Work on Your Site Systemization

Published: Mon, 05/13/19


Did y'all have a nice Mother's Day yesterday? I did! Spent it with my babies. They always ask what I want and I say the same thing - spend some time with me. I just love watching a movie with them or cooking with them, etc. I don't need gifts - I buy myself whatever I want. Their time is something I value way more. So they share it with me. :)

We made an incredible taco soup - with fajita marinated chicken, bell peppers, onions and beans - it's incredible. We put some tortilla chips and cheese on top and it's the coziest meal ever. 

I'm working on a nice bonus for something for tomorrow - and I also plan on sharing something really neat with you that I was thrilled about. 

Today, I want you to spend a sec thinking about your niche sites. Do you have a system in place for it for sharing content and promoting products? How many do you actually post on frequently? You can develop a system for queuing up blog posts and reviews so that you're not trying to work on 15 different niche sites every day. 

I'm working (I was about to say hard but it's not hard - it's diligently) to develop systems to help me get things done faster and more efficiently so that it frees up time for other areas of life - exercise, relaxation and fiction. 

I run several different niche sites - I have them in a variety of non marketing topics (like survival, toys and a few I don't tell anyone about so I don't have any competition). So it's a bit more work to develop multiple systems across the board - because some of them are strict review sites and others are a mix of where I do product reviews AND share valuable information without a selling angle. 

When I'm working on systems, I usually do something like this:

1. Map out a schedule for content sharing.
2. Map out a schedule for emails (if applicable - I don't build a list for every niche, like toys for example)
3. Figure out a ratio of information sharing and product reviews I want to have
4. Map out categories for content sharing - (for example in survival I have categories for self defense, supply hoarding, strategic planning like bugging out, homesteading and more)
4. A list of places and people I want to promote (Share-a-Sale, Amazon, ClickBank, etc.) - a mix of tangible and digital if applicable

I then outline the content based on schedules and categories. So I might have something that looks like this for a survival site:

Survival Blog

Below are the days of the month I'll track:

1st - Top 10 review post for survival kitchen gear (supplies category)
3rd - How to grow a hidden survival (camouflaged) garden  (strategic category)
5th - 5 Ways to Protect Your Family While Bugging Out (combo how to and tangible and info product - I'll teach tips, but also promote products and self defense courses)
...and so on

Survival Email List

1st - Email about importance of lightweight gear w/emphasis on food and then point to blog post for day 1
3rd - Free gift (PLR report on setting up a shipping container survival home) and point them to blog post for day 3 too to continue homesteading tip w/garden
5th - Share story about a SHTF /riot situation and then point to day 5 blog post
...and so on

Having it all mapped out makes sure I have a nice variety of content (and am not repetitive) and it also helps me get everything queued up early so I can take a more hands off approach to the site and work on other business branches. 

Content is the biggest time factor for most sites - whether it's blog posts or products you want to create to sell or social networking posts or emails...it all takes time.

For those of you who have niche sites where you're working on getting a system of content going, I created a discount coupon for my PLR Mini Mart for you to help you get some traction quickly. 

If you use code: 50OFF on PLR Mini Mart it'll knock half off your entire cart (yes, even the total membership option). 

I'll leave it up for a couple of days for you. 

Tiff ;)

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