The Ultimate Blog Podcast - 123. SEO for Travel Bloggers with Nina Clapperton
Episode Date: April 23, 2024Have you ever thought about travel blogging? We have Nina Clapperton on to share more about SEO for travel bloggers. Nina is a multi-6 figure travel blogger and the founder of She Knows SEO. Using her... SEO and AI skills, she grew her travel blog to $30k/mo in 13 months! She shares more about her story and how she got here. She also shares more about choosing the right niche, understanding who your audience is, and tips on content creation for a travel blogger. Nina’s story is not only inspirational, but she also shares practical tips that you aren’t going to want to miss!Thanks for listening! Let us know your thoughts on Instagram: @sparkmediaconceptsGet 20% off of Keysearch Starter Plan using this link and code: KSDISCCheck out MiloTree Cart HERE!Check out the show notes (link below) for more information including links and resources mentioned in today's episode!SHOW NOTES: www.sparkmediaconcepts.com/episode123
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Welcome to the Ultimate Blog Podcast with Amy Reinecke and Jennifer Draper.
We're on a mission to empower women who want to start or grow their own blog.
This podcast is for women who want to learn blogging basics and who crave inspiration
and encouragement.
Whether you're just getting started or have been a blogger for years, we're excited to
welcome you into this space where we are passionate about creating community over competition. We are bloggers who want to encourage you to believe in your potential,
step outside the norm and step into a life where you create your own schedule,
your own success and your own story. Join us for weekly episodes as we navigate blogging
and work from home life all while raising a family and having some serious fun along the way.
all while raising a family and having some serious fun along the way.
Recently, we asked you what you want to learn more about here on the podcast.
And an overwhelming response came back that SEO is something that you're just wanting to learn more and more about. So we've had several guests come on and talk about that. But today,
we get to dive deep into a niche, which is travel SEO. And to do that, we brought on Nina Clapperton,
who is a multi-six-figure travel blogger. And she's actually the founder of She Knows SEO.
And so we know that Nina is going to bring all the goods today. And for you travel bloggers
out there who are like, how do I grow this travel blog today? In 2024, what do I do?
Nina is here to answer that question. She uses SEO and AI skills,
and she grew her travel blog to 30,000 a month in 13 months. So it is possible.
We're going to hear more about Nina's story. So welcome to the Ultimate Blog Podcast, Nina.
Hey, thank you so much for having me.
Well, Nina, before we hit record, you shared your journey on how you became a blogger.
And we told you it was so good that you're going to have to share it again.
So will you share with our community how you ended up in the travel niche, how you ended up blogging in general?
Yeah, so I started with a university project in my first year, I had a concussion,
and I couldn't participate in like the group project they needed. So my prof was like,
just do something online, do a blog or something. So I published three posts that had nothing to do
with anything. They were ridiculous. But I've always loved writing. So I realized I really
enjoyed that. Then I put it on the back burner until I graduated from that degree, which I didn't tell you, but it was actually in medieval literature with a specialty in medieval
dream poetry with talking birds, very useless degree. And so I didn't even know you could get
a degree that was like that niche down. Like technically it was like a BA in literature,
but you had to have a specialty. And that was unfortunate. It was that and The Hobbit. Those were my two specialties. Oh my gosh, that's so interesting. And then from there, I applied with that semi
useless degree to 298 jobs and got a grand total of zero. Even the MLM turned me down, which was
quite the shock to the ego. So I decided I'd go to law school because when you Google what to do
with an English degree, law school comes up. So I wrote my LSATs and you have to wait to get them. So I figured I'll just
spend a year in Europe. Why not? I saved up about $3,000 and found a program where I could work
abroad and get some money while I was over there and volunteer. So I did that. And then I kind of
started the blog again to really show my family where the heck I was in the world. Because I would
regularly get calls from my grandma like, Are you dead yet? And I was like, I answered the phone. So I can't be like, we're
fine. I promise. And so that's when I started kind of semi posting again. And then in December,
I got my like full ride to law school. But I have this Starbucks cookie in Berlin. And I was happier
about the cookie than I was about the full ride. And that said a lot to me about the future.
So I failed on law school, found a $200 flight to New Zealand and moved to New Zealand.
And that's when the blog really started in earnest.
So when I was in Toronto in between getting my visa,
I started it from the dog bed of my family dog.
I'm sitting with him on the floor and bought the domain, did all the stuff, got it ready,
moved to New Zealand.
And ever since, I've been putting all my time and effort into blogging, basically, even when I had other jobs.
I was doing a lot of those like for like, comment for comment threads, which got me some traffic,
but it was useless traffic. I was spending 120 hours a week on it, made no money. Even when I tried to put Google AdSense on the blog, I have $63 still locked away in a Google AdSense
account. I can never access because you have to hit $100 to get it. And it took years before I
even heard the term SEO. Pretty sure someone was just like, I don't know, choking on their own spit
or something when they said that. I was like, what is that? And then took a course. The course was
fine, but it was really generic advice. And just like you said, it is different per niche. So I started playing around with stuff, figured it out. And by December of 2021,
gave myself an ultimatum that I had six months to get my site... Well, I gave myself a year. It
took six months in the end, which is great to get into Mediavine, make even $1,000 with my blog,
or else I had to go back to law school. And then within six months, got into Mediavine. Spite is a very powerful motivator and a fear of law school, also very powerful motivator.
And then within another year, by January 2022, no, that's wrong, 2023, pardon me,
I hit $30,000 in a month, completely passive from that website.
from that website. Nina, I love your story. I love that you've been brave, truly, in this and just taken risks. Because I think that when you start a blog, that's just part of it,
is there are risks to be taken and you bet on yourself. And I love that you are here with us
today and sharing that with people and saying, Hey, it's okay to bet on yourself and you don't have to take the common path.
You can take a different path and you just never know where that could take you.
So I also love that you shared the dates because this isn't like something that you did 10 or 15
years ago when blogging was... When it was, I think, quote unquote, easier to build a blog.
This was in the last couple years here. So you said 2021-ish,
22 is when you kind of gave yourself that ultimatum. And by 2023, you were on Mediavine,
correct? Yeah. So December 2021 was like November, I formulated the plan. In December, I sat down
and I work really well with batch work. So my strategy was every month would be themed.
Growing up, my mom always did that with food. She loves to cook.
So we'd have like the summer of sliders, the winter of empanadas.
And like you would...
I hate a lot of food now because I ate so much of it for so many months.
So I figured a month would be okay.
So I was like, okay, we're going to do a month of a content audit,
a month of keyword research that like then obviously spilled into writing
because hopefully you're not just spending a month on key search, like spinning your wheels, then like a month of back linking
a month of internal links, things like that, where really like focusing on one strategy.
By end of May 2022 is when I applied and I got into Mediavine took like a week to get
everything sorted. So it was I think, like June 10, by the time my ads were live. And then from there,
I decided to do a summer of affiliates and a summer of affiliates and creating two $7 products
really push things over the edge. I also accidentally stumbled upon the best lead magnet
I've ever heard of, which is a quiz. And I get like 13 to 1500 subscribers a month passively
from a quiz that has an SEO like post attached to it.
