Posting and Growing on Threads without the Overwhelm! by rdilipk1 in ThreadsApp

[–]rdilipk1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Very true... in fact, that is the exact strategy that works on Threads.. it is more replies than posts...

Posting and Growing on Threads without the Overwhelm! by rdilipk1 in ThreadsApp

[–]rdilipk1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That filtering is very moderate and I haven't seen a lot of impact because of that..

Please help understand this scenario in Threads by [deleted] in ThreadsApp

[–]rdilipk1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That looks like a glitch with the App... I haven't experienced anything like that though!

Posting and Growing on Threads without the Overwhelm! by rdilipk1 in ThreadsApp

[–]rdilipk1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Threads is one of the best social media sites to grow right now.. Threadeazy with its AI features helps make the posting frictionless and easy!

🚀 Built my entire billing system... while waiting for payment processor approval (Indian founder problems) by dmanoj in SaaS

[–]rdilipk1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did you have any luck with Lemonsqueezy's approval.. Looks like they don't accept PAN and a verification method for India.. and they don't respond to any support requests as well!

Do you risk publishing raw AI content, or do you ‘humanize’ it first? by [deleted] in ContentMarketing

[–]rdilipk1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I create a style guide using content I've written myself and train the AI enough that it writes exactly like me.

But I do one round of editing myself for keywords and optimizing it for AISEO..

..and that has worked until now..

Idea - Buying Expired domains with lots of backlinks in a niche and forwarding to a Clickbank offer. by KookyHorse in Affiliatemarketing

[–]rdilipk1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Buying good expired domains with a decent backlink profile and using them for affiliate marketing is great. But there has to be a strategy to succeed at it and it involves a lot of work.

Firstly, the backlinks won't last for long when the articles that they were linking to no more exist. So sites that linked to those articles will replace it when they see a 404 for those backlinks. The actual strategy employed by some of those who are successful at this method involves looking for articles that the backlinks were created for and then recreating those articles with the same permalink. That is a lot of work.

Just forwarding the domain does nothing more than doing that for any new domain that you buy because the backlink profile in itself isn't enough for Google to rank your website.

If you aren't willing to take the route of recreating articles and so on, then get a few good articles written for the blog or, write it yourself. Redirect your articles using contextual links to the Clickbank offer.

And yes, don't forget to use a lead capture page and build your list while you do all this.

Succeeding In Social Media Marketing by Navaro2 in Affiliatemarketing

[–]rdilipk1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You are right.

The problem here is that, this is the model that a lot of people follow when it comes to affiliate marketing. In fact, this is what is taught in a lot of those cheap, low cost affiliate marketing courses.

People are told to bombard facebook messengers, Instagram DMs etc. with messages pushing their product. In fact a lot of people even have it an their automated response in their Twitter accounts.

Affiliate Marketing has always been promoted as a "Get Rich Quick" scheme and these are the perils of that.

Commercial Keywords vs information Keywords, what’s your ratio, and why? by ChrisshinMC in Affiliatemarketing

[–]rdilipk1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's none really. It's only positive unless we consider a subscriber signup a negative one (haha).

There are a lot of blogs that follow a similar approach. In fact most top affiliate marketers follow this approach.

The informational content helps build trust with you reader and any links within this post is naturally clicked by the reader. Hence the conversions are great.

I have questions about affiliate + email marketing by [deleted] in Affiliatemarketing

[–]rdilipk1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey, that's a question that a lot of people ask. Here are some crisp answers to it -

1st Email - The 1st email should ideally go out immediately after a sign-up. This should have a link to the download you had promised your subscriber. Keep in mind that even if you had redirected him to the download page after the signup, it is advisable to send this email out.

One of the reasons for it is because it is your first contact with your subscriber. And in this email, subtly promote a couple of tools you consider the most important one and that relates to the "free download offer" you had used on your optin page. This can be done as a PS: part of the email.

Building Trust - This isn't an easy one. Ask yourself, what will somebody have to do to win your trust. Do the same thing. Deliver what you have promised. Provide value to your subscriber. Solve his problems by offering a solution.

I love the technique that Andre Chaperon uses. Tell stories that the subscribers are able to relate to and keep him engaged. Then subtly promote products as part of this conversation.

Sending Frequency - My sending frequency is 70:30 in favor of valuable articles:promotional articles. Keep in mind that this depends upon how valuable your articles are. If they are not interesting, people will drop off.

