Why I Spend (At Least!) 3 Hours Before I Write A Short E-mail, Article or Blog Post

I write from the heart. I write with pride. I write with dignity.

content-marketing-research-codrut-turcanu

I might sound arrogant. I might sound harsh. I might sound raw, uncut. I’m just genuine: I tell it as it is. “Fake it till you make it” is not really a phrase in my vocabulary. Authentic writing, yes! It is what I do, what I teach, what I share, with you and with the world.

I do NOT try to attract each and everybody to my content. I never try to please everyone. I know who my target audience is: I know who I talk to. I know who I communicate with.

How come? What is the secret? In depth research; I have developed a simple yet powerful, unique formula that I use each and every time (before) I write something, be it a short email, article or blog post.

You might find this shocking, but it’s the naked truth: I spend minimum 3 hours before I jot down the first phrase or idea. I follow this formula…

In depth DETECTIVE analysis (aka RESEARCH) – this is what 97% of aspiring (copy) writing gurus and bloggers neglect. Even the gurus (aka veterans) are fault to this error. It seems like they don’t really have the time to look for what others have to say, they think they know it all.

No time to see what your competitors are writing about? No time to see what their visitors think (and comment about)? That’s insane. Suicide! Relationship-sinking, profit-slashing habits you have to get rid of, at all costs.

If you want to receive only 10% of the potential of whatever you aim to achieve (e.g. visitors, leads, downloads, sales, partners, referrals, and so on) then do NOT run in depth RESEARCH.

But when you run the kind of RESEARCH I’m about to share with you next, you’re opening the gates to unlimited wealth. Call it: profit potential unlocking. I’m not talking about money, but the potential in whatever you put in (time, effort, energy, resources, skills, etc)

internet search concept with word and key on keyboard

You see, the VAST majority of writers, marketers and bloggers I hear about (and study) – and I encounter hundreds on a weekly basis as per my research approach – actually make hundreds of excuses that block them to spend quality time in researching.

Let me ask you something now: what do you think is the chance to write a high-quality article if you’re only spending 10 minutes (or less) on researching your topic, target audience needs and competitors’ content? Slim to none!

I learned this through deep daily practice:

You cannot connect with your audience without proper, quality research. You cannot make your point across and generate sales unless you know what you’re talking about and connect your audience’s needs with your solution’s benefits (and advantages)

It’s a fine mix you have to compose, it requires R –E – S – E –A – R – C – H

Before we dig into the juicy stuff, let me quickly share two key elements:

#1 – Regardless of how many books you’ve read or how many seminars you attended, your mind is able to expand and receive: new information, new knowledge and new ways of doing something — better, more effectively and efficiently.

#2 – Regardless of the quality and the quantity of the information you absorbed so far, spending even 15 quick minutes on in dept research is going to put that to shame and provide you with priceless knowledge.

In 15 minutes I’m able to find the latest trends, the hottest topics my target audience wants to learn more about, and more importantly – the key terms they’re typing in the searching engine and the stuff my competitors have already written about.

But that’s not enough! NOT ENOUGH. Do you hear me?

What kind of in depth research I do (and why I spend 3 hours before I start writing)

Run Google searches using their free external tool

https://adwords.google.com/select/KeywordToolExternal

You probably already know the power of this resource. The key aspect I want you to understand: there’s no need to pay for something extra if the free available tools accomplish your needs, right?

I see marketers (newbies and veterans alike) rage all the time about the latest SEO tricks and software programs. I keep things simple and use the minimum to achieve my goals and keep costs down, while knowing where to spend the most time, effort and money to reap max. gains.

I advocate for (smart) investing in your online business; you need to know where to spend your money, and WHEN – this is the best lesson you have to learn. And only practice will teach you the fine art of business balance and marketing optimization.

Extract problem-oriented long-tail keywords from Google’s searching tool

The best articles I write ignite from problem-focused key phrases like for example, if I’m writing on blogging topics, I do not write from the top of my head, without searching first the current problems my audience struggles with.

Whenever you type in a lengthy key term or one word in your research tool, make sure you type in (or consider) any of these problem-exposing words:

  • PROBLEM
  • CHALLENGE
  • NEED
  • WANT
  • ISSUE
  • WORRY
  • QUESTION

Inside this post, you’ll find 216 problem-oriented key terms you could search for (free PDF download offered by friend and blogger – Steve Scott)

I always start my writing from a problem, issue or challenge. Why? Because people (my visitors and your readers) are always going to be facing obstacles and are always going to looking for new solutions. Yes, even on the same topics that you see everybody talk about!

Just think about it: you do not spend hours on web sites, forums and blogs of interest just because you like to entertain yourself for the fun sake. You’re looking for (specific) solutions to your wants and needs. Maybe you’re bored at your current job and want distractions (I tell this in a positive way) – you’re looking for alternatives: how to do what you already know for better payouts, or how to develop new skills and get paid what you’re really worth – this is the spark that gets people start online and give up their JOBS…

And if you think about it, this is what turns unknown people into pro bloggers, super star affiliate marketers and best-seller authors: the frustration that comes from their current live events and situations.

That is why you should ALWAYS start your (content) RESEARCH with the problem-solution aspect in mind and your readers will feel like you’re writing from the heart, like you’re speaking to them as you know each others from back in the Elementary.

Marketers know that … “people prefer to buy from other people that they like, know and trust over complete strangers” and we both know how true that is! Let me say that people will listen to you (before they buy) ONLY if you connect to their needs through your content.

Your content talks to them, or not… and in depth research is what makes your content “WOW”!