And that gave me a great email list that I could then really like push affiliates towards push the
$7 product. I got a couple sponsored things off of that. And yeah, that's really how the $30,000
came together. I try to like break it down because I know like everyone wants to know where the
income is. And I have like, I have slide somewhere. I should have pulled it up.
But I know it was like $1,500-ish was ads
because it was January.
Q1 has really low ad revenue.
By the summer, it was up to $7,500 a month
for ads from that site.
But I did switch to Raptive.
So different ad network, pretty similar.
Then affiliates was like $25,000, I think.
And then I think whatever the leftover was like $7,000. No, it wouldn't be $7,000. I don. And then I think whatever the leftover was like seven,
that wouldn't be 7,000. I don't know. I'm not good at math. But the rest of it was definitely
like some sponsored emails and a couple links and then a $7 product which sold like, I don't know,
maybe 50 or so. So like not a ton of money, but something.
Yeah, I'm just sitting here processing all of what you're saying. And I'm hearing you say like
you really focused in on a couple of areas, you focused on SEO, and you focused on your email
list. I didn't hear you talk a lot about social media or anything. Was that any part of your
strategy at all when it came to growing your website? No, I hate social media. I'm really
bad at it. I'm very lucky that with SheKnowsSEO, because I can just talk about SEO and strategies
and things, I find it a bit easier that way. So there's not a ton of editing and cutaways and
posing. I have an old iPhone that my dog has pushed into the ocean a few times. So the camera's
not good. I cannot take a photo. All my photos are crooked as well because I have this $20 tripod.
My sister's dog pushed over a waterfall during the pandemic and I've never replaced it so like every photo I try to take
even good ones are heavily crooked so social media is not my thing at all the site has like
it has a Pinterest it has at the time like I think it had a Twitter account kind of like it was there
I did not post on them at all that That was not my focus. I find having multiple
traffic sources is amazing and diversifying your traffic is so, so good and strong and safe.
But I was really bad at it. And especially at that point when I was like, like you said,
I focus on kind of one thing at a time and really deep dived into it. I would have been spinning my
wheels trying to do all that stuff. And that was something I did early on is like, every week, I jumped from like, okay, this week is Pinterest, this week,
it's TikTok, this week is this, this week is that. And I never gave anything enough time to work.
And I realized, like, for me as a person, I can't split myself up that way, because
I will get distracted, I will jump to something and I'll get too impatient.
I'm also not a visual thinker. So any of like the visual social media make me panic because I'm like, I don't know if
this looks good.
I don't actually care if it looks good.
I just want to like get the information out there.
So writing has always been my focus.
And the email list was purely accidental, honestly.
I didn't send great emails at the beginning either.
But once I realized like these people are there, you there, you want to write to them because they're
sitting there.
And emails are where you get to be more creative too and have more fun with your writing.
So by the end of 2023, I really fell in love with email.
I think there's going to be a lot of new bloggers listening to this and just being like,
wow, this is refreshing.
Because this simplifies things for me.
Because one of the biggest obstacles is how overwhelming it is, like you said, to do all the things.
So they're trying to jump from thing to thing to thing.
And yes, like you said, having traffic from multiple sources is a great thing.
It's important.
But you're not going to get any traffic if you
try to do it all at once. So focusing on one thing at a time is just such a great way to grow.
And then as you have those things nailed down and you're getting that traffic, then you can add on
another thing and add on another thing when you feel like that's the right thing to do.
But I like how you said, you take a month and you batch like working on
keyword research and all of those things. I think for people that are thinking about becoming a
travel blogger, or they're just getting started, I think one of the biggest questions that they
have is, what does this look like behind the scenes? How much traveling do I do? I think
there's a perception based on what we see on social media that every week you're off to a new destination. You're getting your trips comped
and you're going to all these glamorous events and all of this. But I don't think that's necessarily
how travel blogging has to work. And I don't think that that's probably sustainable.
Can you give us just a little peek behind the scenes of what it what it looks like to be able to create content as a travel blogger?
Yeah, I fully agree with you. I think there is this perception that travel blogging
is social media travel blogging. And even that, like, I have tons of friends who are
big on social media, that is their bread and butter, their home most of the year,
it's just that they schedule content really well and they space things out really well. So it looks like they're abroad all the time. But for me personally,
I have chronic illnesses. I have physical and mental disabilities that mean I can't be abroad
all the time. I have to go to doctor's appointments and things like that. So I actually haven't been
outside of North America since the pandemic. I've basically been here. I was supposed to move to Europe last
year and it fell through the night before because of dog paperwork for my service dog. But even then
I was planning to like live in one spot for a while and not be jumping around to a million places.
So you definitely can do that. That's an option for me. When I was doing this, I was sitting in
my like shared apartment or what was like a house at the time, but like a shared townhouse with my roommate in Ottawa, just working. That was what I did. And because you've been on these trips before, like everyone goes on trips, everyone has photos, everyone has experiences. And really with writing about it for travel, you might write like one post on making gluten-free bagels or something. We don't have that. If someone wants to know gluten-free restaurants in Rome, they want to know gluten-free pizza. They want to know gluten-free pasta. They want to know like places that are celiac safe versus normal gluten. I'm celiac. That's why I jumped to gluten-free. It's all of those considerations. So for us, we can't write a one-off post on a topic.
We have to deep dive.
And the way I like to think of it is like,
someone should be able to come to your site
and plan an entire trip,
like plan like the meat and bones of the trip
that's relevant to this specific audience all on your site.
And that takes time to write.
So your three-day weekend trip to New York City,
okay, well now you you have a hotel review that
you can write. You went to some restaurants. Hopefully, you ate at some point. So hopefully,
you did something there. You have a three-day itinerary. You have a two-day itinerary. You
have a one-day itinerary. You have how to get there. You have how to get from the airport to
the city. I could rattle off 20 posts that you could write just from those three days.
And without you having to do any
intense fact finding or letting the keywords drive your traffic or drive your travel,
because like, I don't believe in that I believe travel should be what you want it to be.
Definitely like I'll look a little bit. It's actually become part of my travel planning
where I'm like, Oh, here's this cool thing like I wouldn't have known about otherwise.
But it's kind of the same as looking at blogs to be like, hey, what should I do in New York City? Like, oh, there's these cool ruins of a castle.
Let's go there. There's this great cookie. Let's go there. Like, same idea. But I'm not going to
like go to a museum. I don't love museums. Not my thing. So I'm not going to go to a museum,
just because this keyword might work for it. So yeah, really, for me, travel is very separate from travel blogging,
almost. And everyone I know who is a full time traveler really struggles to write. And I actually
have students as well that have said like, okay, we were traveling full time. And we decided to
like base ourselves for three months, because you just can't write and travel at the same time. It
is so exhausting. Like, you're going to be dead on your feet. You're trying to enjoy it.
We want to enjoy travel at the point. So you need to come home at a certain point and chill for a
minute or co-living, things like that. So I think travel writing works best with either slow matting,
which is where you stay in a place for a month or so, or you go home after. So you can go on
a couple trips a year and then you're kind of set.
