Geasy BHW

Author name: geasybhw

Off Page SEO

Out of Box Link Building Idea

One very basic tactic I’ve used for years which still works for link building ideas today. Looking in different global markets at competitive verticals. 1. Pick a term let’s say “website hosting comparison”. Usually go with high CPC terms from Ahrefs also look at difficulty scores. 2. Use Google Ad Preview tool, you can also see organic listings https://adwords.google.com/apt/AdPreview sure you can use a VPN as well. 3. Check different markets – U.K, US, AU, CA, EU. 4. Pick the top 10 results and start prospecting in each region for link ideas and patterns. One thing many link builders do is they don’t think Global they only look in the local market.

Off Page SEO

Shot gun Skyscraper Linkbuilding Case Study – 15 Links from 300 prospects

The first time I tried Shotgun Skyscraper technique, it was a failiure. I hardly got any links from a couple of hundred emails that I sent. But this time I used it again for a client in a different niche(meditation niche) and it worked great. First of all I made sure that the piece I was promoting was the best one. And it was. Way more comprehensive and detailed than the rest. Secondly, I incentivized to link to us by saying that we gonna share their piece with our decent social following. From the 300 odd recipients, we got 15 links and 3 guest post opportunities. The number of links would have been higher if the mailing tool that I used did not fuck up. It sent the follow up as a separate email instead of replying to the original email so people were asking me what I was following up for So yeah the tactic works in noncommercial niches. Not so much in commercial niches!

Agency SEO

How To Weed Out Junk Sites On Outreach Sites

A process we use at our link-building agency to weed out junk websites(or super big websites that would definitely not give you a link) from a list of prospects is using this formula in google sheets. =ARRAYFORMULA(QUERY(A:A,”select * where not (“&TEXTJOIN(” or “,TRUE,”A contains ‘”&IMPORTDATA(“https://pastebin.com/raw/9K3zndkZ”)&”‘”)&”) label A’Filtered List’”))

Off Page SEO

Linkbuilding tip to get 100% relevant backlinks WITH EASE

Linkbuilding tip to get 100% relevant backlinks: For many clients, you may encounter that a corresponding blogosphere does not exist to get links from. Eg: A signboard maker. You won’t find sites fully dedicated to signboards. Yes you can get links from blogs which talk about promoting your business, branding etc but you will only get page level relavance not domain level relevance. What can you do in this case? Well, a strategy I use is to guest post at sites of same businesses in other cities. This works wonders because signboard makers in other cities are not competitors of your client hence do not hesitate in accepting your guest posts. Mind you – most businesses dont know what a guest post is so you will have to position it as “collaboration” So just Search for – intitle:Business type + “other city” in google and scrape the results. Get a list of results for atleast 10 cities and send them an outreach email.This strategy never fails to work. I have scored hundreds of relevant links this way for clients where there is no passionate blogsphere in the niche.

Agency SEO

10 Lessons learned from sending more than 10K outreach emails

Never use whois info to grab contact info. People often use personal email and dont like to be contacted at that address. I made this mistake and was labelled as a creep by a female blogger. I know girls can be a bit more paranoid than necessary but its better to avoid this. Invest in an outreach tool – When you will be doing outreach over a period time, inevitably you will reach out to some of the same blogger more than once. Without an outreach tool you won’t realize this and will keep introducing yourself in each new email which is kinda awkward. Don’t be over the top – I like to be cheesy but unfortunately humor does not convey very well via email. You humor can be termed as rudeness/creepiness by the recipient so its better to not be over the top. Being a little fun is fine though. Always validate your emails – If you are just starting out with outreach, you might not know that you need to verify the emails with a tool to make sure they really exist. Sending emails to invalid emails can affect your deliverability rate. Leverage the assets you already have – Linkbuilding is about providing value. Just because you wrote a personalized email to someone does not mean someone will link to you. Either you content needs to be ground breaking, if its not, people will either need money. If you dont have money, you can leverage the assets you already have. Like offering give away a free account of your tool or sharing their site to your social media following. Don’t give generic compliments – ” I am a huge fan of your work, I find your website to be really beneficial” People can sense fake compliments from a mile away. People hate being manipulated. if you dont have anything specific to say then dont say anything but dont give generic fake compliments. Always show your face – Bloggers receive dozens of outreach emails a day. Most with fake personas. So its better to show your face and build trust. Follow up or die – Like I said before, blogger receive dozens of outreach emails a day. They dont have time to respond to each. So you gotta follow up multiple times to get their attention. Dont write perfect emails – Having impeccable grammar, perfect capitalization all gives the feel of a marketing email. Make deliberate mistakes like extra spacing, missing capitalization etc to make it look natural. Dont be like everyone else in their inbox – Use a different font than the default font.

