I have a question regarding the WA keyword search results. When I click on View Results, I get some good hits, like "19 results". Then I scroll to the bottom and click on page 1
Basically the 19 that you see are the sites that compete specifically for that keyword. However Google likes to show a bigger number, so what you get is any site that matches just those words to make up the often millions of more results.
So, what query does the keyword tool use that is different from querying google with "query" in quotes?
See more comments
WA Keyword Search results v. Google
I have a question regarding the WA keyword search results. When I click on View Results, I get some good hits, like "19 results". Then I scroll to the bottom and click on page 1
Basically the 19 that you see are the sites that compete specifically for that keyword. However Google likes to show a bigger number, so what you get is any site that matches just those words to make up the often millions of more results.
So, what query does the keyword tool use that is different from querying google with "query" in quotes?
See more comments
I know there are lots of folks who focus on promoting WA. And with those crazy returns, it make sense. I'm sure I'm not the first one to try both, creating a
Hey David,
I just sent you a reply to your PM.
In your personal situation I think you should focus on your passion (brewing) first, and for all the reasons that LittleKitten mentioned below.
It's much easier to create content about your passion, and once it works and you benefiting financially from it, you will then have a new passion for WA and will be able to translate that experience to your WA promotions ;-)
Everyone's different, but as you are making such great progress and you're taking action on what you learn, I think you should continue to push the brewing site.
Just my thoughts :-)
Marcus
I'm in the same situation as you. Money's tight and I'm trying to put up a WA site too. But all goes into my passion. It is easier to write, it is more fun... But I do need money. It does take time, we have to work at it. I'm just hoping I make at least to pay the monthly fee. Got to keep dreaming and working hard.
See more comments
I know there are lots of folks who focus on promoting WA. And with those crazy returns, it make sense. I'm sure I'm not the first one to try both, creating a
Hey David,
I just sent you a reply to your PM.
In your personal situation I think you should focus on your passion (brewing) first, and for all the reasons that LittleKitten mentioned below.
It's much easier to create content about your passion, and once it works and you benefiting financially from it, you will then have a new passion for WA and will be able to translate that experience to your WA promotions ;-)
Everyone's different, but as you are making such great progress and you're taking action on what you learn, I think you should continue to push the brewing site.
Just my thoughts :-)
Marcus
I'm in the same situation as you. Money's tight and I'm trying to put up a WA site too. But all goes into my passion. It is easier to write, it is more fun... But I do need money. It does take time, we have to work at it. I'm just hoping I make at least to pay the monthly fee. Got to keep dreaming and working hard.
See more comments
It doesn't get much traffic, and isn't monetized with affiliate links. I was thinking of reorganizing the content, adding affiliate links, and posting on my new WA site. But I'm
Thank you. Basically, here's where I am. I have a personal blog with lots of content. Then I discovered WA. I'd like to keep in the same niche, but clarify my content and add affiliate links. I guess I could add the affiliate links in the old blog, but then I lose the SEO settings I created here.
I think I will proceed by creating new content in a different format. A lot of the old things are recipes with my notes about process and such. The new WA version will be recipes, but with definitive notes. Thanks again for the help!
I personally wouldn't want to have the same article on both blogs, but rather just link one to the other by mentioning it in another blog post.
The only time duplicate content is a good thing is if it's getting syndicated by news/media outlets (thats my opinion at least).
It doesn't get much traffic, and isn't monetized with affiliate links. I was thinking of reorganizing the content, adding affiliate links, and posting on my new WA site. But I'm
Thank you. Basically, here's where I am. I have a personal blog with lots of content. Then I discovered WA. I'd like to keep in the same niche, but clarify my content and add affiliate links. I guess I could add the affiliate links in the old blog, but then I lose the SEO settings I created here.
I think I will proceed by creating new content in a different format. A lot of the old things are recipes with my notes about process and such. The new WA version will be recipes, but with definitive notes. Thanks again for the help!
I personally wouldn't want to have the same article on both blogs, but rather just link one to the other by mentioning it in another blog post.
The only time duplicate content is a good thing is if it's getting syndicated by news/media outlets (thats my opinion at least).
Labman, very helpful info. Thanks for the clarification, guys!