5.3 How We Use Keywords to Ignite Our Content (AF)

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In this video I discuss:

  • How many keywords to use per article/blog post on your website
  • An overview of how we use keywords to grow our internet business
  • The exact criteria we’re looking for in every keyword we write content for

Please direct all questions and requests for support to the FIMP Facebook group (free for registered members).

5.3 Transcript Below

Okay. So now that we know what keywords are and we know kind of what our overall keyword strategy is going to be, we need to talk about exactly how we use keywords to ignite our content.

And for those of you that this is kind of a recap, I hope you’ll hang in there with me. It’s distinctly possible that you’ll learn a couple of new things just watching this lesson if you are more familiar with some of these ideas, but I want to make sure that I’m not leaving anyone behind. So I want to say very explicitly how we are going to use keywords in our business to kind of ignite our content and get a lot of traction in the coming months.

So keywords – as I’ve mentioned several times by this point – are the fuel for successful content. So first, what we want to do before we write anything is when we’re preparing for an article, we want to find one or two keywords that we want to target in that article. Some people say, you know, target three keywords, optimize an article for five keywords; I find when you do that, you’re almost spreading yourself so thin that it’s really hard to pay attention and do the work at high enough quality that it actually means anything. Sure, you can go out there and try to optimize every article you write for five different keywords; but you’re going to be spreading yourself so thin that you might as well have not tried to optimize for any keywords.

So personally, I only focus on one keyword for every single article I write and I train my writers to do the exact same thing: pick one keyword and write for that one keyword, optimize for that one keyword. Because at the end of the day, if you do that and you write really high-quality content, you’re going to accidentally rank for a lot of other keywords in time around that topic – just based on the context of your article, and what people are saying when they link to you, what other kind of articles and websites are linking to you because you have such high-quality content.

So I only focus on one keyword because (again) for me, it’s quality over quantity. I want to really make sure we knock that one keyword out of the park. We want to pick one really good keyword, we want to optimize for one really good keyword; and then from there, we’re just not going to worry about it too much. We’re just going to focus on that one, we’re going to publish, and we’re going to move on to the next piece of content, alright? And of course, we’ll talk about all of that in great detail in the coming lessons and sections.

So after we find that one keyword, we write a really, really high-quality post about that keyword – ideally, better than anything else on the internet. That should be your goal when you’re writing content is if you know the topic so well because you’ve had a job or you have some sort of certification; or if you don’t know it well enough and you have to go out there and research your butt off so that you come up with a piece of content that is more helpful for that keyword than what anybody else has written about or at least holds a candle to the top competitors. That’s what we’re aiming to do with our content. As far as you’re concerned, you should set a standard for yourself that aiming for anything shy of that is not acceptable because it’s going to hurt your business in the long run.

Does every piece of content you put out need to be 5,000 words? Absolutely not. You can have really high-quality content that’s 1,200 to 1,500 words. And we’re going to talk very explicitly about how to write high-quality content. But just know, you’re not going to be able to pump out 300- and 500-word articles and they’re going to be the best on the web. You really need to kind of get down into the details to truly help people; and the better you do that, the higher quality content you have; and the more you do that, the more you aim for that, the closer you’re going to align with the goal of having the best piece of content on the internet for that particular keyword.

And then there are other things we can do like we can make sure that we optimize that piece of content for that keyword better than anyone else has and we’ll start talking about that as we get into actual keyword tools and we start trying to find high-quality keywords that we want to target with our content.

So I’ll just mention this briefly: that after we write the really high-quality content (hopefully the best piece of content on the internet for that particular keyword and topic), we optimize our post for those keywords. And that is what we’ve referred to many times throughout the training up to this point as SEO (search engine optimization). And there’s on-page SEO; there’s off-page SEO. We’re going to talk about both in different sections as we work on the upcoming lessons.

So just know… we’re in Section 5 now… in Section 6 we’ll talk about really high-quality content and we’ll talk about on-page SEO very, very explicitly there. And then I believe it’s Section 7 when we start talking about how to get traffic to your site. I’ll do a very thorough training on off-page SEO as well. So anyways, just know that’s coming. That’s what we talk about when we talk about optimizing our posts for the keywords we’re targeting. We’ll get there. But just know that’s what it means for now.

And in time, as time goes on, our website begins to build authority and starts ranking for the terms we’re targeting. And I mentioned this is the last lesson, it’s often retroactive. So just because you spend eight months writing content without seeing any real results; you’re just writing really, really high-quality content; sometimes you’re wondering if you’re doing everything correctly… I talked in Section 2 about mindset… that’s normal. You’re going to encounter those phases when you’re trying to build an internet marketing business with little to no investment capital. So you’re going to in those eight months wonder, “Am I doing this right? Why am I not seeing any results? And is this whole industry a scam?” et cetera.

But the good news is once you start to see that tipping point I’ve talked about say at Month 9 or Month 10… Month 10 or Month 11, for example… you’ll start to see that content from those first eight months will start to rank as well. So it kind of ranks retroactively a lot of the time. And as your entire site’s authority builds, a lot of the content that did not previously have enough authority to rank will start to get that authority and start to rank; and you’ll start seeing traffic come in for keywords that you didn’t even optimize for. It just happens when you put out really high-quality content and you focus on your on-page SEO.

So all of this adds up to: we find a really good keyword; we write a really high-quality piece of content; we optimize that piece of content for rankings; and then over time, we start to get traffic to our website – because we do this over and over and over again, people start talking about us, people start finding the site, people start engaging with our site in a way that indicates to Google, “Hey, there’s some really high-quality stuff here!” And all of those things begin to stack on top of each other (again, it’s cumulative) and then we start to see results, we start to get traffic and more traffic and more traffic. And if we’re doing the right things with that traffic, we’ll start making more money and more money and more money. And again, we’ll talk about that later in the training in a different section; but just to give you kind of a big-picture view.

So what specifically should you be looking for in a keyword?

Ideally, a keyword will have at least 30 to 100 searches a month. Sometimes, you can build a business on writing for a bunch of keywords that have 10 searches a month. You’re just going to have to write for more keywords and rank for more keywords. But that’s okay sometimes. But ideally, we’d like to find keywords that we can realistically rank for – that have at least 30 to 100 searches per month.

The lower the competition, the better. I forgot my close parenthesis over there at the end of ‘tools’. We’re going to talk more about that when we begin looking at keyword tools. Exactly how to determine what your competition is for that keyword, how to find low competition keywords, what indicates that something’s a low competition keyword – it’s a combination of many different things. But we’ll take a look at those when we begin looking at keyword tools in Lesson 5.5 and Lesson 5.6.

I typically do keyword research in chunks so I’m not going to sit down and do keyword research for every single article. I may carve out half a day or a day, do a lot of keyword research, take note of all of it, and then use it to fuel my content for the next six to ten articles – if not more. And then when I run out of keywords that I wanted to write content for, I go back and I do another chunk of keyword research.

So just know that it comes down to efficiency. If every single article you write, you have to come back; and you spend several hours focusing on keyword research; then you go and you write the article; and then you come back – it’s just going to interrupt your flow. It’s better to do it all or a big chunk of it and then focus on writing for the next several articles (next several posts) on your website, and then come back to keyword research. And also, it’s nice. It gives you a little bit more variety without sacrificing efficiency.

