, what would you do with your worst performing ads? Ditch them quickly, I bet. And what would you do with your best-performing ads? Show them as
frequently as possible, unless you like flushing money down the toilet. Therein lays the answer. (Not the toilet part!)

To determine the best ads for your keywords, you monitor your keywords for three to four weeks, and collect statistics on which ads are displayed when searches are performed. The more often an ad appears in the search results, the more confident you can be that the ad is profitable. If after three weeks, you see that one ad shows up far more frequently than others for your keywords, you then have just the template to use as the basis for an ad.

You’ve effectively piggybacked off of all of the effort and expense your competitor wasted perfecting the ad! Keyword Elite does this automatically for you, for as many keywords as you want. You could
monitor competition in hundreds of keywords with just a few clicks of the mouse.

This is incredibly powerful. Whenever I will be doing an AdWords campaign, I start spying on the competition weeks in advance. When my campaign launches, I’m usually able to find a winning ad in under $100 and two weeks, vs. several hundred dollars over the course of a few months.

When time and speed to market are important to you, this feature is a godsend. Stop wasting time and money, and start using Keyword Elite! It will help you find exactly which keywords and which ads will convert for YOU.

I would strongly urge you to view the video of this process in action, because it will answer some questions you have and show you how easy and effective this tactic can be. Check out the “Project Number 5″ video. It’s amazing to see this in action.

Keyword Advantage #1: Optimize your Pages Effectively

You’ve probably seen already why I love using keyword research tools so much, but in case you haven’t, I’ll recap my top reasons for using them. Of course, the sky’s the limit with these kinds of tools, because they give you access to *data.* Once you have that data, you can do all kinds of neat things with it (we’ll look at some of those things in the future). All of those things can be packaged pretty neatly into these categories:

  • You can attract more search referrals
  • You can attract higher-quality traffic (EXTREMELY important; traffic is no good unless it’s qualified — keyword research is how you qualify it)
  • You can “predict” what your readers want to see in your pages and posts
  • You can quickly and easily increase the relevance and keyword density of your pages
  • All of which lead to higher profitability per visitor (that really is the bottom line, isn’t it?)

Optimizing Page Content with Keyword Elite

Rather than getting into an overly technical explanation of page optimization, let’s just review a scenario-based description of using Keyword Elite to help you target the content of your page.

In this example, you are going write a blog on . . . creating a blog! We’re going to assume that you create your blog and are able to achieve a top 10 ranking for your targeted keywords. To keep things simple, we’ll further assume that you aren’t selling any products, but have decided to monetize your blog only with AdSense.

Without keyword research:

If you’re experienced, you’ll at least brainstorm some keywords that represent the theme of your blog. You settle on “create blog,” “blogging how-to,” “blogging for beginners,” and “build blog.” Simple enough. So you write content, deploy your blog, market it extensively, and you’re able to achieve a Google top 10 ranking. Congratulations!

Now it’s time to rake in some cash, right? Not so fast! You check your AdSense account and find yourself earning $1.10 per day. One dollar for all of your work?? What gives?

1) There weren’t many searches for your keywords; 2) there was high competition for your keywords; 3) your click-through rate hovered around 1% because your pages weren’t focused enough.

With keyword research:

You plug your four keywords into Keyword Elite and find that the most effective keywords for your blog are actually “how to start a blog,” “make a blog,” “how do I create a blog,” and “how do i start a blog.” You know these are the most effective because Keyword Elite suggested these keywords to you based on their high KEI.

The keyword effectiveness indicator (KEI) takes factors such as the number of searches and the amount of competition into account to help determine keyword profitability. Obviously, if you use keywords
that have little competition, but are searched for frequently, you’ll do much better. Keyword Elite tells you that.

After determining your top keywords, you run another Keyword Elite project to analyze your competition. Keyword Elite will review the top pages for your keywords, and let you see how heavily optimized
they are. If you see one that is off-the-charts optimized, take a look at how they did it and emulate their tactics. If you see a hole, then you’ve got a good shot at ranking highly provided you do your work.

