subject: The Autoblogging Keyword Advantage [print this page] Autoblogging and SEO rule, and here's why: I lurk on a few forums, and I ran across more than one post stating that after a the latest tweak, the exact match returns for particular keywords on the Google keyword tool had dropped off by as much as fifty percent.
Just think about it: You'd bought a domain and ran a PPC campaign based on the exact match phrase for your keyword. You had believed that there was no less than five-thousand searches for your long-tailed keyword so you had truly been hammering hard at this keyword for days. You ultimately get the website in the top five search results for the keyword, only to be disappointed that you are not getting the targeted traffic that you had imagined. You look into the search results once again, only to discover there presently exist now below 1000 searches for that keyword.
I might be upset if this was my personal situation. Think of the huge amounts of cash businesses invest in PPC, now they're finding out how the keywords they've been targeting have a lot less traffic than they imagined. Law suits anyone? Tends to make me glad that I stay away from PPC!
Fortunately, as an autoblogger, I am exempt from a lot of the results of this finding. Being an autoblogger, I rely far more on utter volume of keywords (not volume of searches) to bring me the results I'm looking for.
Fundamentally, as an autoblogger, I function backwards to conventional blogger's methods. After pumping out a huge selection of blogposts with the autoblogging software that I am beta testing, I wait and see which ones are receiving Google attention by examining for top URLs in Awstats. Once I start to see the cream rising up,in terms of amount of page views, I then commence ramping up a marketing campaign to bring traffic through the use of SEO strategies including article submission, commenting on blogs, book marking and making forum profiles. As opposed to traditional blogging methods, I am not composing post after post and book marking like crazy before I have any idea if there's any actual curiosity about a certain keyword phrase.
I don't know about you, but I seriously do not like throwing away time chasing after something which never was there initially. And by using autoblogging, I don't have to. Of course, there are extra twists to my autoblogging method that further laser-hone how I move forward with a campaign employing these successful keywords.