So before we do all of this (again, we’re getting really close to digging into keyword research tools), we need to talk about why some keywords in your niche are valuable and some are totally worthless. And if you don’t (at least) vaguely know about this going in, it can really bite you in the butt and you could end up with a website that has a thousand visitors a day and you can’t… no matter how much you optimize for conversions, no matter what offers you promote… you can’t get more than $500 a month out of that website even though you’re getting 30,000 visitors a month. That just doesn’t make sense. That happens to a lot of people because they don’t know to look for qualified traffic versus unqualified traffic when they’re doing keyword research. So I want to make one very specific stop there and talk about that and then we will go on and start looking at keywords in keyword research tools.

So as always, if you have any questions, feel free to post them to the Facebook group – it’s free for registered members. And I will see you there and I’ll see you in the next video.

5.2 The Anatomy of a “Perfect” Keyword (AF)

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In this video I discuss:

  • What USED to make for a perfect keyword
  • Why that isn’t the case anymore
  • How to turn this tradition and outdated teaching to our advantage
  • A strategy for building a successful website in even the most competitive niches or industries

Please direct all questions and requests for support to the FIMP Facebook group (free for registered members).

5.2 Transcript Below

Okay, let’s do this. Let’s talk about what we are looking for in a keyword.

So the anatomy of a perfect keyword and what makes a keyword more desirable than another is… traditional teaching (that goes back years and years in this industry) is you want something that has as high search volume as possible – something that is searched every month as much as possible and we can pull that data very dependably from several different tools. We’ll get into that later as we start looking at specific keyword tools later in this section.

But you want something that a lot of people are searching every month and that doesn’t have a whole lot of competition – and that can mean a lot of different things. There are a lot of metrics that determine competition, and again, we’ll cover those very extensively later in this section. But the traditional thinking in this industry that’s been taught for years (going back almost to the birth of affiliate marketing) is you want high search volume + low competition and that is a unicorn. That is the perfect compensation. That is what you want to find.

My experience is… especially as the internet has become more and more saturated and more and more competitive… you know, of course, there are probably billions… well, without out doubt there are billions of webpages… at least hundreds of millions of websites… well yeah, at least tens of millions of websites I’d say… but probably more in the hundreds of millions. So as time has gone on and the internet has been packed with more and more content, it’s become more and more difficult to find those really high search volume keywords that would be really easy to rank for without some pretty complex knowledge for search engine optimization. So in my experience and in my opinion, this mindset is very much an artifact of the old days where you would build like a three- or five-page website and you would try to optimize it for one very specific keyword, two very specific keywords, three very specific keywords that were really high in search volume.

Modern-day websites typically have a lot more content. We’re posting content much more regularly; we’re blogging two or three times a week, if not more (a lot of us at least once a week); and even that within a month, you’re going to outgrow kind of the average size of an affiliate marketing or internet marketing website ten years ago.

So everyone knows that internet marketing changes very rapidly. From one year to the next even, there can be a lot of changes. But certainly, every two or three years (and really every five years beyond a shadow of a doubt), things almost get turned upside down and revolutionized – and are completely different than they were five years ago.

So the reason I refer to this as kind of an artifact of the old days is because everything else has changed. Search engine optimization has changed dramatically, of course. All different kinds of marketing, pay-per-click advertising… everything’s been revolutionized. But we still have a bunch of people teaching, and as a result, a bunch of students looking for these really high search volume keywords with as low a competition as possible. And back in the day, I mean even pre-2012, you could probably get away with that because search engine optimization was more of a question of quantity than quality – which can technically be argued there are ways to do that today that are still possible. But again, that’s getting really, really advanced. Just know – for the advanced people that are watching – I know that there things like PBNs and all these other things that can be used to kind of circumvent the changes that were put in place since 2012 but without getting super, super overwhelming and getting just way down a rabbit hole.

2012 is when Google released Penguin 2.0. So Penguin 2.0 was technically their second release (big release) of Penguin which is an algorithm that they used to punish websites based on over-optimized anchor text, way too many links, et cetera. So again, probably even getting too thick into the weeds here… but the long story short is once Google did that, it became much more difficult and much more complex (to the point that you almost need a really sophisticated understanding of search engine optimization) to beat Google at their own game. So you can either play by Google’s rules which is focused on high-quality content and our algorithms will take care of the rest; or you can get really, really, really deep into how to game Google. But again, that takes a ton of technical understanding and it’s a very, very difficult thing to learn. So you have those kind of two options and it’s also much higher cost – much, much higher cost.

So you have those two things and… I’ve ended up down a rabbit hole even though I didn’t want to. But it’s good to know, because essentially – pre-2012 – you could just build a bunch of links that said ‘laser tattoo removal’, right? The link was laser tattoo removal so that was it’s anchor text. So if you wanted to click on that link, you would be clicking on the words ‘laser tattoo removal’. And I could just go get a ton of those. I could just go get hundreds or thousands of those linking to RueTattoo.com, and in time, I would rank for that term. So even though it was a really competitive term, I’d be able to get ranked for it. No problem. I would just have to spend a lot of time and invest in teams (which typically could be hired very easily out of India) to get a really high quantity of links.

And quality didn’t really factor in. Well now, Google looks very extensively and very thoroughly at the quality and the context of those links as well. So you get punished when you try to abuse it that way – which, back in the day, that’s just how you got ranked. Now, it’s how you get a website buried and never found again. Unfortunately.

So I say it’s an artifact of the old days because you could get ranked for those high search volume + low competition (as low competition as you could find terms) fairly easily. It was just a matter of who could get the highest quantity of links really quickly. And as long as you could keep adding that quantity of links, you were probably going to get ranked in the top three. It doesn’t really work that way anymore. And as a result, ranking for a high competition or high search volume keywords because they’re so desirable has become more and more difficult.

So I’ve probably spent way too much time on this, and hopefully, none of you were just like your heads are just like spinning. If they are, take a deep breath… don’t worry about it… because a lot of that’s going to make so much more sense as we continue through the other sections. But just kind of to really explain why I say this is kind of an artifact of the old days, we don’t have to do it this way anymore. We really don’t. It’s really kind of swimming against the current compared to what today’s search engine climate looks like compared to what it looked like five years ago.

So, moving on. People are probably just like fast-forwarding like, “Oh God, finally!”

So higher search volume keywords (like I’ve mentioned briefly) are usually dominated by high authority established websites. So websites that have been around a long time have dozens, if not hundreds, if not thousands of pages of content that’s really, really high-quality. And so, as a result of these higher search terms being more desirable… obviously, they’re more desirable because if you get ranked for them, you’re going to get more traffic; if you get more traffic, you have more opportunities to make more money… so the more desirable they are (it goes hand in hand), the higher competition they are these days. You can still find some gems that may have a few thousand searches a month that are technically still somewhat low or moderate competition, but that is super hard and you just can’t depend on building a business on that anymore these days.

So after just kind of vomiting all of this all over you (which I apologize for, for the record), what is the solution? How do we get around all of this?

So the solution to this is to kind of flip the script. Instead of going for low competition + high search volume (which doesn’t really exist anymore in today’s search climate), you can build your site’s weight by kind of picking up the scraps that all of the big boys are leaving behind. A lot of these super authoritative sites want nothing to do with a keyword that has 30 searches or 100 searches or 500 searches a month. They just don’t target those because they have the authority.