Study competitors

My competitors are not just bloggers who talk (or focalize) ON the topic or problem I want to write about. My competitors are:

  • BOOK AUTHORS
  • SPEAKERS, TRAINERS AND COACHES
  • SUPER AFFILIATES AND INTERNET MARKETING GURUS
  • INSIDER EXPERTS AND SPECIALISTS

Neglect this step and you’re reducing your research power down to 50% and cut your writing quality (and its output) tremendously.

Writing is output. You cannot produce awesome, believable content, unless your input (RESEARCH) is awesome and comes from believable sources, correct?

That is why my formula is different than the rest, and it “only” requires I invest at least 3 hours of in depth research – before I write a single phrase! And here’s what I do…

I inspect industry-related blogs, sites, and forums.

I study competitors on Quantcast.com. I am not content just with sites as Google, YouTube, Twiter. I dive into the web, as well as in the offline world. 3 hours, at least!

You have to understand that writing is not writing in itself; writing generates from RESEARCH.

What you read about, what you hear and what you see. This is what produces your writing. Not your actual knowledge. That’s why almost anybody can turn into a little “expert” on a topic if they take 3 or more hours to study a topic in depth. And sacrifice TV or clubs.

And take this: the ideas (and problems) that you write about are more important than the actual data-typing or information-organizing. 80% is research, and 20% is actual “writing”.

This is where most bloggers and writers fail. They write about the wrong topic or “problem”. They assume they know what their audience know, and write about it. That’s like walking backwards.

Start with RESEARCH. This entire article is about my formula. And I don’t even have enough time to exhaust this KEY topic (in depth research).

Sometimes I interview experts (and I created a ton of info-products using this method) not only because I get to learn from the best in their fields, but because I can save a ton of time, effort and money, simply by getting expert-insights and asking them the right questions.

You see, it is NOT enough to gather 10 specialists and interview them. Call that an ebook and sell it for $47. You have to know to ask the right questions in a politely manner (whether by email, skype or phone) – and asking the right questions TAKES in depth research.

I’d say and go to the extremes that NOTHING online should be taken care of without proper RESEARCH. You cannot email someone you don’t know and ask them to promote your product or help you for free on a (laborious) project. There’s a specific way of doing these things, you have to learn.

And when you consult with (or have a mentor) someone who has already been through such aspects, you actually should be HAPPY to pay for his expertise and save yourself head aches, time and errors.

Imagine me going nuts about research, sometimes investing up to 15 hours a WEEK when having to write an in depth viral blog post, PDF report or other related content which requires facts and credible sources, not just information.

Editing

I do not edit my writing like a fly going crazy round circles. I do it once I finish at least 95% of the actual email, article or blog post.

When I do this, thoughts flow naturally and my fingers type faster than my mind thinks. Whenever I transfer my mind from the “writing” into the “editing” mood, I lose track, I lose inspiration. I hit the writers block. I don’t have problems starting the writing, as I have enough quality research material on my hands. My biggest challenge is to avoid editing (I rarely go back a phrase to correct or add to it, while writing!)

An important thing I want to mention: never strive to remove your editing habit. Law of attraction says that you get what you focus on. If you keep an eye on editing, you’ll never finish writing.

Permit yourself to edit. Sometimes you might find better ideas or angles to say the same thing with less or better words. Just keep editing at minimum, and usually at the end of your writing.

Arrange your content in a logical (guide-style) format

I won’t talk much about this. The majority of people would prefer step-by-step information over the so-common web non-intelligible and non-organized content. If you are the one putting your content in an easy to read format, you get to win the heart of your reader and provide him/her with a great reading experience.

You have to understand that information is not everything that people are looking for. They also want it to come in an easy-to-read, easy-to-digest format, like a blueprint. That’s why I can easily sell free information for $10, $50 and even $149 because people are willing to invest in the time you took to arrange stuff people want to read.

Why? Because they won’t have to do it themselves, either out of time or expertise, or both.

Reach to your competitors’ readers

Your competitors have already the target audience you want to reach and talk to. You want to get them talking about you and your product. You want them spreading the world about your brand, your service, your content, and everything you have to say online and offline. They’re your advocates, your raving fans, your 2.0 tribes.

Neglect your competitors’ content and whatever they’re saying (on their blogs, sites, forums, books, videos, audios, white papers, etc.) and you neglect your target audience and potential customer base.

My research phase includes reading comments on blogs, on forums and on consumer reviews sites such as Amazon , plus other industry-related outlets.

Sometimes I get problem-oriented long-tail keywords (pure gems) just by listening to the crowd. This information combined with Google’s search terms is power for your content writing and marketing.

I’ll tell you upfront: content writing is marketing and marketing is writing. If you want exposure (the more people see your name/content/link out there, the better!) you cannot afford to limit your time, effort and budget on writing.

You can advertise here and there and expect limited results. But when you write, your content is exposed on the web, and sometimes in print (if you know how to do it). In print content doesn’t last. Online, it is archived for many months and years, you know it!

I like to consider that advertising is only 20% of marketing, and produces limited, short-term results (clicks or sales). Content writing is 80% of marketing which produces the highest and best results of your investment (time and money).

If I had $10,000 in my Paypal to spend on marketing, at least 80% would go into content writing (emails, how-to reports, blog posts, PDFs, Videos, Audios, you name it.)

FACT: I now devote 100% of my time to writing, and connecting with the audience I want to reach, educate and inform through my content. I spend ZERO on advertising because writing is what generates repeat, long-term customers, not hit-and-miss promotions.

