Tuesday 28 January 2014

[Build Great Backlinks] Why Google Pushed Me to Build a (Bigger) Link Network

Build Great Backlinks


link-networkIn 1865, Fredik Idestam built a pulp mill on the banks of the Tammerkoski River in southwestern Finland. He soon added a papermaking machine. As with any papermaking company at the time, much of what the company produced was used for stationery, newsprint, and books – the primary means of communication before the age of television, radio, and telephone. So in a way, it was in the communications business.

By 1900, it was already one of the biggest paper producers in Finland and was looking for growth opportunities. Electricity was a rapidly growing source of energy at the time. So in 1902 it decided to build its own electric generators and sell the current to local businesses. By the end of the 1920s, however, the company was struggling financially so it decided to join forces with Finnish Rubber Works.

Rubber (being a natural insulator for electricity) offered obvious synergies for the combined companies. By the early 1920s, telephone service was a rapidly growing business and cables were still being laid from city to city. In 1922, the Finish Cable company was wisely added to this growing conglomerate. Over the next several decades, it continued to expand smartly into adjacent industries and around the world.

By 2010, it had become a $40 billion company, with operations in 120 countries around the world, and a market leader in its main business line, which is still communications.

You know the company by the same name it had a hundred years ago when it was producing paper in Finland–Nokia.

I really love this story because it shows a company reacting to a changing landscape and thriving because of it. Often, I feel like we have to do the exact same thing when it comes to SEO. Whether or not an idea fits perfectly within Google’s guidelines.

I Never Wanted to Build a (Bigger) Link Network

The reason I say bigger link network is because I’ve built them before and honestly believe everyone should try building one. Every single person who is active in SEO – especially those who do it for clients – should have built at least one link network for testing purposes. It’s not like anyone is forcing you to actually use the links for your authority sites; there’s very little to lose by testing them out in a new industry.

To be honest with you, I’ve never wanted to have to build a bigger link network. Or I should really say lots of small ones around different industries. To give you an idea of scale, my own network will probably be well past 1,000 domains before the end of this year. I’m not looking forward to the renewal fees, but they have more than paid for themselves already.

I’m aware that admitting and even talking about building a link network probably doesn’t put this brand in a very good light. Please spare the jokes about this brand already having a bad reputation ;) . Put simply, my motto for this blog is, and always has been, “write what I would want to read.” That’s where 100% of my material comes from–topics I wish other people were writing about in such detail.

This may seem like quite a strange topic for someone who, for eight years, has been highly focused on the Google “right way”. Not too much has changed there because I still believe in the Google way. If you could overly-simplify the Google algorithm and say that they just want “great resources for end users which pick up links naturally” then I think that’s a great model. It’s obviously an ideal in the perfect world.

The problem, of course, is that it just doesn’t work. Building a search engine to correctly order billions of web pages for billions of queries has to be one of the greatest computational challenges in human history. I genuinely believe that. But the challenge really shows and the end result is something I can only describe as Google search results not being fair based on the guidelines they set.

Not everyone gets the same treatment, so why should we all act the same?

GoDaddy Makes Google Their Bitch (Again)

Over two years ago now, back in December 2011, Joost de Valk a.k.a Yoast wrote a interesting blog post about Godaddy performing spammy link building techniques. Yoast higlighted that Godaddy we’re using widgets on their website builder and linking back to their own website with anchor-text rich backlinks. He also revealed that it was working really well, having a huge impact on their search traffic in recent months.

godaddy-yoast

Two years later, this practice is still happily going on. Instead of just focusing on their website builder, Godaddy have also employed this tactic for people using their SSL certificates as well. If you do a Google search for SSL Certificate, I see Godaddy in first position (I removed the ads at the top for clarity purposes).

godaddy-ssl

It’s not a hugely surprising search result on the surface of things. After all, Godaddy are the biggest web hosting company in the world (based on number of customers) and a well-known brand in the industry, whether you like them or not.

Keep in mind his is a highly popular search term, with 40,500 exact searches per month and a recommended Adwords bid price of $14.58. I found the ranking as I was actually looking to purchase an SSL certificate, which is no-doubt a phrase where a lot of searches convert into buyers.

If you look at the anchor text profile before you look at the actual links to the page, you can just tell something unnatural is going on:

anchor-ssl

All of these perfect anchor-text links are of course coming from the widgets that GoDaddy are putting on client websites. Notice that under each graphic there is a text link there. Even more amazing is that some of these links are white text on a white background so you don’t see them unless you try to copy some text on the page. I assume webmasters have done this to try and hide the link without knowing how to modify the code GoDaddy gave them:

joke-godaddy

That picture should give you an idea of how they’re alternating the links, surely a practice not to look too unnatural (hah!) and rank for more terms.

And just look at how well it’s working:

  • “Secure servers” — Google Rank: #1
  • “Secure website” — Google Rank: #1
  • “about ssl certificate” — Google Rank: #5

And because some of you are super-smart you may be thinking that these are all very old and not a practice that Godaddy still gets involved in. I did purchase their SSL certificate and I was not given the link code but in both Ahrefs and MajesticSEO, a lot of these links have only been discovered in the last couple of months. I’ve included a screenshot of a few sample links in Ahrefs below:

ahrefs-latest

I also emailed Godaddy SSL support about this practice regarding site seals. It took a few emails for them to understand what I was talking about so I sent them the screenshot you see in this post of all the widgets with the links underneath. There was zero-denial in their reply:

godaddy-admit

It’s a practice that Yoast outed for their free site builder and it’s a practice they’ve also employed across other services they offer, such as SSL certificates. And because they have such a huge brand and user base already, even if you wanted to compete with them using this exact same tactic – which Google don’t like – you would stand little chance. The irony is that you would probably get penalised.

These links are not no-followed either which is Google’s recommendation for widget links; check the websites in that Ahrefs screenshot for examples (thanks to Mr. Floate for helping me with that). Is Google going to make Godaddy go and disavow these links and contact webmasters to take them down? Yeah right.

