7 SEO Tips to Make More Money Online

by hnss999007 on 2009-11-30 13:09:03

The SEO Deterioration Zombie is here - we don't want to drive high-quality traffic from search engines, but people often see some rare mistakes that minimize the old sales expenses. Here are 7 SEO techniques to help you get more traffic to your website for less money, whether it's a niche site or a flagship monster.

After all, only the first place counts – actually, just the top 5. If you have rankings on pages one or two down, you won't get much. Of course, you can get traffic on pages 2 and 3, but it's very minimal. I had a ranking on page 3-4 early in my SEO journey, blogged about increasing link exchanges in 2009! This was a high-traffic period, and I can tell you, my SEO hand knows how to use Google SEO insights, and I had long-term traffic rankings. All of you "make money online" in your titles and ranked #150; you're wasting time moving forward. Let me talk about my last point.

Start long, then short - we focus on long-tail keywords, which are more specific, low competition, and low traffic keywords. This allows you to quickly rank for these keywords. "But Justin, long-tail keywords aren't worth so much." My #7-#10 rankings for "SEO techniques" bring me more traffic than my #30 ranking for "more SEO." Heaven, my branded keyword searches bring me more traffic than doing "SEO." So my suggestion is to target primarily long-tail keywords as your goals. So, if you want "make money online," for example, do "learn how to make money online," then "how to make money online," then "make money online," and finally "earn money." The traffic you gain at each stage will allow you to grow and make money while you build up to the golden phrase.

Multiple keywords per page - be innovative with your title tags, using phrases that include multiple keywords. Of course, using "keyword1 | keyword2 | keyword3" works, but it looks like SEO from ten years ago. Look at this title: "7 SEO Techniques to Make More Money Online." The title is catchy and can serve as link bait. People will link to this title more than they would to their "keyword-rich" titles. Looking at all the keywords its purpose serves, here’s just a big list: how to make more money, online earning tips, make more money, earn more money online, online earning tips, make more money, SEO techniques, ways to make more money, etc. If someone links to my title, I get authority for all these keyword phrases. I still use the keyword-rich method for my affiliate sites, but I see the value in a title that naturally includes many keywords.

Still on links - there's no time I do SEO too complicated without considering the role of outgoing links, final quotas, and juice leakage. I hate the fact, which is why the main topic of this blog is "SEO" and the second topic is "making money." Ignoring all the theories aside, rankings still depend on links. The SEO game keeps changing, but if you just learn the basic functions of running a site, all you need to know is that rankings are about good linking. Don’t let all the discussions, incoming theories, and ideas stop you. Remember, you need other websites talking about you and linking to relevant content.

Human editors provide the best links - I hit this tool because human editorial networks include promoting many sites. Human interest, education, and money. Automated methods are not a bad way to distribute your link bait, but remember, human editors create the best results. If you want to avoid any semi-competition, you should focus on the human element and get "good links." These may involve linkbait, content creation, networking, or buying links.

Every niche is different - this is where people enter and fall into the trap of expecting every item to perform the same. Questions like "how many links do I need?" "How long does this take?" "What currency should I use?" It all depends. I believe Google uses niche/specific-keyword algorithms and targets/keyword-related requests. I've seen great farming emphasis and done something else entirely. I've seen how optimization can harm your competitive advantage. I've seen fully matched links rank without issue on head-specific sites but harm me in competitive markets. I've invested in a 5000 unique visitor site, months later ranking in the top 5 for each related keyword, but not in the top 100 for the main keyword. The search traffic came mostly from long-tail phrases and 0 visitors from my keyword targeting, even though I had 500% more links. Also, traffic isn't always equal. Traffic varies depending on some keywords, heavier on certain demographics. If I knew 80% of the website visitors were 18-30-year-old women, it gives me great power. I know how to bait links for this age group, I know how to sell to them. In this case, I am a successful personal marketing person, so I know how to network with them. Knowing your site owner is a 25-year-old guy who plays Warcraft versus a 45-year-old who runs a hunting blog makes a huge difference. I can convince the 25-year-old to give me a link, but the hunting guy is a small challenge (for me, or maybe not for you). Being successful in one niche doesn't mean you'll succeed in another.

Your monetization might not fit - too many people use Adsense as a monetization method because it's "easy" to set up, but it's not a profitable monetization method for everyone. I don't run AdSense ads. I don't think I've ever run AdSense ads with intent-based subtlety. If you want to make the same users' money, you need to consider other ways. For instance, if I find a good positioning for a "buy product" keyword, I won't use AdSense; I'll use eBay through PHP. When it comes to keywords, consider demographic keywords and user intent. For example, if you want to make money through AdSense, you need to consider what keywords you generate.

[Link provided for reference] http://www.6du.net.cn/seo-jiqiao-zhuanqian.html