Quote:
Originally Posted by johnny_d
Thanks for the previous answer. If possible, I would have more questions regarding this.
1) How to do keyword research, for the best possible results. I know, that I can use Keyword Planner, Market Samurai, and some other tools (free, online), but it is probably good to use some kind of software too (probably paid), or multiple programs, at the same time. Would you be able to explain, how to do it, step by step?
2) What is your opinion about the following programs? Do you use them? Can you write something about each of them:
a) SENuke
b) Ultimate Demon
c) Scrapebox
d) GSA Search Ranker
e) Keyword Elite
I bought the last one several days ago, and I returned it. I did not have too much time to test the program, but I would say that it is probably not very good. I think that it would need to be updated also.
3) What other seo / adult seo software, would you recommend?
4) What websites would you recommend, for somebody interested in search engine optimization of adult sites (the more the better, all you have in your bookmarks, would be probably the best)
I can recommend, the following ones:
Link Building Book - Bonus Content
Point Blank SEO - Link Building Blog (very good course, strategies section is also good)
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1. I just do intuitive keyword research using what I know about the industry. The good thing about Google is that if you rank well for 'London escort', you'll probably do pretty well for 'London companion' too. This is why written text is so important: keywords come from natural language, so I just build stuff for people and the rest is done for me. I don't use any tools for keywords, but if I needed to for a niche or industry I was unsure of, I'd probably do it. Don't focus too much on that though: building a good site and focusing your efforts is the best thing to do at the start.
2. I only use a few 'programs', all of them online. Those are Analytics, Webmaster Tools and Accuranker. I suppose the research stuff on Ahrefs is a tool as well, but yeah - nothing much past that.
3. As above. Accuranker is only really good for people that run businesses, but if you have a large empire that you want to monitor, it's great.
4. As far as I know, there aren't any decent sources for SEO that are directed toward SEO. In fact, I'd say the blog section on our business's site is the only option. That said, most mainstream SEO information is also useful. I Google "SEO" regularly and go to news articles - I also frequent SearchEngineLand.com a lot.
Quote:
Originally Posted by johnny_d
Here is some more questions, if you dont mind:
1) Does it make sense / sound like a good idea to use multiple seo / social media sharing / some other kind plugins on a network of Wordpress blogs? Lets say 200 sites? The websites would be more versatile, they could be based on 20 different themes, also. Would it make a difference?
2) How important is updating websites on a regular basis, lets say Wordpress blogs. Is it possible to have a successful network, of lets say 250 blogs, without updating them on a regular basis (lets say for 12 months or more, domains can be old, websites large. but no updates)
3) What would be the other general rules of seo?
a) "keep things separate"
b) keep things versatile
What else could be put here?
Thanks.
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1. I run a lot of Wordpress blogs, and my mission is to keep them as distant from each other as possible. I wouldn't interlink them with social media: just a good way for Google to know that you're all linked together. I'm not entirely sure I understand this question, so maybe reword it for me?
2. Yes, absolutely. Some of my highest earning sites haven't updated in quite some time. My method is to build a site and schedule posts - one a month - for the rest of the year. I think this is the best of both worlds. Google would likely include updating content as being a good indication, but it isn't 100% required. If you're going to do blogs, pump and dump. Don't spend longer than a few hours on them.
3. Build a site that's useful to the user is the biggest tip. I mean, I have some sites that do well in SEO but don't provide a great user experience, but those sites are never going to rank #1 for big keywords. I get most of my revenue through longtails because I don't really have the head to run a huge website. It's also very risky, because one wrong move and your income is down the drain. Multiple sites = diversity.
Other tips:
1. Focus on titles. Very important for SEO to have a decent title.
2. Write meta descriptions for the main pages that attract clicks.
3. Understand that time on site is an important metric.
4. Don't spam your site with backlinks. Google will punish you eventually.
5. Realize that SEO is a long-term game and it isn't going to make you money overnight.
6. Look at what the competition is doing. If someone is #1 for a good search term, they're likely doing something correct.
Quote:
Originally Posted by johnny_d
I would have another three questions:
1) Is .com better than .net and .org. I've hear that yes. Would .net be better than .org too?
2) I would like to create a network of 200 pornstar blogs, with their names in domain names, could be something like http://HotSaraJay.com, Welcome to Hot Jynx Maze, http://HotSunnyLeone.com
It would be based on Wordpress Multisite. What would I need to do in order to maximize traffic from Google.com, and other search engines, in a long term perspective, lets say a period of one or two years.
3) I have a website, which was getting only around 200 uv a day, and I found a very good source of high quality traffic to the site. It will be receiving around 900 people a day or more, and these people will be visiting some pages, staying on the website for a while, and so on (it wont be the best parameters, but bounce rate, time on site, and number of pages visited will be quite good).
With the above, will I be getting more search engine visitors over time? I've read in several places, that this is how it works. Everybody talks about bounce rate, amount of traffic, also social media buzz, as factors, which influence amount of traffic from search engine sites...
Thanks.
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1. I stick to .coms because it's best for the user experience. I have slight trust issues with .net and .org - it might not be justified, but I just do. I imagine others do as well. Put it this way: there's little risk with .com. This doesn't mean that other TLDs are potentially problematic, but I've only ever had a few websites that weren't .coms.
2. This is a huge question, and one that I can't really answer in a few hundred words. All I'll do is reiterate that the best method for SEO is to provide a great user experience. Focus on what a user would want. Chuck in some text for every picture/video - link out to decent resources, etc. etc. etc.. Again, real large question and one that I can't justify without spending a lot of time on. Sorry!
3. Bounce rate and time on site are only affected by traffic that search engines can monitor. Google only knows when someone's on your site if they get their via Google. If someone ranks #1 on Google for "porn" but on average, 95% of them click back on their browser and select a new link, Google's unlikely to think that the site is worthy of the #1 spot. Traffic stats are unimportant unless they are organic. Google does not use Analytics information, only data it can get directly from its search engine.
That said, there might be small advantages to traffic to your site, such as people being more likely to link to it. I'd also imagine a couple of people would end up Googling for it and that would be a signal to Google that your site is somewhat worthy of attention.
Quote:
Originally Posted by DonJon69
I saw your example sites of how to advertise cam models. Looks good.
I have a question.
How many posts do you need on a site to start seeing results and how many sites?
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This question is sort of similar to asking me how long a piece of string is. Do you want me to tell you how much I make through affiliate marketing with Camgirls? Put it this way: the little I have dabbled in it was profitable. Next year I plan to dump a lot more time into it because I think it's a decent way to make cash.
It's hard work, but like anything, if you do it, you'll see results.
I recommend you start off with 5 sites and have 50 or so posts each. Sit on it for a month and see if you get any results.