Cnet With More Brand Favoring

We actually came up with a classifier to say, okay, IRS or Wikipedia or New York Times is over on this side, and the low-quality sites are over on this side.” – Google’s Matt Cutts

Cnet are one of the best tech resources out there online. There are very few people who would question that statement. Google obviously think the same, because CNET manage to rank for an awful lot of web hosting related queries.

The problem? Their page has no reviews, no more than 100 unique words and is simply just pushing affiliate links.

cnet-spam

This is the page that is ranking 3rd in Google for “web hosting reviews” with over 12,000 searches per month and a suggested Adwords bid price of $14.65 per click. Yet, there are no reviews. The only thing I’ve missed from that screenshot is their Google ads at the bottom of the page. Don’t think those links on the sidebar will take you to anything substantial either. They have some forums, but even the hosting section I could only see one recent thread on actual hosting companies, which has 2 posts.

That page is ranking for a lot of alternatives on this term as well.

cnet-alternatives

Another page on the CNET website is actually competing with us in our XXX Niche Case Study and is very similar to what they have here (though obviously a different niche). A thin page, getting undeserved rankings purely because of their brand name.

Go and check out the backlinks to that page in Ahrefs. You’ll probably get a laugh out of it like I did.

The Rap Genius Drama Was a Joke

There have been many blog posts around the web on the controversy surrounding the Rap Genius drama so I’m not going to cover it in a lot of detail here. The short version of the tale is that Rap Genius, a lyrics website, were asking affiliates to place a number of links back to certain pages on their website to get higher search rankings for those terms.

Here’s what happened, in bullet-point form:

  • Rap Genius tried to throw all of their competitors under a bus by saying they were all doing it
  • Rap Genius failed to show any examples and ignored repeated emails asking for this information
  • Rap Genius were given special treatment by Google, getting to speak directly with their web spam team
  • Rap Genius were back in Google within 10 days (tell me when that’s ever happened to a site you know about)
  • One of the Rap Genius co-founders is a former product manager at Google
  • Rap Genius now have 20% more backlinks than they did before thanks to all of the press
  • Google got to reinforce their “don’t try to manipulate us” PR message
  • Google had zero idea about these backlinks until a blogger who previously had zero readers wrote about it

Next.

One Story in Millions of Being Unfairly Outranked

I was recently reading this article on Branded 3 about doing link removals. In the article they say they’ve had 60 manual penalties removed by not actually removing any links and just using the disavow tool. This is interesting, albeit strange, since in posts just a few months ago they said they do perform link removals.

What really caught my attention though was the comments section. There were quite a few angry webmasters there, with one example being Stephen. Here’s what he had to say:

stephen

Now, when I first read this comment I thought “I bet if I look at his website I can see where he’s going wrong very easily“. That’s probably a cynical approach, but I’ve came across many webmasters who can’t believe they’re not ranking well yet they have very few backlinks, they’re in a really difficult niche or some other fairly obvious reason.

That wasn’t the case for Stephen. I see no reason why he should have lost his rankings.

And more importantly, I see no reason why it’s his job to go and manually process every link he has when a new update around the corner may make all of that time and effort spent pointless.

With a bit of online detective work I managed to find Stephen’s tapas website (his comment username wasn’t linked) and pretty quickly found that the search term he was referring to was “spanish tapas”. This is part of the title tag of his Proper Spanish Tapas website and sure enough, I saw him in 15th too. He doesn’t have the most attractive website design, but it’s clearly an authority website on this topic:

spanish-tapas

The first obvious thing I can see is that the structure of the search results have not turned in Stephen’s favour. I have visited this search result page from many different IP addresses and each time I was presented with 6-7 results (across page 1 and 2) which are recommending restaurants. It’s odd that Australian websites come up when I’m using a Texas (USA) based IP but there you go. I change the IP and these recommendations of restaurants change.

It’s definitely not a typical, local based Google search result, but if anything it is probably the main cause of the rankings slip for Stephen. I don’t really have any qualms with that; this is Google’s search engine and it’s up to them which kind of results they want to display.

My problem is why About.com have two listings on the first page, the BBC are ranking and so are WholeFoods Market.

This is not a dumb SEO question. The obvious answer to that website is that they’re “authority domains” or “authority websites”. That may be the case, but they are not authorities on this niche and I’m sure they will never try to be or claim to be.

Whole Foods basic page on this topic is killing Stephen’s 50+ pages of information on a website that is 8 years old. The Whole Foods page has 2 backlinks. The BBC page has links from 12 different domains.

Yet his website has been unfairly shut out and replaced in a Google algorithm which puts so much weight on brands, that people who love and are passionate about a topic have a really hard time getting noticed. Surely they should be the people ranking?

And I did look into his backlinks. The funny thing is that some of them aren’t from the best sources but he attained them in a really credible way. For example, he has links from article directories, but they’re the best articles I’ve ever seen published on such directories. And it’s not like he’s trying to build them now, he published them back in 2006 and 2007. Again showing how long he has been building a website on this topic. He even authored a book on the subject, if you need more convincing there is no need to question this sites authority.

He has plenty of natural links that come from simply creating a great resource:

spanish-links

Sadly, when a brand like WholeFoods or About.com can whip up a simple page on this topic that is barely useful to a searcher, those links just aren’t good enough when an update comes. Stephen is not alone. There are without a doubt millions of webmasters struggling because of this kind of thing. I’ve spoken to plenty of them when I do phone consultations.

The Concept of Building a Link Network

To oversimplify the concept of building a link network for those who aren’t familiar with the idea, it goes like this: You build other websites around similar topics to a website that you want to rank – usually on powerful expired domains – and then link back to your original website.

If we’re using a whitehat to blackhat scale then this probably sits bang in the middle at being a grey hat tactic. Definitely not the kind of links Google want you to be getting, but also not hacking peoples websites and injecting your viagra links into them either.