Uncategorized

The Impact of Explicit Content on Society and Individuals: An Arab Perspective

In recent years, the availability and accessibility of explicit content, such as pornography and erotic stories, have increased significantly due to advancements in technology and the internet. This trend has sparked a heated debate among scholars, activists, and the general public in Arab societies, where traditional values and religious beliefs often clash with modern arab xxnxx clips lifestyles and liberal attitudes. This article aims to explore the complex relationship between explicit content and Arab societies, shedding light on the potential benefits and drawbacks of this phenomenon. First, it is important to acknowledge that explicit content is not a novelty in Arab societies, as they have a rich and diverse history of erotic literature and poetry. However, the recent proliferation of online explicit content has raised new concerns and challenges, particularly among young people who are more likely to be exposed to such material. One of the main arguments in favor of explicit content is that it can serve as a valuable educational tool, helping individuals to understand their bodies, desires, and relationships better. Moreover, some studies suggest that explicit content can contribute to promoting sexual health and reducing the risk of unwanted pregnancies, sexually transmitted infections, and sexual assaults. However, these potential benefits should be weighed against the potential harm that explicit content can cause, especially if it is consumed excessively or inappropriately. For instance, some research indicates that exposure to explicit content can lead to unrealistic expectations, objectification, and addiction, which can negatively affect an individual’s mental and emotional well-being. Furthermore, explicit content can have broader societal implications, particularly in conservative and religious communities where it is often viewed as a threat to traditional values and family structures. In such contexts, explicit content can exacerbate existing tensions and divisions, fueling moral panics, censorship, and discrimination against marginalized groups. Therefore, it is crucial to find a balanced and nuanced approach to explicit content that takes into account its potential benefits and drawbacks. This can be achieved through a combination of education, awareness, and regulation, which can help individuals and societies to make informed and responsible choices about their consumption and production of explicit content. In conclusion, explicit content is a complex and multifaceted phenomenon that requires careful consideration and analysis. While it can offer potential benefits, such as education and sexual health, it can also pose significant risks, such as addiction and societal division. Therefore, it is essential to adopt a balanced and context-specific approach to explicit content that respects cultural, religious, and personal values while promoting individual and collective well-being.

Uncategorized

Private Blog Networks (PBN): The Myths and The Risks

#1 – In foreign niches, PBNs are THE BEST way to rank right now because the algo’s are so outdated in terms of content quality & link signals etc but they are still good at stopping pure spam.. So PBNs are the perfect answer because you can use expired domains on foreign SERPs (I’d stick to non-dropped domains for English niches, more on that later) with literally foreign TLDs and as long as the power and content signals are there they work a charm. Go into every Nordic (Sweden, Netherlands, Denmark etc) payday loans, casino or just about any spammy SERP and everyone in the top 10 is using PBNs.. You literally wouldn’t be able to outrank them without having some sort of insane budget and tiered link building using PBNs on the tier 2 ANYWAY. Examples – Danish payday loans site ranking #1 with a shit ton of foreign PBNs, not blocking bots so you can ahrefs it – penge247.dk Germany casino site dominating for years at this point, using German homepage PBNs with branded anchors and good OnPage – onlinecasino.de #2 – What niche/industry are you in, do you want to keep the site and how much money do you have? End of the day, PBNs are cheaper than guest post link building.. I can buy an aged, DA/DR30+, RD100+ domain with most of it’s links going to the homepage for $100 – $200.. That 1 domain gives me 100% control, 100% link juice and I can link to multiple other sites, or even sell links on it to make my money back.. Most niches that you reach out to will want you to spend $20 – $50 just for the link + the content + the time and you aren’t getting 100% of the juice at all. If you’re in an affiliate niche and the #1 guy is ranking with a 50 site, dedicated PBN and you want to go full white hat, natural links, HQ content then good fucking luck with that one mate. #3 – Sale valuations.. This one has always perplexed me.. Why people think they still need the PBNs when they want to sell the site is beyond me. This is something I spoke about on LionZeal’s show 3 years ago now ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5cHoeMAGxa0 ) but the gist of it is you build and rank a site affordably with PBNs and as the site generates revenue you slowly pull the PBN links down and replace them with white hat links – You might see some initial drops at first, but link ghosting and a bunch of other factors considering you’re already ranking play into effect and it’s not that big of a loss at all if managed well. I did this recently.. I had a site I made, used my own PBN on, ranked it with about $2,000 worth of PBN investment to a site that makes $4k/Mo on a good month and $2k/Mo on a bad month.. Then used the revenue generated over the next 6 months to flesh out the site with more content and remove the PBNs and slowly drip HQ guest posts – I sold that site for $72k. #4 – How safe is it? Is your niche prone to manual reviews? Where are you sourcing your domains? How fast do you need them? Can you do link swaps with other trusted SEOs? Then there’s a few obvious ones.. I build everything in FireFox (Just because I am that paranoid) use unique, premium hosting for each PBN, use the same writer for my money site content as PBN content (Just for future proofing any really good content algo’s coming out) and slowly build PBNs up/out, as well as use wayback to see what the site had previously – Remember Google’s cache is 2 years old, so it’s likely they will compare cached versions, if there is any.

