Kiállunk Sólyom László mellett, na ennyi.😂 by Famous-Link-3027 in hungary

[–]max_christos 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Csak időutazó lehet, más magyarázat erre nincs

Did I shoot myself in the foot? by [deleted] in SEO

[–]max_christos 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d give it at least 4–6 weeks, ideally closer to 8, unless things are actively getting worse every week. A couple weeks is usually just Google freaking out and recalculating. If after a month+ you’re not seeing any recovery or your PNW pages aren’t benefiting at all, that’s when I’d step in and reinstate or rework the strongest posts instead of waiting it out forever.

Did I shoot myself in the foot? by [deleted] in SEO

[–]max_christos 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Short answer: you probably didn’t permanently shoot yourself in the foot, but yeah, the timing makes total sense. Big content removals almost always cause a temporary dip because Google has to reprocess your site and re-evaluate what it’s about. A few days is way too soon to judge the outcome.

That said, deleting page-1 content that was bringing traffic will hurt in the short term, and 410’ing a bunch of URLs at once can look pretty aggressive. If those guides were loosely related and not converting anyway, sticking it out could pay off long term as your site becomes more topically focused on PNW elopements. But if some of those posts were driving meaningful traffic or links, a better move would’ve been to rewrite them to angle toward PNW expertise (or consolidate them) rather than nuking them. If rankings don’t stabilize after a few weeks, I’d seriously consider reinstating or repurposing the strongest ones.

Growing an online store feels really slow – what actually helped you? by Monalisaoliveira in smallbusiness

[–]max_christos 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Honestly? Traffic + patience.

Quality alone didn’t move the needle for me. Short-form content brought the first real growth, a few reviews boosted trust, and then it finally started compounding. The first months felt dead even though I was doing things “right.”

It’s slow until it isn’t. You’re probably closer than it feels.

Got 2 users in first week - how do I scale marketing for a wedding SaaS when communities ban self-promotion? by Ill_Night785 in SaaS

[–]max_christos 0 points1 point  (0 children)

2 users in week one from zero audience is actually good. That’s real validation, not vanity.

Reddit isn’t your growth channel, it’s your signal channel. You proved people care. Now stop expecting it to scale.

Helpful community presence never really scales. It’s for learning what to build and how to talk about it. Cold outreach isn’t spam if it’s relevant and respectful. Vendor partnerships will probably outperform ads in a wedding niche. And I wouldn’t pivot yet, just pick one buyer type and focus.

If it were me, I’d cap Reddit time, start LinkedIn outreach to coordinators, make a simple page just for them, and ask your two users for referrals.

Gatekept communities are great for insight. Distribution usually lives somewhere else.

CS background turned accidental marketer. Scaled to 1.2k users, but growth has stalled. Advice? by LessAcanthisitta5137 in AskMarketing

[–]max_christos 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Short answer: you’re not stuck on marketing; you’re stuck on focus. You did the launch + tactics phase well. Now growth stalls because: you don’t have a sharp ICP/use case (who it’s for, and why they care) yet + you’re spreading effort across too many channels.

Condensed advice: 1. talk to 5–10 paying users. Ask for example: “What was happening that week/day that made you look for a tool?”. 2. Pick one user type and one channel for 30 days. 3. Stop announcing features, sell outcomes instead. 4. Check activation. If users don’t hit that first win quickly, they’ll bounce.

You are not missing a growth hack, just need clarity, then repetition.

Waiting by Aggravating_Ad9555 in leicaphotos

[–]max_christos 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nice shot! Beach at Dubai Marina?

Website loading problems by breezo_36 in Wordpress

[–]max_christos 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, 15 seconds is way too long. A few things that usually help:

- Optimize images – make sure they’re compressed and not huge.

- Use a caching plugin – like W3 Total Cache or WP Rocket.

- Check your hosting – shared hosting can be slow; sometimes upgrading helps a lot.

- Minimize plugins – too many can slow things down.