I do believe there is a right way to do things when it comes to building a network, like actually making the sites you build attractive and useful, meaning no default WordPress theme and no-spun content. Just human written content that actually has some value in it if anyone were to ever come across them (although that is not the aim).

One thing you have to be careful of when you build a link network – we’re ridiculously over-paranoid about ours – is privacy. If you don’t set things up properly then you could easily create a footprint which links all of your websites together and could possibly get all of the sites linked from those domains penalised. Some of the obvious steps to take when protecting yourself are:

  • Using numerous different hosting companies and IP addresses
  • Mixing up your WHOIS data (legally, but never the same) for each stack of domains
  • Never keeping a list of all your websites in one place
  • Not using automated software to put together your websites. Set them up manually
  • Block the sites from link checking tools (like Ahrefs & Majestic SEO) so competitors can’t report you
  • Don’t put analytics code on any of the websites. You don’t need it.

And so on. There are about 10 more steps that we take with our network but I’ll save those for another day. That’s not to say we’re totally safe – not even guest posting is totally safe these days – but myself and Diggy will take our chances.

I’ve happily outed my own link networks before when we built really terrible ones such as for our Penguin2.com case study.

We have a very slow, expensive process, but I believe it’s worth it for the long run.

Originally, as I’ve said in this post, this was all primarily for testing. I have seen link networks, freshness abusers and plain spammer-owned sites outranking me and others in far too many industries to ignore trying this. I’ve simply decided to ramp up my efforts in the wake of all the drama surrounding Google and how they operate in the industries I follow, not limited to the examples I’ve posted above. And not to mention the over reliance of Google on ranking “brands” highly, even if they aren’t the best result on a subject.

This is not a post trying to convince others to build their own network – think of it more as an interesting opinion piece – but to help weigh any options you may have I’ve structured the rest of the post in a Good vs. Evil format with what I see a networks benefits and weaknesses are.

Positive: A Network Can Get You “Natural” Links

Something interesting that has happened in a number of the niches I’m involved in is that a link network has helped me to get a lot more natural links to my website. That may seem a little odd, until you hear why.

Whenever people are doing round-up posts for things like “Here’s what X amount of experts in X niche say about X” – which are all over the web – then they will often go to Google and look at the top sites ranking in those industries. I see at least 5 of these blog posts in the internet marketing niche every week, and I promise you they are common in other large industries as well. I’ve gained a lot of natural backlinks just by answering a quick email because someone already found me in Google.

I guess you could say this about any tactic that takes you to the top of Google but my point is that you don’t only need to rely on a network just because you’ve used it. They can be excellent platforms to build from.

Of course, this is only going to happen if you’ve done a good job with keyword research and know how to use network links to get you good rankings.

Negative: A Link Network is Not Risk-Free

One of the most recent takedowns of a private blog network was that of Anglo Rank. Some of the biggest search blogs on the web covered the news of their demise.

anglo-matt

What amazes me is not that they were caught and lost rankings but that Anglo Rank is nothing more than a service being promoted on BlackHatWorld. If you read the thread then you’ll see they’ve still been making plenty of sales in January, so it didn’t even deter people from that exact network. You really think Google would have better things to focus on to get some PR, scaring webmasters into any type of off-site SEO *cough*Godaddy*cough*.

Just after that, came Backlinks.com:

matt-cutts-backlinks

If you’re not building your own link network then you have to be very careful about link networks that you use from other people. Every single day on my Facebook ads I see people promoting link networks. They scrape the fans of popular facebook pages – ViperChill, Smart Passive Income, etc – then try to sell you on the network dream.

These are the same sites that tell you there are only 18 days left to opt-in, yet a week later they’ll say there’s 18 days left. I would stay very clear of anything like this. A network that is open to anyone with a Facebook account is not going to have customers promoting the best websites or be very secretive about where the links are coming from.

pat-fb

Ironically, I believe the people in question that Pat are talking about are aligned perfectly there on the right hand side of Facebook with his status update. I’ve saw them running ads with his face on and many other internet marketers.

Positive: A Network Can Keep You Ahead of the Curve

One of the great side-benefits of running a network has been being able to keep ahead of the latest SEO changes. There was literally an update two weeks ago, yet not a single person reported it. At least not until a few days after we noticed something. Being totally honest here, I didn’t even notice it myself until members of our private community started sharing their experiences:

forum-stuff

At first I kind of dismissed this blog post. Everything looked fine for the sites using our network (and the thread OP said PBN links looked fine), and when I checked sites like MozCast – which monitor Google fluctuations – everything seemed pretty normal.

I decided to reach out to Dr. Pete who handles MozCast (as far as I know) but he hadn’t noticed anything either:

dr-pete

I decided to post a question on Inbound.org to make sure we weren’t crazy and other people must be noticing something as well.

serp-changes

Crickets. There’s one person discussing the update.

Me.

Then one week after I asked about it, a better worded title makes the homepage of Inbound.org about that exact same topic.

better-wording

I deserve absolutely no credit for this discovery, and owe it all to people in our community who were happy to discuss these effects on their own sites which I hadn’t noticed, and it seems like the entire SEO community didn’t notice either (for at least a week).

This gave me a lot of data to work with, well in advance of the “SEO world” and I’ll be updating all of our users in the next few days about what I think the update addressed.

Negative: You Can’t Always Use Them for Clients

I recently had the opportunity to work on an SEO campaign for LG. Unfortunately, since it was a country-specific product and they were hiring multiple freelancers, their budget was a lot smaller than I was expecting and thus I didn’t end up working with them.

Even if I had got to work with them, the last strategy on my list for building links with them would be building links from a blog network. That’s not say I don’t think they would work, but some brands are simply not going to be okay with you building those types of links, and I’m not really surprised.

If you are going to be focusing on creating great content that gets people talking though – which isn’t always easy in the air-conditioning industry – the budget would have to be bigger than someone who is happy with network links that you can build for them.

