Showing posts with label Expert Tips. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

17 SEO Mistakes, How to Fix Them, and What to Avoid

Search engine optimization continues to trip up even experienced marketers, costing businesses visibility and revenue.

This article breaks down 17 common SEO mistakes and provides clear solutions to fix them, drawing on insights from industry experts who have diagnosed these issues across hundreds of campaigns.

Each mistake comes with a practical remedy and guidance on what to avoid moving forward.

SEO Mistakes, How to Fix Them, and What to Avoid: eAskme

Other people are reading: Best Subreddits for SEO, Marketing, Social Media, Product, Technology, Development, Business and Bonus!

1. Too Much AI:

Access to everything is bad. The same applied to AI. At the same time, AI tools are making the job of SEO professionals and content creators easy. But relying too much on AI hurts the quality, human insight, and organic ranking.

It is advisable to use Ahrefs, SEMrush and other SEO tools. But only to understand the issues and fixes. You cannot let AI do SEO or generate content for your website.

I have already shared why you should not use ChatGPT for Law Firm SEO.

Gaurav Kumar, Founder and CEO at eAskme.  

2. Handle Noindex and Launch Checks Seriously

We relaunched a client's e-commerce website a few years ago and about 1,500 URLs ended up as "crawled - currently not indexed" in Google Search Console. It happened because every new category page got shipped with a global noindex tag in the frenzy of the final stages of the relaunch. As a result, the client's organic revenue fell by about 30%.

I will admit that a bit of panic did set in at first, but we were able to jump in and fix it in time.

- We stripped the rogue tag and rolled out a new lean XML sitemap with priority pages only.

- We also built a new internal-link web that pointed to the affected categories and requested re-indexing (in batches to avoid crawl-budget shock).

The pages eventually regained rankings in about six weeks and sales then began to bounce back.

The lesson we learnt is that your staging-to-live checklists should be treated as sacred.

Isaac Bullen, Marketing Director, 3WH

3. Slow Down and Earn Trust

When I first started my business, I was very focused on getting content out quickly, rather than spending time on creating quality content. I wrote a tremendous volume of AI-generated SEO articles for clients (all B2B) in a very short period of time, and I believed that boosting the articles with internal linking and optimizing my website would make up for any shortcomings in the articles, quality-wise.

This did increase the amount of digital traffic to our websites, but it did not convert into increased leads. Even though the content ranked well, it did not align with the challenge that our target audience was attempting to address.

While I technically did match what our target audience was searching for, I had not built any trust with them. Per comments from the sales team, prospective customers viewed our content as being "generic," even though, by the metrics of Ahrefs, our articles looked good.

Therefore, I ceased publishing content because I had the opportunity to interview the sales staff to learn about the challenges faced by prospective customers and what words they were using to describe the transactions, as well as examples that were received well during earlier calls.

I utilized AI to generate outlines of the content and to clean up the final drafts of the articles, but the primary authorship remained with humans.

Tracking rankings is not an accomplishment; tracking revenue is more important.

Do not use AI or the need for speed as an excuse to publish subpar content.

Mike Khorev, SEO Consultant, Mike Khorev

4. Guard Robots Files With Rigid Checks

I once blocked an entire subdirectory in robots.txt during a site migration and killed 40% of our organic traffic in three weeks. We caught it during a routine crawl audit, but the damage was already done... Recovery took us 2 months even after we fixed the file and resubmitted the sitemap.

Everyone makes technical errors - the lesson was that I had no process to catch it before it shipped.

So now I run a staged deployment checklist that includes:

  • A crawl simulation on staging,
  • A manual robots.txt review by two people,
  • And a post-launch monitor that alerts me if indexed page counts drop more than 5% week over week.

I also keep a rollback-ready version of every configuration file we touch.

My recommendation is to treat robots.txt and canonical tags like you treat database migrations. One wrong line can erase months of work, so you should always build a review gate.

