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hello House How was your day hope you have a great one today we are going to be continuing from from yesterday today will be day 4 right if you miss the other please go and study them for good understanding ok , so let us begin .
I try to look for stuff between 7 and 50 gravity if I’m promoting a Clickbank product – that means it’s got a little traffic coming in, and it’s not oversaturated with high dollar guys who are spending thousands of dollars on campaigns and drowning me out. Take notes on this stuff because when you’re ready, you can plug these products into my keyword research system and get a lot of strong, targeted keywords from people who can be helped by the kind of products we’re promoting.
Desperate Buyers
Think about things in life that cause serious PAIN. Think of the thing that made you the most terrified during your life – was it dealing with grief? A wart, a sore, surviving without having enough money? Stress is a big motivator when it comes to buying, and you can exploit that stress and offer a helpful solution. Everyone has their own thought process when it comes to stuff like this, but I tend to think of illnesses. Cold sores, toothaches, yeast infections, gout. Stuff that’s either annoying or physically painful but can be helped if you buy a product.
Take one good look at MarketHeath ( http://www.markethealth.com/)– most people are familiar with Amazon, but MarketHealth offers awesome commissions on high dollar products that people are desperate to buy – this is a great alternative if you’re passionate about health and fitness and helping people solve really depressing problems.
Finally, point your browser to affiliate networks like NeverBlue
( http://www.neverblue.com) and Clickbooth ( http://www.clickbooth.com).
These are two of the web’s biggest CPA networks. Instead of getting paid for sales, you’ll get paid when people fill out an offer or give a company some personal information. Generally, you get paid a little less, but in higher volume as people usually don’t mind giving up their address for a free sample of a product you’ve sold them on.
The guys who run CPA networks are pretty hard-nosed and don’t like newbies and time-wasters. If you can talk about IM well enough to do a phone interview and sound like you know what you’re talking about, you’ve got a good chance of being accepted though.
You can even take the list you’ve made from 43Things and distilled even further through
Clickbank and look for products that are tied to those words on Amazon.
I’m probably devoting too much time too this one: think of an interesting topic! It’s not that hard! And don’t putz around asking “will it make money? Are you sure? Gosh I’m such a fraidy cat!” or looking for some “secret niche” that will earn you zillions without competition.
You put one foot in front of the other and work. That’s how good things happen.
Evaluating Demand & Competition
Before we can settle on a particular niche or topic and start building our empire, we have to make sure it’s a viable niche – that there is money to be made, and that competition won’t prevent us from doing so.
In other words, we have to assess demand and competition.
Entire company’s, careers, and publications have been built on these functions, and we’ll delve into some deeper exercises and considerations in the “Experienced Marketers” sections, but for our initial primary purpose of niche selection, it’s pretty simple & straightforward.
Advertising
one of the quickest, surest, most straightforward means for assessing the viability of a niche is to see if money is being spent advertising in that niche.
How do we do that? Very simply: do a few searches on that topic or niche category. If you see advertisements on the right and on top, you know right off the bat that there is money to be made in this niche. This doesn’t mean that you’ll make money in this niche, we still have to assess competition. But a high number of advertisers tells us right away that companies are spending money to sell products or services because there is more money to be made.
Don’t limit yourself to just one search, try different searches, variations, etc. If you see very few or no advertisers, it doesn’t mean there aren’t opportunities; more than a few times we’ve found topics that had few or no advertisers, and made a lot of money as early entrants into a niche. For this blueprint however, we’re looking only for niches that we can validate.
In addition to playing searches, there are some tools which will tell you if companies are spending money to make money in a particular niche or topic.
Spyfu.com (http://www.spyfu.com/) is a terrific competitive intelligence tool. Typing your keyword or topic and see how many people are advertising, how much they’re paying, etc.
KeywordSpy Pro ( http://www.keywordspypro.com/ ) is another tool that will do this for you.
Keyword Research
Keyword research can tell us not only if there is money to be made, but give us the necessary intelligence about competition to see if we can make money there.
Once again, entire websites, publications, and careers are built entirely on the discipline of keyword research.