Positive: A Network Is Easy to Backtrack From

There’s one thing that’s quite clear when looking into the drama around Google’s Disavow tool is that they simply do not know which links you’ve created yourself and which links someone else has built for you. As far as I know, it would be impossible for any search engine to ever know this. What has seemingly happened in thousands of cases (if not more) is that you will receive some kind of penalty for unnatural links and get a warning about this in Google Webmaster tools.

You will be shown a sample of the links you have to take-down and then it’s up to you to manually contact webmasters to get those links taken down. Don’t expect that because you do this though you’ll be guaranteed to rank where you did previously or even just get back in the Google index for your brand name.

Just this month, the message Google are giving webmasters has changed.

The latest reports from this month are that you may be asked to remove more links and then you’ll have to wait a few weeks for them to get back to your new request:

marie-haynes

Keeping in mind that once again it’s your responsibility to go and find these links; Google are not going to tell you about all of them. It’s a ridiculous move on their part because they’ve now opened up a totally new SEO industry where companies are charging businesses to help them find the links to remove. Not everyone has the money to pay $79/m to Ahrefs or similar to get a better idea of their link profile.

I’ve actually been giving free reports to some people because they simply have no idea what links are pointing to their website that Gogle may not like.

With a link network, you can take down any links in minutes. No worrying about contacting webmasters whatsoever.

Negative: They Won’t Work in Every Niche

Recently, a client of mine – let’s call him Stan – invited me to meet up with one of his friends who was interested in my services. I met up with him for lunch a few days later and he was a great guy, already ready to start paying me after seeing what I had done for Stan.

He asked me to never tell anyone his industry as he really thinks he has a hot corner in a popular category – which I would mostly agree with – and wanted me on board.

I checked out his site, saw there were quite a few improvements to be made, but thought the terms he wanted to target sounded long-tail enough before I did any proper research. When I got home I was sad to see sites like the NHS (The UK’s National Health Service), Wikipedia, About.com, .Gov and .Edu authority sites on the topic.

Even for long-term phrases which were sometimes very-specific product names, big recognisable organisations were showing up in the search results. I sent him a pretty simple email, “I don’t think I can make a good impact on this search term for you and it wouldn’t be fair to accept your money”.

It wasn’t his budget, it was more about the links I could build for him. Network links would simply not penetrate those search results baring a stranger than normal Google results page.

Positive: They’re Amazing in New Industries

It should be no secret to regular readers of this blog that I love making money by targeting new industries, which I’m fortunate to have been successful with. I’m finding good new niche ideas on a regular basis, but they’re so new it’s almost impossible to get “proper links”.

One example I gave a few months ago was Neverwet. At the time, an affiliate website was ranking 1st in Google.

What are my options here, really, if I want to make money from that niche?

  • Broken link building? My site is new so nobody is linking to me or others anyway.
  • Writing blog comments? Mostly nofollow and those that are dofollow are spammed to hell. Seeing an affiliate site in a comment URL also looks suspicious.
  • Getting links from high-quality press sites? Why wouldn’t they just link to the main product website
  • Writing guest posts? You can’t deny they would be primarily for SEO. Nobody really wants to read about that product, but instead watch that product.

I could go on, but you’re starting to get the idea. In a new niche when I’m breaking through a new market, network links work amazingly well. They work just as well for local SEO as well, but I don’t want everyone knowing that. A little reward for those of you who read every word of this post ;) .

Why ViperChill Will Always Have Porn Backlinks

Something I noticed a few months ago after my blog posts on Google freshness was that someone started a Negative SEO campaign for this website, essentially sending links from erotica style websites with similar terms as the anchor text.

I have to admit I laughed when I first saw this:

pornlinks

The other funny thing is that I am 99% certain I know who did this — someone I know personally. Fortunately it has not affected the rankings of my WordPress SEO page, but even if it did I wouldn’t do anything about it.

Why? Because I believe Google can do the job just fine on their own. I think the disavow tool really gives them fantastic PR in terms of scaring webmasters to do anything external that even hints at being done to get better search rankings. I refuse to have to spend days or even weeks of my time trying to get these links manually removed; especially when someone can click a button and build them all back up again.

If only we were all ex-Google product managers like one of the founders of Rap Genius.

I know Google isn’t the only marketing option. I know there are millions if not billions of search results where most people would agree they’re great results with the sites on them being great resources. I also have no desire to start using Bing. But I have zero doubt that the game we are playing here is just not fair. There are times when the individual just has no chance against big brands, and the ‘rules’ just aren’t able to be enforced.

I know many people who would never consider doing anything but writing great content and trying to get ‘natural’ links. I think that’s great. I would never perform an unnatural link building campaign for this website, mostly because I don’t need to or have the desire to rank for much.

The irony though is that focusing on content can even land you in trouble, as Rae recently put it:

I'm sorry, but I live in reality. In reality, creating good content guarantees you nothing.

There's no guarantee good content will magically be shared.

If it does get shared, and gets shared so much that a larger site republishes it, it could screw me.

If people like it, and link to it with too much anchor, it could screw me.

If not enough quality sites link to it in proportion to the overall inbound links, it could screw me.

If multiple bloggers with a good audience who can give me good exposure, but that also blatantly sell links or publish a lot of guest posts links to it, it could screw me.

If I include a nifty graphic in it and enough people repost that graphic and give me a link credit for being the source, it could screw me.

There are industries and cases where utilising a link network would not be a very effective option, but there are other markets where – with these links – you’ll actually have a fighting thriving chance at getting your quality resource noticed.

Just my $0.02. Hello, 2014.



You may view the latest post at
http://www.viperchill.com/blog-network/

Build Great Backlinks
Glen
peter.clarke@designed-for-success.com

Monday 27 January 2014

[Build Great Backlinks] 12 Powerful Tips to Dramatically Increase Email Open Rate

Build Great Backlinks


People are always talking about money being in the list. But what good is a list of subscribers if you can’t get anybody to open your messages?