Off Page SEO

How We Did Link Building on SEO Niche

Did a linkbuilding campaign for a client in the toughest niche IMO: SEO He has a free KW research tool. Now you know how difficult it is these to pitch someone and say please include our tool in your list because its free. SEOs dont usually give a shit. They know the value of links so usually ask for money or just flat out ignore your pitch. So I had to figure out how to provide value. I scraped a shit load of articles which had “SEO tools” or “Keyword research tools” in the title. Next I Made my VA go through all these pages and look for broken tools. after finding some broken tools, we extracted the backlinks to these tools and made a mega list of prospects. Next we popped the list into hunter and got the emails. Then we ran the prospects through a email cleaning tool (clearout.io) in my case. We removed all the “invalid” and “guess” emails and just kept the “valid” emails. You should do this too because “guess” emails usually have a 40% bounce rate. Next I made my VA take a screenshot of all the broken links and paste the image URL into the corresponding cells. and then we sent the emails. Out of the 500 odd emails we sent, we got 10 solid links including a link from seobook.com (DR 81)

Interviews

Expert Interview – Sherb Answers IM Questions

Thanks to everyone for the support that you gave to this content format. I’ll do my best to get the top members of this forum to walk through their journey and answer questions related to their career. Today we have in the seat @Sherb, whom I decided to make some questions related to his writing career and his opinions about SEO. Give it a read. Totally worth it. 1. Can you tell us about your background? How did you get into this business? I’m 28 years old, American, born and raised in the Southeast. I was born into a middle-class family. Dad was a nuclear chemist and is now a tax appraiser and going to be retiring in a few months at age 60. Mom was an incredible teacher, had an extensive education, and was well-loved amongst her students and peers. She sadly passed away from cancer a couple years back. They instilled a very hard work ethic for myself and my sister. We earned everything we got, although they made sure we never, ever went without. We spent many weekends in work clothes toiling around the property. They made sure we both got great educations and they we went to and graduated from college, as they had done. While in high school, I started screwing around with Blogspot blogs. Some of them I made got traffic here and there. I would write short stories about my classmates and put them up online and they loved to read them, and would frequently ask for certain things to be included in future stories. In college, I cooled off from the online world for a bit to focus more on my studies. I still dabbled here and there, but didn’t do any serious IM work. After my wife graduated, she started medical school and would consistently be pulling 70-80 hour weeks between classes and studying. I needed something to fill my time, so I started working on a few websites. While doing this, I posted about being interested in online reputation management. It was here that I was contacted by my first client, who referred me to my second client, and the list went on. I had perused Blackhatworld in some form or fashion since early 2007, and towards the end of 2014 into 2015, finally had the expertise I thought was needed to contribute something of value to the board. I started diving deep into IM and SEO, and haven’t looked back. 2. Tell us a bit of your current projects, what are you working on? I have left the online reputation management world for now, choosing to focus on the less stressful content writing while working on my own projects. I’ve got several travel and affiliate sites, the largest of which being my Iceland travel site that I have been working on when time allows for over a year. I’ve also got a 60-site PBN that myself and my web property manager handle the growth of. I have several local service businesses that I plan to launch before the end of the year, outsourcing 90 percent of the work to outside parties and truly dive into the business world from a managerial standpoint. 3. How did you discover your talent for writing? I’ll paste something I wrote back in mid-July: https://www.blackhatworld.com/seo/will-grammarly-help-me-with-english.1044152/#post-11227387 I got an old Windows 95 computer for my 8th or 9th birthday and it was so slow that it would only run Office. I spent my weekends from ages 8 to 12 chopping firewood, doing chores around the house with my parents and sister, and writing stories about tornadoes and FBI field agents and abandoned theme parks and everything in between. I put my friends in the stories and then had them read them. Practicing constantly eventually got me to the point where I was winning essay contests. I went to Disney World for a week because I won an essay contest. I’ve got a shit-ton of trophies in the closet from spelling bees and speech contests and essay contests I won on the state level. I got an all-expenses paid trip to Washington DC because I wrote a killer paper on how we should capture stories of WWII vets before they all die. I spent my last two summers of high school on college campuses getting “the college experience” and learning advanced mathematical concepts… because I wrote a convincing application letter. I got my college education completely paid for because I wrote a shit-ton of essays my senior year of high school and won over a dozen small scholarships as a result. And now I make a six-figure income between writing I do online, for clients, and in my day job. Knowing how to write is (to me) the second most important real-world skill you can have. The first being the ability to communicate and filter your thoughts into spoken words and actions. 4. What does a good content research process look like? Researching the topic should not be difficult. Google what it is about, utilize the resources that your customer offers you from the get-go, and make sure you understand what is being asked of you. To me, almost as important as understanding the subject matter is understanding how it will be used, and tailoring your writing to meet the needs of your client’s website. I have lost several-thousand dollar writing gigs because an article I provided was in a completely different style and tone than what the customer had on their site already. That is a mistake I will not make twice. If your content is going on a website for a doctor, you’d better provide non-conversational language and strong call to action, and have enough medical knowledge to not put in filler content that destroys the message being conveyed with unnecessary wordiness. 5. How do you research when you have to write for some unknown topic you don’t have much knowledge about? If the topic is not something I am familiar with, I treat it