So you really can have a travel blog with going on just like a handful of trips a year.
Yeah. You can have a travel blog with a two-week vacation, like two weeks of vacation from your job easily. And because you also have like your day trips from your home, you have your home area,
tons of people make travel blogs about their city. I did that with a niche site
that I'm like building in public to sell for $50,000 on YouTube about Ottawa. Because first
of all, there weren't that many Ottawa blogs. And also I was there and I was like, I need an
incentive to leave the house because COVID just ended. I need like to learn how to human again
and be in society. So I started the blog to like make me go do things like found a beer festival.
There were the new zip line opened across between the provinces. There were there's a new drive in
I hadn't tried like all that stuff was a great way to explore my local area. And also was great
content. So it's finding that balance for you of like what you like to write about and then making
what you're doing work for you. And also like, you don't need
to publish every day. That's the beauty of a blog is unlike social media where you have to like,
try and have at least three a week or whatever the new algorithm thing is that every week it
changes. And again, the reason I don't love it for us, we can publish 100 posts, and then kind
of keep updating them and you're probably fine. Now travels for Mediavine, I did a poll. On average, it takes about 140 to 160 posts to get into Mediavine.
So if you plan that for yourself, like, okay, for one year, I'm going to go really hard
on content.
But then after that, I can let that content kind of work for me and just publish like
even one a month or something and update some old content and then just travel and have
the fun and then like let the blog pay for the travel. That's great.
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So something that I'm hearing that you're talking about is,
it doesn't actually need to be something that you're doing full-time.
So you can build this alongside what you're doing,
which is honestly what a lot of people are doing when they start their blogs,
is they are working a full-time job and then doing this on the side.
So I found that to be really encouraging, actually,
that maybe you want to be a travel blogger, maybe you really enjoy travel,
but you can do that with
your family vacations a couple of times a year. So I just wanted to highlight that because
I found that really encouraging. But the question I want to ask now is when it comes to niche
in the travel industry, when you're sitting down and saying, okay, maybe you've already
started a travel blog, or maybe you're thinking about it. What encouragement do you have in
regards to niche?
How niche down do you actually need to be? Can it be more broad? Does it need to be like
you are a family travel blogger or your solo travel or your only road trips? What are some
encouragement that you have in that regard? Because there are a lot of travel bloggers,
just like there's a lot of food bloggers. So how do you make yourself stand out in this industry?
How do you make yourself stand out in this industry?
That's the question.
Yeah.
I'll jump back to what you said before that about working.
I was working a full-time job when I hit my $30,000 a month.
That's what made me quit my full-time job because I had a lot of debt from a service
dog.
I was working four jobs when I got into Mediavine.
So I can fully say that...
Also, they were part-time, but I had three part-time jobs and I got into Mediavine. So I can fully say that like, also like they were part-time,
but I had like three part-time jobs
and the full-time job.
So fully, this is doable while you are working full-time.
I will say having a social life doing this
and working full-time, not gonna happen.
You have to put the social life on hold for a minute,
but it's doable.
As for niche, that was actually like
kind of the first month of my strategy
was really figuring out like,
who am I and what do I have to say? And I actually had to take myself out of it. The best way to
figure out your niche is to think about your audience. So what's your audience avatar? Who
are you talking to? That's something most people do when they're thinking of like a digital product
or a service to offer. They're like, okay, who am I going to talk to? So I did, like at the time I
was working full time, very much nepotism got me this job because I
shouldn't have had it but I was a law clerk and I was working in a state firm so we did a lot of
wills and like Henson trusts and things like different just nonsense trusts essentially and
so because of that we were the people people went to for if their child had a disability and they
needed a trust put in their will for that and that was like a big specialty of the law firm
same thing happens with your
site. You want to be like, like I started my site called She Knows SEO because that's what people
would talk about me in Facebook groups. They'd be like, Oh, Nina, she knows SEO. That's who you
should talk to. And you want that with your blog. You want to be like, okay, this is the person who
can tell you about this thing. So that's really where a niche is going to come in. Who are you
helping? What are you going to be known for? Now travel is, I think, the hardest overarching niche in the blogging
world. I have an SEO blog. I've had food blogs. I have a pet blog. I've helped my old roommate
build a construction site. I've done so many blogs. Travel is the hardest because with blogs,
people tend to start it because it's fun. And what do people enjoy more than free travel and pets? Nothing. So those are two really hard niches. But with travel,
there's so much competition. And one thing that happens a lot is people will write one post on
things to do in Rome and they're like, check, done, finished Rome, we're over. And then people
are like, no, but what else? What else can we do? So that's really where you want to have the niche be super specific in the sense of who are we talking to? So is it Rome for retirees? Is it
Rome for couples? Is it Rome for families? Because the example I always use is like things to do in
Rome at night. Okay, well, nightlife is very different for a family with kids or a 20 year
old backpacker who's looking to get like blitz out of their mind. So like you need to have an idea of who we're talking to here. And that's why like the audience
comes first to me, then the niche follows. So if my audience is going to be a retiree moving abroad
versus a 20-year-old moving abroad, that's going to massively shift the way that like my tone is
going to be, my style, the language I use, also the posts I'm going to write.
So I think you can like give yourself an overarching niche of something like solo travel.
Solo travels really hard. That was my niche beforehand. And I'll talk about how I pivoted
in just a second. But like, you'll you can kind of put that in your head, but then you need silos.
And so people call them pillars, silos, categories, whatever you want to call them.
Essentially, like the way I think of it is like your niche is the foundation of your site.
And then the silos are literally like pillars.
Like think of like an old like Coliseum building.
You have like each pillar is a different element of the like,
that's kind of kind of the right wording,
but essentially just like a different architectural element
that's going to hold up whatever's happening.
And so what I always give then as the next example is like in science class, we had like that,
we did build a bridge out of straws and then put a book on top of it and see if it would hold it up.
Well, if you had one straw, that book is going to smash it down. But if you have like 10, 20,
50 straws, that book is going to stay up. So each of those columns and content silos is what I call
them. They need to be hefty enough to hold up the weight of Google's expectations.
And that's where like writing around the same topic comes in.
So if you want to have solo travel as like your overarching niche,
you then have a silo that's more like solo travel in Italy.
And then you're just going to write to death on that.
And I typically say 20 to 50 posts to start.
Like that's going to be the beginning of that silo.
And that's going to be everything to do with solo travel in Italy, Rome, even just general stuff of
eating in Italy. Solo travelers still eat. So that still would technically be a part of it,
even though it doesn't have solo travel in Italy in the title or the keyword,
which is a common misconception I want to throw in.
Now, I went with solo female
travel as my niche because nomadic Matt is huge. I think most travel bloggers know who he is and
compete with him a little bit in that sense. And I was like, cool, I'll be the female nomadic Matt.