Email marketing can be a virtual cash machine when done right. 

But before you’re making the big bucks mesmerizing your subscribers, you need to build your list by capturing emails.

I highly suggest utilizing Popup Domination to do just that. 

It’s proven time after time to increase subscribers by 524% overnight. Over 35,000 websites are currently using it!

And while Popup Domination is a great tool to help build your list, you’re still going to need to get all those new subscribers to open your messages.

I’m not only going to show you how to get your emails opened but how to actually have people looking for them.

Here are 12 powerful tips to increase open rate:

Make It Personal

headlines that get results

These days, our inboxes fill up quick and a lot of times get flooded with junk mail. We all deal with it.

We sign up for some product or newsletter that looks promising only to be inundated with spam and nonstop affiliate offers.

One of the easiest tactical approaches many use to filter nonsense is seeking out their names.

Make sure you’re collecting first names with your email capture and personalizing subject lines with first name. This is an instant attention grabber and subtle trust builder.

Have A Double Opt-in

I know it’s hard to choose between list size and list quality and I’ll be up front with you, your list will be smaller with a double opt-in. 

BUT…

It will be much higher quality!

Think about it, your subscriber just proved they’re opening and clicking your links. Whatever it is you’re offering they’re seriously interested.

If you offer something of great value, you don’t need a massive list to make a living. Just don’t forget your subscriber jumped through a couple hoops – reward them to show your appreciation.

Get Mobile Optimized

Nearly everybody has a smart phone, in fact, there’s a growing belief that in the near future we’ll exclusively use phones for email, work, shopping et cetera.

133.7 million people own smart phones in the US alone and 43% of all email worldwide is opened on mobile devices as of April of last year.

People are using their phones to check email now more than ever…

And if the links in your email are always leading back to a site that’s not mobile optimized they’ll stop opening because it’s a pain in the neck to deal with.

Use Enticing Subject Lines

This should be obvious, but I still observe marketers using dry and boring headlines.

Just this week I was consulting a friend who’s getting his feet wet in online marketing… I suggested he get into it, because he’s a natural salesman.

I know he doesn’t have a sales background and asked if there was something specific helping him create fantastic headlines.

Without hesitation he says, “sea-puck.” He meant CPUQ. and it stands for controversy, power-words, urgency, questions.

Those are the only styles you need to utilize in order to craft irresistible headlines… And here’s an example of each:

Controversy
Power Words
Urgency
Questions
A Little Mistake That Cost a Farmer $3,000 a Year You Can Make Big Money Easily Warning: Read This NOW Or Kiss The Rest Of Your Money Goodbye Free Website Review: What Do You Struggle with Online?
But What if You Could See Her Naked? Outstanding Methods Are The Special Edge For Open Rates What You Must Buy And Sale Now: The ONLY Way To Protect Your Weatlth Are You Frustrated By Internet Marketing?
Nazi UFOs to attack U.S. Hilarious Confessions Of Real Desperate Housewives What You Must Do Immediately To Rank In Google Are You Making These Blogging Mistakes?

Offer Real Value Consistently

You’d think this is obvious, especially with how I opened this post saying email marketing was like a cash machine.

While I still consider that to be a spot on analogy, you have to understand it’s only possible by offering fantastic content from the get go and not stopping.

Once people understand that you care and truly want to share high quality information with the world they’ll be looking forward to your products and recommendations.

But nothing will get you marked as spam or unsubscribed from quicker than constantly pounding your list with offer after offer. The only people that get away with this are those with MASSIVE, 100k + lists that can afford to lose a few subscribers.

Build A Relationship With The Reader

The best way to manage your online reputation is to build strong  relationships. That goes beyond email marketing, it should be your goal with all of your interactions online

You’re the premier representative of your brand so hold yourself to a high standard and your work will reflect that.

People will give you great reviews, testimonials and leave positive comments on your various content. You’ll find loyal fans silencing haters for you which is always  great for brand management.

Loyalty must be earned, it cannot be bought.

Have An Open Loop

These are fun because you get to sharpen your storytelling skills.

Basically you build up anticipation by giving the impression you’re about to reveal some outstanding information and always make them wait until tomorrow by coming back around to the beginning of your story.

You’re giving information, but you’re disguising it…

For instance, here’s a really quick example. Matter of fact, what I’m about about to show you, took me 2 hard years online to figure out, spending thousands on products that were supposed to put my business on auto-pilot…

I nearly went bankrupt and then it finally hit me!

What I discovered was so blatantly obvious and simple, I made over 4k my very first day. And it didn’t cost me a penny.

All I had to do was use google trends and open loops to see a 720% increase in traffic, it was that powerful …  I could rinse and repeat forever.

I mentioned it to my friend who had been marketing for years, but he brushed off the thought of quality free traffic.

So I showed his little brother, a complete “noob.” I gotta tell ya, he’s the only 17 year old I know driving an M3 that he paid for – cash.

Not bad for open loops and Google trends?

You’re going to want to see how you can do what this 17 year old did… I’ll tell you all about it tomorrow.

See what I did there?

Clean Up Your List

It’s normal to get inactive subscribers but sometimes they just need a refresher.

There are two simple methods you can use…

The first is send an email reconfirming they want to be on your list. You can do this through Aweber or whatever auto-responder you’re using.

The second thing I do when a subscriber has been inactive for a month is put them on a separate list where they’ll no longer be mailed daily.

I’ll hit them with 1 more daily email blast and a reconfirmation 7-14 days later, if neither get’s opened they’re removed completely. You can typically automate this entire process through your auto-responder’s “list segment” option.

Remain Consistent With Delivery Time

When I’d send emails at inconsistent times the open rate was much lower compared to mailing at the same time daily.

All major auto-responders have an option to have your message sent out at a specific date and time.