Interviews

Expert Interview – William Talks IM

Today in the Expert Interview Series we have a well reputable member. He is all over the digital world from E-commerce to SEO he has what to say. Totally an interview that you should read. 1. Could you please tell us a little bit of the journey how you started in internet marketing till the moment of this interview? I started in IM about 12-13 years ago promoting Clickbank products. Before starting with IM I had built some large Facebook groups and pages in the very early days of Facebook that across them had millions of followers, it was easy back then (sigh). I never really used them for internet marketing though until I discovered Clickbank. I created an account and placed some links and the next morning woke to $238. I was blown away and started making a lot more each day promoting Clickbank guides on the many groups and pages I had created in the past. Since then I have always had a passion for affiliate marketing and creating large hubs where people gather online. My wife and I have worked on many fun projects together and started one of the fastest growing etsy shops of all time which at one point was also one of the top selling etsy shops in the world. We sold that business and moved on to helping other sellers grow their businesses. It feels like we are coming full circle as we have been generating the majority of our income from affiliate marketing over the last 12 months and are about to get back into the fray with eCommerce and POD. Before IM from 15 – 21 I worked in a lot of call centers and developed customer service skills which helped a lot with managing our businesses ourselves and the ability to speak to anyone on the phone no matter their position. Most of those jobs where in sales departments so I learned a lot of great skills. No matter if it was insurance, phones, inbound sales outbound sales, customer service/sales, I was always the best performer or within the top 1% without fail and would max out on the bonuses and extra commission so I always wanted more and had to become self employed to do it. In my spare time I started working for myself by singing up to an MLM company selling household products when I was 18 and did fairly well with that and had a team generating 35k – 50k sales each month by the time I was 19. I learned a lot of skills from that mlm business and two others I joined before moving to the US. In fact it was a franchise/mlm company I initially moved to the US to do when I was 22. I moved to Vegas and met my wife, we got married 6 months later and moved back to the UK for a year and it was at the end of that year which we got into Clickbank and moved back. We earned so much money in a two month time frame that we decided to move back to the US, paid for my immigration and attorney and had the ability to work for ourselves from that point on. 2. Tell us a bit of your current projects, what are you working on? The most exciting projects right now are some of our Fiverr affiliate promotions that we are doing as well as some POD shops we are in the process of building. We also dabbled with Poshmark over the last year and surprisingly have built up quite an empire on there with a few shops that are automated and promoted with imacros. The number one project right now however is developing land we purchased so that we can utilize our online promotional skills with promoting an Airbnb retreat for tourists coming to the Grand Canyon and to offer experiences and workshops. As well as that side of things I would ultimately like to have a large cottage industry out there with people running the various businesses and shops we will have online processing the orders and fulfillment all in house, as well as it being an incubator for small businesses. (dont say commune it’s not going to be a commune lol!) maybe I will try and keep the promiscuous aspetcs of a commune though, that sounds GRRRR8 lol! 3. What do you think the future has prepared for SEO? Much the same with people constantly trying to game the system or understand it better. The more people understand SEO the more it will change. It’s people like the users on this forum that will dictate the future of SEO as they are the people changing it every day with new techniques that over come obstacles, that then spawn new obstacles. Whenever people adopt a new way of promotion it forces innovation and change to stand out from the crowd. I feel it will evolve as fast as technology has evolved. 4. When you get a new ORM client, what are some basic stuff that you should deal with? Firstly I ask them what they want to achieve and then let them know what is going to realistically be achievable and set out budgets for it. Most of our clients probably fall under SMM more, but with doing that you inevitably are doing ORM too. Most of the clients we have are not familiar with ORM or its principles so there is a lot of education to be done. The most important thing in my opinion is making sure the client understands what it is they need, making sure that’s something you can actually deliver on and then educating the client to make sure that they know a lot of the best practices to make my job as easy as possible and not to cause unneeded pr problems going forward. 5. You have done some e-commerce stuff too. Could you please elaborate a bit into that? What’s the

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