Now it’s time to rake in some cash, right? Correct! You check your AdSense account and find yourself earning $27.52 per day. What gives?

1) You chose the exact keywords that were being searched for the most in your niche; 2) you chose keywords with low competition; 3) You created targeted, optimized content that yielded a click-through rate approaching 5%.

That’s a 2500% increase over choosing your own keywords! In this example, from one optimized site, you could earn $800 additional per month! If you aren’t choosing keywords to focus your content, why
aren’t you? And if you are choosing keywords, why aren’t you using Keyword Elite?

It’s never too early and it’s never too late to perform keyword research.

To find out more about how you can use Keyword Elite to improve your search rankings, focus your content, and earn more money, there are some great videos available for you to watch. Check out the “Project #2″ video to see the above tactics in action!

Niche Research Tools: Finding Hot Topics for Blog Posts

I’ve told you before that I like to use auto-pilot sites and blogs to bring in passive income. I’ve gotten a lot of questions about how I find great niches to attack with these auto-pilot sites. I addressed these questions in the auto-pilot group, and I thought I’d mention them to you because they can be used in conjunction with keyword research to find hot blog topics to post about. Hot topics with low competition equals traffic to your blog!

Before I mention these free research tools, if you have any interest in earning passive income from auto-pilot sites, you’ll want to check out the auto-pilot members group (and claim two free case study e-books).

Believe me when I tell you that finding a good niche isn’t easy, but it very much becomes second nature after you do it for a few months. You begin to notice patterns here and there, which lead to hunches, and those hunches can then be validated pretty easily. Provided you know how to validate them.

So here are some of the free online services I use to validate my niche research. Using these services will alert you to what people are searching for today, and if you can tie what they want to one of your new blog posts, you can capitalize on this extra search traffic.

So here they are, in no particular order:

Yahoo! Buzz
———–
http://buzzlog.buzz.yahoo.com/overall/

The Lycos 50
————
http://50.lycos.com/

Google Trends
————-
http://google.com/trends

Trendhunter Popular List
————————
http://www.trendhunter.com/popular

AOL Hot Searches
—————-
http://hotsearches.aol.com/

eBay Pulse
———-
http://pulse.ebay.com/

current.com’s Google Current
—————————-
http://current.com/topics/76253632_google_current?sort=currentness

Barnes & Noble Bestseller List
——————————
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/bestsellers/top100.asp

You probably noticed a pattern in the above, which should point to another success factor that you should try to address with your niche research: find a hot niche, attack it quickly, and generate traffic ASAP. That’s how you capture search traffic and Page Rank. Provided that your blog is seeded with content and you’re using the Google XML Sitemap plug-in, your new posts should be ranking in Google’s index very quickly.

Forum Marketing: Hated, But Devastatingly Effective!

If I had to name one thing that shocks more people about blogging than any other topic, it’s traffic generation. Namely, that there is no “magic” tool that will send hordes of visitors to your blog for no effort. Rather, it’s a systematic and labor-intensive process to build readership over time.

Sure, I use traffic programs like Traffic Kahuna, Ethic Links, and the like, but they are just tools that help me manage the work that must be done. The bottom line is that no matter how they’re wrapped up, and no matter what fancy names people apply to them, the top traffic generation methods are simple. Today I’d like to go into a little more detail about one of those effective methods: forum participation.

The concept is simple:

1) Find good forums in your niche that use “dofollow” links, meaning the “nofollow” attribute is absent. Good means high traffic, high Page Rank forums that allow signatures.

2) Create a profile, learn the rules of the forum, and create an effective signature.

3) Post frequently on each forum, visiting several times a week, and write good posts. No spam!

Proper execution, though, is lost on 90 percent of those who try forum marketing. Here are some additional tips to help you market your blog effectively through the forums.

1) Fill out your profile completely, and show off your personality. You’re trying to attract readers! Give forum viewers an opportunity to see what they’ll find on your blog each day. That includes a GOOD avatar. Silly, but it makes a big difference.