Milosz Krasinski, International SEO Consultant, Owner, Chilli Fruit Web Consulting

5. Validate SERPs, Not Just Scores

One SEO mistake that taught me a hard lesson was relying too heavily on keyword difficulty scores from tools. Early on, I targeted keywords labeled "easy," only to find page one dominated by high-authority brands that perfectly matched user intent.

Rankings stalled, and a lot of time was wasted.

I fixed this by making SERP review mandatory before creating content.

Now I check:

  • Who ranks
  • Their Domain Rating
  • Traffic
  • Backlink depth
  • How well they answer the query

In many cases, that shift helped pages rank within 60 days because we focused on keywords where competitors had thin content and fewer than 10 referring domains.

My advice is simple. Treat keyword difficulty as a directional signal, not a decision-maker. Always validate the SERP manually.

Nick Mikhalenkov, SEO Manager, Nine Peaks Media

6. Strengthen Strategic Internal Links

Early on, I made the error of neglecting internal links while chasing external backlinks. I used to assume that authority came only from external sources.

At the time, I would publish great content and move on to outreach, which leaves new pages un-integrated into the site's structure. This created a growing number of orphan or poorly connected pages that Google could index, but couldn't crawl, analyze, and rank consistently.

We rectified this by embracing a streamlined hub-and-spoke model. We evaluated the site for high-performing authoritative pages and linked them to relevant new pages, both topically and chronologically, to redistribute link equity and reinforce contextual relevance.

Furthermore, we instituted a publishing rule that every new page has to be contextually linked to multiple relevant pages and has to have significant inbound and outbound links at launch.

I recommend applying the same level of thought and strategy to internal linking as you would to external linking. Internal links guide crawler behavior, outline the interrelationships of the content, and indicate to the algorithm the hierarchy and importance of the content.

Overlooking internal links means you are leaving one of the best, most efficient, and high ROI levers in SEO untouched.

Brandon Schroth, Founder, Reporter Outreach

7. Fix Foundations Before You Scale Content

One of the biggest SEO mistakes I made was focusing too much on publishing content quickly without first fixing the technical foundation of a website.

We once pushed a large batch of blog and service pages for a client, but traffic barely moved because the site had indexing issues, slow load times, and weak internal linking.

Adil Rafeeque, Co-Founder and CEO, SEO Expert

8. Delete Thin Lists, Focus Relevance

I wrote too much content, and ended up with irrelevant content.

I run a blog about Lisbon, Portugal, and I had written a lot of great content, the blog was growing, but then I hit a wall and started writing "best X" articles, and a lot of them, and this started hurting me. It was clear that Google saw this as thin, easy-to-duplicate content, especially if you don't add a personal edge to each piece.

I then deleted all of these and significantly reduced my content, which actually made my traffic start growing again. Likely because Google started scoring my overall website content score higher.

Phillip Stemann, SEO Consultant, Phillip Stemann

9. Create Hyperlocal Pages With Real Proof

Okay, so here's a little SEO lesson I learned the painful way. Years ago, I worked with this multi-location firm.

We were in a rush, so we cranked out location pages with almost identical content, just changing the city name. And yeah, it actually worked for about three months.

But then Google updated the algorithm, and traffic nosedived. They went from pulling in 180 leads a month to struggling to break 60.

Had to go back and do it right. We rebuilt every page from the ground up and made it hyper-local.

Showed who worked in that office, pulled in actual reviews from people in that city, talked about real cases, and even gave directions from local landmarks.

It was a pain, but six months later not only were they ranking again, but their conversion rate doubled. Because people actually felt like the content was for them.

Since then, I keep saying the same thing over and over. If your content doesn't feel like it was written for a real person in a real place, it's not worth publishing. Templated junk won't cut it anymore with Google or with people.

Sasha Berson, Grow Chief Executive, Grow Law Firm

10. Chase Gaps, Not Competitors

I used to just copy what my competitors were ranking for.