Great. Done. And then I wrote no female travel posts or solo female travel posts because they're
really hard because there are Be My Travel News, The Blonde Abroad. There's so many of them out
there. And I didn't necessarily have anything new to add to the conversation. So when I like after
had 180 posts when I started this journey of like to Mediavine, I sat down, I looked at my content
and I was like, what are my top 10 that Google is telling me that it already likes? So I went to my
Google Analytics, looked at the top 10. Now you have to go to like pages and screens in G4
and it'll show you.
I have a YouTube tutorial on that
if people are scared of G4
because it is very annoying.
It's not the best.
Microsoft Clarity is great.
It's free.
Also recommend that.
But I looked at my top 10.
I was like, what is similar about my best posts?
And I had two that I'd written like kind of on a whim
about living abroad.
But they got thousands of page
views and my other content got like a couple hundred. And I was like, well, clearly, something
is working there. So let's lean into that. And also I noticed when I would like offhandedly
reference like, oh, when I was 16, I moved to Italy by myself because like Canada is boring.
So like I wanted to live in Italy. People like wait tell us more about that so I leaned in
I steered into the skid kind of a thing and went with the content people were asking me about and
Google was asking about and then made a niche for myself but I would call it slow matting I used
that term before no one else would that's not a common term it's starting to be more so now because
Rosie Bell who was the travel writer who taught it to me, I believe, like created it started like getting more acclaim. So more people are using it, but not actually a term. The terms
people know are expat or like digital nomad. I don't like either of those terms. But I had to
use a term that my audience are using. I wanted to make sure that my audience like we're actually
searching for that term. So that's another thing with niche is so many people come up with some really complex name of like, I'm going to be a golden retriever, sensitive
pod blogger. And I'm like, what? Like, what is that? No, you're not. Or like, they'll even say
like, I'm solo travel for 54 year olds. And I'm like, Whoa, okay, that's way too specific. Like,
definitely solo travel. And in your head,
your audience is 50. Great. But you don't want to get so specific or something non searchable.
Like you want to make sure that it's something that is a term people recognize and understand,
even if you don't like the term, like, I use expat all the time. I think it's a dumb term.
I definitely think immigrant makes more sense because it's what you are if you move somewhere.
Or slow mad.
I like that better than digital nomad.
But you have to go with the language your audience is using.
And with the niche idea of that,
one way to validate the niche
is to look for what your audience is searching for.
See the kind of language that they're using around it.
Also make sure it exists somewhere.
Like someone else has definitely written about
it before unless it's a brand new thing. You can kind of validate that people actually care about
this thing by seeing if even one exists like one needs to exist somewhere. And also there needs to
be a gap that like, like solo travel pretty much full unless we're looking at solo travel in a
certain place or for a certain type of person, like for me, solo travel with a service dog is really challenging. And that's definitely something people ask a lot of questions about. But solo female travel of a random Canadian girl, lots of people, like we're pretty generic, just a lot of us out there. So it's not as compelling for people. And that's something to keep in mind when you're doing that. You can look for that in Facebook groups.
I love Facebook groups.
I know like an old 28,
like I absolutely adore Facebook groups
to find some validation there.
Look at keywords.
My rule is kind of like,
if there's a hundred keywords
that you could realistically rank for,
then it's an okay niche.
However, like again, solo travel,
if you just search solo travel,
you're not going to find anything because there's like Nomadic Mad, The Blonde Abroad,
Be My Travel Muse. I've been around since like 2008 and have written all of them. So
we need something newer and typically more specific. And that's again,
where like this specific audience is really going to serve you.
I think that is like such great advice. I'm thinking about people that we have in our
community and how that could specifically like help them just narrow it down, you know, because I think that
we go into it with this idea, no matter what your niche is, you go into it thinking,
okay, well, I want to write just about this. But you do have to kind of at some point after
you've got content out there, take a step back and look like, what is Google liking? What
is my audience liking? What is actually driving the traffic? And we often say like, you have to
be willing to pivot or willing to shift and blogging. And it sounds like that's very true
for you as well. But we can go into things like with an idea of what we want to do,
but we have to be a little bit more fluid and know that that might need to shift at some point. If your ultimate goal is to like build a business
and like this be your full-time job. Now, if you want to do a hobby, that's on another podcast,
but like building a business, like you have to have that lens. And I think just you gave us some
really, really great insight, I think on the first step, which is your niche. And if you haven't
quite dove into that yet and understood who are you talking to, then I want you to take
what Nina said and go back and just start jotting things down. Look at what people are coming to on
your site and go back to the drawing board a little bit if you don't feel like your blog is
growing in the way that you want it to.
So let's say that somebody's gone through that practice.
And then next, they're moving on to creating content.
And they have...
Let's say they have a family vacation plan
for a popular travel destination.
How do you know?
How can you search for content
using a keyword research tool
for popular travel destinations that there likely are a lot of posts written about,
but maybe that's where you really want to go to? Do you recommend not doing that,
going somewhere that's a little bit more off the map? Or can people still rank for keywords
that are popular travel destinations? Yeah, you can definitely rank for popular
travel destinations. It's just going definitely rank for popular travel destinations.
It's just going to be the boring
and the specific keywords.
Boring keywords, pay my bills.
That's what I always say.
Is Canada in America
was one of my best posts for a long time
pre this current update when like,
or no last update when I put Reddit at the top.
But like that was a big post for me
because people do ask it
and people don't know.
So another thing I always say with keywords is like, remember that people only know what
they know.
And many people with travel and geography, especially, it's not there.
Like, it's not very clear.
But also like with that one, I actually realized searching the question, it's more about the
continent of America versus the US America, which I was like, oh, okay.
So not like the dumb question
I would have at first thought. But equally, I didn't know Mexico was the North America until
two years ago. And my best friend at the time ran a Mexico travel blog. So I was like, Oh,
should have probably learned about that sooner. With sorry, back to your question about finding
trips, like, go where you want to go. Like there's a reason that you're attracted to it. And you want to go there. And that's really where I am talking about, like, just enjoy your
travel, and then find content around that thing. So that's where it's not going to be like, okay,
best restaurants in Rome, it's going to be like, child friendly restaurants in Rome,
restaurants that are dog friendly restaurants with outdoor seating,. You're going to look at the specifics there
that are relevant for your audience.
And so what I like to do for that,
honestly, my starting point,
I use KeySearch as my favorite
because it's the cheapest keyword research tool.
I'm going to start with a seed keyword,
which is also called a root keyword,
but I started calling it a seed keyword for some reason.
So you're going to put in Rome travel
and just see what keywords come up. Then you're going to start putting like Rome travel, and just see what keywords come up,
then you're going to start putting in more specifics of like, okay, Rome restaurants,
and then look for long tail keywords, you can actually filter by the word count length.
So in travel, typically a long tail keyword is six or more words. In other niches, it's four.
But if you think of like things to do in Rome, that's five words, that's a very basic keyword
for us. And most destinations have
like Rome, Italy, suddenly it's six. So we want to make sure that we're looking for longer keywords,
which tend to be more specific questions. We also want to look for easy keywords. So in
KeySearch, you can filter for a difficulty score of up to 39. That's when it switches from like
green to yellow. Now, difficulty scores on keyword research tools are somewhat garbage, to be honest. So like, you kind of need to ignore some of them. But this is a
great starting point, especially for a beginner. So you're going to look at that and be like, okay,
here is now a list of keywords that are long tailed and easy. Which ones of these are relevant
to my audience? Do not just write an easy keywords because they're easy.
