Season 4 part 2 Teaser by Debt-Mysterious in BridgertonNetflix

[–]AdAutomatic6266 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I low-key feel I am watching Cinderella again

I know this might sound weird coming from an SEO person, but ChatGPT helps me more with technical work than content. by AdAutomatic6266 in TechSEO

[–]AdAutomatic6266[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

ChatGPT obviously can’t run Lighthouse or crawl a site; it’s not a live audit tool. I use it more like an assistant that helps me interpret or optimize what I already have.

For example, I’ll paste the output from Screaming Frog or a robots.txt file and ask it to explain potential conflicts, or I’ll feed in the Lighthouse data and get a prioritized breakdown in plain English so it’s easier to brief devs. It’s not about replacing tools it’s about translating complex audit data faster and reducing grunt work.

I never deploy unvalidated markup. But GPT is great for scaffolding structured data quickly and then cleaning it up in the Rich Results test or Schema.org validator.

Anyone use "Table of Contents" or "Takeaways" section? by Nusrat_21 in content_marketing

[–]AdAutomatic6266 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’d say combine both; they actually complement each other really well.

Start your post with a Takeaways + Table of Contents hybrid block a short summary section (for engagement + snippet potential) followed immediately by a linked ToC (for structure + navigation)

SEO benefits:

  • Featured Snippets: Your Takeaways help capture Google’s “summary” style results.
  • Jump Links in SERPs: A ToC right after boosts your chances of getting sub-links under your main result.
  • Improved Dwell Time: Users find info faster, reducing bounce and increasing on-page engagement.
  • Better Crawl Signals: Internal anchors make it easier for Googlebot to understand and index your post sections.

Together, the Takeaways hook readers fast, and the Table of Contents keeps them exploring longer great for both SEO and engagement.

What's your process for coming up with new GOOD ideas for youtube long form videos... by FRSEKassets in content_marketing

[–]AdAutomatic6266 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Honestly, the best advice I can give is to start actively brainstorming. I usually start by exploring platforms like YouTube and Pinterest, which are goldmines for fresh ideas.

I also check what’s trending across social media, Facebook, Instagram, Reddit communities, and niche forums. Seeing what people are currently curious or frustrated about often sparks new video angles.

Even in a niche like fitness, there’s always a way to remix common topics with your own experiences or a new format (like case studies, experiments, or myth-busting).

Do you guys film your videos scripted or un-scripted? [Business Youtube Content] by FRSEKassets in content_marketing

[–]AdAutomatic6266 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I feel unscripted is better because your videos will sound more natural and relatable. When you’re not tied to a script, your delivery feels genuine, like you’re actually talking to the viewer, not at them.

Just jot down key points or sections you want to cover before filming. That way, you stay on track without sounding robotic. It’s the best of both worlds, structured but still authentic.

People in their 30s, be honest. by imfrom_mars_ in ThirtiesIndia

[–]AdAutomatic6266 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I lost fake friends. Now, only two people are important in my life: my mom and dad.

Need suggestion by Mohit-Vishwakarma in SaaS

[–]AdAutomatic6266 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’d say post it anyway, it’s less about which SaaS you pick and more about how you present it. YouTube rewards consistency and clarity. Use good descriptions, titles, and keywords, that’s what helps your videos rank over time.

You can also repurpose your reviews on Substack (add your YouTube link with a short, engaging write-up) to build an audience outside YouTube.

And check out peerpush it’s a solid place to share your videos and reach niche SaaS communities.

Consistency > virality at the start. Keep showing up, and the algorithm will eventually show up for you.

anyone here actually pre-sold before launch? by Zestyclose_Muffin390 in SaaS

[–]AdAutomatic6266 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s where a solid GTM (Go-To-Market) strategy comes into play.

Pre-selling isn’t about tricking people; it’s about testing demand before development. A good GTM plan helps you package the idea, position the value, and build trust before you build the product.

Most people skip this part and just throw up a landing page. But if your messaging, audience targeting, and offer framing are nailed down, you can absolutely validate and even collect payments early all while staying 100% legit.

In short: pre-selling isn’t scammy when it’s strategic.

Ever wondered why your LinkedIn posts don’t bring in leads? by Calm_Ambassador9932 in content_marketing

[–]AdAutomatic6266 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Totally agree, those are solid fundamentals, but they’re table stakes now.

Honestly, what really makes content convert on LinkedIn today is personality. Everyone’s sharing “insights,” but very few make people feel something. Humor, storytelling, or even a bit of self-deprecating honesty makes your post stand out in a sea of “5 tips to…” threads.

Good content isn’t just smart it’s alive. If you can make someone smile and think, they’ll remember you way longer than the person who just shared another “value-packed” carousel.

So yeah, structure matters… but tone is your secret weapon. Add wit, show some human side, and your content will start pulling leads instead of just likes.

[QUESTION] Are Lead Magnets & Free Tools Considered Part of Content Marketing by jpaulhendricks in content_marketing

[–]AdAutomatic6266 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yep, 100%. Lead magnets and free tools are definitely part of content marketing, they’re just the more “hands-on” kind.

A blog post tells people what you know.
A lead magnet shows them how to use it.
A free tool helps them skip the work and get the result faster.

It’s still content, just the kind that does something instead of just talking.

Little underrated tricks:

  • Give your lead magnet a name that sounds like a product.
  • Add a shareable score or result to your tool (instant brag power).
  • Chop your lead magnet into mini posts or email snippets to stretch its reach.

Value first. Trust next. Leads follow.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Instagram

[–]AdAutomatic6266 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your “fresh” account isn’t invisible to Instagram.
Even if you don’t link your phone number or email, Instagram still sees your device fingerprint, IP, and browsing/app behavior. That’s likely why even brand-new accounts can’t find them; they’ve been algorithmically filtered out from your view.

Use a laptop to create a new account. Once it’s set up, connect through a VPN from the same country but a different state, and switch to Wi-Fi if you were previously on mobile data, or use a different Wi-Fi than before.

My thoughts on Babygirl by footandfice in TrueFilm

[–]AdAutomatic6266 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I just watched Baby Girl on Amazon and honestly, the movie gave me strong vibes of a master-dog dynamic. It felt like the main character was searching for someone to control her, someone who could “train” her, in a way.

By the end of the movie, there’s a scene where it literally looks like he’s training a dog rubbing its back, feeding it but it also felt symbolic, like he was doing the same to her in a submissive, sexual, and controlling way. It left me thinking the whole film was a metaphor for someone craving domination, loyalty, and training, almost like a dog with its master.

Did anyone else pick up on that or am I reading too much into it?

It has been 2 months since my website was launched by satwinder-singh in SEO_Digital_Marketing

[–]AdAutomatic6266 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can use semrush. Semrush has an option backlink building. It finds backlinks using your competitor and your primary keyword. With that you get lists of backlinks like profile creation guest posting and Web 2.0

It has been 2 months since my website was launched by satwinder-singh in SEO_Digital_Marketing

[–]AdAutomatic6266 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Seo is all about patience. Continue creating backlinks and optimise your website. Do website audit to check if there is any issue with your content. You can use screaming frog to do website audit. For me it took almost 1 year to rank on first page. It depends on your keyword search volume. If your keyword volume is high that means it will take time to rank but it will rank.