Hey hope everyone's good?I am just about to put in a lot of time on a review, when I realise that the name of my product on Amazon where I am sending the readers, is slightly d
I would think Amazon would have the correct product name.
I have had problems with keywords in the sense of people will misspell what they are searching for. Example, I did a review on a seat cushion. The name of the cushion is Xtreme Comforts. A lot of people use the search term Extreme Comforts. I went with the official product name Xtreme Comforts.
Not sure if this is helpful :)
As long as you're 100% sure the people searching that KW are talking about that product in Amazon then there's no issue.
Better to go for more popular keyword :)
Can you help with keyword confusion?
Hey hope everyone's good?I am just about to put in a lot of time on a review, when I realise that the name of my product on Amazon where I am sending the readers, is slightly d
There is no simple answer. Very frequently you will see product names on Amazon written carelessly. Check all options in a keyword tool and this must be your main guidance.
When you decide, use the targetted keyword by following the usual best practice, but use the other version(s) of it somewhere in the text where appropriate, add it certainly as a tag word as well.
I would think Amazon would have the correct product name.
I have had problems with keywords in the sense of people will misspell what they are searching for. Example, I did a review on a seat cushion. The name of the cushion is Xtreme Comforts. A lot of people use the search term Extreme Comforts. I went with the official product name Xtreme Comforts.
Not sure if this is helpful :)
As long as you're 100% sure the people searching that KW are talking about that product in Amazon then there's no issue.
Better to go for more popular keyword :)
I just wondered whether there are any guidelines you stick to with the affiliations? For example, I was about to sign one for grocery/plant orders with a very well established
Most people will tell you that most niches make money. They do but not all niches are created equally some offer higher percentages for instance in the make money online industry the normal is 50%. Food does tend to be considerably less and the potential to make money much less. Having said that you could have recipes on the site and recommend a supermarket and also recommend table decorations, flower arrangements, tablecloths, crockery et cetera all of those have a higher percentage affiliate commission
How low should you go on the commissions you agree to?
I just wondered whether there are any guidelines you stick to with the affiliations? For example, I was about to sign one for grocery/plant orders with a very well established
Most people will tell you that most niches make money. They do but not all niches are created equally some offer higher percentages for instance in the make money online industry the normal is 50%. Food does tend to be considerably less and the potential to make money much less. Having said that you could have recipes on the site and recommend a supermarket and also recommend table decorations, flower arrangements, tablecloths, crockery et cetera all of those have a higher percentage affiliate commission
I'm really nervous about completing the google ad sign up as some of the sites i've seen look really
I will sign up, but I wondered if there are ways of preventing overkill on the ads, and more control over what is going to be displayed/ how big etc?
Thanks,
Jo
Hey Jo,
When I signed up, Google Adwords turned me down. At first, I was offended but like you, I realized they had done me a favour as I tend to NOT trust websites that use Adwords because those sites tend to look too tacky.
Plus, I discovered that the Google Adwords payout is not nearly as profitable as, say, a good Clickbank product might be.
However that's my opinion. :-))
Hope this helps you.
Thank you.. I was just following the training programme and it’s the first thing I’ve been hesitant about doing.. I might hold off!
Go ahead and apply for it so that you know how to do it, as that is what Kyle is teaching us... you know, to get out of our "comfort zone" and try something new. It can't hurt to try... and maybe you will be accepted AND maybe even profit from Adwords. You won't know unless you try.
See more comments
I'm really nervous about completing the google ad sign up as some of the sites i've seen look really
I will sign up, but I wondered if there are ways of preventing overkill on the ads, and more control over what is going to be displayed/ how big etc?
Thanks,
Jo
Hey Jo,
When I signed up, Google Adwords turned me down. At first, I was offended but like you, I realized they had done me a favour as I tend to NOT trust websites that use Adwords because those sites tend to look too tacky.
Plus, I discovered that the Google Adwords payout is not nearly as profitable as, say, a good Clickbank product might be.
However that's my opinion. :-))
Hope this helps you.
Thank you.. I was just following the training programme and it’s the first thing I’ve been hesitant about doing.. I might hold off!
Go ahead and apply for it so that you know how to do it, as that is what Kyle is teaching us... you know, to get out of our "comfort zone" and try something new. It can't hurt to try... and maybe you will be accepted AND maybe even profit from Adwords. You won't know unless you try.
See more comments
There is no simple answer. Very frequently you will see product names on Amazon written carelessly. Check all options in a keyword tool and this must be your main guidance.
When you decide, use the targetted keyword by following the usual best practice, but use the other version(s) of it somewhere in the text where appropriate, add it certainly as a tag word as well.