Keyword Q&A, 40 Limit Exclusive Marketing Pillar Blog Post Collection - Part 2
Published: Sat, 10/07/23
I have flopped at cooking this week. I made a 15 bean soup and my beans never quite got soft enough. Then I made a pot of chicken and dumplings but the chicken was chewy. So had to toss both of those. I hate it when I make something I know how to do properly and it fails. LOL I wanted warm stuff for these chilly 70 degree days. Ha ha! Tonight I'm trying to make chicken enchiladas and 7-layer dip because my daughter asked for it.
FYI: Part 2 of the 7-Day Marketing Momentum Free Challenge is ready. And below my PLR listings, there's a question that was sent in to me from someone who got free access to my paid Writing Productivity Challenge about keyword tools, so I answer that for you and why I use what I use.
New Limited PLR: Exclusive Marketing Pillar Blog Post Collection - Part 2 (Only Available for 40 Buyers!)
My latest limited to 40 buyers PLR is called Exclusive Marketing Pillar Blog Post Collection - Part 2. This is the second bundle in a collection of pillar blog posts designed to serve as primary resources on your marketing blog that you can interlink to and from. Each one is a comprehensive post that's built around a single concept and semantic topics to help pull in search engine traffic. These are also long enough to serve as lead magnets, you can combine them into one info product to sell, divide them and drip them out in emails, etc. There is a ton of profit potential in these pillar posts - for tools, courses, and more. But ultimately, the content is top notch in educating your reader so they feel satisfied.Pillar Post #1 - A Newbie's Guide to Growing and Catering to a List of Subscribers
This is a 8-page, 3,583-word report that covers the following:
- Setting Up Your List Building System
- Developing Irresistible Lead Magnets
- Set Up a Landing Page to Capture Subscriber Information
- Organic and Paid Methods to Grow Your List
- Planning Your Email Marketing Campaigns
- Elevating Your Email Conversions to a New Level
Pillar Post #2 - The Ultimate Content Marketing Guide for Higher Conversions
This is a 5-page, 2,167-word report that covers the following:
- Each Piece of Content Should Have a Measurable Goal
- Analysis and Planning for High-Converting Content
- 3 Areas Where Content Will Have a High Impact
- Take a Multimedia Approach to Content Marketing
- Tips for Improved Content Marketing
** This PLR comes in both Word and TXT formats
Be one of only 40 people to own them here:
https://www.plrlaunch.com/exclusive-marketing-pillar-blog-post-collection-part-2-limited-plr
Answer to a Question About Keyword Research
Recently, I gifted my subscribers access to my paid course called "Writing Productivity Challenge," and a question came in today that said:"Going back and forwards through your course, it's proving to be one of the best courses I've come across for product creation. Detailed short, easy lessons with no fluff or filler. I was wondering do you still use the same keyword tool you mentioned in the course? And also what free options would you recommend using, before upgrading to a paid keyword tool?"
Honestly, I'm not 100% sure which keyword tool I was using because one got upgraded awhile back. But my go to is still WordRecon.
The reasons are varied, so let me tell you why. If you're an SEO blogger real into data numbers and volume, competition, etc., that YOU need to see, rather than it simply being ranked for you, then this isn't the keyword tool for you. I'm NOT a data numbers person for my work. I find it stifling and unnatural in many ways for content creation that resonates with people and I think people get too hung up on numbers and use some weird phrase that just doesn't fit right for the content.
The reason I use WordRecon is because all of the data is behind the scenes stuff. What WE see is the ability to drill down, get instant keywords from a wide number of platforms (18) - not just Google, but we can switch to how people are searching on Amazon, Etsy, YouTube, Pinterest, Bing, Ask, App Stores and iTunes, eBay, Yahoo, Google Play, Wikipedia, AliExpress, Alibaba, Home Depot, Walmart, Target, Fiverr, and Baidu. They're organized by Search Engines, e-commerce and other sources.
So if I see a phrase in a Google list that I want to explore more, I click Other Sources and see what that phrase does on Amazon, Bing, YouTube, etc. There's a button that says "Drill Down" and I love this one! Gives me instant long-tail lists from that original phrase. I can click on all the ones I like in any list and create a list of just those, and export it to my computer if I want to.
You can also save and organize your keywords and lists. The tool has a page analyzer built into it, too. So if I want to rank for this phrase: how to rank a blog in google and I go to Google and see the first sport (a featured snippet) is this page: https://comradeweb.com/blog/do-i-really-need-a-blog, I can put that in the Page Analyzer and WordRecon will tell me their meta data (description, links, etc), page Headers from H1 down to H4, any image alt tags they're using, it'll give me a word analysis where I see words, counts, and frequency, and I can see the anchor text being used, too.
If I enter that same phrase on Google and go to videos and find this YouTube video in the top spot: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CjzjUbA8nzA&ab_channel=NeilPatel I can enter it into WordRecon's YouTube video tags and captions tool and it'll give me all the data - the tags being used, category, duration, description, and caption track.
Another thing I like: Ted Chen created neat tutorials inside the product to help you learn unique ways to find keywords. He has a video tutorial section and an important tips section. This REALLY helped me in the beginning - stuff I didn't know like wildcard searches and what to do after I get my basic search results. And he has a downloadable free search tactics cheatsheet. He also has a list of mistakes to avoid.
I guess I like how he puts it on his sales page: "WordRecon is not a mere keyword research tool. WordRecon is a complete audience research tool..."
And he keeps his product operational (rare in the marketing world). He has a monthly or annual payment plan and it's affordable, unlike SEMRush and other tools that price many out. It's cloud-based, so you don't have to download it.
Check it out for yourself - his video tutorial at the beginning shows it in action (at the time of the recording he has 12 sources and now there's 18):
https://jvz2.com/c/5810/234473/
Tiff :)