Connecting is KEY

During my research I make sure to jot down links and contact details (e.g. email, Twitter profile link, etc) of people whom I consider potential friends, “ideal” to give feedback on the stuff I write.

Most of the times, they’re competitors. I use Excel to SAVE this priceless data and save me time later when connecting with influencers to help spread the word about my content.

Someone who has already been exposed to your content is 10x times more inclined to say YES promoting you and your stuff. I know have a “bad” habit: to email links only to someone that knows me, or that we talked previously.

Hesitate to publish

I NEVER (should I repeat?) mean, NEVER… push the send button once I finish writing the content. I let it for at least 10 or 20 minutes to sit there. I go do something else. I let my subconscious mind feed new thoughts and ideas and when it does, I go back and edit the text: add, rewrite or remove some words or phrases.

The biggest mistake I see bloggers, writers and much everybody who creates content make: RUSH.

The way I started writing content or publish blog posts years ago, was idiot-style. I knew that was not the way to go about it!

You see, I was getting a “brilliant” idea from the top of my head (thinking that’s what others would want to read about, and I was so wrong – didn’t really spend time to research for keywords or run competitive analysis at all)…

I was writing for 10 or 15 minutes, and call that good content. The majority of wannabe writers (and skilled bloggers) know what I’m talking about. Then I’d push the SEND button and wait for email replies and raving comments.

Do you put a seed in the ground today and wait to spring into a tree the next morning? Unheard!

This is why I make sure to spend (at least!) 3 hours before I write a short e-mail, article or blog post. Whether it is for my projects, or for my clients’ projects, I follow the same formula.

Before you hire your next content marketing specialist, make sure you refer them to this article. They might learn something new which helps improve their research and writing.

Go out there and share this message with the people you know and trust.

* Skilled writers are not born, they’re made. In depth research, practice and perseverance are the 3 key ingredients anybody who wants to cook up “wow” content has to mix before they achieve “instant” results.

12 Weird Things You Should Know About the Most Productive Internet Marketing Copywriter

Codrut Turcanu, the most productive Internet Marketing copywriter, shares why he is considered the #1 word smith in the online business arena. 12 weird things super affiliates and copywriters wanted to know but were afraid to ask.

If you’re looking to learn Internet marketing copywriting and discover a few “make money online” secrets from the most productive Internet marketing copywriter, read further to discover things not even my closes friends know about me.

I Make Money Online
and I Am Not a Millionaire

I don’t like to talk about how much money I make. It’s none of others interest. But if you ask me about how often I write, or what type of content I can produce, then you got my attention.

Making money online is not my intention. I write and help clients make more money, which in turn fills my bank account.

“I Made $10,000 Last Night!”
Is Not HYPE, Just a Potential Goal…

Want to achieve it? It won’t happen overnight… unless you’re willing to sacrifice and work: hard and smart. Like I do, like others I know do. Like others you read about do.

How does a rich person look to you? What does richness mean to you?

I am rich not because of the material things I own or have access to, but because I have a richness mindset which enables me to think positive and see solutions and opportunities in places, situations or people where others see just obstacles and problems.

I won’t claim how much I earn. It’s silly. Who cares about it? And who helps to know?

If you live in countries where the medium salary is $30, then with $1,000+ a month, you could call yourself rich.

You can rob a bank or steal from others. Internet is not a lottery ticket. You might make some money overnight by luck or accident, but in 9 out of 10 cases, you won’t be able to duplicate that because you will not know for sure HOW!

I Build Systems that Make Money

I like working for others (e.g. writing and consulting) but I know there are only 24 hours in a day and one can generate more value and benefits if he multiplies himself. So I make sure that what I do is not sell time for money, but also sell money for money.

Investing in your business takes time but is imperial. If you have a car, you don’t stop one day and say: “wait, I now have to buy gas everyday to drive?”…

Invest time, effort and money in your business if you want it to generate 24/7 cash, or quit.

If something works and makes money for me, I want to know from A to Z how to multiply that either by investing more money or replicating the process (e.g. get more traffic or hire more people)

Business is simple if you build the right system.

I Am a (Content) Research Fanatic

I understand input equals output. What you know directly reflects in your writing. Thus, if you want to write “wow” content, then you need access to “wow” information. How do you access it? Take time to read, learn or watch/listen to whatever it is you’re writing or talking about.

No matter how expert I might be on a topic, I always like to find new information and upgrade my knowledge, thus I spend a minimum of 3 hours for content marketing research.

Cannot afford to create “so and so” content. What about you? How much time do you invest in research?

I Am a Swipe File Junkie

I collect winning ads, emails, headlines, blog posts, etc. And use them. I make sure to put some of my collections on sale to help others save time, improve their skill and generate revenue:

When you start using swipe files and templates as I do, you not only save precious time, but you also get ideas that unleash your imagination and help tap into marketing that is proven.

I Wake Up In the Morning

7 a.m. 6 a.m. Even 5 a.m.

When I go to sleep earlier (e.g. 11 or 10 pm) I get up at 5 a.m. to start praying, exercising and studying the Bible…

This is what gives me full power for the whole day and motivates me to reach my daily tasks and monthly goals.

I am a Goal Setting Addict

I don’t have 100’s of yearly goals. I keep it simple. 12 goals or less (a year): small and big.

One (major) goal a month…

For example this year I planned for 2 trips outside Romania. And in order to achieve that I’ll have to work on my daily and weekly tasks to make that happen. What about you, do you set steps to ensure your goals are reached by a specific time frame?

I Keep a Daily Journal

Ok, I don’t blog on paper. I don’t write my thoughts. I have specific sections I focus on.

