This email was triggered by one I received yesterday.

The contents of this email caused me to do some research, and this is a report of what I found out.

I gave up on keyword research years ago because it seemed that the keywords I chose, based on information I learned, didn't rank and didn't bring any traffic worth having.

The same keywords didn't help with my Google or Bing ads either, as these became money sinks, not profitable enterprises.

Smart people don't keep throwing money at things that don't break even or give a positive ROI.

However, I may have found a breakthrough that will help change all that.

This method is a way of identifying which long-tail keywords will rank quickly, even with minimal links.

I'm excited to test this out as it makes logical sense to me, and I cannot see anywhere this won't work.

The concept is simple. 

The Keyword Golden Ratio is derived from finding keywords with less than 250 searches a month and dividing that by the number of sites in the Google search results page with the keyword in the title.

When that ratio is less than 0.25, the keyword is Golden, and you should write a blog post using it in the title, the description and once in the body of the post.

Here is a blog post that describes the process in more depth than I have and provides you with a spreadsheet to do the calculation for you.

https://mangools.com/blog/keyword-golden-ratio.

You have to do this process manually, which cuts down the competition, but the results can be spectacular.

I'm going to be trying this out, and I will report here how it goes.

You can email me and let me know how it works out for you.
 

Regards,
Brent.
 

P.S.  What you will need to do for this to work is to write good content.

Each post will need to be around 1,000 words and need to engage the reader to stay onsite as long as possible.

One way to do this would be to write the post and then make a video from your article and add that to your post.

You can learn how to write excellent articles here https://link.wm-tips.com/reviews.

There are many tools you can use to make a video ranging from a PowerPoint slideshow to Camtasia.

I would typically have suggested Vidnami here as the easiest tool to use, but they are no more (bugga).

The tool I'm using now is YIVE, https://go.wm-tips.com/yive-one, which you might still be able to get on a lifetime deal through that link.

It's a pretty good tool with some unusual features that I'm still exploring.

 
  Brent Milne
12 Torrens St
Happy Valley
South Australia

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