Sure, I got some traffic, but I was always one step behind. Now I look for the specific questions people are searching for that nobody is answering. That's what actually works.

My advice is to stop chasing the crowd and find those gaps for yourself. It's a much better way to grow.

Justin Herring, Founder and CEO, YEAH! Local

11. Use Natural Anchors With Context

I once went too far with anchor text optimization. The rankings jumped up fast, but then Google caught on and our organic growth flatlined.

Working with national brands since then showed me that natural, relevant links are what actually last. My advice?

Be genuine with your linking. Focus on context over keywords to avoid penalties.

Miguel Salcido, CEO, Organic Media Group

12. Refresh Winners Before You Pursue New Topics

Years ago I made the mistake of letting my old blog posts get stale.

Our best repair guides started dropping in Google, and traffic fell off a cliff. But once we went back and updated those old posts with fresh info and clearer photos, the traffic came right back. Seriously, don't just chase new topics.

The real opportunity is updating what you already have out there.

David Fuller, Marketing Director, WorkshopManuals

13. Prefer Evergreen Guides, Skip Trend Bait

My big early mistake was chasing whatever tech keywords were trending. I had one post get a huge spike in traffic for a week, then it vanished as soon as the news cycle moved on. It was ugly.

I switched to writing detailed guides and updating them regularly. Our traffic stopped being a roller coaster and I could tell people were actually finding the content useful.

Now I build content that lasts instead of chasing those quick hits.

Branden Shortt, Founder & Product Advisor, The Informr

14. Recommit to SEO for Durable Growth

I believe that in past years I neglected my SEO strategy, partly due to the success I achieved on other platforms when it came to converting clients. It wasn't until about a year ago that I started giving it the importance it truly deserves again.

In recent times, SEO has become more important than ever, and there are significant opportunities to be found.

First of all, many people have stopped investing in it after the latest Google updates, which penalized many small businesses that were not engaging in any bad practices.

Secondly, this has impacted many agencies that were doing good work but, after traffic drops, ended up losing clients. If we add to this the fact that SEO is not "trendy" right now, we find a large number of empty spaces waiting to be filled.

On the other hand, artificial intelligence and LLMs are fed by search engines. So the way to appear in them is, once again, SEO.

As if that weren't enough, just look into the most disruptive brands and I can assure you that the most successful ones all have a strong SEO strategy. It doesn't matter if they are better known for their social media presence or for viral videos—those that perform best have an SEO strategy behind them.

For these reasons, I have launched several websites and am collaborating with other media outlets to strengthen my presence in organic search.

Jose Garcia, Economista 3909 - Marketing 447, Economista Jose Garcia

15. Make SEO a Continuous Discipline

I started a global branding and digital marketing firm 24 years ago. It is a common mistake to believe that SEO is a one-time activity—set it and forget it.

Search engines are constantly updating their algorithms and keywords and evolving, so SEO needs to be an ongoing commitment for content to stay on top—page 1. Search engines will continue to find and serve up websites that contain the best content and information to meet its users' needs, so make it an ongoing priority.

Google updates algorithms regularly to make sure sites aren't tricking audiences with their process to move up the ranks unfairly.

One big danger is making a lot of small SEO changes to your site. Although it's smart to update your site with fresh content, you have to be careful it doesn't look suspicious and get penalized by the search engines.

It's also a danger and rookie mistake: if you discontinue a product or service, do not delete the page from your site.

Once the page is deleted, both the URL and the keyword for which it was ranked will disappear. Don't risk losing your ranking if you delete a product or service. Simply add a message for visitors to your site to redirect them to the relevant page. You work hard to get your strong rankings, so don't let that effort go to waste unnecessarily or by accident.

It is important to conduct thorough SEO audits to uncover any technical SEO issues, including broken links. Good internal and external links show both users and search crawlers that you have high quality content.