Think of it as kind of like a championship boxer. Like they’ve already trained, they’ve already built up all of their weight, they’ve eaten healthy, they’ve exercised – now there’s this champion with this giant belt on. And when they write a piece of content, a lot of the time Google goes, “Hey! Yeah, you. I trust you. You’re going up towards the top.” And they can do that for keywords that get thousands of searches a month.

When you’re getting established, you don’t have that advantage. But what you can do is you can kind of build… that’s why I said build your weight… you want to kind of eat up all of the scraps that these guys are leaving behind that may have 15, 30, 45, 100 searches a month. And then as time goes on, your website’s authority will build on those kind of little scraps and then you will be able to compete more and more as time goes on. And you put out more and more quality with those heavy weights and contend for some of those really desirable spots. But that takes a lot of time to build up to. The good news is you can start seeing traction before then just with lower search volume keywords.

So I kind of refer to this as “Scraps today, feasts tomorrow.” And of course, that’s a simplification because when I say ‘feast tomorrow’, we’re talking about at least six to twelve months of really hard work here before you start seeing some noticeable results – if you’re doing everything according to the training here.

So the idea is if you turn out a higher volume of really high-quality content directly targeting lower search volume keywords that other guys are overlooking, this really adds up over time. So instead of spending the next eight months trying to get ranked for a single keyword that gets 5,000 searches a month, you can spin those next eight to twelve months focusing on dozens of keywords that have 100 searches a month, 200 searches a month, 30 searches a month. And you’re going to end up with a much better shot in today’s search climate of getting ranked for a lot of those tiny keywords, rather than ending up eight months down the road and still not even being on page five for that main keyword you were going for because it’s just so hard to go at internet marketing from that approach these days.

So over time – as you start getting a lot of these lower search volume articles ranked – your authority’s going to build, people are going to link to you, people are going to talk about you in forums because you have really high-quality content. And as time goes on from you kind of (like I said) picking up these scraps and eating them, you’re going to build your weight because people are going to start noticing you, people are going to start talking about you; and as that happens (you get more engagement on your site, et cetera), you really kind of start to gain that credibility and build that authority. And then, as time goes on, you can use this authority to rank for moderate competition; and ultimately, even high competition keywords.

So we kind of focus on these phases like a brand new site – you’re a newborn. And it’s going to be impossible to go beat Mike Tyson in a boxing match; but you can (like I said) eat up those little scraps, get the nutrition you need, start building a little weight. And as time goes on, it almost becomes… I’ve mentioned kind of exponential… but there’s a tipping point where you kind of start to see a little success. And once you start to see that little success, typically it’s followed with a really tremendous growth curve because those are little kind of early signs of gaining authority. I mean, you’re almost kind of there to breaking through a wall. And typically, those happen within… I don’t know… three to six months of one another.

So it takes a while to get to that tipping point, but once you get to that tipping point, it becomes much easier from there to begin ranking for a lot more keywords. And the really nice thing is that this… I’ll mention later in the training… this kind of happens retroactively. So what you’ve written in the past also begins to rank because your authority begins to build.

So this is why frequent publishing of high-quality content has become so pivotal for early stage blogs especially when they don’t have a large marketing budget. (Excuse me, I’m getting a burning in my nose like I need to sneeze. Very distracting.) So this is why this path you hear talked about a lot and some people go, “Ah, that path’s a load of crap. Just do what I say,” and then they charge you several hundred dollars for this path that is totally outdated and requires thousands of dollars in advertising and marketing is a coin toss at best. If you do this correctly, if you stay this course, and you pay attention to the training, and you’re willing to work hard; this is as surefire as a business (a low cost business) gets in this industry. You just have to be willing to stick with it.

So I mentioned this isn’t what everyone else is saying. Internet marketing has evolved so dramatically since the golden years and only aiming for desirable search terms that have a few hundred or a few thousand searches plus every month with no marketing budget is going to result in disappointment in today’s search climate. That’s all there is to it. There are no ifs, ands, or buts. It just doesn’t work that way anymore. It’s impossible in today’s search climate (again) without some really advanced knowledge and knowing how to game Google – which is incredibly complex because they’ve gotten so good at optimizing their algorithms to punish people that try to gain their search engine rankings. Outside of that… getting really, really good at that… there’s no way to go about content marketing and search engine optimization and get ranked for really high search volume keywords like you could five years ago. It just doesn’t work anymore. It’s totally obsolete.

So like I mentioned earlier, this is… as far as low cost businesses… this is as fail-proof as it gets in internet marketing if you don’t have a marketing budget and advertising budget where you can spend hundreds or thousands of dollars and maybe lose it all without really feeling the pain. That’s not true of most people that are trying to start internet businesses. So as far as low-cost internet businesses go, it’s a lot of work in the beginning; it takes a lot of studying – which is all here in the Free Internet Marketing Project for you for free. So if you do everything correctly, this is a surefire of a shot as you’re going to get in this industry with a low budget.

So this is what we’re going to focus on. These efforts are what we’re going to focus on for the next few months. But first, we have to find some keywords.

So now that we’ve talked probably a little bit too extensively about the backgrounds of keywords and what we’re going to aim to do, we’re kind of flipping the script on traditional keyword teaching that is totally outdated and from 2005 to 2010 up to 2012 when it really got kind of cut off at the head by Google but for some reason people just kept teaching it. I think it’s largely due to the fact that a lot of people in this industry – a lot of coaches in this industry – are just frankly out of touch and they don’t realize how hard that is because they have existing authority websites and they’re not trying to build out new websites. I’ve probably tried to build out a dozen new websites in the past three years – most of which have failed. And so, I’ve learned this the hard way that this is absolutely the best way to approach a low-budget internet business that’s built around content and content creation and content marketing.

So, now that we’ve talked about all that (probably, like I said, way too in-depth)… but now you’re a pro, we need to talk about exactly how to find keywords. So I’m going to talk a little bit about exactly how we use keywords… I mentioned in the last lesson how do we use them… we’ll talk about that later. Well, that’s next lesson.

And then, we’re going to start looking firsthand at how to find these using free keyword tools. There are some really good free keyword tools out there as well as some premium keyword tools that are totally optional – and I’ll make that very clear once we get there.

So if you have any questions, feel free to post them to the Facebook group. As always, that is free for registered members. And I will see you over there and I’ll see you in the next lesson.

3.4 How Scared Should You Be of Competition? (AF)

Thanks for stopping by and checking us out! If you like what you see, make sure to create a free account so that you can:

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Unlock it all by getting the tools your business needs to grow.

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WARNING: Goo-roo’s ain’t gonna like this

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In this video I discuss:

  • Why competition is usually a very good thing (and when it’s not)
  • The most competitive, evergreen niches for internet businesses
  • How to topple even the biggest and best competitors in any niche

Please direct all questions and requests for support to the FIMP Facebook group (free for registered members).

3.4 Transcript Below

Okay! I mentioned at the end of the last video – the last lesson – that this is what we’re going to be discussing: How scared you should be of competition?

A lot of people’s instinct is actually the opposite of what you should really kind of take away from seeing a lot of competition in a niche. So I’m just going to dig down into this one, because at the end of the day, competition is actually a really good thing. You shouldn’t be scared of competition at all – with a few exceptions which we’ll talk about.

Competition is a sign that there is money to be made in that niche. And even more importantly than that, there is already money being made in that niche.