I use Aweber and usually set my followups to “send 1 day after previous” which sends at the time the individual received that last email which is the same time they signed up. Be sure to have several emails queued in advance. 

Run Split tests

If most of your content is the same for all subscribers, you can run several split tests to identify what resonates best with your audience.

I’ll test several different mail-out times based on time of day in PST, EST & GMT. Typically I’ll test 8am, 2pm and 6pm mail-out times for each timezone and set my broadcasts to the most active.

The second is test what CPUQs are getting opened the most and include that style in the subject lines more frequently.

The third thing to test is whether it’s best to have messages coming from myself or the brand. Typically it’s best to have your emails “from” a person, but I’ve seen otherwise, which is why I test.

Great First Impression

Meet Richard Branson

How many times have you heard, first impressions are everything?

Well they are, and the same is true online. Your first impression is your best shot at earning trust and ensuring future emails get opened.

Assuming you’re already running a clean email capture software like Popup Domination to grab attention and build your list, it’s crucial to give away awesome content like problem solving reports, info-graphics, podcasts and videos.

Have A Second Lead Magnet

This next tip is perhaps one of the most effective things I’ve ever done to dramatically increase open rate…

Creating a second lead magnet in the form of an eCourse, audio or video series spread out over several days is a clever and incredibly effective way to get your emails opened and consumed.

You’ll notice Income Diary employing this very method with their free Free 7 day money making eCourse…

Make Sure The Content Is Relevant

A great way of enhancing the relationship with your list is simply surveying them from time to time.

This will help clearly identify what problem it is that you’re audience needs solving. Once you identify what that “problem” is, make it a point to over-deliver on the solution.

Always try to empathize and respect your reader. You’ll have no problem earning a living online if offering high value is 100% of your mission, 

Don’t meet expectation, exceed it!

Success by choice, not by chance.

-David Aston

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Build Great Backlinks
David Aston
peter.clarke@designed-for-success.com

Wednesday 22 January 2014

[Build Great Backlinks] 10 Article Headline Examples That Got Us 10 Million Readers

Build Great Backlinks


Creating engaging headlines is the most important part of copywriting.

It’s also the most fun.

Don’t be afraid to put a significant amount of mental energy into your headlines…

Your title is what audiences recall, even more so than the content itself.

It’s what’s displayed in the search results and their bookmarks menu – setting the stage for the entire blog post.

I invite you to create a word document with about 100 headlines for inspiration and reference it anytime you’re creating new post titles.

Straight up, if your headlines sucks, your posts won't get viewed and your site won't keep as many visitors.

10 Post Titles Guaranteed to Get YOU Results

Classic How-to

A lot of popular blogs and websites have discovered formulas that deliver results every time.

One headline formula that’s been incredibly effective for more than a century is the classic how to. This is a great way to increase engagement, just be sure to deliver on your promises.

They don’t even necessarily need to start with the words “how to” to be a how to headline.

“How to Have a Healthier and More Productive Home Office”

“10 Step To Successfully Outsourcing Your Online Business”

“21 Ways to Dominate Youtube: The Ultimate Guide”

Identify and Solve a Problem

One of best ways to get new readers is to Identify and solve a problem with trigger words.

The top companies use emotional triggers in nearly every headline – another classic style that’s withstood the test of time.

You’ll notice major companies like Cosmopolitan, DailyMail and Yahoo using this style often:

“6 Instant Confidence Boosters”

“Parenting Guru: From Chaos to Access”

“Gene Breakthrough Restores The Sight Of People With Inherited Eye Disease And Could Save Thousands From Blindness”

Make A Statement

Variety in driveway

Sometimes we get writers block and can’t think of a clever headline… This is where making a direct statement is the easiest and most effective way to engage your reader. 

“Twitter Goes Public: 21 Things You Should Know”

“Tips That Show Anybody How To Make Money Online – Guaranteed”

“Thousands Already Make Millions Online And So Can You”

Strike A Note Of Controversy

Blog posts that have controversial titles grab more attention.

Riding the wave of controversy is good for blogs that want to pull audiences in, get them emotionally involved and commenting on your site.

“Why All Guys Cheat, Fresh Insight”

“Which One Deserves To Die?”

“10 Reasons Civilization May Collapse Because Of Organic Foods…”

It's a very effective tool for generating attention. Just try not to land on the wrong side of an issue or be disrespectful.

You don’t want to offend your primary audience unless of course you’re trying to not make money.

Remember, you want to pull readers in not push them away.

Shorter Titles Are Great

Concentrate on keeping your headlines to the point.

People like short and sweet and have limited attention spans – especially online!

“No Cellphones – By Law”

“Rob Banks Legally”

“Fat Makes You Thin”

Try to avoid wordy headlines as they dilute your message and distract from the point of your post.

Ask Questions

Using a question as a title is an excellent opportunity to get people to click through to your post.

When people spot a question in a title, they’ll automatically think of a response. It’s natural…

“Are You Too Clever For Success?”

“Want To Immediately Reverse All Your Health Issues?”

“Six Types Of Investors – Which Group Are You In?”

Increase the chance the question resonates with your audience by being certain it’s relevant to your demographic.

An easy way to do this is by installing a survey plugin like YOP Poll or FluidSurveys and asking what type of posts your readers want to see more of.

Use Headlines That Offer Explanations

Explanatory headlines make things instantly clear to readers by doing exactly what the name suggests, explaining something…

“How I Doubled My Money With Facebook Ads”

“For At Risk Youths, Learning Digital Media Is A Luxury”

“New Shampoo Leaves Your Hair Smoother – Easier to Manage”

Sometimes it pays to have breaking news in the title itself.

When you turn your news into explanations, your audience knows exactly what they’re getting into before they ever start reading.

Go For An "Intrigue" Style

Write a headline that makes people do kind of a double take when they read it.

Make them wonder and ask if it’s even possible.

National Enquirer is notorious for this…

“Father Goes For Kidney Treatment – Leaves Hospital As A Women”

“How Jack The Weakling SLAUGHTERED THE DANCE FLOOR HOG!"

