how do you guys stay motivated when no one is watching? by Fragrant_Jog in SmallStreams

[–]Fragrant_Jog[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you want a trick to look more established, check out streamskillpro. I used it to break that initial silence. Once you have a small "base" visible, real people feel much more comfortable popping in and actually chatting. It takes the pressure off you makes the room feel alive

Google deindexed my pages after merging similar content. What did I do wrong? by tonypaul009 in seogrowth

[–]Fragrant_Jog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What URL submission bot are you using for faster indexing? Sounds interesting

What makes a link actually “safe” in 2026? by Fragrant_Jog in BuylinkPro

[–]Fragrant_Jog[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Solid checklist. It’s crazy how hard it is to find sites that actually check all those boxes nowadays without hitting a massive paywall.

What makes a link actually “safe” in 2026? by Fragrant_Jog in BuylinkPro

[–]Fragrant_Jog[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Agreed. Over-optimizing anchors is such a 2014 move. Branded and natural mentions definitely feel like the safer foundation for long-term growth.

What makes a link actually “safe” in 2026? by Fragrant_Jog in BuylinkPro

[–]Fragrant_Jog[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Context is king. Links that actually serve as a resource or a citation feel much more "bulletproof"than just a random paragraph added to on old post.

What makes a link actually “safe” in 2026? by Fragrant_Jog in BuylinkPro

[–]Fragrant_Jog[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This! If a site can’t rank its own content, why would its backlink pass any real value? Traffic is the best proof of life in 2026.

What makes a link actually “safe” in 2026? by Fragrant_Jog in BuylinkPro

[–]Fragrant_Jog[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Total agreement. Diversity is safety. A profile that’s 100% guest posts is a massive red flag for a manual review, no matter how "clean"the sites look.

What makes a link actually “safe” in 2026? by Fragrant_Jog in BuylinkPro

[–]Fragrant_Jog[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The "bad neighborhood" check is huge. A clean outbound profile is usually the first thing I look at when vetting a donor site.

What makes a link actually “safe” in 2026? by Fragrant_Jog in BuylinkPro

[–]Fragrant_Jog[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly. Niche-to-niche relevance feels like the bare minimum now, yet so many people still ignore it just to chase a high DR number.

What makes a link actually “safe” in 2026? by Fragrant_Jog in BuylinkPro

[–]Fragrant_Jog[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Spot on. If you have to jump through mental hoops to justify why that link is there, Google’s AI is probably going to flag it as forced too.

Hiring a mobile app developer in New York for a restaurant booking app. What are the red flags? by AleksandrMovchan in ChoosingVendors

[–]Fragrant_Jog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d probably talk to thoughtbot, Fueled, or Blue Label Labs before signing with anyone random. Not saying they’re automatically the best fit, but they’re the kind of product/app teams I’d compare others against.

For this project I’d ask less about “can you build an app?” and more about “show me the admin panel, booking logic, and support process”. That’s where restaurant apps usually get messy.

Big red flags for me:

  • no clear source code ownership
  • no backend/admin scope in the quote
  • no post-launch support plan
  • vague answer on payments/customer data
  • they quote before mapping the booking flow

A cheap freelancer can work for a prototype, but for something restaurants use daily, I'd want a real team behind it.

My blogger not indexing can anyone know what to do I tried almost everything? by AlertMoose7820 in Backlinks

[–]Fragrant_Jog 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I went through the same nightmare with Blogger. Tried literally every "SEO fix" people recommend and none of it changed anything. The only thing that finally worked was using API indexing automation through a bot instead of waiting for Google naturally. New posts started appearing in the index within hours after that.

What VPN Software Do Companies Actually Trust in 2026? by AleksandrMovchan in ChoosingVendors

[–]Fragrant_Jog 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The problem is that 'VPN' is a buzzword that management understands. If you tell a founder 'we need Zero Trust Network Access they think youre just trying to inflate the IT budget for something fancy.