Each day (one hour or two before I go to sleep) I jot down ideas on three categories:

  • 3 small or big achievements I accomplished today
  • 3 lessons I learned today (about life, business or myself & others)
  • 3 improvements I work (e.g. waking up at 5 a.m. , eating healthy food, etc)

Praise to Robin Sharma for this! Devour everything this guy’s talking about. Read his blog and do what he says. It works :)

robin-sharma

Robin Sharma

Do What Is Most Difficult

How do you tackle your goals: do you do what is easy or what it needs to be done?

That’s another way of looking at personal productivity and achievements. A tip I learned from Robin Sharma. Anthony Robbins and Seth Godin also advocate this principle.

The question is: how do you practice in the dark when nobody sees you?

I prefer to do my best when others watch me, and when they don’t. That is why it is KEY to start off your day with the most important and difficult task or activity.

Checking email is not. Browsing for stats is not. Reading the newspaper is not.

Once you finish the hardest part of your day, do you think you’ll have a sense of pride and a boost to finish the remaining tasks? You bet! If you do the vice-versa and start off with your easiest or most interesting task, then you will always postpone the tasks that need to get done and are the most important ones.

Sometimes the hardest tasks are either time-consuming or require deep thinking or in depth research.

If you have a task that you don’t like or feel bored to tackle, then that is not for you. Delegate or outsource it. Do something else.

What makes you passionate? What is it the most difficult task that you like to work on? Start your day with that.

I Have Super Mentors

OK. I don’t spend thousands to go to seminars or meet with my mentors one-on-one or over the phone (yet). I prefer to listen to Robin, Tony and Seth via YouTube. They’re sharing so much information, that, when you implement it, you start making money, guaranteed.

A business mentor I eagerly follow is Jay Abraham.

jay-abraham

Jay Abraham

This guy’s a genius. Spent 40+ years in the offline business arena: he has worked in 460+ different industries (not companies) and helped/interacted with 10,000 individuals and companies (small, medium and fortune 500)

Do you think you and I can learn something from these guys?

How serious are you about making it happen? How determined are you to turn your dreams and goals into reality?

If you cannot afford my super mentor fees, then at least learn from what I know from them. You can always afford my fees and tap into my six-figure brain, if you want!

Consulting and writing is what I do the best. What about you? What is your #1 passion or skill?

I Like to Interview Specialists and Experts

“The secret to success in any field is to find what successful people do, think about and act on, and do the same.” – Anthony Robbins

anthony-robbins

Anthony Robbins

I interview people (by email or skype) first because I want to know how the experts reach their goals and I am too curious not to find how they think and how they approach life, business and their specialty.

Second, because I publish most of the interviews I do for free or for a fee. Others can learn from my findings and at the same time this strategy brings me free targeted traffic.

Yes I am a SEO specialist. I know how to find what people buy and how to get traffic without tricking Google!

I Work with Clients (Underground)

Most of the things I create, write or achieve are NOT known publicly or attached to my name.

I often ghostwrite and consult with clients from USA, Canada, UK, Australia and worldwide. My clients get the entire credit for whatever it is they’re selling or promoting, making them more money, as a result of my skills and knowledge.

I don’t sell or promote B.S. I don’t advocate HYPE either! That’s why I always make sure to review an affiliate product before I recommend it for example, or check out the client background before I work on a project.

There you have it. 12 Weird Things You Should Know About the Most Productive Internet Marketing Copywriter.

Blog Commenting SEO: How I Get Top 3 Google Blog Rankings and Free Blog Traffic

Frustrated about your Google blog rankings? Sick and tired of not getting (massive) free blog traffic just like any other pro blogger? Read my blog commenting SEO formula. It helps rank your blog on the top 3 Google listings for keyword related terms which bring you free blog traffic.

Personally, I’m tired of the so-called “Rank in Google Overnight” software programs or magic formulas. I tried some of them, and most are or sound “black-hat”. Today you’re ranked on first page, tomorrow you’re banned or un-listed by Google for weeks or months.

We should avoid this like nothing else. I do NOT teach black-hat. I do NOT practice it.

What am I going to share with you next though is what I know and what works for me.

And before we dive in, here’s PROOF (just you know I’m not making this up)

blog-commenting-seo-google-blog-rankings

I rank number #3 on first page Google for “product review template” and made $51 last week on ClickBank just because of this page/keyword ranking alone. Imagine what happens when you have 10, 25 or 50 long-tail keyword optimize pages like this?

I could be making… $510…$1,275…$2,550. Others are probably making lots more. What about you?

Now, don’t let the potential fool you.  It is unlimited. But it doesn’t mean you’ll ever reach the sky, right?

Some products claim the potential is there and you can reach it. That’s B.S. Never believe such product claims.

You know those sales pitches.  They should never be taken as trustworthy, unless their creators have believable proof and not some fake screen shots. 98% are fake anyway. Or they’re misleading people that the revenue was generate from free traffic or Facebook, when the truth is that they’ve paid AdWords or other PPC engines to drive their traffic, and are fooling us guys.

Be aware!

How I Get Top 3 Google Listings
and Free Blog Traffic…

On almost any long-tail keyword I want to rank for. My proprietary system is laid out right in front of you. Are you ready to steal my secrets and get free blog traffic? OK, let’s start…

Step #1
On-page Blog SEO

What I do exactly is make sure that my blog is optimized for the search engines, particularly Google. They (and I) look at content optimization the same way a book author (or publisher) would look at his cover.