“Wall Street Getting Kicked In The Face By Asian Techs!”

Try A "Finality"

Another way to generate interest is by using finality style (power) words like ultimate, best, exclusive, only, guaranteed et cetera.

If you can deliver after a reader clicks the headline, then you’ll almost certainly earn a new reader.

“The Ultimate Guide to Making Money Online”

“Every Internet Entrepreneur Regrets Not Doing This Sooner”

“This Blog Post Will Make You More Money Guaranteed”

Craft A "Top List"

This is one of the simplest formats to follow, and it’s ideal for SEO and getting ranked in the search engines for the more competitive terms.

Put the topic first, ideally optimized for popular search terms, and then use a “emotion-provoking” description.

Numbers grab attention and tell your audience you're an authority. It lets them know you have something specific, concrete and real to offer them.

"24 Rules I Follow When Creating Successful Websites"

“5 Ways to Make More Money Online – Even If You’re Just Starting Out”

“Top 10 Facebook Advertising Mistakes To Avoid”

These get clicks because they purport how to reach a specific goal. It positions you as the expert who actually reached that quantifiable outcome.

Headlines are a critical element because they’re what draw the reader into the body of your post.

It helps to look at the first page of Digg or Reddit and try to see what kinds of tactics are being used to grab attention.

Recognize what posts captivate you and start a list of the headlines that compelled you to click – I bet you’ll notice something strikingly similar about each.

Identify that “something” and use it to your advantage.

 Success by choice, not by chance.

-David Aston

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Build Great Backlinks
David Aston
peter.clarke@designed-for-success.com

Monday 20 January 2014

[Build Great Backlinks] 10 Young Entrepreneurs to Follow in 2014

Build Great Backlinks


Young people have always been able to see things in new and innovative ways.

Lately, they’ve been taking that vision and founding businesses.

The trend took off with Steve Jobs and Bill Gates, who founded Apple and Microsoft in 1976 at the age of 21. Then came Mark Zuckerberg, who programmed Facebook while still a student at Harvard University and became a billionaire by the age of 23.

Now Zuckerberg’s Facebook is being challenged by a new generation of young entrepreneurs. These kids aren’t just digital natives, they’re mobile and social natives. The list of ten young entrepreneurs below is full of bright minds that will be re-imagining the  world in 2014 — and not one of them is older than 23.

 

follow madison on twitter#10

Madison Robinson

Founder of Fish Flops

Age: 15

Madison first had the idea for light-up flip flops for kids when she was only eight-years-old. Seven years later, Robinson’s Fish Flops are being sold in national department store’s like Nordstrom’s. Over 60,000 Fish Flops have been sold, which The Daily Mail estimates as "retail sales of at least 1.2 million."

Follow Madison Robinson on Twitter

 

follow lucas duplan on twitter

#9

Lucas Duplan

Founder and CEO of Clinkle

Age: 22

Duplan is the Stanford computer science drop-out behind the world’s biggest app that doesn’t exist yet.

Clinkle’s mission is to completely replace your wallet with your phone. But thanks to a cloak of secrecy, nobody in the general public knows what makes Clinkle different from well-positioned competitors like Square and Google Wallet.

Duplan assures us that they’re "building something fundamentally different from everything else out there." That would certainly explain the record-setting $25 million in seed funding the company raised in 2013 from the likes of Richard Branson and Peter Thiel (former CEO of PayPal).

There are rumors that Clinkle’s killer advantage is that it makes seamless phone-to-phone transactions through high-frequency sound – but then there’s also speculation that Duplan’s poor management of the company is driving employees away in droves.

If Clinkle goes up in flames in 2014, it may discourage further venture funding for young entrepreneurs. If it succeeds, you may just be paying for your next cup of coffee without reaching for your wallet.

Follow Lucas Duplan on Twitter

 

follow khoa phan on twitter#8

Khoa Phan

Freelance Vine Editor

Age: 23

Back when I profiled the ten YouTube channels with the most subscribers, I saw that many of the video creators with the biggest audience were those that had adopted the video platform early and immediately started building a brand for their channel.

23-year-old Khoa Phan started his vine account the day after Twitter bought the service for $30 million and he’s been growing with the benefit of the inside track ever since. Mashable listed Phan as one of the top ten users to follow on Vine but he’s nowhere close to Vine’s most subscribed account (as of January 2014 Nash Grier and KingBach are neck and neck at 4.8 million followers each).

But thanks to Khoa’s polished construction-paper-meets-stop-motion style and “have a good day” personality, he’s been more marketable than other top Vine users. Phan has inked lucrative video production deals with a bevy of big-name clients:  Snapple, MTV, (RED), Livestrong, and Peanuts Worldwide. It will be interesting to follow Khoa Phan and see if he can transition his 7 second videos from a successful service business to an online empire.

Follow Khoa Phan on Twitter

 

follow stacey ferreira on twitter#7

Stacey Ferreira

Cofounder of MySocialCloud

Age: 21

Have you ever forgotten an important online password? MySocialCloud looks to end that problem permanently by securely storing all of your usernames and passwords in one place.

Ferreira was only 18 when she cofounded MySocialCloud with her brother Scott. By the age of 20, they had raised $1,000,000 in venture capital from the likes of Richard Branson and Alex Welch (CEO/Founder of Photobucket).

Ferreira is currently speaking, co-writing a book, and working on her second start-up.

Follow Stacey Ferreira on Twitter

 

follow eden full on twitter#6

Eden Full

Creator of SunSaluter

Age: 21

Eden Full was still in high school when she started developing the SunSaluter, a solar panel that rotates with the movement of the sun to maximize efficiency. It’s tracking mechanism uses thermal expansion instead of an electric motor, making it relatively low maintenance and low cost.