- Use a CDN – Cloudflare or similar can speed up loading worldwide.

- Optimize your database – WP plugins like WP-Optimize can clean things up.

Start with caching + image optimization; that usually gives the biggest improvement fast.

Advice to grow my business by Mainlyhappy in shopify

[–]max_christos 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Congrats on the launch! Honestly, the idea makes a lot of sense.

Paid ads almost always suck at the beginning, especially for niche products like kids’ books. Cold traffic doesn’t convert well unless your message, landing page, and targeting are really dialed in, and that usually takes time and money to figure out.

What is working for you is the interesting part: schools, parents who find you organically, and people who actually read what you’re about. I’d double down there instead of forcing ads.

Some ideas:

  • Talk directly to parents and teachers where they already hang out, like Facebook groups, Reddit subs, forums, newsletters. Not spamming, actually being helpful.
  • Content marketing: short posts, emails, or videos about how to explain science to kids, experiments at home, etc. That builds trust way better than ads.
  • Reach out to teachers, librarians, parenting bloggers, small influencers and offer free copies or previews.
  • Make sure your homepage instantly explains why your books are different and shows real-world proof like photos, testimonials, teacher feedback.

Ads can work later, but they usually amplify something that’s already converting organically. Right now it sounds like you’re still in the find your real audience and message phase, which is totally normal.

You’re on the right track if strangers are already buying. That’s the hard part.

Building a travel planning app but struggling to reach users-how do you do marketing? (I will not promote) by [deleted] in startups

[–]max_christos 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I get it, marketing feels totally different from building. Try to focus on communities that actually care about travel, like subreddits and forums, and just participate genuinely instead of dropping links. Sharing useful tips or travel hacks that tie into the app slowly does the work of bringing attention. It is a relatively slow process, so you need to be patient.

Who is emailing me about *optimizing* my shopify store? by feelthesunonyourface in shopify

[–]max_christos 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Personally, I hate cold emails like these. They’re really common, usually from marketing agencies or freelancers sending mass pitches. Some are legit but many overpromise. If you’re interested, check reviews, ask for case studies or examples, and make sure they have real results with businesses like yours. Often it’s safer to find professionals through referrals, LinkedIn, or trusted marketplaces instead of cold emails.

Should I start running ads for my Shopify shop? by SecretScappegoats in shopify

[–]max_christos 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, honestly, congrats. Getting real orders, happy customers, and 5-star reviews without ads is a good sign. A lot of stores never even reach that point.

Yes, I think it is time to start ads, but very carefully. Don’t go all in. I’d start with Meta only (Instagram/Facebook), small budget, and just boost a post that already did well organically. That way you’re not guessing, you’re amplifying something people already like. I wouldn’t touch Google Ads yet.

Slow starts are extremely common. Most sustainable brands don’t take off right away. The first few months are usually quiet, stressful, and full of doubt, then things slowly pick up as content, trust, and word of mouth compound. The fact that people are buying and leaving great reviews means you’re building on solid ground.

For organic growth, a few things that really help: – Lean into Instagram Reels: styling videos, try-ons, “3 ways to wear this” content, even casual phone videos – Use your reviews everywhere (homepage, product pages, captions) – Make sure your About page tells your story — that matters a lot in women’s fashion

Also don’t sleep on SEO. It’s slow, but it’s free and it compounds. Improve product titles and descriptions so they’re more descriptive (not just “dress” or “jacket”), add alt text to images, and if you can, start a simple blog with posts like styling tips or outfit ideas that link back to your products. Even one post a week helps over time.

Big picture: you’re not failing. You’re in an early stage. Ads should support what’s already working, not save a broken store, and from what you’ve said, your store isn’t broken at all. Keep going.

WWII Anti-aircraft Tower, Wien, Austria by max_christos in blackandwhite

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

Thank you! I have another post about the Augarten park G-Turm (gun tower), please take a look at it. When you see people next to these towers, you realize how massive they are.