And a lot of people say… like I had someone write me the other day and they said, “Hey Ian, could you give me some examples… like these are the industries I’m looking at going into. Could you give me some examples of some valid affiliate sites? Some sites that would actually make money… that are making money?”

And I said, “Well if you Google pretty much anything in the niche and you find a site that is producing helpful content and writing a lot of articles, that’s a great site to model your site after.”

Almost the more competition there is in an industry, the more examples of things that are working that you can find very easily. So it can actually be a very, very good thing.

At the end of the day, if you provide more value than the current competitors in a niche, it’s just a matter of time before you topple them or you find yourself among them. It’s a matter of posting really high quality content over a period of time. And if you keep doing that, Google themselves have said very publicly that you will break through as long as you just keep publishing really high quality content. It’s just a matter of time.

So if you can find ways to provide value or provide as much value as the very tiptop… the people that are doing really well in the industry… if you can do just as well and even better, if you can do better than them and provide more value, it’s just a matter of time until you succeed in that niche.

So that can also be true, you don’t necessarily have to compete side-by-side with them. That can also be true… as I’ve discussed in past training… it can be true if you provide value in a different medium.

So if there are a lot of people creating really, really high-quality content posts – written content – you could be the guy or gal that comes in and makes videos. Totally possible and just as valid of an approach.

So the one exception I will give to kind of this role is if you see the same three to five authority sites… so we are talking about like really heavy hitter famous websites… if everything you search in a niche is dominated by the same three or five competitors – they have the top three, the top five listings so they are all showing up on the first page over and over again – it’s probably better to pursue a different niche if you just can’t find terms within that niche that these competitors are constantly popping up in.

So a really good example is Amazon. If you’re seeing Amazon pop up two or three times towards the top for all of the search terms you’re looking at – that you’re putting into Google If you’re finding really authoritative health sites like Mayo Clinic or Health MD. Another really good example is in the real estate niche. It can be really, really hard to do SEO (search engine optimization) in the real estate niche because Realtor.com and so many others… Zillow, Trulia… so many of these other websites have such a strong hold on those niches.

So if everything you’re searching is popping up with the same heavy hitting various established authorities and you just can’t find any way around that… you just can’t find enough keywords outside of that… I would seriously consider looking at another niche. So that’s just a really good rule of thumb for the exception there.

So I also want to take a moment in this lesson and talk about the most competitive and also the most profitable industries. You may have heard of these referred to as “evergreen niches” and there are kind of three main coveted evergreen niches in this industry.

There’s Health and Wellness and Beauty. They kind of fall into the same category for whatever reason. That is one of the top three evergreen niches that no matter what, that is always going to be a very profitable niche to do business in or a very profitable industry. There are a lot of niches under that umbrella and they will all be very profitable. If you can get traffic in that niche or in that industry to your niche site, you are probably going to make a pretty decent amount of income.

The same thing is true for Make Money Online, anything having to do with Investing or Business Opportunities. So at the end of the day, money. Health and wellness and money so far are the niches.

If you have a site about making money doing *blank* (whether it be working online or building businesses that cost less than $100 to start up) or anything having to do with investing (whether it be from stocks to auctions) to finding things on Craigslist or eBay that you flipped for money in the long run, those are going to be really profitable niche sites and there are going to be a lot of possibilities… really profitable niche sites within those industries.

So same thing goes for Relationships and Dating.

Those are the top three evergreen niches that as time goes on, more and more… it’s been this way for a decade, 15 years now, even longer actually… these have always been the most profitable industries for people running internet marketing businesses – whether it be a blog or an affiliate marketing site or eCommerce.

If you establish yourself in these niches, it’s likely to be very profitable but it is also significantly more likely to be much higher competition – naturally. If there’s a lot more money to be made there, there are probably going to be a lot more people looking to get in into that niche or that industry. But if you can kind of crack a smart way in, you could be looking at a huge pay off.

Originally, when I entered the internet marketing niche overall… similar to Free Internet Marketing Project, I wanted to start an honest review site for so many years before I did it. But I finally did it once and it turned out to be a really, really great niche to be in.

But I didn’t go into internet marketing saying, “Hey I’m going to teach people how to make money on the internet,” because there’s so many articles about that and it’s such a saturated market place.

So I decided what I would do… before – well, not before – but when I entered the internet marketing product review space, everything you read was a positive review for the product. No matter what you looked up, no matter what search term, on YouTube, in Google, all you saw were positive recommendations because that was how people monetized. They weren’t giving honest reviews. Most of them weren’t even buying the products. They were just saying, “It’s great. Buy through my affiliate link.” “It’s awesome. It fulfills everything it ever said it would and more. Buy through my affiliate link.”

And I was really fed up with that because most of these products were crap. I knew because I was buying a lot of them or I had bought a lot of them in the years leading up to that and they were just crap. When I got into them… this guy gave it a glowing recommendation… I got into them and it was a total piece of crap.

So I ultimately decided to enter the internet marketing space. Instead of going head on and competing with all of the articles – all the really high quality content that’s in this industry – I decided to review products honestly and that was a great way into the niche.

Now traditional kind of school of thought was: if you go into a niche and you say products are bad… you find products and you go through them and you find out that they’re bad and you can’t recommend them… well then, you can’t make any money because if you say, “Oh, this is crap,” and nobody buys it, then you’re not making any money.

But what I found in time as I was going through and giving all of those honest reviews was there were products out there that were fulfilling similar sales claims that were totally legitimate and much higher quality. And over time, people would find their way to those products.

I never… I could’ve been much more strong-handed in how I funneled people into those. Basically, there are a lot of people in the industry now that say, “This is a bad product. This is a good product, though. Go buy this one.” And I never really did that because it just felt – for me – ethically questionable.

So even though I probably shouldn’t have a problem with it personally, it was just something I didn’t want to do because my number one priority was helping people. I always wanted to keep that at the core of my business. And at the end of the day, if you help people, they are going to end up a lot of them sticking with you, following your training, digging through your sites some more, and ultimately making you money.

So that’s a really good example of a smart way into a very, very saturated niche. And so smart in fact that it’s taught now – it wasn’t when I started No More BS Reviews years ago before… that was when I eventually started Stopping Scams to be a more holistic site than just reviews: to incorporate training and stuff like that, too; to really help prevent scams because what better way to prevent people from being scammed than giving them really high-quality training so that they don’t have to go and buy all these products; or at the very least, when they’re evaluating a product, they have a much better understanding and realistic perspective to evaluate… a better lens to evaluate that product through. So if there’s a smart way in, the payoff can be absolutely huge if you thicken your skin and you can tough it out.

So I say all of that again to get down to kind of the important takeaways.

Stop looking at competition as a bad thing. It’s usually quite the opposite with that one exception I talked about if the same authorities are dominating all of the search terms you look up, it’s probably better to either find a different way into that niche, find different things to write about in that niche, or just switch niches entirely.

The most important thing is that you add more value or you add value through a different medium or you add value in a totally different way that nobody has ever added value before. So if you do those things, you will be successful in the long run and whatever niche you enter – as long as it’s dealing with a buying audience.

So if you can add more value, if you can add value differently than any of the people in the space are doing it, or if you can add value through a different medium – say, again I always use the example if there’s not a whole lot of people making videos, but a lot of people making written content, and you’re willing to make videos, they don’t even have to be super great, we’ll talk about that later in the training, too – those can all be really great ends to very, very profitable high competition niches.

So that’s the end of this lesson. Again the take home message is just don’t be afraid of competition.