Over time, with content changes, links can break, which creates a poor user experience and reflects lower quality content, a factor that can affect page ranking.

SEO is a great strategy to increase your visibility, awareness, credibility and rankings online.

Paige Arnof-Fenn, Founder & CEO, Mavens & Moguls

16. Target High Intent, Not Volume

I'm with Gotham Artists, a boutique speaker bureau, and the SEO mistake that probably cost us the most time and money early on was getting obsessed with high volume keywords instead of actually thinking about search intent.

The Mistake:

I went hard after broad terms like "motivational speakers" because the search volume looked incredible—like thousands of searches every month.

We eventually ranked pretty well for it, traffic started coming in, and I felt like I was crushing SEO.

Except almost none of that traffic actually converted.

When I finally looked at what these visitors were doing, most of them were students doing research projects, people just browsing for inspiration, or folks looking for free content. Not a single company with an actual budget trying to book a speaker for their event.

Meanwhile, we were barely showing up for searches like "keynote speaker for healthcare conference" or "innovation speaker for tech summit"—way lower volume, but those were the people actually trying to book speakers with real budgets and timelines.

What I Learned:

Traffic by itself is basically a vanity metric if it's the wrong traffic. A hundred people searching "book keynote speaker for annual sales kickoff" are worth way more than ten thousand people searching generic stuff. Search intent is everything.

How I Fixed It:

I completely flipped the strategy. Instead of chasing volume, I started looking at what actual buyers were searching for.

I went through our inquiry forms to see what phrases people used, listened to how prospects described what they needed on calls, looked at the specific types of events and industries we actually served.

Then I built content around those long-tail, high-intent searches. Things like:

  • "how to choose a speaker for a virtual leadership conference"
  • "typical speaker fees for corporate events"

The search volume looked tiny compared to what I'd been targeting before, but the traffic that did come was actually qualified.

Traffic went down overall, but leads and actual conversions went up, which is obviously what actually matters.

What I'd Recommend:

Don't get seduced by big search volume numbers.

Before you invest time optimizing for any keyword, ask yourself: if someone searching this lands on my site, are they actually a potential customer, or are they just... someone who typed some words into Google?

If they're not in your target market, the ranking is worthless. Good SEO isn't about more traffic—it's about the right traffic.

Austin Benton, Marketing Strategist, Gotham Artists

17. Align Topics With Real Questions

Keywords must be backed with intent and alignment. During the first months of EVhype, I managed to publish dozens of EV-related pages. They were great in tools, but they didn't match the search intent.

Thus, they prompted users to abandon the pages. We had lots of visitors, but repeat visits were absent, and bounce rates were above 75%.

Deleting non-performing pages didn't seem like a productive step to many. Consolidating content and optimizing the pages to new, specific, user-generated questions, such as:

  • The costs of charging an EV.
  • The home installation steps.
  • Or the calculations of range anxiety, helped the pages perform better.

In a brief period, we reduced the number of indexed pages by 40% and more than doubled the number of visits attributed to organic search. Moreover, people started staying longer on the new pages.

I would say step aside from the volume trap. It doesn't matter if you rank for 10,000 keywords and none of them are the right ones.

Rob Dillan, Founder, EVhype

Other helpful articles:

Thursday, December 25, 2025

How do Google AI Overviews Affect Bloggers in 2026?

How do Google AI Overviews affect bloggers? Google AI Overviews and Google AI Mode are replacing blogs and websites from the first position. Bloggers are divided into two sides over the benefits and usability of AI Overviews.

One side of bloggers confirms that Google AI Overviews has helped them reach the target audience and boost organic traffic; the other side of bloggers are complaining about the loss of traffic and ranking.

What is the truth?

How do Google AI Overviews Affect Bloggers in 2026?

Let's uncover it with the help of expert bloggers.

I am inviting bloggers to this expert roundup. Share your best tips about "How do Google AI Overviews affect bloggers in 2026?