And it comes into mind two key questions:

  1. Does it attract attention?
  2. Does the title and cover is (highly) relevant to the overall content found inside?

You want to attract the right audience to open and buy your book. In our case, we want our visitors (the right ones, not just anybody) to open/click our blog post and read it. If you get their attention, you are one step closer to generating clicks which lead to sales.

No attention, no clicks, no sales! That’s why your blog post title (headline) is the most important part in your content marketing strategy. As important as the first three words you say when meeting someone new or a friend of yours. What you say is targeted and memorable, or you better not say it!

What blog commenting “spammers” and “black-hat” practitioners do has nothing to do with optimization, but directing readers to “so-and-so” content or pure junk, just to get the click or make the quick buck.

This is not optimization,
but tricking and deceiving visitors.

And for this reason alone, people think SEO is black-hat entirely, or at least, they put a bad label on the terminology and its practice.

Re-read that and please, do not make the same mistake thinking alike. Search engine optimization is a concept that you have to fully grasp before you judge or criticize those who practice it.

Whenever we entitle a book, movie, blog post or whatever, we actually “optimize” it in order to attract the right audience and get rid of the kind of prospects who are not (or will never be) interested in what we have to offer or sell.

It is in our duty to make the Internet a better place and provide relevant content to right target audience. It is our responsibility to work with search engines (and benefit from their results and traffic) – because all Google wants is to separate the bad from the good.

Next time you hear someone trashing SEO, why not direct them to this post to change their view? :)

How I do on-page blog SEO:

You have to understand that my blog commenting SEO formula won’t work unless your blog home page is optimized for the right visitor. That means…

Your home page navigation bar title (what people see at the top of their browser) should include key terms related and highly-relevant to your overall content.

This is the first thing Google will show in their listing when indexing your blog or whatever page you optimize for.

My home page says…

Codrut Turcanu [the most productive Internet Marketing copywriter] – because I optimize for “Internet Marketing copywriter”. I want my visitors (new and returning) feel and perceive me as the #1 copywriter when it comes to Internet Marketing industry. And my content does the task.

In this regard, I also make sure my blog header is optimized, that’s why you see a similar text…

“Codrut Turcanu, the most productive Internet Marketing copywriter”

Why do I do this? Because:

I want to be relevant and avoid deceiving people
with wrong content or banner ads.

Google plays a key role on relevancy. I am able to rank in top 3 and maintain my spot not because I submit my links to all kinds of web 2.0 bookmarking sites, but because my content is relevant, thus when people click on my links, this makes Google consider ranking my blog higher in their SERP (search engine results page)

Not only that, but if your blog sidebar is content-relevant, that means if you’re showcasing the latest or other related posts, this helps visitor access your content faster. Do you think they’ll return to your blog more often? Definitely! I make an habit to show visitors relevant content in my blog’s sidebar, instead of pushing pop-ups or banner ads in their face.

blog-commenting-se-hot-posts-codrut-turcanu

When people come from Google (or other sites/blogs) and land on my blog, they don’t want to join my list, unless I particularly advertised a squeeze page. They don’t want to buy my product, unless I specifically wrote a product review blog post. All they are looking for is content, so I make it (stupid) EASY for them to access it.

When your visitors spend more time on your blog,
they will probably spend more time clicking
on your ads, and making you more money

In fact, that’s what statistics and common sense tell us. If you love spending more time with your friends, then it means you increase your chance to do more things altogether, expanding your relationship and taking it to the next level. It is the same case scenario in all the other type of relationship…

  • male-female
  • parent-child
  • blog owner-reader
  • vendor-consumer
  • seller-buyer

When you understand that business, life and marketing is built on and lives on identical principles (trust gaining and relationship building) you will unlock the keys to generating wealth in your life and in other people’s lives.

It is not about the numbers which counts, it is the quality of your content and relationship that is key.

Don’t tell me you have 10k followers if nobody clicks or re-tweets your message.

Don’t tell me you got 3k visitors a day if you nobody joins your list or comments on your blog.

Don’t tell me you’re making $5k a day if you’re not happy with what you do, indeed.

Just recently I noticed something amazing. Upon deciding to write in depth blog posts, I mean, highly-relevant and researched content (remember, as per my content marketing research formula it takes me up to 15 hours to create such articles you’re reading now, from A to Z: research, writing, editing, etc) visitors time spent on the blog doubled and bounce rate cut by 15%.

blog-commenting-seo-analytics

That means my relevant & awesome content made visitors stick with my blog twice as previous three months alone. Notice: your content has not only to be relevant, but red-hot too.

In both screen shots (before & after)  you’ll notice that around 80% of visitors are new, first-time visitors. This tells a lot about the relevancy and helpfulness of your content. It’s not about you or me, it’s always about THEM (your readers and visitors) – always!

Step #2
Off-page blog SEO

This concept refers to the text and link you utilize to optimize your blog post for, on other relevant blogs, sites and social media channels.

You’re doing off-site SEO whenever you link back to your blog from a YouTube video description, EzineArticles resource box url/hyperlinked key term, or blog comment/”name” field key word.

All these should be highly-targeted. That means if my home page is on-site optimized for “Internet Marketing copywriter”, then I want to make sure all the keyword links and key terms that link back to my home page, or whatever blog post I want to rank for, should utilize this long-tail keyword.

Since I prefer to target 3, 4 and 5 words and not one or two words, I always rank high in Google for relevant key terms. Although I get less traffic, at least all the hundreds key terms I list for in top 3 will outreach the volume of one or two one-word or two-word keywords I’d rank for.