It will not serve you if it does not serve your audience.
And that's a mistake I made for the longest time.
I wrote like a beach packing list or something in early 2021 or mid 2021.
And I was like, I'm so smart.
I found this like easier keyword.
I had no beach content,
like not a single post about a beach on my website.
I don't really like beach.
It's like, I hate sand. So I had nothing. Why did I write that post? a beach on my website. I don't really like beach. It's like I hate sand.
So I had nothing. Why did I write that post? It didn't do well. Even though it was like well
written, it was SEO ish optimized. I wasn't great at SEO back then. Like it didn't do well. And
largely that was because of the topical authority. I didn't have anything. I had nothing to connect
this to. So when you're looking at these keywords, I like to make a topic cluster essentially
where you're going to try and almost think of it
like planning a trip.
You're going to try and find a keyword
that kind of fits for every stage of the trip planning
as best you can.
Not all of them are going to be rankable for sure.
Like things to do in Rome is far too generic.
But if you're running a Rome travel blog,
you should have that post.
That's just necessary.
So like sometimes there are some common sense posts you just need. But beyond that, when you're running a Roam travel blog, you should have that post. That's just necessary. So sometimes there are some common sense posts you just need.
But beyond that, when you're looking at keywords like to go to Roam,
you can start looking at pet-friendly Roam, dog Roam.
Use those root keywords and then filter and see what you can find.
The next step is when you're looking at those,
look at the actual people ranking in the top 10 and look for
lower DA sites. So those are typically newer sites, typically easier to rank against.
And then put those into competitor analysis and be like, okay, for a long time, the Roman guy or
the Rome guy was my example, but he's doing really well now. So now he's not easy. But his site was
a DA 30 for a long time. New blogs can compete with a DA30.
I actually created a DA calculator on SheKnowsSEO.
But if you put in your DA, it'll tell you what DA you can approximately compete with.
You can find that in the menu under everything on SheKnowsSEO.
But yeah, from there, you can put in your DA.
It'll estimate what you can compete with.
So go look at your competitors and be like,
Okay, there's someone that's a DA 30. I have a DA
zero, you're going to compete up to 30. I have a DA 30. Okay, 45 ish that you can compete with.
Usually, it's about 15 over. So then I'm going to take those people and then mine them for keywords,
which is essentially just looking what do they rank for already? Can I rank for it? And again,
always, always, always come back to your audience. Like just because nomadic Matt ranked for something about male solo travel, I wouldn't write on that as a
female solo travel blogger. It makes no sense for my audience. Same for like, if I'm running a
website about golden retrievers, I'm not going to write about pugs because that's not my people.
And you really want your people on your site to like expect what you're giving them. So that's where you're also going to be able to write more on the subject, get topical authority, and then you can compete for those popular destinations. So popular destinations tend to mostly have like the generic things to do posts written. The hyper specific, you can go for. The specific to your audience, you can go for. Boring stuff, you can go for. Is there Uber
in X? Can you drink the water in X? Very popular everywhere. Safety keywords, always super popular.
Everyone is petrified about like leaving their house essentially, like the world was crazy. So
totally great keywords for like, can, I don't know, is Marrakesh safe for solo female travelers
wearing shorts?
Write on that.
That is a question people have.
Can I bring XYZ on a plane?
There are so many weird questions about what people can bring on planes.
You're like, why do you have that?
But those are very common things that you would think, okay, planes have been written to death.
No, there's still room there.
And you'll even stumble upon what I call zero volume keywords,
which are just keywords that like key search and other search engines don't know matter yet.
Because all of these tools are based on the Google AdWords API, which is ads for people
buying ads on Google. And if you're going to buy an ad, you want to be guaranteed to get in front
of as many people as possible. I'm not going to buy a hidden gem billboard. I'm buying the billboard like in Times Square. I couldn't because that would bankrupt me.
But like in theory, you want that one. And that's the thing. So Google knows that. So they're focused
on trying to find data on those keywords. So a lot of keywords like the is there Uber and X is
like, can you drink the water and X? They don't care about because who's going to buy an ad for
that. So we can actually write on those questions and they'll surprise you and often they can get like
thousands of page views even if key search says like 10 and really you're not going to know 100%
which ones those are you can typically find them with like facebook groups like questions people
are just asking and clearly there's not a good answer your own searches and seeing like do the
top 10 and
actually answer the question historically it was if a forum was ranking you could then be like
google doesn't like forums obviously now google and reddit are the best buddies but even so people
don't like reddit so i'm finding that like the keywords i wrote to compete with reddit even if
i'm just beneath reddit now the click-through rate is a lot higher because the general user does not want a forum.
They want something concrete.
They don't want like Joe Schmo from 2014 telling them like, is it safe to travel here, especially for women?
You're like, Joe, what are you doing?
They want Nina because I am a woman traveling in that place.
So go for those.
It's definitely doable.
And yeah, that's a very long-winded answer to your question.
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It's so valuable, though. You have given them actual steps to take. And I'm speechless because
it's so, so helpful. And you've answered almost every single
question. I think the one question that I do have is, you know, you talked about the zero volume
keywords. Is there a range of volume that you're looking for? And also, is there a way to combine
keywords so that they can kind of have an idea of how much traffic they could get from a post?
Yeah, so there's actually a few different ways.
So with volume, most people will say like 300 minimum.
I don't have that because I don't think that's helpful, honestly.
First of all, like with latent semantic indexing, which is like basically like must words, I guess is the term some people use.
So, for example, if you're talking about things to do in New York,
you're going to mention the Empire State Building.
You're going to mention the Statue of Liberty.
Then you have secondary keywords.
Like you have so many extra things you're going to mention
that can get picked up as keywords that you would never expect
or that you can kind of anticipate.
So I have like keywords where like, yeah, the primary keyword is 10
and it actually was 10 people search it per month. But all of the extra keywords combined make it 1000 page views a month kind of keyword.
And that's really great. So I don't think looking at volume is the best thing to do. Definitely,
it matters to some extent, like we don't want to write, I mean, Mediavine, even like with their
new journey thing, it's like 10,000 sessions, it's probably about 15,000 page views. I don't want to write 1500 posts to get there, like I'd like to write fewer. But I also
want to make sure I'm being specific, I'm ranking. And I find what a lot of people don't think of is
like, those posts that are 10,000 page views a month, they require like an army of the 10 page
view a month posts to kind of buoy them up with internal linking.
You can connect them all together,
kind of like making a family tree almost
and like turning that ultimate post
into like the grandfather
that everything else comes down from.
So we want to connect them all
so Google can see that they're related.
Because like, I don't know,
if you see me and my little sister in the street,
you're like, they look almost the same.
Are they related?