Please fill your answer in this expert roundup form.

Note:
"This expert roundup is invitation based. If you have not received the invitation, then you will not be able to publish your tips.

If you still want to publish your tips in this expert roundup, then ask for the invitation."

Please make sure that the tips are helpful and effective. Also share how the tips have helped you.

Wednesday, August 5, 2020

Marketing Strategies and Their Benefits

Have you heard about the mystery of advertising and the wonders that marketing strategies have on business?

Well, the fact that you are reading this article it means that you have expressed your interest in this particular field.

If you do a quick research you might end up feeling overwhelmed with the abundance of information you will find on the subject of marketing and marketing strategies.

Marketing Strategies and Their Benefits: eAskme
Marketing Strategies and Their Benefits: eAskme


So, to help you save your precious time, we have decided to create this article that consists of all of the important benefits you will get just by incorporating certain marketing strategies into your particular business.

Accordingly, the focus is not on the business itself, but rather on the advantages that advertising has to offer.

So, considering all of the things mentioned above we are going to take a look at the benefits of incorporating marketing strategies.

Continue reading and you will find out how you can actually apply them to suit your business.

Increasing Traffic to Your Business:

To put this in other words, increasing the traffic of your business means that through marketing strategies you will actually expand the range of customers as more and more people will become aware of the product or service that you are selling.

One of the best representatives of this statement is the online casino industry. Casino NetBet is offering you a chance to play online roulette and see the effects of how a popular game can increase the traffic to a particular business.

The best way to experience certain marketing strategies, like this one, for example, is to visit the site and explore the games they offer.

You will see how their attention to detail in every single game is capturing the players’ attention, giving them a sense of excitement.

Many games have a particular theme and all of the other minor things are correlated.

This way the player feel even more engaged and are more likely to spread the word out and increase the traffic to the site.

But, it is not enough to design a perfect strategy that will only increase the traffic of your business, but also you have to make sure that you are doing everything you can in order to keep the new customers interested for a longer period of time and manage to maintain the interest and the loyalty of the existing ones.

Keeping Your Business Up to Date:

The marketing strategies you will incorporate into your business strategy will help you get a hold of the latest trends in the business world that will help you keep it up to date.

Being in the field of constant development and changes, businesses like sport.netbet.com have to make sure that they are looking ahead and adapt to stay relevant, because you want to place the bets on cricket in the most secure way possible.

There are so many innovations that are hard to follow, but when you design the perfect marketing strategy that would fit your business you will get a chance to easily incorporate the popular trends that are happening right now.

Another interesting approach is that when you are using marketing strategies to keep your business updated, you are actually presenting the customers with the latest changes and improvements that you are applying.

This is a great opportunity that will help you get to the point of success you are aiming to achieve.

Make Smart Choices:

As mentioned above, there is an abundance of marketing strategies that you can find just with a quick search on the internet. But this does not guarantee you success.

When thinking about incorporating various marketing strategies you have to be aware of the fact that particular, well-crafted ones will have the biggest impact on your business.

So, make sure that you are making smart choices when it comes to choosing the best marketing strategy for your business.

If you do not know how to make smart choices, then hire a research panel that can gather relevant information for your business and helps you develop a better approach.
 
Make smart choice when arranging funds for your business.

Growth Increasing:

Marketing strategies are there to help your business grow and improve. This way you are doing everything in your power in order to get a better understanding of how certain strategies will help your business grow.

This is not an easy task to do and often takes so much time, but all of the work, energy, and resources you put in will make a huge difference in the overall business success.

If you still have any question, do share via comments.

If you find this article interesting, don’t forget to share it with your friends and family.

Why?

Because, Sharing is Caring!

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Biggest Blogging Myths

Like any old and ancient culture or business Blogging is also full of facts, fictions, myths or doubts. Where some blogging myths will not make you worry but some others can make your blogging business suffer and see really hard time.