If you have any questions, as always, feel free to post them to the Facebook group – free for registered members. And other than that, I will see you in the next lesson.

5.3 How We Use Keywords to Ignite Our Content

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In this video I discuss:

  • How many keywords to use per article/blog post on your website
  • An overview of how we use keywords to grow our internet business
  • The exact criteria we’re looking for in every keyword we write content for

Please direct all questions and requests for support to the FIMP Facebook group (free for registered members).

5.3 Transcript Below

Okay. So now that we know what keywords are and we know kind of what our overall keyword strategy is going to be, we need to talk about exactly how we use keywords to ignite our content.

And for those of you that this is kind of a recap, I hope you’ll hang in there with me. It’s distinctly possible that you’ll learn a couple of new things just watching this lesson if you are more familiar with some of these ideas, but I want to make sure that I’m not leaving anyone behind. So I want to say very explicitly how we are going to use keywords in our business to kind of ignite our content and get a lot of traction in the coming months.

So keywords – as I’ve mentioned several times by this point – are the fuel for successful content. So first, what we want to do before we write anything is when we’re preparing for an article, we want to find one or two keywords that we want to target in that article. Some people say, you know, target three keywords, optimize an article for five keywords; I find when you do that, you’re almost spreading yourself so thin that it’s really hard to pay attention and do the work at high enough quality that it actually means anything. Sure, you can go out there and try to optimize every article you write for five different keywords; but you’re going to be spreading yourself so thin that you might as well have not tried to optimize for any keywords.

So personally, I only focus on one keyword for every single article I write and I train my writers to do the exact same thing: pick one keyword and write for that one keyword, optimize for that one keyword. Because at the end of the day, if you do that and you write really high-quality content, you’re going to accidentally rank for a lot of other keywords in time around that topic – just based on the context of your article, and what people are saying when they link to you, what other kind of articles and websites are linking to you because you have such high-quality content.

So I only focus on one keyword because (again) for me, it’s quality over quantity. I want to really make sure we knock that one keyword out of the park. We want to pick one really good keyword, we want to optimize for one really good keyword; and then from there, we’re just not going to worry about it too much. We’re just going to focus on that one, we’re going to publish, and we’re going to move on to the next piece of content, alright? And of course, we’ll talk about all of that in great detail in the coming lessons and sections.

So after we find that one keyword, we write a really, really high-quality post about that keyword – ideally, better than anything else on the internet. That should be your goal when you’re writing content is if you know the topic so well because you’ve had a job or you have some sort of certification; or if you don’t know it well enough and you have to go out there and research your butt off so that you come up with a piece of content that is more helpful for that keyword than what anybody else has written about or at least holds a candle to the top competitors. That’s what we’re aiming to do with our content. As far as you’re concerned, you should set a standard for yourself that aiming for anything shy of that is not acceptable because it’s going to hurt your business in the long run.

Does every piece of content you put out need to be 5,000 words? Absolutely not. You can have really high-quality content that’s 1,200 to 1,500 words. And we’re going to talk very explicitly about how to write high-quality content. But just know, you’re not going to be able to pump out 300- and 500-word articles and they’re going to be the best on the web. You really need to kind of get down into the details to truly help people; and the better you do that, the higher quality content you have; and the more you do that, the more you aim for that, the closer you’re going to align with the goal of having the best piece of content on the internet for that particular keyword.

And then there are other things we can do like we can make sure that we optimize that piece of content for that keyword better than anyone else has and we’ll start talking about that as we get into actual keyword tools and we start trying to find high-quality keywords that we want to target with our content.

So I’ll just mention this briefly: that after we write the really high-quality content (hopefully the best piece of content on the internet for that particular keyword and topic), we optimize our post for those keywords. And that is what we’ve referred to many times throughout the training up to this point as SEO (search engine optimization). And there’s on-page SEO; there’s off-page SEO. We’re going to talk about both in different sections as we work on the upcoming lessons.

So just know… we’re in Section 5 now… in Section 6 we’ll talk about really high-quality content and we’ll talk about on-page SEO very, very explicitly there. And then I believe it’s Section 7 when we start talking about how to get traffic to your site. I’ll do a very thorough training on off-page SEO as well. So anyways, just know that’s coming. That’s what we talk about when we talk about optimizing our posts for the keywords we’re targeting. We’ll get there. But just know that’s what it means for now.

And in time, as time goes on, our website begins to build authority and starts ranking for the terms we’re targeting. And I mentioned this is the last lesson, it’s often retroactive. So just because you spend eight months writing content without seeing any real results; you’re just writing really, really high-quality content; sometimes you’re wondering if you’re doing everything correctly… I talked in Section 2 about mindset… that’s normal. You’re going to encounter those phases when you’re trying to build an internet marketing business with little to no investment capital. So you’re going to in those eight months wonder, “Am I doing this right? Why am I not seeing any results? And is this whole industry a scam?” et cetera.

But the good news is once you start to see that tipping point I’ve talked about say at Month 9 or Month 10… Month 10 or Month 11, for example… you’ll start to see that content from those first eight months will start to rank as well. So it kind of ranks retroactively a lot of the time. And as your entire site’s authority builds, a lot of the content that did not previously have enough authority to rank will start to get that authority and start to rank; and you’ll start seeing traffic come in for keywords that you didn’t even optimize for. It just happens when you put out really high-quality content and you focus on your on-page SEO.

So all of this adds up to: we find a really good keyword; we write a really high-quality piece of content; we optimize that piece of content for rankings; and then over time, we start to get traffic to our website – because we do this over and over and over again, people start talking about us, people start finding the site, people start engaging with our site in a way that indicates to Google, “Hey, there’s some really high-quality stuff here!” And all of those things begin to stack on top of each other (again, it’s cumulative) and then we start to see results, we start to get traffic and more traffic and more traffic. And if we’re doing the right things with that traffic, we’ll start making more money and more money and more money. And again, we’ll talk about that later in the training in a different section; but just to give you kind of a big-picture view.

So what specifically should you be looking for in a keyword?

Ideally, a keyword will have at least 30 to 100 searches a month. Sometimes, you can build a business on writing for a bunch of keywords that have 10 searches a month. You’re just going to have to write for more keywords and rank for more keywords. But that’s okay sometimes. But ideally, we’d like to find keywords that we can realistically rank for – that have at least 30 to 100 searches per month.

The lower the competition, the better. I forgot my close parenthesis over there at the end of ‘tools’. We’re going to talk more about that when we begin looking at keyword tools. Exactly how to determine what your competition is for that keyword, how to find low competition keywords, what indicates that something’s a low competition keyword – it’s a combination of many different things. But we’ll take a look at those when we begin looking at keyword tools in Lesson 5.5 and Lesson 5.6.

I typically do keyword research in chunks so I’m not going to sit down and do keyword research for every single article. I may carve out half a day or a day, do a lot of keyword research, take note of all of it, and then use it to fuel my content for the next six to ten articles – if not more. And then when I run out of keywords that I wanted to write content for, I go back and I do another chunk of keyword research.

So just know that it comes down to efficiency. If every single article you write, you have to come back; and you spend several hours focusing on keyword research; then you go and you write the article; and then you come back – it’s just going to interrupt your flow. It’s better to do it all or a big chunk of it and then focus on writing for the next several articles (next several posts) on your website, and then come back to keyword research. And also, it’s nice. It gives you a little bit more variety without sacrificing efficiency.