However, ranking for one or two word keywords is a myth, a dream, non sense. Why would you want to do it? First of all: everybody is trying to act dumb online and spend $20+ per generic, short terms, thus competition is fierce. And the traffic is very low quality.

You (I, and others) don’t search for “copywriting” when we want to learn how to write a pitch, but type in “how to write a sales letter”. You probably won’t search for “copywriting guru” if you wanted to hire an IM related copywriter, but type in “Internet Marketing copywriter”. You get the point.

Keep off-page relevant just as you’d do on-page optimization.

How I do off-page blog SEO:

Whenever I comment on highly-relevant blog (posts) I make sure to leave these details:

#1 – My brand name (“Codrut Turcanu” added by @ and a highly-relevant keyword) – I insert the keyword only if the blog allows (hint: look for “CommentLuv” plugin enabled blogs and they should allow such practice)

#2 – My email (in case I want to continue the conversation if other people reply to the post I comment on or if they say something about my own comment)

I always subscribe for “email updates” otherwise I would sound like I go to the party just to eat, drink and say goodby, showing no interest in others, and what they have to say.

Never comment “what a great post, thank you!” but add to the conversation, otherwise, you better leave without commenting at all.

#3 – My blog home page url (or blog post link)

Some blog platforms don’t allow links other than the domain name root url. If you include for e.g. yourdomainname.com/your-blog-post your comment might not reach the moderator.

Whenever you comment on a blog and include such link, make sure it says… “your comment is waiting for moderation” or something like that, otherwise it won’t go through, and you’ll have to write again, and submit it with your domain root link.

Sometimes it shows as “duplicate comment” for the same reason. Wait a few minutes, clear your cookies and comment again, if you really want to leave your feedback on that blog.

How to Access 35 High-Traffic Blogs: reaching a combined 500,000+ growing Audience…

I scoured the web to compile a word document list (“High-Traffic Blogs I Love”) revealing 35 high-popular blogs (LINKS) in the Internet Marketing niche (topics range from blogging, make money online and affiliate marketing) that I follow consistently. I need to keep me up to date on my industry but also I enjoy sharing my wisdom with new crowds.

I spent 30 hours (5 days in row) compiling this list and couldn’t run my blog commenting SEO formula without it. The blogs found inside range from page rank 2 to page rank 6. Content is often updated and the growing number of comments makes these blog communities amazing and fun to interact with.

Some blogs get 100+ of comments per post. You might recognize pro bloggers such as John Chow and Yaro Starak, just to name two of my favorites.  You should see the list, it includes 33 others.

I often visit these blogs (daily and weekly) to share my value-added comments with their respective target audience. If you have a blog that has anything to do with online marketing or “make money online”, SEO or maybe blogging? Then you need to put your hands on the list – or spend 30 hours as I did, hoping to find the exact blogs I’ve found.

I’d say the list is gold nugget even if you’re just promoting affiliate programs, you could participate in the comments section with your short url (e.g. http://bit.ly – sign-up, is free!) and re-direct these links to whatever products you’re promoting.

Don’t make the mistake to think this is the same old list of blogs that are ranked in a directory or “TOP” lists…

You won’t find most of these blogs online that easily, unless you want to spend days as I did…

I didn’t add other information inside other than the links, which is enough. To help me save a ton of time when commenting or visiting these blogs, I created a “bookmark” folder in my Firefox browser called “Blogs I Love” and added all the 35 links.

I spend 3 to 5 hours a day, two or three days a week reading and commenting on those blogs. And because I have created this folder, they’re just one click away from me!

Now, if you ask about the DO-follow, you should know…

Some blogs are do-follow, others are not. The majority are CommentLuv enabled so you can benefit from direct visitors that click on your “latest post” links, and not only on your “brand name or keyword”.

A good portion of these blogs are  Twitter profile enabled – meaning they allow your Twitter link, thus increasing your followers count and quality overtime. This option alone brought me new connections and friends that I now frequently email with, guest post and help each others make more money online.

It’s not about the numbers, it’s about the quality of your contacts though, and guess what!

I don’t blog comment for the sake of
getting a do-follow back link

I comment because I want to; I like meeting new people, making friends and interacting within these blog communities.

You cannot believe how many connections you could make and how much your traffic will grow!

I cannot resist to SHARE my knowledge, ASK questions, LEARN new things. And this 35 blogs list is what helps me achieve all this and more (including traffic and back-links)

Am I crazy? No. I don’t comment strictly on do-follow blogs. If I do this, I lose my other target audience who is as relevant as on “do-follow” blogs. And I want to reach the target audience in the first place, regardless if a blog is do-follow, or not.

Yup. I love to share what I know with other relevant audiences; I don’t keep it for my blog only. I want more people know what I know, do what I do, and reap the rewards.

If you want my 35 blogs list I can let you have it for only $29, one-time. I spent 30 hours compiling it, and it’s my secret blog commenting weapon. Cannot allow everybody access it, unless they really want it. So a measly $29 is what proves they appreciate my work.

If you want to tap into a growing audience of 500,000+ visitors and blog readers, click here to buy the 35 blogs list (by card or paypal) – you get instant download access (no opt-in list to join!)

I reserve the right to sell my list to 10 people or less, is that precious! Are you one of them?

If you have something to say about my Blog Commenting SEO formula:How I Get Top 3 Google Blog Rankings and Free Blog Traffic, then join the conversation. The ball is in your court now…

P.S. I forgot to mention that my 35 blogs list (“High-Traffic Blogs I Love”) also includes 3 bonus links and I constantly update the document with new high-popular, high-traffic blogs. Some of which you never heard of!