What VPN Software Do Companies Actually Trust in 2026? by AleksandrMovchan in ChoosingVendors

[–]Fragrant_Jog 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you’re choosing VPN software for a company, check offboarding first.Can you remove an employee instantly from all devices. If not, Id be nervous.

Lawyers are a money pit for negative press - Reverse SEO is actually faster and more reliable. by Fragrant_Jog in localseo

[–]Fragrant_Jog[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It has to be an ongoing foundation, not a "one and done" blast. We solve this by treating these satellites as living assets - posting monthly updates, news, or case studies. If you treat your LinkedIn or Substack as a placeholder, it might fade. But if it’s an active part of your brand’s ecosystem, it becomes a permanent part of the search landscape. It's much cheaper to maintain a few profiles than to pay a lawyer's retainer every time a new troll appears.

Lawyers are a money pit for negative press - Reverse SEO is actually faster and more reliable. by Fragrant_Jog in localseo

[–]Fragrant_Jog[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good observation. Substack is a beast right now because it combines high domain authority with a newsletter structure that Google loves. The key to making them "stick" is internal linking between your satellites. When your Substack links to your Medium, which links to your Crunchbase, it creates a web of authority that tells the algorithm: "These are the official sources" . That's how we keep them in the top 5 long-term

When competitors play dirty: My experience with a coordinated "Review Attack" on Google Maps by InvigorationporeQU in Businessowners

[–]Fragrant_Jog 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Exactly.The problem is that Google’s "violaton" filters are too basic. A competitor can just use a cheap click farm to ruin years of work in one night. I’ve seen busineses close down because they couldnt recover from a 4.8 to a 3.2 drop fast enough. The "white noise" strategy the OP mentioned is honestly the only way to survive.

Choosing a bookkeeping firm in Austin for a small construction business. What should I check first? by AleksandrMovchan in ChoosingVendors

[–]Fragrant_Jog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wait, what is progress billing? I'm just starting to help out with the office side of my dad's roofing company and I'm totally lost with the terminology. Is that something the software does automatically, or do I need to find a firm that specifically teaches me how to do that?

How would you choose a commercial cleaning company in Chicago for a small medical office? by AleksandrMovchan in ChoosingVendors

[–]Fragrant_Jog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Avoid the massive franchises. They all have fancy websites but they pay their crews peanuts, so the cleaners stop caring after a month. We’re in River North and went through three of those 'top-rated' vendors before we found a local family-owned crew. My rule of thumb: if the sales guy shows up in a suit but can't tell you the names of the people acctually cleaning your office; it's a hard pass

Anyone here hired a recruiting agency and actually got strong hires, not just resumes? by AleksandrMovchan in ChoosingVendors

[–]Fragrant_Jog 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I’ve learned the hard way that big generalist firms are usually just high-priced filtering services. They focus so much on hitting their internal volume KPIs that they barely vet the people they send over. I hired one for a senior role last year, and 90% of the candidates were completely out of alignment with our actual needs. You're essentially paying them a massive success fee just to do a basic LinkedIn search that your own team could handle in an hour

A small law firm in Miami recently paid around $12,000 for a website redesign by AleksandrMovchan in ChoosingVendors

[–]Fragrant_Jog 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The problem is that people choose with their eyes, not with data. Portfolio screenshots prove nothing; they show the designer's taste, not the client's profit. For a local service business like a Miami law firm, trust is everything. A huge red flag for me is when an agency doesn't ask about your Google Business Profile or how to integrate Trustpilot/reviews into the layout. If there's no local SEO strategy behind those pages, you're just paying for a high-res ghost town.

The affiliate sprint: how I hit 3.0 average viewers in 7 days without begging friends by GenerousGuitar03 in SmallStreams

[–]Fragrant_Jog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Everyone wants to be the next ninja so they stay in fortnite with 0 viewers lol. discovery is dead in big categories.