It is important to uncover these biggest blogging myths. So that you know what you should avoid and what you can live with.

Biggest Blogging Myths: eAskme
Biggest Blogging Myths: eAskme
Here is what other bloggers are saying about the biggest blogging myths.

Biggest blogging myths(Donna Merrill)

"===

""Biggest Blogging Myths that Bloggers believe in""

===

Bloggers believe that the more links to their blog posts that they can drop all around the internet… the more traffic they’ll drive to their articles.

The belief is that blogging is a numbers game.

Put your link in front of more people in order to get more blog traffic.

So they go about the business of sharing a link to their latest post on Twitter, Facebook and all the others.

The more people see it, the better.

I call this a “blogging myth” because more exposure does not equate with more traffic.

And it doesn’t even address the issue of the quality of your traffic.

You see, you can drop your social media links all over the place.

But if people don’t know who you are, what you are about, and mostly… how you can improve their lives in some way… then they won’t care about clicking over to read your article.

And even if they do, many people will bounce right away because it doesn’t instantly resonate with them… or with what they expected.

I think it’s far better to use social media platforms to connect with people in a personal way.

Forget about your great blog post.

Concentrate on what people are talking about that is relevant to the value you can give them.

Find the people who are searching for the solutions to their problems that you offer.

Have conversations with them… in groups or even individually.

Ask them what they’re looking for, what their obstacles, distractions and failings have been.

And tell them what yours are.

Let them know you (1) care about them and their struggles, and (2) are able to help them along the way.

In that way you can start to earn the trust of people in your target audience.

Over time, they’ll start finding their way to your blog because you’ve already demonstrated how you can help them in your social media interactions.

Now, this might not get you as much blog traffic as mass link-dropping methods.

But it will result in building a far higher quality audience.

And this, in turn, will mean a much higher likelihood of converting your readers into subscribers, buyers and clients."

Biggest blogging myths Zac Johnson

One of the most common myths that bloggers still have is... if they built it, an audience will come and find them.

This is WRONG.

With more than a BILLION active sites on the internet today, you need to market a blog for audiences to find it.

This can be through SEO, social media, guest blogging, or whatever method you like, but you are going to need to gain high-quality backlinks to have your site start ranking in Google. Focus on content promotion as much as possible.

Biggest blogging myths (Ryan Biddulph)

"The biggest myth I have seen is that blog monetizing channels make money in and of themselves.

Have you ever seen Amazon eBooks make money?

Nope. eBooks cannot make money. eBooks are inanimate objects.

Skilled writers, who practice writing for years, and who build their friend networks, make money through writing and self-publishing eBooks.

Bloggers believe a THING can make money and skip all the hard work and practice that makes money. Silly, funny and ultimately it kills many a blogging career."

Biggest blogging myths(Richard Lowe)

The biggest myth I've seen about blogging is if you create a blog people will visit automatically as if by magic.

In fact, I was working with someone last week who is creating an author blog. I explained to him how creating the blog was just one step - he had to promote it as well, and keep creating good quality content.

He wanted to know why people just wound "flock to his blog" just because he had something to say.

A second myth I've run into is the belief that a blogger can throw up a few ads and vast amounts of money will be made. Of course, that doesn't happen.

Biggest blogging myths (Janice Wald)

    Blogging is done in isolation. This is a myth. The most successful bloggers support each other with comments and social shares.
     SEO doesn't matter. Google won't show your blog to people without an optimized article. The post will last longer on social media. Yet, bloggers focus more on social media promotion than strong SEO practices.
    The bounce rate doesn't matter. You want to keep people on your blog by having them scroll through white space, headings and graphics. Add GIPHYs, anything to keep people on your blog longer.

The biggest blogging myth is bloggers don't need to do SEO research. I spend a great deal of time researching rankable keywords.

When I find them, it's worth it! Traffic from search engines like Google can last for years.