When Full applied to Princeton, she mentioned the SunSaluter in her application letter. She got in – and soon got in with a professor who worked in Kenya over the summer and offered to give her a little bit of funding. In the summer of 2010, Full went to Kenya to try to implement her prototype in the real world

The hands-on experience showed Full how far her SunSaluter had to go if it wanted to be a complete success. Eden told Entrepreneur, "I learned that while our product worked, it didn’t work well. The trip taught me what the people there actually need and how to design better for them."

Making the prototype better would require her full attention and more money, so Full applied for the $100,000 Thiel Scholarship and won in May 2012. Full took a year off school to further develop the SunSaluter and the company she’s built around it (Rosseicollis Technologies Inc.).

To date, Eden Full has helped over 6,000 people get clean water and power. She returned to Princeton to study Mechanical Engineering in Fall 2013, but she’s still managing the Rosseicollis team via email. Can the SunSaluter continue to grow and reach it’s goal of helping 1.5 billion people while Full is a full-time student?

Follow Eden Full on Twitter

 

follow nick d aloiso on twitter#5

Nick D’aloisio

Founder of Summly

Age: 18

The Wall Street Journal just named their Technology Innovator of 2013 with an article declaring that he "has changed the way we read."

In March 2011, D’aloisio released Trimit, an iOS application that analyzed text content and condensed it into a summary of either 1000, 500, or 140 characters. The app was good enough to be featured by Apple and to garner $300,000 in venture capital from Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing.

D’aloisio used the funds to create a new-and-improved version of the app called Summly. Summly was acquired by Yahoo in March 2013 for $30 million. Nick is currently going to school in the UK while helping Yahoo develop their news digest.

“I absolutely want to start another company,” D’aloisio told the Wall Street Journal. “Serial entrepreneurs get addicted to creation. I want to be passionate. I feel really bad when I’m not doing something new.”

Follow Nick D’aloisio on Twitter

 

follow volumental on twitter#4

Caroline Walerud

Co-Founder/CEO of Volumental

Age: 23

Volumental started as a robotics research project at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, Sweden. But when they developed a breakthrough 3D scanning technology, it quickly became a breakout business with $330,000 in soft funding from a Swedish innovation agency and articles in Tech Crunch and Mashable.

Volumental has built "the world’s first cloud-based 3D scanner." It’s real innovation is in automation and ease of use. All you need to use it is a browser with a depth camera and you’ll be able to easily make models of anything around your house (even your self).

Caroline Walerud is the 23-year-old co-founder and CEO of Volumental and the only young entrepreneur on this list who you can view as a 3D model. Last year, she led the company on a successful Kickstarter campaign ($27,362) in order for them to hire a new employee who would be dedicated to making the 3D models something that you can actually print out.

In December 2013, Walerud was named Super Talent 2013 by the Swedish Business magazine Veckans Affärer. But as the CEO of company that’s automating and simplifying the ability to create 3D models and print them, by December 2014 she might be a household name globally.

Follow Volumental on Twitter

 

follow brian wong on twitter#3

Brian Wong

Co-founder of Kiip

Age: 22

Kiip is helping companies link virtual achievements to real-life commercial promotions. It might come in the form of a coupon after beating a level on your favorite game or a free bottle of vitamin water after completing a five mile run.

It’s all based on the idea that marketing at a ‘moment of achievement’ finds people at their most engaged and receptive. Wong came up with the idea while watching people immersed in their iPads on an airplane and founded the company in July 2010 alongside Courtney Guertin and Amadeus Demarzi. They’ve since raised $15.4 million in venture capital.

How’s this for a ‘moment of achievement’: Kiip reaches "70 million users through 1,500 games and apps" (Forbes). And the company has established partnerships with some of the worlds biggest companies, including McDonald’s, Sony, and Amazon.

In 2013, Kiip was one of Fast Company’s 50 most innovative companies. In 2014, Wong says the goal is profitability.

Follow Brian Wong on Twitter

 

follow evan spiegel on twitter#2

Evan Spiegel

CEO and Founder of Snapchat

Age: 23

Snapchat is turning social networking upside-down by emphasizing privacy and impermanence. The Snapchat app has been growing end over end. It went from 200 million "snaps" (images) uploaded per day to 350 million in just four months (June-September 2013).

In 2013, Facebook saw a decrease in daily use among teens (16% in the US), which is Snapchat’s primary demographic. That explains why Zuckerberg reportedly offered $3 Billion cash for Snapchat – and why Spiegel refused.

If Snapchat can maintain its growth and find a way to monetize, then Spiegel will be the world’s next young billionaire. But with Snapchat’s recent security breach and Spiegel’s reputation as an "arrogant" novice those are two big ifs.

Whatever Spiegel and Snapchat do in 2014, the world will be watching.

Follow Spiegel on Twitter

 

follow palmer luckey on twitter#1

Palmer Luckey

Founder of Oculus VR

Age: 21

Oculus VR is developing the virtual reality headset that Business Insider called "most definitely the future of gaming."

Palmer Luckey is the 21-year-old who started it all by developing the initial headset, incorporating with two partners, and launching a 2012 Kickstarter campaign that raised $2.4 million.

2013 brought even greater success: $91 million in venture funding, 50 employees, and a growing community of indie developers around the world creating applications for the Oculus Rift prototype.

At CES 2014, they’ve debuted a brand new, high-definition prototype called Crystal Cove and it’s already the talk of the show. Oculus is shooting for a consumer release of their first virtual reality headset by Q3 2014. If all goes as planned, they won’t just upend the videogame industry; they’ll create a revolutionary new ‘virtual experience’ industry all its own.

Follow Palmer Luckey on Twitter

A New Generation of Young Entrepreneurs

While it’s exciting to think about what these ten young entrepreneurs will accomplish in 2014, the young entrepreneur movement is much bigger than just the ten names above. A recent poll from the Kaufman Foundation found that more than half of millennial have started or want to start their own business.

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Build Great Backlinks
Nick Scheidies
peter.clarke@designed-for-success.com