P.P.S. This company offers SEO Consulting if you’re interested in such a service.

How to Write a Product Review and Why I Often Get More Affiliate Sales than My Competitors!

If you are an affiliate marketer looking to learn how to write a product review (so effective, it gets sales, not just clicks) then look no further.

In the next 10 minutes you’ll discover why I often get more affiliate sales than my competitors and hear me uncover my proprietary affiliate commission-boosting method, step-by-step, right in front of you.

My job as a super affiliate marketer is to ALWAYS be authentic and know what I’m promoting better than the product owner itself. Does it sound hard to believe? Not, if you do what I do; you too will soon start to crank out affiliate product reviews like never before, and get (more) sales, not just clicks.

What is a product review
and why should you care?

A product review is NOT a template you buy, fill in the blanks and see $300+ in your paypal account overnight…

A product review is NOT a hard-sell “fool the reader” blurb that fills your pockets with cash…

A product review is NOT a sponsored blog post where others bribe you (for little) to sugarcoat their lame stuff…

A product review IS: your personal experience with a product (service or program) you found so useful that you cannot help but tell others about it and share your findings — the good, the bad and the ugly.

The best product reviews I’ve written…

Or stumbled upon, were the ones that are specifically targeted to the ideal reader/buyer and fill in the missing links. That’s why such reviews will always make a bunch of sales, even with little or less clicks.

Now, let’s compare two affiliate approaches and see the winning method. Suppose we have…

Affiliate A (let’s call him John) who gets 500 clicks on his blog ad, and…

Affiliate B (Mary) who gets 300 clicks as a result of her blog post (link) product review.

John would get 1% conversion, 2% if he’s lucky or 5% if he’s already “known in the field”.

Total sales John make: 5% X 500 clicks = 25 sales

Mary would get at least 10%, sometimes 20% and even 25% sales conversion because of her personal review, pulling-in 75 sales (25% X 300 clicks)

Ask any reputable super affiliate and they’ll tell how by writing even a simple, mini-product review would double if not triple their sales compared with merely placing a sidebar ad or text link in their posts.

You have to understand:
what makes a winning product review

Yes, it is important if you are already honest and known in the field (like an authority, guru, or whatever). But if you simply place a sidebar ad or embed your content with text links on your blog, then your sales will never skyrocket as when doing product reviews.

That’s why banners and text links are 10x times less effective than a personal, insightful product review. It always has been that way and it will always be!

People do NOT buy products but solutions to their problems…

Or results to their needs!

I learned this the hard way:

People often buy the right solution at the right time for needs or wants they think they have.

That’s why pre-selling your affiliate product recommendation is key, so NEVER tell someone about a product until you talk about their problem, and lead to the ideal solution…

A link or a banner ad cannot tell the (whole) story. These two methods are similar to spam, or cold-calling, as inefficient and time-wasters as when trying to sell a car to a stranger on the street.

Don’t understand me wrong: your car might be the hottest driving machine in town, just that a stranger will refuse your (irresistible) offer because she doesn’t know you, she doesn’t like you… hmm, I guess she doesn’t even trust you!

How can she? Did you spend time with her? Did you tell her your story? Did she know why you’re selling the car, why to her and why today? No. Because this takes time and we don’t want to waste time, we want to make money… bad approach.

It’s all about THEM and YOU… not just you!

Whenever you’re recommending something, free or paid, you risk your reputation. It’s either going up, or down.

Yes, your reputation is on the line, whether you consciously think that way, or not.

Get this: you’re not only recommending a product (through your product review, banner or text link), but also the customer support team and their service.

If the product is good, but the support duds, refunds will probably sprung up, making you less sales and spreading the word about your promotion and marketing practice.

Imagine this…

Last week I told one of my best friends to watch “The Town” movie. I thought it was a good one because I’ve seen it. My friend didn’t like it. He cannot stand Ben. Now, do you think I’ll ever recommend him a Ben Affleck movie ever again? Nah, I’ll change my strategy, instead I will make sure to ask about his favorite actors, find about his genre likes and only afterward make custom-tailored suggestions.

It’s not only about the product you recommend, but also who you recommend that can build or demolish your reputation as well as your friend/relationship connections.

If I told you to click this link and buy SEMRush (a keyword research and competitive tool I just subscribed with 48 hours ago) would you do it simply because I told you so?

No, unless I tell you the benefits and advantages of this tool and what it could mean for your business and search engine rankings, right? I’ll hold that for another post (product review) though – thank you for the idea!

What kind of Affiliate Products
you can (and should) review…

Anything you can think of: from physical products, offline and online services, digital products, software tools, you name it. There’s no limit to what you can review and generate affiliate sales with.

Digital marketing and media trend analyst site – Emarketer.com says in a report they sell for $695 (yes, that’s not a typo!)

Reading product reviews is a growing part of consumers’ prepurchase search ritual. Over the past few years, consumers have increased the number of reviews they read and the overall time they spend reading them.”

Nielsen Global Online Consumer Survey shows that…

“Recommendations by personal acquaintances and opinions posted by consumers online are the most trusted forms of advertising globally, according to the latest twice-yearly Nielsen Global Online Consumer Survey of over 25,000 Internet consumers from 50 countries.

The Nielsen survey, the largest of its kind, shows that nine in every ten Internet consumers worldwide (90 percent) trust recommendations from people they know, while seven in every ten (70 percent) trust consumer opinions posted online.”

It’s not always about you, but about the other human at the end of the line that has a major need or problem and needs a solution, now, not next month. And if you step in with the right recommendation and provide with your link, they’ll buy it…

But what about FTC “scary” rules
and (recent) affiliate guidelines…

What do you think happens if you disclose affiliate links (endorsements) and make your affiliate-vendor relation transparent?