2) FOCUS. Limit posting to 30 minutes, 1 hour, 2 hours, whatever. Time your efforts and constantly remind yourself to stay focused. You’re participating, yes, but participating with a purpose. Be careful that you don’t end up browsing and lurking.

3) Shoot for 10 good posts per forum per week. A good post is filled with good, informational content.

4) Make a list of your top blog posts, their URL’s, and related keywords. Use the list to help you find the right discussions.

5) If you can’t find the right discussion, create them. Ask a question, solicit opinions, and be sure to state your position.

6) Craft a compelling signature. Point to your anchor posts, a special offer, a review page, a freebie. This serves two purposes: increases your direct traffic and builds a deep backlink to your blog.

7) If you don’t have time (or the will) to make these posts, find someone on Elance who will post for you. Post a descriptive project, make sure the poster has good writing skills, give him or her posting guidelines (length, frequency, quality). Be specific!

It’s always best to go with someone who already has knowledge in your niche. I usually request an average of 10 posts per day for 10 days, for a price of $100. I also request no active promotion — just participation and a signature file. When the contract is complete, I retain rights to the posting account so that I can change the signature for any future promotion effort. Instant links!

8) Track your results. You need to track the traffic you get from each forum so you know which efforts to ramp up and which ones to cut off. “You can expect what you inspect.” Measure everything!

This isn’t rocket science, but it requires effort. And this is what turns most people off blog promotion. You need to virtually shake a lot of hands to build good readership, but the effort will pay off in the long run.

To speed this process up, you can use software — not for spamming, but for managing your comment campaign. The software will help you manage your accounts, manage your logins, track the forums that
you’ve posted in, track responses to your posts, and so on. Not such a big deal when you only post to one forum, but when you’re managing 20-30 accounts, it becomes a lifesaver.

How much does this software cost? Why, it’s free for members of this group! Download it here

Good luck with your promotion efforts.

Using Keywords to Title Your Blog Posts

This is another topic that is so vital that it can’t be said enough. You absolutely MUST pay attention to the keywords you are focusing your content around if you want to maximize your search traffic and improve your blog’s profitability. Here are a few reasons why you should do keyword research:

  • It helps you keep your blog content tightly focused
  • It helps you determine which post titles will attract the most search traffic
  • It helps you gauge competition
  • It helps you attract highly qualified traffic
  • It allows you to see how much search traffic there is for a niche
  • It prevents you from wasting time on topics that aren’t searched or profitable

All of which lead to more relevant content, which is the cornerstone of highly profitable contextual advertising. Profitability isn’t everything, but we all have to eat!

As an example, say you were given a choice between a truckload of peaches or a truckload of pears to sell at a farmer’s market. What would you choose? Probably whichever one you liked the best, but
the question you would be asking is “Which fruit sells the best?” If you knew that, on average, 100 peaches sold every day at the market, but 1000 pears sold every day, you would choose pears in a
heartbeat. That’s what keyword research tells you: exactly what people are looking for every time they search; but even better, it allows you to find out how much competition there is for a keyword.

Keyword research is not an optional activity for professional bloggers. It is a necessity. This is one of the things that will set you apart from all of those people who are killing themselves trying to churn out a few Adsense dollars each day. You’ve simply got to do it.

Craft a Compelling Title with Keywords

For each of your anchor posts, you should be doing keyword research. This doesn’t mean that you should limit your writing to only those topics that generate search traffic, but it does mean that you should describe your posts in such a way that they attract maximum traffic.

The process is just as you would expect. Extract the keywords from your post, and plug them into your keyword software. Your software will present you with a long list of related keywords that you might not have even thought of. Analyze those words with the software and look for the number of searches, the number of competing results, and the KEI, which is a measurement of the effectiveness of a keyword. A good strategy is to keyword the title and first paragraph of your story with those words with the highest KEI’s.

It’s a wonderfully simple way to grab extra search traffic, and many of your competitors aren’t doing it, so get a leg up on them!