So before we do all of this (again, we’re getting really close to digging into keyword research tools), we need to talk about why some keywords in your niche are valuable and some are totally worthless. And if you don’t (at least) vaguely know about this going in, it can really bite you in the butt and you could end up with a website that has a thousand visitors a day and you can’t… no matter how much you optimize for conversions, no matter what offers you promote… you can’t get more than $500 a month out of that website even though you’re getting 30,000 visitors a month. That just doesn’t make sense. That happens to a lot of people because they don’t know to look for qualified traffic versus unqualified traffic when they’re doing keyword research. So I want to make one very specific stop there and talk about that and then we will go on and start looking at keywords in keyword research tools.

So as always, if you have any questions, feel free to post them to the Facebook group – it’s free for registered members. And I will see you there and I’ll see you in the next video.

5.2 The Anatomy of a “Perfect” Keyword

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In this video I discuss:

  • What USED to make for a perfect keyword
  • Why that isn’t the case anymore
  • How to turn this tradition and outdated teaching to our advantage
  • A strategy for building a successful website in even the most competitive niches or industries

Please direct all questions and requests for support to the FIMP Facebook group (free for registered members).

5.2 Transcript Below

Okay, let’s do this. Let’s talk about what we are looking for in a keyword.

So the anatomy of a perfect keyword and what makes a keyword more desirable than another is… traditional teaching (that goes back years and years in this industry) is you want something that has as high search volume as possible – something that is searched every month as much as possible and we can pull that data very dependably from several different tools. We’ll get into that later as we start looking at specific keyword tools later in this section.

But you want something that a lot of people are searching every month and that doesn’t have a whole lot of competition – and that can mean a lot of different things. There are a lot of metrics that determine competition, and again, we’ll cover those very extensively later in this section. But the traditional thinking in this industry that’s been taught for years (going back almost to the birth of affiliate marketing) is you want high search volume + low competition and that is a unicorn. That is the perfect compensation. That is what you want to find.

My experience is… especially as the internet has become more and more saturated and more and more competitive… you know, of course, there are probably billions… well, without out doubt there are billions of webpages… at least hundreds of millions of websites… well yeah, at least tens of millions of websites I’d say… but probably more in the hundreds of millions. So as time has gone on and the internet has been packed with more and more content, it’s become more and more difficult to find those really high search volume keywords that would be really easy to rank for without some pretty complex knowledge for search engine optimization. So in my experience and in my opinion, this mindset is very much an artifact of the old days where you would build like a three- or five-page website and you would try to optimize it for one very specific keyword, two very specific keywords, three very specific keywords that were really high in search volume.

Modern-day websites typically have a lot more content. We’re posting content much more regularly; we’re blogging two or three times a week, if not more (a lot of us at least once a week); and even that within a month, you’re going to outgrow kind of the average size of an affiliate marketing or internet marketing website ten years ago.

So everyone knows that internet marketing changes very rapidly. From one year to the next even, there can be a lot of changes. But certainly, every two or three years (and really every five years beyond a shadow of a doubt), things almost get turned upside down and revolutionized – and are completely different than they were five years ago.

So the reason I refer to this as kind of an artifact of the old days is because everything else has changed. Search engine optimization has changed dramatically, of course. All different kinds of marketing, pay-per-click advertising… everything’s been revolutionized. But we still have a bunch of people teaching, and as a result, a bunch of students looking for these really high search volume keywords with as low a competition as possible. And back in the day, I mean even pre-2012, you could probably get away with that because search engine optimization was more of a question of quantity than quality – which can technically be argued there are ways to do that today that are still possible. But again, that’s getting really, really advanced. Just know – for the advanced people that are watching – I know that there things like PBNs and all these other things that can be used to kind of circumvent the changes that were put in place since 2012 but without getting super, super overwhelming and getting just way down a rabbit hole.

2012 is when Google released Penguin 2.0. So Penguin 2.0 was technically their second release (big release) of Penguin which is an algorithm that they used to punish websites based on over-optimized anchor text, way too many links, et cetera. So again, probably even getting too thick into the weeds here… but the long story short is once Google did that, it became much more difficult and much more complex (to the point that you almost need a really sophisticated understanding of search engine optimization) to beat Google at their own game. So you can either play by Google’s rules which is focused on high-quality content and our algorithms will take care of the rest; or you can get really, really, really deep into how to game Google. But again, that takes a ton of technical understanding and it’s a very, very difficult thing to learn. So you have those kind of two options and it’s also much higher cost – much, much higher cost.

So you have those two things and… I’ve ended up down a rabbit hole even though I didn’t want to. But it’s good to know, because essentially – pre-2012 – you could just build a bunch of links that said ‘laser tattoo removal’, right? The link was laser tattoo removal so that was it’s anchor text. So if you wanted to click on that link, you would be clicking on the words ‘laser tattoo removal’. And I could just go get a ton of those. I could just go get hundreds or thousands of those linking to RueTattoo.com, and in time, I would rank for that term. So even though it was a really competitive term, I’d be able to get ranked for it. No problem. I would just have to spend a lot of time and invest in teams (which typically could be hired very easily out of India) to get a really high quantity of links.

And quality didn’t really factor in. Well now, Google looks very extensively and very thoroughly at the quality and the context of those links as well. So you get punished when you try to abuse it that way – which, back in the day, that’s just how you got ranked. Now, it’s how you get a website buried and never found again. Unfortunately.

So I say it’s an artifact of the old days because you could get ranked for those high search volume + low competition (as low competition as you could find terms) fairly easily. It was just a matter of who could get the highest quantity of links really quickly. And as long as you could keep adding that quantity of links, you were probably going to get ranked in the top three. It doesn’t really work that way anymore. And as a result, ranking for a high competition or high search volume keywords because they’re so desirable has become more and more difficult.

So I’ve probably spent way too much time on this, and hopefully, none of you were just like your heads are just like spinning. If they are, take a deep breath… don’t worry about it… because a lot of that’s going to make so much more sense as we continue through the other sections. But just kind of to really explain why I say this is kind of an artifact of the old days, we don’t have to do it this way anymore. We really don’t. It’s really kind of swimming against the current compared to what today’s search engine climate looks like compared to what it looked like five years ago.

So, moving on. People are probably just like fast-forwarding like, “Oh God, finally!”

So higher search volume keywords (like I’ve mentioned briefly) are usually dominated by high authority established websites. So websites that have been around a long time have dozens, if not hundreds, if not thousands of pages of content that’s really, really high-quality. And so, as a result of these higher search terms being more desirable… obviously, they’re more desirable because if you get ranked for them, you’re going to get more traffic; if you get more traffic, you have more opportunities to make more money… so the more desirable they are (it goes hand in hand), the higher competition they are these days. You can still find some gems that may have a few thousand searches a month that are technically still somewhat low or moderate competition, but that is super hard and you just can’t depend on building a business on that anymore these days.

So after just kind of vomiting all of this all over you (which I apologize for, for the record), what is the solution? How do we get around all of this?

So the solution to this is to kind of flip the script. Instead of going for low competition + high search volume (which doesn’t really exist anymore in today’s search climate), you can build your site’s weight by kind of picking up the scraps that all of the big boys are leaving behind. A lot of these super authoritative sites want nothing to do with a keyword that has 30 searches or 100 searches or 500 searches a month. They just don’t target those because they have the authority.