Will you get less clicks? Will you cut your affiliate checks and diminish your earnings into half?

Not at all; it’s the opposite. I’ve made more money when I went up front and told readers: this is my link, buy the product or not. It’s your choice. And I’ve also made even more money when I told them: buy from my link, I get a commissions for telling you about it, and I’ll also send you this bonus ___ if you order today (or by XX.XX. date).

Here’s what FTC says about affiliate/endorsement disclosure (you have not to worry about it)

“It takes a lifetime to build a good reputation, but you can lose it in a minute.” — Will Rogers, American actor and comedian

FTC wants to protect both: your consumer and your reputation. When you understand this key principle, you won’t get scared about FTC rules but embrace what they’re doing and be open to their suggestions.

Personally, I purchase online and offline regardless of the affiliate-vendor relationship. If a review is honest, I can tell. My gut feeling tells me if a person is lying or not. I don’t have to read their affiliate disclosure to decide if I like what I read, trust the product and buy.

What about you?

How I Went from Zero to $1,000’s
in Affiliate Commissions

I’ve started just like you: from scratch… with no site and no domain name, knowing nothing about placing links or displaying banners on a web page.

First time I recall driving 57 clicks (or hits?) to an affiliate link and thought to quit because all I got was no sales and sheer frustration. After talking back and forth with the vendor and other affiliates, I soon realized that writing affiliate product reviews is KEY. And the rest is history.

Now, let’s be honest, nobody can write a good product review, unless they know:

1. What the product or service you’re going to talk about does!

2. Who was it created/designated for!

3. What problem, issue or challenge it solves, and more importantly, how!

You do all this by performing in depth research and close product (service) inspect.

There are no shortcuts, trust me on this one. The more you study the product, the better your review.

Input equals output. What you learn/discover from your analyst is something you jot down or memorize. Your experiment with the product is a direct reflection of your (written) product review and vice-versa.

Anybody can tell straight up from your review if you’ve personally tested the product or not. This gut feeling makes people want to buy from you and tell others, or not buy and tell their friends not too.

There are so many fake reviews out there, everywhere, in any niche; just Google around and you will see what I’m talking about. The Internet needs to be a better place, with carefully-selected, closely- reviewed products and services.

How to really write
affiliate product reviews that sell!

Here are the 5 top (proprietary) methods I use (after I closely inspect, read or try the product).

#1 – Keyword Research

You know the product, you know what it does and who it helps. Now, it’s time you perform keyword research. I’ve told you I’m currently use Google AdWord’s free tool (will consider paid solutions next) – feel free to use whatever it fits you, just simplify things, it should be easier that way.

It’s not about rushing things, but keep it simple, not simplistic.

#2 – Long-tail key term optimization

Use Google’s tool and you might find key terms related to the product title you’re promoting. They’re the best “buyers” keywords to focus on and optimize your blog post/product review.

SEO means search engine optimization. Optimization is not bad. Optimization is what we need and want in life. We want to get more, and do better.

Then it’s in your responsibility to help your reader find your product review in Google’s first page results. Don’t let fake reviews rank there. Optimize your post and readers will find it easier because it’s custom-tailored to their specific wants.

SEO is a label you put on your content just like we label books with the right title and emails with the correct subject line.

If SEO is bad, then you’re not getting the full picture. You’re actually telling me that optimized subject lines and book titles is wrong? Not optimizing is bad and “black-hat”, a wrong practice!

#3 – Competitive Research

I spent 3 hours and 50 minutes (as per my content marketing research formula) just to find the right articles, sources and facts to help me crank out this post you’re reading now (not including the 6 hours+ for actual writing end editing)

Was it helpful? Am I right when I say that if I had not performed such extensive research, my writing would have been regular, blatant and boring?

#4 – Product Review Write

By now you’ve already noticed that learning How to Write a Product Review is actually not just about writing but product inspection and competitive research.

Since you’ve gathered all the information in one place (on paper on in a word doc for e.g.), writing is easy, natural. Practice makes it perfect. You are not born skilled, you have to become!

Your review should ALWAYS include…

  • Product title
  • Product benefits/advantages
  • Product ideas – how you’re using it in your life or business
  • Product missing link(s) – what you dislike about it, but found a solution that fills the gap
  • Product call to action – it helps get the sale and reach maximum conversion (if done right)
  • Product bonus offer (offer one or two exclusive items, not a bunch of useless “goodies”)

*** HIGHLY IMPORTANT:

Before you write your review, study at least 5 to 7 other reviews on the same or similar products if yours is the first. Your affiliate product review should be the best since you’ve been already exposed to your competitors’ reviews. But let’s not forget your personal experience with the product, this is priority #1 and this is what reflects the most in your review.

#5 – Product Review Edit

Editing is a different process than writing, so it should be performed separately. This is where you remove words or interchange phrases, add product images and link them to your affiliate url.

A picture is worth a thousand words or 1001 words is worth more than a picture as a Chinesse proverb says.

Once you’re done, publish your review on your blog and wait for comments and sales to come in.

I sometimes spend about an hour just to edit the post and make sure it looks good prior pushing the send button.

Now it’s your turn to comment. What do you have to share about How to Write a Product Review … do you have any questions to ask or things to add to the conversation?

P.S. If you need help on how to write product reviews, contact me. I provide consulting and do-it-on-your-behalf content writing services: affiliate product reviews, viral blog posts, emails, etc…