But if we're like talking to each other and I call her my sister, you're like, they look almost the same. Are they related? But if we're like talking to each other, and I call her my sister, you're like,
ah, they definitely are related. And that's kind of the same thing here. So yeah, for me,
there's no like minimum keyword volume with zero volume keywords, literally, I've had zero volume
keywords that show up as 1000 in key search that show up as zero, you don't know. And it's really
a misnomer. Essentially, they're just like keywords that Google doesn't understand yet, or that the user intent hasn't been satisfied.
And you can get in there and satisfy it better. So a common example actually relates to secondary
keywords, where like, maybe someone does rank for can you is it safe to solo female travel
in Marrakesh in shorts, maybe someone's generic post on solo female travel safety in Marrakesh in shorts. Maybe someone's generic post on solo female travel
safety in Marrakesh ranks for that, but they don't really address it or they address it in like one
sentence and then no one else beneath them addresses it at all. Okay, well, you could
address it. You could create a whole post around that. And now you are more of an expert on that
subject than these other people. So that's kind of where you can start to spot them. Ultimately,
it's kind of a gut feeling and there is always some risk with them that like they might actually be at like
10 volume. But with Google, Google is like a full site metric, essentially, like they're evaluating
your full site. So I always refer to it like as your GPA. I know I'm Canadian, so we don't really
have that as much, but the US does. And I usually talk to Americans, so they seem to understand it better. But essentially, like every blog post on your site
is like a course that you're taking. And whatever grade it gets in Google's eyes affects your
overall GPA. So even if you take like the history of rock and roll or drumming 101, where you just
bang on books in the corner, and it has nothing to do with like your major, it's not really like
affecting your law school application, it still brings up your GPA overall. So having those posts that do rank, even if they
have a little bit less volume is really good. And especially at the beginning, like don't start at
the 10,000 volume like posts because you're competing with the likes of nomadic math,
start small and then scale. So I still write on posts that are like 10
volume because i don't mind but you're going to want to kind of slowly grow as much as you can
and when you're planning a topic cluster because i do recommend like planning out your content
before you write it so you can plan like well then you know okay i'm going to write these 10
posts about food and roam i know to reference all the other posts so I can internal link to it. But you can also start to kind of look at the predicted volume in key search or
in Ahrefs or SEMrush or whatever tool you use. I don't care. Just stick with like be specific with
one compared to the same thing because each of them have their own volume metrics. And they're
all different. They're all completely different. So with that, I would look there and be like, okay, well, this cluster, the volume combined is about 10,000. Now, if you rank number
one, you typically get about 30% of the click-through rates. Right now with the current
updates and the new widgets Google is adding with travel, it's lowered to about 20, 15%,
which is frustrating, I know, but unfortunately the case. So you're going to reduce that. You're
going to be like, okay, what's 15% of 10,000?
1,500, I think.
I'm not good at math in my head, but it sounds right.
So that's 1,500 page views you can get from that cluster.
That's really solid to start for sure.
And you can definitely scale that with secondary keywords.
Key search, my favorite thing about them,
they have a content assistant area
that's essentially a rank IQ, but free.
So you can just like put in your keyword there
and it'll suggest must words and secondary keywords
that your competitors are using.
With other tools, what you can do is take your competitors,
look at the top 10 for that keyword,
put them into competitor analysis
and mine the specific page for keywords
and see what other keywords that page is ranking for.
Those are your secondary keywords.
Don't make them up.
They're not a made up thing.
They're going to be keywords that are typically like a semantic variation of the main keyword
or are kind of related, like I said, with like the shorts in Marrakesh versus like normal female
safety. So you want to see what Google is already telling us that like they like and that they care
about and that they think are related to each other. Another place is like the related questions. And the people also ask questions on the actual search in Google,
please use incognito. Remember that like, Google is trying to essentially be a for you feed a
little bit even before Google Discover. So they're really trying to like serve what they think you
want. And you will have skewed that with your own searches. So use incognito. If you're not in the
US, you can actually Google like on Google, Google USA, click on it, and it'll take you to a US essentially
version of Google. And since many of us want to target US traffic, because most money there,
then that's a great way to see like the questions in the US versus the questions in like, like in
Canada, we sometimes are a bit better geography in Canada than like a US person is.
I want to see those like kind of dumb questions so that I can answer them so that I can like
actually satisfy that intent. Yeah, I think that was the whole question I answered. I hope
maybe I missed something. Yeah, definitely. No, I think you answered that and more. To be honest,
one thing that is just I think just the theme of everything that you're saying and almost every answer has been the foundation. And I hope that that is the common thread that people get from this particular episode and from your advice is your growth is not dependent on one thing.
And your reach and your impact is dependent on all these little things and all these little keywords.
So it's not that we... When we sit down and we are like,
Alright, I'm going to do keyword research today. That we're looking at this one thing that we're going to rank for.
And it's going to be the make or break in our business.
And I think a lot of times when travel bloggers or quite frankly, any new blogger gets started,
they're like, I think that this post is going to be it, you know, and we we put all of our eggs in that one basket. But I love that you have
even recommended like, it's okay to shoot for like the 10 volume or the zero, like, take that with a
grain of salt. And it doesn't mean that that's not going to serve your audience, that's not going to
serve your community, like, don't miss out on those things that could still help them. I just... I love the analogy of the straws with the boat.
And by having that there, that's just... I don't know.
That analogy is, I think, kind of...
It's life-giving and it can totally change your mindset in regards to blogging,
knowing that, yes, what you're working on with that specific post, it does matter.
But so does every other post you're working on with that specific post, it does matter. But so does every other post that you're working on. You don't have to put so much pressure on
yourself to write the perfect post. And I think oftentimes, that's what we're doing is I have to
write the perfect post like, Oh my gosh, I have this killer keyword and I have to write the perfect
post. No, like how can you create more juice to that specific post? So just I think thank you for
just bringing that to light. You've given like such concrete examples. And you told us before
we started recording that you were going to go deep. And we said go deep. We love it because
our audience wants that. And you've totally done that, which has been so helpful. I just I thank
you for sharing really how you've gone about all of this. I think it's
incredibly helpful for travel bloggers, but also just encouragement for all bloggers and all niches
and what we're doing. So just a personal thank you for that. But I do have a question since you
brought it up about the Google updates and how that has kind of shifted and changed. How do you
see this having an impact on travel blogs in particular?
Yeah, there's a lot of talk about travel blogs being like Google's new worst enemy. And I do
think Google has been the hardest on travel blogs for a few reasons. The helpful content update
started like there was a 17% decrease in travel blogs across the board. I don't remember where
I got that number. Like it's something from Lily Ray that she shared, but I can't find the graph that she shared since. But there was an actual study done that was like
a 17% decrease in travel across the board. And because of that, we got a new widget on the top
of most travel posts that is like kind of a things to do widget almost where Google started pulling
bits of information from posts that they were actually seeing and trying to personalize it per person. And the frustrating thing is they're pulling pictures from travel
bloggers, which personally, I think is a security issue because someone might consent to be on a
travel blog. They might not consent to be on the front page of Google, sort of a thing.
And as a woman and a woman who has dealt with security issues online before, I wouldn't
necessarily want to have my image shoved up there
in the front page of Google sort of a thing.