Think of it as kind of like a championship boxer. Like they’ve already trained, they’ve already built up all of their weight, they’ve eaten healthy, they’ve exercised – now there’s this champion with this giant belt on. And when they write a piece of content, a lot of the time Google goes, “Hey! Yeah, you. I trust you. You’re going up towards the top.” And they can do that for keywords that get thousands of searches a month.

When you’re getting established, you don’t have that advantage. But what you can do is you can kind of build… that’s why I said build your weight… you want to kind of eat up all of the scraps that these guys are leaving behind that may have 15, 30, 45, 100 searches a month. And then as time goes on, your website’s authority will build on those kind of little scraps and then you will be able to compete more and more as time goes on. And you put out more and more quality with those heavy weights and contend for some of those really desirable spots. But that takes a lot of time to build up to. The good news is you can start seeing traction before then just with lower search volume keywords.

So I kind of refer to this as “Scraps today, feasts tomorrow.” And of course, that’s a simplification because when I say ‘feast tomorrow’, we’re talking about at least six to twelve months of really hard work here before you start seeing some noticeable results – if you’re doing everything according to the training here.

So the idea is if you turn out a higher volume of really high-quality content directly targeting lower search volume keywords that other guys are overlooking, this really adds up over time. So instead of spending the next eight months trying to get ranked for a single keyword that gets 5,000 searches a month, you can spin those next eight to twelve months focusing on dozens of keywords that have 100 searches a month, 200 searches a month, 30 searches a month. And you’re going to end up with a much better shot in today’s search climate of getting ranked for a lot of those tiny keywords, rather than ending up eight months down the road and still not even being on page five for that main keyword you were going for because it’s just so hard to go at internet marketing from that approach these days.

So over time – as you start getting a lot of these lower search volume articles ranked – your authority’s going to build, people are going to link to you, people are going to talk about you in forums because you have really high-quality content. And as time goes on from you kind of (like I said) picking up these scraps and eating them, you’re going to build your weight because people are going to start noticing you, people are going to start talking about you; and as that happens (you get more engagement on your site, et cetera), you really kind of start to gain that credibility and build that authority. And then, as time goes on, you can use this authority to rank for moderate competition; and ultimately, even high competition keywords.

So we kind of focus on these phases like a brand new site – you’re a newborn. And it’s going to be impossible to go beat Mike Tyson in a boxing match; but you can (like I said) eat up those little scraps, get the nutrition you need, start building a little weight. And as time goes on, it almost becomes… I’ve mentioned kind of exponential… but there’s a tipping point where you kind of start to see a little success. And once you start to see that little success, typically it’s followed with a really tremendous growth curve because those are little kind of early signs of gaining authority. I mean, you’re almost kind of there to breaking through a wall. And typically, those happen within… I don’t know… three to six months of one another.

So it takes a while to get to that tipping point, but once you get to that tipping point, it becomes much easier from there to begin ranking for a lot more keywords. And the really nice thing is that this… I’ll mention later in the training… this kind of happens retroactively. So what you’ve written in the past also begins to rank because your authority begins to build.

So this is why frequent publishing of high-quality content has become so pivotal for early stage blogs especially when they don’t have a large marketing budget. (Excuse me, I’m getting a burning in my nose like I need to sneeze. Very distracting.) So this is why this path you hear talked about a lot and some people go, “Ah, that path’s a load of crap. Just do what I say,” and then they charge you several hundred dollars for this path that is totally outdated and requires thousands of dollars in advertising and marketing is a coin toss at best. If you do this correctly, if you stay this course, and you pay attention to the training, and you’re willing to work hard; this is as surefire as a business (a low cost business) gets in this industry. You just have to be willing to stick with it.

So I mentioned this isn’t what everyone else is saying. Internet marketing has evolved so dramatically since the golden years and only aiming for desirable search terms that have a few hundred or a few thousand searches plus every month with no marketing budget is going to result in disappointment in today’s search climate. That’s all there is to it. There are no ifs, ands, or buts. It just doesn’t work that way anymore. It’s impossible in today’s search climate (again) without some really advanced knowledge and knowing how to game Google – which is incredibly complex because they’ve gotten so good at optimizing their algorithms to punish people that try to gain their search engine rankings. Outside of that… getting really, really good at that… there’s no way to go about content marketing and search engine optimization and get ranked for really high search volume keywords like you could five years ago. It just doesn’t work anymore. It’s totally obsolete.

So like I mentioned earlier, this is… as far as low cost businesses… this is as fail-proof as it gets in internet marketing if you don’t have a marketing budget and advertising budget where you can spend hundreds or thousands of dollars and maybe lose it all without really feeling the pain. That’s not true of most people that are trying to start internet businesses. So as far as low-cost internet businesses go, it’s a lot of work in the beginning; it takes a lot of studying – which is all here in the Free Internet Marketing Project for you for free. So if you do everything correctly, this is a surefire of a shot as you’re going to get in this industry with a low budget.

So this is what we’re going to focus on. These efforts are what we’re going to focus on for the next few months. But first, we have to find some keywords.

So now that we’ve talked probably a little bit too extensively about the backgrounds of keywords and what we’re going to aim to do, we’re kind of flipping the script on traditional keyword teaching that is totally outdated and from 2005 to 2010 up to 2012 when it really got kind of cut off at the head by Google but for some reason people just kept teaching it. I think it’s largely due to the fact that a lot of people in this industry – a lot of coaches in this industry – are just frankly out of touch and they don’t realize how hard that is because they have existing authority websites and they’re not trying to build out new websites. I’ve probably tried to build out a dozen new websites in the past three years – most of which have failed. And so, I’ve learned this the hard way that this is absolutely the best way to approach a low-budget internet business that’s built around content and content creation and content marketing.

So, now that we’ve talked about all that (probably, like I said, way too in-depth)… but now you’re a pro, we need to talk about exactly how to find keywords. So I’m going to talk a little bit about exactly how we use keywords… I mentioned in the last lesson how do we use them… we’ll talk about that later. Well, that’s next lesson.

And then, we’re going to start looking firsthand at how to find these using free keyword tools. There are some really good free keyword tools out there as well as some premium keyword tools that are totally optional – and I’ll make that very clear once we get there.

So if you have any questions, feel free to post them to the Facebook group. As always, that is free for registered members. And I will see you over there and I’ll see you in the next lesson.

3.4 How Scared Should You Be of Competition?

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In this video I discuss:

  • Why competition is usually a very good thing (and when it’s not)
  • The most competitive, evergreen niches for internet businesses
  • How to topple even the biggest and best competitors in any niche

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3.4 Transcript Below

Okay! I mentioned at the end of the last video – the last lesson – that this is what we’re going to be discussing: How scared you should be of competition?

A lot of people’s instinct is actually the opposite of what you should really kind of take away from seeing a lot of competition in a niche. So I’m just going to dig down into this one, because at the end of the day, competition is actually a really good thing. You shouldn’t be scared of competition at all – with a few exceptions which we’ll talk about.

Competition is a sign that there is money to be made in that niche. And even more importantly than that, there is already money being made in that niche.

And a lot of people say… like I had someone write me the other day and they said, “Hey Ian, could you give me some examples… like these are the industries I’m looking at going into. Could you give me some examples of some valid affiliate sites? Some sites that would actually make money… that are making money?”

