Internet Marketing RSS 2.0
# Saturday, September 26, 2009
Do You Guess At What To Promote?

May I ask because I'm curious?

How often do you just **guess** at what markets and products to promote?

And how often does that lead to a campaign that hauls in the loot for you?

And it's okay...

We've all done it...**guess** I mean.

What if?

What if we could get a multi-million dollar corporation to do ALL the work for you?

And...

What if all that research was AVAILABLE FREE?...and all you had to do was know where to look...and how to look?

The happy news is...the work IS done for you...

And my friend David wants to show you this 'secret site'...

You don't have to opt in or anything...

You do have to scroll down 1/2 way on the page and look for

**How To Find A Profitable Niche To Sell To...the Movie**

Then if this helps you as much as I think it will...and you like David's style...

 


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keyword research
# Friday, September 25, 2009
What is a "buying" keyword?

It is a keyword that is used by a customer who is ready to buy. It separates the buyers from the those looking for information only. I'm sure you have come across keywords that have plenty of traffic, but no sales. Those are keywords used by people who are just browsing.

You need to concentrate on the buying keywords. There is a new system that locates these buying keywords you. It will change the way you perform keyword research.

What can it do for you?
  • The fastest way to become a niche super affiliate
  • The quickest way to Generate record-breaking affiliate commissions
  • The easiest way to make more money online… guaranteed
  • The easiest way to sell anything online… guaranteed
 


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keyword research
# Monday, July 27, 2009

The following is an email I sent to Marshall Alder who has been having trouble with One Week Marketing from PotPieGirl.

I think the methods may work, but you really have to get into the long tail keywords. Did you get the Bum Marketing course from Travis? It talks about finding the right long tail keywords which I think is half the battle.

http://www.bummarketingmethod.com/

I agree with Travis and before I ever read his materials, I was using The Google Keyword Tool and plain old Google Search Results to conduct my research. It's all free. In a nutshell here it is...

1) Find a product. PotPieGirl says find either a market or a product, but I personally start with a product. I do think cb-analytics.com is a good place to go, because clickbanks marketplace is hard to navigate. I also like CommissionJunction.com, but let's stick with ClickBank.

Now, I think the product has to have some gravity. Gravity indicates that somebody is making sales. That means there is a market. Plus the sales letter has to be doing its job if other affiliates make money. Of course too much gravity may mean there's already a ton of affiliates out there. I'm really still trying to define a good gravity point, I'd recommend 50 for now.

http://www.cb-analytics.com/

2) Take a main keyword for the product or the primary market and go to the google keyword tool, and pull up all the related keywords. Look for keyword that have about 1000, maybe even 2000 global monthly searches. Any more than this and there probably too much competition. Of course, you never know until you look, so give a few higher volume ones a try. Find ten long tail keywords that you will research further.

https://adwords.google.com/select/KeywordToolExternal

3) go to plain old Google.com and search for your ten keywords. Wrap each one in double quotes, do a search and see how many pages returned there are (this is called "phrase" match). Travis says you want keywords with less than 1000 competing pages. I agree.

Hopefully, 5 of your 10 keywords fit the 1000 or less competing pages rules. If not, go back to the keyword tool and get another 10 keywords, and look at the competition for them.

4) After you have 5 low competition keywords, start building your Squidoo lenses, writing articles, everything PotPieGirl recommends.

Again, I think if you put more into the keyword research, you get more out.

 


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Affiliate
# Saturday, June 27, 2009

This is a video from Hal Varian, the Chief Economist at Google. It's a great in depth explanation of how the Adwords Ad Auction system works.

He explains how vital the Quality Score is to a Successful Adwords Campaign. The video explains the Quality Score is calculated. It also explains how it plus your CPC determines ad position. Quality score is the reason your Adwords Campaign will be a success, or the reason it will fail. The Free Adwords Strategy Guide show you how to improve your Quality Scores and Save Money. Request your copy of the Free guide.

 


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Adwords
# Wednesday, June 03, 2009

I had question from one of my customers regarding the keyword level destination url. It seems there some confusion between the adgroup level destination url and the keyword level one. Below is my reply.

There are two kinds of campaigns you can generate with the campaign creator. One, the recommended way of one adgroup per keyword, which results in multiple adgroups. Two, a campaign with a single adgroup and each keyword in the adgroup has a keyword-level destination url. If you "switch to advanced mode" you get the choice to generate multiple adgroups or a single adgroup in the dropdown labelled "AdGroup".

Now, a keyword-level destination is a url attached to the keyword. If you are familiar with adwords, you know you use syntax like this...

   Keyword ** Max CPC ** Destination URL

This provides a keyword-level CPC and Destination url. Thus you can have single adgroup with multiple keywords and multiple destination urls.

A regular destination url is at the adgroup level, and applies to all keywords.

You must have a destination url, in one form or another.

The error message "No need to apply destination url to keyword if generating multiple ad groups." means you have the "Adgroup" dropdown set at "multiple" and you've checked the "Keyword dest. url". What you are saying is generate mutlkiple adgroups with one keyword per adgroup, but then give that one keyword a keyword-level destination url. The system is preventing you from doing that. The only way you'd ever want to check the "Keyword dest. url" checkbox is if you set the "adgroup" dropdown to "single".

 


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campaign creator
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