So there have been issues surrounding that.
And unfortunately, we can't really change it right now.
People are trying to like talk to Google about it
and Google is not very responsive.
But that definitely decreased
some of the click-through for travel.
And I think this is something that came with AI anyway.
And like, and I enjoy AI for personal use. I do think that there are a lot of issues with is something that came with AI anyway. And I enjoy AI for
personal use. I do think that there are a lot of issues with the way that businesses are using AI,
and especially mass bloggers who are trying to publish like 1000 posts a day with AI that like
is fun nonsense. I am not for that. I think AI is an assistant that should make your life a bit
easier, but should not replace you and the content just written with AI. I think most of us have seen it and it's like, that should not be out there.
That is troubling. I once read something recently actually about like female, like what to wear in
Marrakesh or something. And it was like, don't wear sheer or opaque fabrics. And I was like,
what other fabrics are there? At both ends of the spectrum, we have nothing else now.
And it was so clearly AI that I was like,
but it was ranking like three on Google.
And I was like, that's a nightmare.
So I think Google has to shift something.
They've had some issues with their market share.
And like in terms of search,
they're down 6% over last year,
mostly in the US.
And that's not good for their bottom line.
Now with the current update,
the core update isn't done
rolling out at time of recording.
So I don't fully know the impact yet.
And I think most SEOs don't.
But the thing that I'm noticing the most of sites
that are doing well during this
is that SEO is not their core.
So people who are just writing to fit a keyword into a box,
they're the ones struggling.
People who are just like checking a box
with everything that they're doing,
they just want to like get the blog up, get rich, move on.
They're not doing very well.
The people who are going to the places or writing about places that they've been to,
that's doing well.
People who are like sharing helpful info, going really specific.
I have a dog that we've traveled a lot recently together in Canada.
And with that, I always look for dog-friendly places to eat.
He is a service dog, but he can only work for so many hours a day. And dogs, I always look for like dog friendly places to eat. He is a service
dog, but like he can only work for so many hours a day and dogs. I didn't know this. They get burnt
out just like we do. So you have to like actually like give them enough time off and stuff. But it
was just us. So I'm like, hey, he can't sit in the car. We need to eat. So I'd look for dog friendly
places. But I wanted to know, is the patio dog friendly or is the restaurant dog friendly? Like
if it's raining, can I bring him inside? Is it? it no I have to sit in like the glaring heat and I am like
fluorescent white so like I burn in a second I need to be inside on some of those days
also sometimes like dogs in the patio aren't super well behaved so I was like I don't want
him near that but blogs wouldn't tell me so I had to go call these places and I'm a millennial
I hate calling people I do not want to pick up a phone. If I could, I would disable that option on my phone
entirely. But I had to go call them because none of the top 10 in any of these places told me that.
So that's kind of the thing that people who are getting really specific are saying like,
okay, you park around the corner here. This on the menu is best. Giving real concrete examples of their experience.
And I'm not saying that people that got hit by the update... There were tons of people that got
hit unfairly. However, some of them, even though I know that they experienced the thing because
I've spoken to them, they did not put that in the blog post. The blog post doesn't reflect that.
And unfortunately, that means that their hard of didn't pay off because they skipped
that so some things that people can do for sure like personal experience up front like your intro
should immediately tell me what i'm going to learn and why you're the person to teach me
and if it doesn't i'm probably gone like i don't care that doesn't help me then i also want to know
like what the key takeaways are a lot of people do like a key takeaway box. I think that's a little bit lazy personally. I understand the need for it, but I
would just build it into your intro. Like, yeah, for restaurants in Victoria or something that are
dog friendly. Okay. We're talking about dog friendly restaurants in Victoria. These are my
three favorite. This one patio only, but the other ones you can actually bring your dog inside.
They're good with dogs of all sizes, winter, rain, whatever. And this one will even bring your dog a bowl of water
and like a little bowl of French fries or something.
Like immediately give them what they want.
People are so afraid to do that.
And like they'll do top 10 lists
with the best thing at the bottom.
Most people are not scrolling that far.
Serve your dessert first.
Put it right up front.
Let people have their cake first.
Give them the answer.
And then anyone who wants to learn more, who wouldn't have just looked at headers, they're going to keep
reading. But the header people, at least they've got the information now. And then they can leave,
but they're leaving happy. So that's a big thing. I also do think that diversifying is great
once you're ready. So a lot of people, the second the HCU hit, they were like,
diversify today.
Like you should be on Pinterest and you should be on Facebook and you should be buying ads and
all this stuff. And I was like, whoa, this is my full-time gig now. And even like, even for me,
that was a lot to hear because you don't have that bandwidth at the beginning. Like you have
one thing you can kind of handle. My rule, and this comes from Ron Swanson is like, full ass one thing. And then you can half ass a second thing. But like, give your all to one
thing. Don't like, try to do 20 things the same time. So for me, it was SEO. And then email was
kind of like, okay, I'll write a couple when I have a minute. And then I just like, schedule
them for the month. It was not really a strategy to begin with.
And that was okay.
It still did well for me.
Like I put up the quiz freebie and it just worked.
And I was like, great, that's okay.
That was a surprise.
Didn't expect it to do that.
And that gave me the motivation to use that
as my second thing.
Now for other people that could be TikTok,
it could be YouTube.
I'm really into YouTube right now.
I don't know why.
I'm just like having a moment where I'm enjoying video, which I never thought I would say I thought it was like
the worst thing for a long time. But YouTube SEO is pretty similar to a blog. So I think there is
a reason I like it. But it could be it could be email as long as you have a way for people
to directly get to the email. So like, email should not be your first second thing until you
have people in the list list sort of a thing.
So a good tip as well, if you want to get an email list to start, but you don't want to focus on it,
plan like a week, write out a year's worth of emails, like whether you're going to email weekly or every other week, and schedule them into a welcome sequence so that every week they're
automatically going to get the email. Set a date in your calendar though for when you turn that on.
That way you know at that point, I should start sending actual emails to these people. But then if you have a list of like, 10 people, maybe by the end of the year, it's 500 people. Now it's kind of more worth your time to write to those people. Not that the first 10 don't deserve your time. But it's a lot to have to like, keep remembering to do it. So that's a way to kind of like automate it for yourself. I also automate social media a bit with Zapier.
So with OpenAI's API and Zapier,
you can actually have like
when you publish a new WordPress post,
it'll auto send it through to ChatGVT,
write like a specific,
you've trained it on like a way to write
whatever social post you want.
And then it'll auto share it for you
the second the new post goes live. That's the simplest way to kind of like have those but not really do them.
And then lastly, I think the biggest thing for really like handling updates overall is treat
this like a business. And most people like want to treat this like a turnkey thing like, okay,
it's gonna be 100% passive once I put in like a month of work. No, it's not. It will always be semi-active.
And that's because content is a depreciating asset.
After 18 months, your content is hurting you, not helping you, if you haven't updated it.
And that's just because things change.
Restaurants change their hours.
Things close.
Pandemics happen.
Stuff changes in society.
So you want to go fix that content.
