New Limited PLR: 10 Ways to Revive a Blog That's Buried in the SERPs; AI Lesson for My Kids

Published: Wed, 02/08/23


The plumbers came today after I told them my yard looks like it's caving in toward the tunnel they dug - there's now a four-inch gap between the bottom of my dog gate and the ground, not good for wee little chihuahuas. They drained the water and promised to return tomorrow to backfill it. I can see the finish line from here!

FYI: If you need to see what limited PLR is left and see what big, discounted store bundles are available, go here.

First Dibs: Y'all have first dibs until this limited PLR is approved for the public - enjoy!

New Limited PLR: 10 Ways to Revive a Blog That's Buried in the SERPs

My latest limited to 50 buyers PLR is called 10 Ways to Revive a Blog That's Buried in the SERPs. This is a content piece that teaches online entrepreneurs how they can take a blog that's struggling to achieve any significant ranking in the search engine results pages and put it on a path to high performance in generating organic traffic. Using proactive search engine optimization (SEO) efforts, this report shows them the renovation process rather than ignoring past efforts to go a new path. Whether they have 10 previous posts or hundreds, they can apply this strategy to them all. 

This is a 7-page, 2,957-word content piece that covers the following:

- Add Lastmod to Your Sitemap
- Create a Management System for Your Blog Posts
- Develop Keyword Clusters for Each Post
- Delete Any Irrelevant Blog Content
- Correct All Outdated Information
- Update the Formatting for Your Blog Content
- Create Comprehensive Outlines for Each Post 
- See If the Content Can Work Well as a Featured Snippet
- Expand on Your Posts One By One
- Position Your Post as a Shared Resource and Get Links in Place  

** This PLR comes in both Word and TXT formats

Free Graphic

I've included the PNG file of an image you can use.

Be one of only 50 people to own it here:
https://www.plrlaunch.com/10-ways-to-revive-a-blog-thats-buried-in-the-serps-limited-plr

AI Lesson for My Kids

As a mom entrepreneur who has raised her kids to be online entrepreneurs, I have always taught them ethics and quality - and why these, along with creativity matter. Today, I was writing a limited PLR about reviving an outdated blog and they were walking through the room (it's by the kitchen, so I love that I get to chat with them frequently) and one of them joked about why I don't just let AI write it for me because I mentioned how tired I was. 

I know they were joking, but I took it as an opportunity SHOW why. (In the discussion someone said, "Well I can see people resorting to it if they don't know anything about a topic.") Nooooo! That's the WORST time to use AI for content. Here's why...

As they were watching, I went to ChatGPT and asked it for some SEO blog tips. My intention was to show lack of quality alone, but I hit on bad information, too!

Look at this beauty it churned out:



Oh, really? Google doesn't want comprehensive content? Their "helpful update" can be achieved in 300 words? LOL!

Now if you didn't know about SEO and pillar blog posts and Google's "Helpful update" and all that, you'd simply copy and paste this nonsense for all your readers to see. My kids both agreed they wouldn't have known if this information in the above image was right or wrong because they're not SEO experts. 

So then I showed them the difference in this and researching on search engines. You get a myriad of authority sites guiding you in what search engines are rewarding and you can read a bunch of sources and get the WHY of what they're saying, too.

For example, when you go down the rabbit hole of educating yourself, you find that backlinks are usually given to comprehensive blog posts, right? Not thin, value-less ones. Comprehensive content outperformed basic content. The average first page Google result is over 1,400 words...and so on. Of course they SAY word count isn't a factor (they have to because people will stuff irrelevant words and info into their post if they don't), but comprehensiveness IS, and that's hard to do in so few words. It's true that longer doesn't necessarily mean better, either - quality must come first.

Not only does ChatGPT say specifically that it can produce incorrect answers, it also warns: "ChatGPT will occasionally make up facts or “hallucinate” outputs." That's nice to know. LOL!

The ONLY way I'd ever recommend even the most savvy people use these tools is for brainstorming ONLY - but you and I both know marketers and the way they shortcut everything - so we're about to see SO much awful information that's factually wrong being put out by otherwise charismatic niche leaders and that's a shame. 

It's too tempting to shortcut things for many people, which is why I teach my kids to steer clear of it and continue creating original, thoughtful content. I dread thinking about my future doctor or lawyer may have relied on AI and not used his or her own brain to pass tests and complete work needed to learn topics.

It will hopefully have a strong place in the future, but I told my kids to sideline themselves from the use of any AI (fiction and graphics included - not just marketing) until there's a solid ethical landscape and obvious quality controls in place, too. In the meantime I'll roll my eyes seeing products like the one I saw last night where marketers are promising people can become "bestselling authors" using AI in a flash! Spare me. LOL

Tiff :)

P.S. Prefer a weekly digest?
http://www.tiffanylambert.com/weeklytiff.html
 
 


PO Box 373, Kennedale, Texas 76060


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