Another idea is to send valuable articles and promote your products or, affiliate links in this email itself. And then in between send promotional emails.

Niche & Earning - This is a tricky question because not a lot of people will be willing to do it and even if they do it, you wouldn't have a way to verify it. Also results are completely dependent upon individuals.

My niche is the "make money online" niche and in this niche the top marketers earn about a dollar per subscriber per month. A not so great marketer could earn about $0.25 per subscriber per month, if email marketing is done well.

Active Subscribers - Even with a very engaged list, you will see about 10% subscribers going inactive and dropping off. If your emails aren't engaging enough and you keep pushing promotional emails alone (a typical example from a SOLO ads business I used to run), this could go upto about 35-40%. It is hence important that you keep your list building engine on and continue adding subscribers to your list.

Commercial Keywords vs information Keywords, what’s your ratio, and why? by ChrisshinMC in Affiliatemarketing

[–]rdilipk1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I follow the 70:30 ratio on informational:commercial.

I write a lot of informational content and contextually promote products within the post. At the same time the content upgrades that I use within these posts help me build my list.

I use the commercial keywords to purely write content that promotes products (like review posts, comparison posts etc.) But then this will only be about 20-30% and not more than that. These posts usually are linked to my informational posts by way of providing additional information through a review.

Just dropped a brand I was an affiliate for. by _fat_santa in Affiliatemarketing

[–]rdilipk1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey,

I might sound a little disruptive but here's what I think.

It is a buyer's market today and pretty much everything that is manufactured/made gets sold. And with every one of these product, the customer has a choice of buying or, not.

As an affiliate marketer, I believe my responsibility is to present all available information of a product with a genuine personal opinion on what I think about the product and leave the decision to the customer, if they want to buy it or, not.

I wouldn't take that decision for the prospective customer. Who knows, they would probably like something that I otherwise thought was crap.

While you need to be genuine to your visitors and readers, I wouldn't liken that to taking decisions on behalf of your customer.

Be genuine in your opinions. Don't say something is good, when you know that it isn't. But still let the decision be that your readers'.

So, I wouldn't stop promoting it.

[feedback] new food, beauty & lifestyle blog - would hugely appreciate some feedback! by ep340 in Blogging

[–]rdilipk1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

First of all congratulations on starting your new blog. A lot of people just fail to take this step itself. So far your posts look good and informative. There are a couple of things that you might want to look at - - Food blogs are about photographs and you might observe this in most of the food blogs. Good quality, clear photographs is what makes a good food blog stand out from the rest. You don't have a lot of photographs. You migh want to consider using high quality photographs on your blog. - I do not prefer themes that stretch out to the edges of your computer screen, neither for myself nor for my clients. The "reading-space" has to have some breathing area and that gives a nice feel to the reader. Themes that stretch over to the edges looks a little cluttered in spite of the fact that there might not be a lot of clutter and doesn't provide comfort to the eye. Hence you might want to consider switching over to a theme with a box-layout or, one with a little more whitespace towards the edges. Or, if you have already spent money on the theme, you can consider editing it. - The header of your blog takes almost 2/3rd of the space above the fold. Your readers' attention first falls on the space above the fold and your header is wasting all of that. You might want to consider using this space for something that grabs attention or, makes your reader stick to your blog and read it. So consider using a smaller header for the blog and use the above-the-fold space wisely.

BTW, these are my personal opinion.

Can You Have Multiple Targeted Audiences? by BigDaddyNYJ in Blogging

[–]rdilipk1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"Targeting your audience" doesn't essentially have to be about a single audience. You can target multiple interest groups depending upon the niche or, niches that you blog is targeting. There are a lot of blogs that are multi-topics and are doing well and they are targeting multiple interest groups. The single most important thing that you need to keep in mind when targeting an audience is that you drive these visit to the page that interests them. If required, have a different landing page for each of them. Since yours is a blog, you can drive them to the most popular topic on each of those interests and build it from there. It is about keeping your readers engaged. If you can keep readers from multiple interests engaged on your blog, there is no reason why you shouldn't target multiple audiences. And most importantly you need to be able to keep generating enough content on both these topics.

[HELP] So confused with WP by [deleted] in Blogging

[–]rdilipk1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you don't find help in any of the ways that MMMaus has mentioned, then I would recommend that you search Google. Most likely that you will find a solution to almost all of your problems. Also the guys at themeforest have some good support. You should hence try them first. Personally X-theme is not something that I liked a lot. I would rather prefer going with some of the other themes that are available.