For that reason, it might be smart to hire a professional keyword researcher. It can be a little boring and time consuming and fraught with chances to mess things up – all things you don’t want. If you’re determined to learn this skill for yourself, check out the webinar from AdSense
Flippers here - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Vq9sWg7HNo – it goes into
quite a bit of visual detail. Remember that if you learn how to do this yourself, you can easily sell your skills for a bit of quick cash.
So what do you need for good keyword research? You need to be strong and you need to be thorough. Personally, I don’t like leaving any potential keywords on the table.
https://adwords.google.com/select/KeywordToolExternal
This is Google Keyword Tool, and it’s more or less Keywords Central online. Get yourself an account if you don’t have one already. It’s free. Now, let’s say we’ve picked a niche… and we want to promote a physical product like a sewing machine. Finding out which ones to target is as easy as typing.
I’d like to advise you not to spend too much time on Google’s keyword tool, as some of the information there can be deceptive. Remember that it’s targeted for AdWords advertisers, not
SEO-based marketers. The Competition bar shows the competition for paid advertisers for a given keyword – which is fine if you’re planning to monetize with AdSense, but isn’t too useful otherwise.
Download and boot up a copy of Market Samurai ( http://www.marketsamurai.com), an awesome and invaluable tool for researching profitable keywords. It costs about $100 dollars, but we’ve got a 30 day free trial to work with, and when you’re ready to buy, there are lots of sites that will give you a rebate for the product if you buy through them.
Anyway, go through the sign-up process, install the software, and let’s start a new project. We won’t need to start a new one for every keyword, although we might want to split them into categories, depending on how many keywords you’ve picked out.
Hopefully, by the time the trial is over, we’ve made enough money that we’re very comfortable with buying the software. Take a few seconds and log into AdWords using your browser, since Market Samurai likes to throw one of those annoying CAPTCHA boxes at you and then balk altogether if you aren’t logged in.
Check off the Google Keyword Tool checkbox and check “Include Additional” from the dropdown menu if it’s not there already - it’s going to give you a bigger list of keywords to choose from. Make sure you’ve got a minimum keywords list of 2 (don’t worry, you will probably never ever rank for a one keyword term).
Anyway, check the “Generate Keywords” button here.
There are a few options in the Keyword Research screen I want to draw your attention to:
Positive Keywords will exclude any keywords that DON’T include the word listed here.
Negative keywords will exclude any keywords that DO include the word listed here.
Generally words like “free” or “cheap” or “hacked” are all worth adding to your negative keywords. They ain’t interested in buying anything.
Now, let’s move on to keyword analysis. Set the match type to Exact and the Period to
Monthly. Change the filters from Golden Rule to None.
The resulting screen is pretty complicated, especially if you’re new to the software. But there are three basic questions you should ask – and all the information on this screen is geared towards answering one of them.
Are People Interested In This Topic?
I don’t stress out about SEOT, it’s a number based on 42% of total searches (ie, the number of hits they think you’d get as the #1 result), and that’s an extremely optimistic number that usually overestimates the initial traffic and the click through rate.
Instead, take a look at your total number of searches. As far as the number of total searches you want, I try to get at least 1,200 per month for each keyword. You can get ranked for a keyword this size even if you don’t have any resources. Remember, you can get ranked for a smaller keyword and then target tougher keywords from there.
Get a Phrase to Broad of at least 15%. This makes sure that people are looking specifically for the keyword we’re targeting instead of only part of it.
You should also take a quick glance at your trends line for targeted keywords. This only needs a quick glance. Some keywords are seasonal, and some niches are seasonal. Check out the results for the keyword “get ex-boyfriend” - they tend to drop off a little bit during the middle of the year and peak in the early months.
Is There Commercial Intent?
Use the SEOC rating – for the purposes of sorting. As you look at these keywords, ask yourself:
Do you know exactly what this person wants to read when they type this into a search engine? Are they looking to buy something or just learn about a topic?
Can we connect them to a product that will make us money?
Can we actually help them solve their problem?
Is there a good number of searches?
Get between 10 and 15 of these. Now, you’re probably a little bored with keywords, but you should absolutely take a little time and research your competition in those keywords you think look really sexy.
How Much Competition Is There?
There’s a popular myth that you can gauge competition by the number of pages that pop up when you type a phrase into a search engine – mostly spread by shady marketers who want to impress people by ranking for one of these “paper tiger” keywords.