And I said, “Well if you Google pretty much anything in the niche and you find a site that is producing helpful content and writing a lot of articles, that’s a great site to model your site after.”

Almost the more competition there is in an industry, the more examples of things that are working that you can find very easily. So it can actually be a very, very good thing.

At the end of the day, if you provide more value than the current competitors in a niche, it’s just a matter of time before you topple them or you find yourself among them. It’s a matter of posting really high quality content over a period of time. And if you keep doing that, Google themselves have said very publicly that you will break through as long as you just keep publishing really high quality content. It’s just a matter of time.

So if you can find ways to provide value or provide as much value as the very tiptop… the people that are doing really well in the industry… if you can do just as well and even better, if you can do better than them and provide more value, it’s just a matter of time until you succeed in that niche.

So that can also be true, you don’t necessarily have to compete side-by-side with them. That can also be true… as I’ve discussed in past training… it can be true if you provide value in a different medium.

So if there are a lot of people creating really, really high-quality content posts – written content – you could be the guy or gal that comes in and makes videos. Totally possible and just as valid of an approach.

So the one exception I will give to kind of this role is if you see the same three to five authority sites… so we are talking about like really heavy hitter famous websites… if everything you search in a niche is dominated by the same three or five competitors – they have the top three, the top five listings so they are all showing up on the first page over and over again – it’s probably better to pursue a different niche if you just can’t find terms within that niche that these competitors are constantly popping up in.

So a really good example is Amazon. If you’re seeing Amazon pop up two or three times towards the top for all of the search terms you’re looking at – that you’re putting into Google If you’re finding really authoritative health sites like Mayo Clinic or Health MD. Another really good example is in the real estate niche. It can be really, really hard to do SEO (search engine optimization) in the real estate niche because Realtor.com and so many others… Zillow, Trulia… so many of these other websites have such a strong hold on those niches.

So if everything you’re searching is popping up with the same heavy hitting various established authorities and you just can’t find any way around that… you just can’t find enough keywords outside of that… I would seriously consider looking at another niche. So that’s just a really good rule of thumb for the exception there.

So I also want to take a moment in this lesson and talk about the most competitive and also the most profitable industries. You may have heard of these referred to as “evergreen niches” and there are kind of three main coveted evergreen niches in this industry.

There’s Health and Wellness and Beauty. They kind of fall into the same category for whatever reason. That is one of the top three evergreen niches that no matter what, that is always going to be a very profitable niche to do business in or a very profitable industry. There are a lot of niches under that umbrella and they will all be very profitable. If you can get traffic in that niche or in that industry to your niche site, you are probably going to make a pretty decent amount of income.

The same thing is true for Make Money Online, anything having to do with Investing or Business Opportunities. So at the end of the day, money. Health and wellness and money so far are the niches.

If you have a site about making money doing *blank* (whether it be working online or building businesses that cost less than $100 to start up) or anything having to do with investing (whether it be from stocks to auctions) to finding things on Craigslist or eBay that you flipped for money in the long run, those are going to be really profitable niche sites and there are going to be a lot of possibilities… really profitable niche sites within those industries.

So same thing goes for Relationships and Dating.

Those are the top three evergreen niches that as time goes on, more and more… it’s been this way for a decade, 15 years now, even longer actually… these have always been the most profitable industries for people running internet marketing businesses – whether it be a blog or an affiliate marketing site or eCommerce.

If you establish yourself in these niches, it’s likely to be very profitable but it is also significantly more likely to be much higher competition – naturally. If there’s a lot more money to be made there, there are probably going to be a lot more people looking to get in into that niche or that industry. But if you can kind of crack a smart way in, you could be looking at a huge pay off.

Originally, when I entered the internet marketing niche overall… similar to Free Internet Marketing Project, I wanted to start an honest review site for so many years before I did it. But I finally did it once and it turned out to be a really, really great niche to be in.

But I didn’t go into internet marketing saying, “Hey I’m going to teach people how to make money on the internet,” because there’s so many articles about that and it’s such a saturated market place.

So I decided what I would do… before – well, not before – but when I entered the internet marketing product review space, everything you read was a positive review for the product. No matter what you looked up, no matter what search term, on YouTube, in Google, all you saw were positive recommendations because that was how people monetized. They weren’t giving honest reviews. Most of them weren’t even buying the products. They were just saying, “It’s great. Buy through my affiliate link.” “It’s awesome. It fulfills everything it ever said it would and more. Buy through my affiliate link.”

And I was really fed up with that because most of these products were crap. I knew because I was buying a lot of them or I had bought a lot of them in the years leading up to that and they were just crap. When I got into them… this guy gave it a glowing recommendation… I got into them and it was a total piece of crap.

So I ultimately decided to enter the internet marketing space. Instead of going head on and competing with all of the articles – all the really high quality content that’s in this industry – I decided to review products honestly and that was a great way into the niche.

Now traditional kind of school of thought was: if you go into a niche and you say products are bad… you find products and you go through them and you find out that they’re bad and you can’t recommend them… well then, you can’t make any money because if you say, “Oh, this is crap,” and nobody buys it, then you’re not making any money.

But what I found in time as I was going through and giving all of those honest reviews was there were products out there that were fulfilling similar sales claims that were totally legitimate and much higher quality. And over time, people would find their way to those products.

I never… I could’ve been much more strong-handed in how I funneled people into those. Basically, there are a lot of people in the industry now that say, “This is a bad product. This is a good product, though. Go buy this one.” And I never really did that because it just felt – for me – ethically questionable.

So even though I probably shouldn’t have a problem with it personally, it was just something I didn’t want to do because my number one priority was helping people. I always wanted to keep that at the core of my business. And at the end of the day, if you help people, they are going to end up a lot of them sticking with you, following your training, digging through your sites some more, and ultimately making you money.

So that’s a really good example of a smart way into a very, very saturated niche. And so smart in fact that it’s taught now – it wasn’t when I started No More BS Reviews years ago before… that was when I eventually started Stopping Scams to be a more holistic site than just reviews: to incorporate training and stuff like that, too; to really help prevent scams because what better way to prevent people from being scammed than giving them really high-quality training so that they don’t have to go and buy all these products; or at the very least, when they’re evaluating a product, they have a much better understanding and realistic perspective to evaluate… a better lens to evaluate that product through. So if there’s a smart way in, the payoff can be absolutely huge if you thicken your skin and you can tough it out.

So I say all of that again to get down to kind of the important takeaways.

Stop looking at competition as a bad thing. It’s usually quite the opposite with that one exception I talked about if the same authorities are dominating all of the search terms you look up, it’s probably better to either find a different way into that niche, find different things to write about in that niche, or just switch niches entirely.

The most important thing is that you add more value or you add value through a different medium or you add value in a totally different way that nobody has ever added value before. So if you do those things, you will be successful in the long run and whatever niche you enter – as long as it’s dealing with a buying audience.

So if you can add more value, if you can add value differently than any of the people in the space are doing it, or if you can add value through a different medium – say, again I always use the example if there’s not a whole lot of people making videos, but a lot of people making written content, and you’re willing to make videos, they don’t even have to be super great, we’ll talk about that later in the training, too – those can all be really great ends to very, very profitable high competition niches.

So that’s the end of this lesson. Again the take home message is just don’t be afraid of competition.

If you have any questions, as always, feel free to post them to the Facebook group – free for registered members. And other than that, I will see you in the next lesson.

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