Learn More About Keywords + Free e-books

Keywords are so important that I address keyword topics exclusively in another member group. Learn more about keyword research or join this group. I am giving away two free e-books, “AdSense Arbitrage” and “AdWords Made Easy,” for new members of this group. I hope you’ll join us because we have plenty of great tips to share!

Good luck and USE YOUR KEYWORDS!

What to Do When You Run Out of Content Ideas

I’m guessing that you’re right in the thick of things by now, hopefully generating unique content hand over fist. But I wanted to address what happens when you run out of ideas — and it will happen! Here are some ideas to help you uncover new blog posts, or worst case scenario, give you content even when you’ve run out of ideas for new posts. Don’t worry, if it does happen, it’s just temporary.

How to Find Content Inspiration

1) Subscribe to like-minded blogs. What are they writing about? Can you respond to a post, add to a post, or dispute a post of theirs? Do their posts give you any ideas?

Don’t short-change this tactic. You will be amazed at the number of posts you can create by pseudo-collaborating with other bloggers, and it’s also a great way to get links and establish your credibility.

2) Browse forums in your field. What are people talking about? What problems are they having?

3) Try StumbleUpon! You can find clever, inspiring content with a few clicks.

4) Create a video of yourself doing something in your niche or completing a task. What’s second-nature to you could be news to someone else.

5) Review your blog comments — write about a common thread in those comments, or answer them in a new post.

6) Use Twitter! With Twitter, I really feel like I have my fingertips on the pulse of the niches I follow.

7) Write a tutorial.

8) Review a new service, business, web site, or book in your niche. This also gives you a way to earn some commissions. You could even set up a regular review day — maybe once every two weeks or so.

9) Interview your peers, and posts the results. Most bloggers are open to surveys from their peers, provided that it doesn’t look like social climbing.

“I Have NOTHING to Blog About!”

1) Write a recap post. Recap the week’s events, recap your favorite blog posts over the past week, recap the comments left on your blog, etc.

2) Start reaching out to guest bloggers. You can create an author account in your WordPress blog, allowing them to write content, but not publish it.

3) Use private label content (PLR). Private label content can be purchased, rewritten, and rebranded. Its quality varies, with the best stuff being available from PLR Pro. They limit distribution to 200 people and it’s well-written. Another option is InfoGoRound. The quality is not quite as good, and the content is not as exclusive, but it’s cheaper and you’re not limited to whatever the content of the month is.

Almost all other PLR content I have found is very, very, very, very bad.

4) Take a break, gather your best post ideas from the past, and go on a blog commenting campaign (see the book for how to do this). You can gain traffic, backlinks, and find ideas at the same time.

Writer’s block happens to every blogger from time to time, but if approached methodically, there’s no reason that it should slow you down.

Watch your Blog’s Tagline

I wanted to take a few moments today to address a very common situation that occurs after one first installs Wordpress and begins tinkering around with its themes and plug-ins.

Keep your Header and Tagline Synched

Wordpress is a snap to customize. Find a theme you like, upload and unzip it, then apply it and you’re done. Further customizations can be done in the theme editor or by editing the images that install with the theme.

Because it’s so easy, it’s very common to experiment with themes, jumping from theme to theme, attempting to find one that “fits” with the overall style of your blog. I gravitate towards newspaper themes, because they provide multiple template options, the front page can be easily customized, and because they are able to convey a lot of information and advertising in a small piece of real estate. By the way, be sure to check out the premium themes in Chapter 8 — many of those themes are very hard to track down, so you won’t find too many people using them.

The situation that I see very often is that a custom theme completely replaces the textual header that contains your blog name and headline. When you look at your blog, all looks well, because you see the header that shipped with the theme. The problem is in your RSS feed however, which pulls your blog description from the “Options” tab. This description is vital for folks who might be searching for relevant blogs at blog or RSS directory sites, so it’s important that you keep it updated.

The moral: always keep your tagline in the “Options” tab of your blog’s control panel in synch with the text that might be on any custom header you use.

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