Post by account_disabled on Nov 26, 2023 5:14:10 GMT -5
He searches for blogs that are very popular and fit into his niche. So you find articles in those blogs on topics that you would like to discuss, but only choose those posts that have received a lot of shares on social media. The example he gives in one of his articles is a post that appeared on Copyblogger, “A Simple Plan for Writing One Powerful Piece of Online Content per Week”.Blog Post in Less Than 2 Hours.” #8 – The most read pages of our blog If you use Google Analytics, go to Behavior/Site Content/All Pages and you will have the list of the most viewed pages on your blog. These results, according to some, can serve as inspiration for you to create similar content, taking advantage of the wave of success of other posts.
It must be said, however, that these are results that vary continuously, because the latest published posts could temporarily supplant other results. For now my 10 most read pages are: When to put an apostrophe Phone Number Data in the article a (and when not) home page 5 frequent grammatical errors Creative writing The writer's pantry When to put the emphasis on the verb give (and why) How to make an ebook How to publish a book without a publisher 7 new creative writing exercises How to become a writer in 10 steps I have already written 2 posts on the apostrophe and I would say that it is more than enough. You can always write about grammatical errors, but first I have to find others. 4 and 5 are information pages. I have already written several posts about the accent. The 7 does not foresee a sequel, but in any case I already have in mind to write a post on that topic.
I would say that number 8 is definitive and has been the most commented post and guest post ever for a long time. The 9 could have a sequel, but I have to think of useful and original exercises. It would be repetitive to propose 10 again. My list translates into nothing. #9 – Search keys How did they find your blog? With the same statistics tool, Google Analytics, go to Acquisition/Keywords/Organic results. Here are my first 10 results and 10 more to follow. Organic search Organic search Once I tried to scroll through all the pages, but there are many. I now see over 2000 combinations, many of which have negligible variations. Well, I just wasted time because I never found, except in a couple of cases, valid ideas for writing posts. #10 – Blog searches Again on Google Analytics, but this time go to Behavior/Site Search/Search Terms and you will know what on earth people are searching for on your blog. It's funny sometimes.
It must be said, however, that these are results that vary continuously, because the latest published posts could temporarily supplant other results. For now my 10 most read pages are: When to put an apostrophe Phone Number Data in the article a (and when not) home page 5 frequent grammatical errors Creative writing The writer's pantry When to put the emphasis on the verb give (and why) How to make an ebook How to publish a book without a publisher 7 new creative writing exercises How to become a writer in 10 steps I have already written 2 posts on the apostrophe and I would say that it is more than enough. You can always write about grammatical errors, but first I have to find others. 4 and 5 are information pages. I have already written several posts about the accent. The 7 does not foresee a sequel, but in any case I already have in mind to write a post on that topic.
I would say that number 8 is definitive and has been the most commented post and guest post ever for a long time. The 9 could have a sequel, but I have to think of useful and original exercises. It would be repetitive to propose 10 again. My list translates into nothing. #9 – Search keys How did they find your blog? With the same statistics tool, Google Analytics, go to Acquisition/Keywords/Organic results. Here are my first 10 results and 10 more to follow. Organic search Organic search Once I tried to scroll through all the pages, but there are many. I now see over 2000 combinations, many of which have negligible variations. Well, I just wasted time because I never found, except in a couple of cases, valid ideas for writing posts. #10 – Blog searches Again on Google Analytics, but this time go to Behavior/Site Search/Search Terms and you will know what on earth people are searching for on your blog. It's funny sometimes.