But it’s not the be-all end all. Really, no matter what your keyword is, you have ten competing pages – the ones on the first page of Google. You can get a good view of this by loading up the Market Samurai competition module.
There are some really worthwhile batch competition research tools (Stealth Keyword
Competition Analyzer, among others), but let’s just plug them into Market Samurai’s SEO
Competition module and have a look at the top ten competitors.
Let’s start with (pick one) – just click the key icon.
Glance at the Page Rank (but don’t stress out about it). If the average on the page is somewhere around 3.5, we can jump on the top ten with only a bit of effort.
RD, referring domains. This is a sign of how many webpages are pointing at this specific URL.
BLP stands for Backlinked Pages. If this is a cloud of red, you’re going to need a lot of patience to crack this nut.
BLEG stands for Backlinks, EDU and GOV. Google gives a lot of credit to links that come from those kinds of sites. If you see a bunch of green here, it’s a weakness, and you’re going to attack it.
Finally, take a look at all those boxes on the right – basically they will tell us whether the site owner has optimized his or her page for these keywords. If you see a lot of green, you can assume you’re either dealing with a juggernaut who doesn’t need the juice, or an amateur who doesn’t know how to squeeze it.
Outsourcing It
http://www.myonlinebusinessjourney.c...word-research/
http://fiverr.com/beyondwebpros/do-i...-research-and-
provide-high-traffic-low-competition-keywords-on-a-given-niche
Choosing What To Promote
In order to make money as an affiliate, you need affiliate offers to promote, and visitors to purchase.
Choosing what to promote obviously depends on the niche or topic of your site, but for any given niche – and website – there will be offers that are better than others.
All things considered, more is better than less: all other things being equal, you want to promote products that pay out the highest commission.
But “all other things” are rarely equal. When choosing products to promote, you want to consider the following, roughly in order:
Product quality & value – whenever practical and appropriate, purchase products that you intend to promote. Some companies will provide free or lower-cost ‘review’ products for affiliates. Note: the more established you are, the more leverage you have and the more willing vendors will be to provide products.
Where it’s not feasible to actually see/use a product yourself, look for legitimate customer reviews, such as on Amazon or shopping sites. This will give you a sense of buyer’s satisfaction overall, and by extension, quality and value.
How well it fits with your site’s ‘reason for being’.
Conversion likelihood – a product that solves a pressing need will probably convert at a higher rate than a product that provides a lesser benefit.
Affiliate Tools – does the merchant provide any sales tools / aids such as graphics, product descriptions, etc.
Commission / Payout.
Cookie duration. A cookie is a snippet of information, stored on a computer that identifies that computer during the current and subsequent visits to a web site. Each cookie is coded to identify that computer during the current and subsequent visits to the merchant’s web site – it’s how a merchant or affiliate network knows to credit you with commission on a sale.
Cookies have a duration – they could last for a single session (expiring if a sale isn’t made on the initial click-through), or 24 hours, or 90 days, or a year, or just never expire. Knowing the duration is crucial; given the option, you want to promote products that have at least a 30-90 day cookie.
One-time vs. recurring commissions. While most affiliate products are one-off purchases, there are many that have some recurring component, such as monthly fees or subscription.
In addition, many products that require or use ‘consumables’ pay you for those as well, providing the base product was purchased through your affiliate link.
Affiliate network or vendor. The larger affiliate networks are very reliable, however smaller/newer networks can and do go out of business, as do the occasional direct vendor or merchant. There are few things worse in this business than earning commissions and then not getting paid.
Other Considerations
Another consideration to take into account is commission rate plans. Amazon, for instance, has a ‘sliding scale’ that ups your commission percentage as you reach higher sales volumes.
As such, it may make sense to promote additional Amazon products rather than products from disparate vendors in order to reach the higher commission level.
Other issues to consider include how often you get paid, what the payout ‘threshold’ is, and how you get paid i.e. via Paypal, check, direct deposit, etc.
Terms Of Service
Whenever you join an affiliate network or sign up to a direct affiliate program, be sure to read the Terms of Service, or “TOS”.
You’ll want to make sure there aren’t any restrictions that may interfere or cause problems down the road. For instance, some merchants prohibit affiliates from using their brand name with paid traffic sources such as such as Google’s Adwords.
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