 Of all these myths, what I've learned in two years since the publication is if you want substantial lasting traffic, you need to conduct SEO research and optimize your posts for SEO.

Here are my top 10:

  1.     You can know with certainty what keywords your site will rank for. You can do the greatest keyword research in the world. However, more depends on an article's success besides search volume and online competition. For example, the longevity of your blog, your DA, and the DA of your online competitors all play a part among other factors.
  2.     The way to overcome writer’s block is to write. It’s a myth. There are many ways to overcome Writer’s Block that have nothing to do with writing.
  3.     Publishing content daily on your blog is difficult. It’s a myth. Getting into a daily writing habit is easy. Writing sporadically makes it hard to return to writing. Then, writing might be seen as a chore.
  4.     Paid promotion is always better than free promotion. Myth: According to an article on Kingged, trying to rank higher in search engines organically will be 94% better for your blog growth in the long term than paying for promotion which has more short-term benefits.
  5.     You should write about whatever you want. It may be your blog, but this is a myth. You need to write for a target audience. Unless you are a humor blogger, readers want to be empowered by your posts. Your musings will soon get old, and your readers will move on.
  6.     You should only promote new content. Promoting older content is an effective way to repurpose your blog posts. Many newer readers haven’t read your old content yet. If your page views and comments indicate many people read your post when you published it, there’s no reason your newer readers shouldn’t enjoy it as well.
  7.     There is no way to know the best time to promote your blog posts on social media since your readers are all on the Internet at different times and in different time zones. Myth: Many articles have been written about how to know the right time to publish. There are many free tools that will promote your posts during optimal times for you such as Hootsuite and Buffer.
  8.     Blogging helps your writing. Blogging helps your blog writing since practice perfects your craft. Practicing blogging won't help your essay writing skills, for example.
  9.     Blogging is fast. Myth: it takes hours to produce a blog post from start to finish.
  10.     Blogging is done alone. Many blogger groups exist where people help each other. Facebook has many groups you can find in the search bar. Type your niche + group.

Blogging Myths (Andy Nathan)

You're not qualified to write about this topic. When I started my blog, I got a lot of comments about how I should leave this to the professionals. People didn't understand why someone should listen to me about digital marketing.

However, 10 years later I am an authority in my field. That all started with my blog. The key is to start.

You might not know it all, but as long as your information is truthful, helpful, and legal (do not forget legal), then you are qualified.

Blogging is a great way to share your knowledge and clarify your thinking on the topic.

Every time I wrote a blog post, I had to fact check my information. That made me test things I thought I already knew.

Sometimes I was right, and often I was wrong. However, I got better at what I did one post at a time.

Ten years later and 5,000 blog posts later, I am still learning.

Create and they will come (Raelyn Tan)

The biggest blogging mistake I see is that bloggers are creating blog post after blog post without bothering to having a solid promotional plan to get more people to read their articles.

The myth "build it and they will come" is absolutely not true!

In general, I recommend a 80/20 rule to the bloggers in my community: Spend 80% of your time promoting, and only 20% creating - not the other way round.

Myths about roundup posts (David Leonhardt)

I think one of the biggest blogging myths is that a huge round-up post id of huge value. The theory is that 100 people sharing the post is better than 10 people. And that is true.

But the post itself is not necessarily better with 100 people.

If each person brings something genuinely new to the table, then a 100-person post could be one of those epic "ultimate" guides. In that case 100 people can make the post great.

But I've seen too many roundup posts - and I've been in too many of them - where the same half-dozen ideas are regurgitated in different words by most of the 28, 72 or 100 participants.

Interesting tidbit...when I'm one of 100 participants, I will tweet the post, put it on LinkedIn and add it to a couple Pinterest boards.

But when I am one of a handful of participants, I'll promote it high and wide.

Why?

Because my comment in a smaller post isn't lost in a crowd.