Affiliates close. Airbnb shut down. Everyone panicked. That happens. So keep changes in society. So you want to go fix that content. Affiliates close,
like Airbnb shut down, everyone panicked, like that happens. So keep those in mind. But also
like having something like a product or service is a great thing that's really going to strengthen
your site and make it look like a business. And Google really prefers businesses. So like
getting yourself certified as a travel agent, I haven't gone that far. But like,
you could definitely just offer travel planning services, You could have a $7 product like I do. I have one that's
how to pick where to move. And then one about how to tell your friends and family that you're
moving abroad with scripts and everything, which never occurred to me. And this is why
audience research is so key. Because I just leave leave I just don't care what my family thinks
and like I fully traumatize them doing that but I just go away and I'm like I'll see you maybe
bye like thank god for cell phones like they'll and that's why like I needed the blog because
they genuinely didn't know where I was because I would just be like oh yeah on a whim I decided
to go to Sophia and Bulgaria because my sister's name is Sophie and she hates when I call her
Sophia so I wanted to take a ton of photos. My sister's name is Sophie, and she hates when I call her Sofia.
So I wanted to take a ton of photos and spam her with them on Facebook for a joke, which is dumb.
But I spent three days there just because of that.
And I do stuff like that.
And for me, my family didn't even know where I was.
So yeah, that kind of helped that.
Having those services and having any sort of offer like that
is really helpful to people and to Google to really trust you as an actual business.
I'm not saying you need to set yourself up with an LLC day one. I don't think that
has any bearing on this. But I think treating it as though it is an active income business,
even if you intend for most of it to be passive, is kind of key. So yeah, pace yourself a bit, try to come
up with like diverse ways for traffic a little bit. And just give yourself some grace to like,
this is hard. And I think Google, unfortunately, has like leveled us up to a new level of a video
game. And the new level is the final boss is insane. And it's a lot harder now to deal with.
But that's okay, because we're all at the same level together. And so it's harder for everybody. So the better you can do to put your audience
first, write content for them, and then like, yeah, have a keyword in mind, have like some
secondary keyword ideas. Don't just like spam it with keywords. Don't like not be helpful. And
don't, yeah, don't feel like everything needs to serve seo like write
some of those posts that you know are just helpful like the things to do in rome where it's like okay
obviously if you have a rome travel blog and you don't have that that'd be really weird write some
of those like write it around questions people are actually asking you and yeah just like have
some fun with it like i try and like like balance like Nina posts that are fun for me
versus like actual posts that matter to my audience
and are super relevant and traffic drivers for sure.
But those posts that I write for me
often build the community a bit more too.
And having a diehard community,
that's the best thing you can do.
I love my community so much.
One of the reasons I love Facebook groups
is you can like have the conversations with people. And yeah, like that's going to be really key. Being yourself,
having your own tone of voice. I'm so tired of reading every blog post and they all go like,
here to four, none the less. And I'm like, I don't want to talk to you. That's, that's horrible.
I'm not writing. I want to like chat with y'all and like have a conversation. So like I make I
use analogies. I make jokes about my mental health. I recently compared like my ADHD. I was like,
maybe it's ADHD. Maybe it's Maybelline. Like, I do weird stuff. Like, that is who I am and my
personality. I throw photos of my dog and his crocs into like half of the slides I do for
presentations. Like, first of all, make some attacks right off. Mostly, they're more fun than like a screenshot of Google. So a lot of stuff. And that's what I become known for. Like people
can be like, she knows SEO, she has purple hair, and she has Theo. And immediately, my brand is
really clear. And I did that by accident, because like, I just don't know how to not be myself.
But even in your writing, like, someone should be able to read your writing and know immediately like, okay, this is Nina. This is Nina talking to me. No one else's analogies
the way she does. No one makes semi inappropriate jokes that like probably should not be part of
the purpose. No one like else has this dog, like these sorts of things. Those are going to keep
you safe in updates. And yeah, and I want to add like one self-serving thing. So I use a screen reader because my ADHD and my grandma's blind. So please
use alt text properly as well. Like I am on a crusade to make alt text and like make all websites
accessible in every way possible. I have like a free accessibility checklist on my website that
like goes through all the things. Naturally, most WordPress sites are accessible. And it's the things people do that undermine it
that frustrate me so much.
Like many accessibility plugins,
I used air quotes there,
actually break my screen reader
and don't let me use my screen reader
and things like that.
It's really frustrating.
So if you want to check out that checklist, you can.
But mainly with alt text,
please just like actually describe your images.
Do not just keyword stuff it.
It's bad for Google. Google sees that as keyword stuffing and Google's blind. So Google's actually
reading the code of the page. And so where you think, okay, well, I had a keyword stuff. I've
used it three times. It's not that much. It's not a natural. Okay. But if 12 of your images just say
Croatia beach, well, you've keyword stuff. So instead like make it natural my rule is like describe the image like
what's physically happening in the image and then describe why it matters to the post and in the
spot in particular i should be able to read that and picture in my head what the image is and
understand its relevance to this place in the post i created a free gpt and chat gpt it's called she
knows alt text we We've had like
5000 uses now, which I'm so happy about because people are finally caring, but go use it. Upload
your images, it'll write the alt text for you. You can also feed it a URL, and it'll write the
alt text for you for any image on the page that's missing alt text. But yeah, just take the time.
As a disabled user, I leave sites that aren't accessible to me. And 73% of disabled users do the same. And there's
16% of the population is disabled. So you're losing a lot of the people. And again, diehard
community. I bookmark sites that have really good accessibility for myself because I'm like,
I like you. Thank you. You cared about me. I'm going to care about you.
Yes. I think that's really great advice. We will put a link to that as well in the show notes.
That way people can take advantage of that. Because I think that just... When you put numbers
to it the way that you just did, I think that makes it much more real to understand how much
of the population is consuming your content through the lens of one disability or another.
And so making sure that we are creating content in the most
accessible way is really important. Nina, thank you. So you've brought so much to the conversation
about SEO, about, you know, accessibility, all of it. I am just really, really thankful that we are
able to share you with our community because I think that they're going to want to learn a lot
more from you. So can you please tell them where they can connect with you and find you?
Yeah, you can find me at sheknowsseo.co. I actually have a free SEO content audit guide
that's supposed to be a checklist. It's 12 pages. I don't do anything by halves.
So it's my exact process that I did in that 6 months to update my content and get it going.
my exact like process that I did in that six months to update my content and get it going.
So you can find that at she knows seo.co slash everything. And yeah, you can also find me at Nina Clapperton on Instagram and Twitter and at she knows seo on YouTube, where I share all sorts
of tutorials. And yeah, you'll see Theo, he pops up regularly in my videos, because he believes he
is the main character and thinks my mic is ASMR for himself.
So yeah, most of my courses too, there's just like a head that'll just show up and he's like,
hi, because he knows he is main character energy. I love it. I love it. Well, thank you so much,
Nina. We appreciate you. And I learned a lot and I know a lot of people who are listening are very thankful they took the time to listen to this episode today.
Yeah, definitely.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thanks so much for tuning in today.
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