Biggest Blogging Myths(Nikola Roza)

The biggest blogging myth by far is believing that Google is a perfect, demi-god like machine and that all you (the blogger) need to do is give your best and you will be rewarded.But here's the thing:Folks don't understand that there are 3 million blog posts published ever single day and that Google is not an absolute, perfect machine that can sift through the crap to find the gems.It's an algoryhtm. and no- it isn't perfect. It works and ranks on math alone.

So If someone knows a bit about SEO and starts feeding the algorithm the metrics it wants to see... well guess what?

That person is going to rank higher than you, even if your post is objectively thousand times better than theirs.

Note: that is why you often see crap ranking on the first pages of Google, while truliy uniqe and good pages are burried God knows where.

The former people do SEO; the later hope Google will somehow magically figure out their content is the best.It won't.But there's solution to it (things you can do about it)Step #0- accept that this is how the world works.

Don't try to change it, but adapt and thrive.Step #1- 1 Write the best content you're capable of.

Having an awesome piece to promote will make your job a thousand times easier.Step #2- Promote it.
  •     Social media,
  •     blog comments,
  •     email outreach .
It all works. Just get eyeballs in front of your content.Step #3- Build lasting, genuine relationships with the bloggers in your niche.

Do things for them for free first, so later on they have an incentive to help you out with your blog promotion.And that's it really.

Rinse and repeat; don't give up and I'll see you at the top:)

Biggest blogging myths(Sathish Arumugam)


"It’s easy to blog

May be setting up a blog and publishing a content is now made simpler with reliable hosting services and open source CMS. But, that doesn’t mean that blogging is easy.

It claims for more dedication, passion, and efforts. It is hard to accept, an hour a day is enough to blog successfully. It is not so. If you are blogging as a hobby, then I admit.

Otherwise, blogging needs enough time to research, analyze, strategize and content preparation and promotions.

I don’t have intention to cut you off from blogging, still I insist you to understand the work and time that is required to be a successful blogger.

Furthermore, there are abundant blogging myths might stop your blogging success.

It includes blogging is only to make money, blogging is all about writing, have to be a expert writer, no one loves to read long form of content, etc. Don’t just believe in all these and limit yourself. "

Biggest blogging myths()

There are a few myths that I see all the time. Some are incomplete techniques others are completely wrong.

Myth #1. Write great content and results will come (backlinks, readers, clients, rankings etc). That's not true. Although high-quality content is the first step of a blogging strategy, it's not enough. You have to promote this content, do on-page SEO, and earn links through white hat strategies like blogger outreach.

Myth #2. Blog commenting is a good link building strategy. This is not true. You won't rank if your links come only from blog comments. These links have a very low value. You should use blog comments as a way to connect with influencers. Subscribe to at least five industry leaders and whenever they publish a new blog post, add an insightful comment. This is a good way to get on their radar.

Myth #3. You will rank if you get lots of social shares and likes. I had a friend who was focusing all her time to get hundreds of repins because she thought that if her posts will rank in Pinterest's search results will also rank on Google.

Although different social media bloggers say that shares influence results, there have been different studies with no concrete results.

Shares may be one of the hundreds of ranking factors but their impact is so small that it won't make much of a difference.

Biggest blogging myths(Srish Agrawal)

Bloggers need to understand that just publishing 500-words of content daily no longer works. Blog posts need to be at least 1000-1500+ in length now.

The longer the content, the better. This also makes it easier to continually promote such content as well.

This also works extremely well if the content is evergreen, so it can keep getting referenced to for many months to come.

Biggest blogging myths(Storm McManus)

One of the biggest myths that most bloggers still seem to believe in is that "if you build it, they will come".

Starting a successful and money-making blog is not easy, and it doesn't just happen with the push of the 'publish' button in WordPress.

Blogging is a skill and knowing where to find quality endorsements and backlinks takes time, effort, and expertise knowledge about your target niche.

New bloggers need to know what sets their words and advice apart from the rest and be able to clearly articulate their value-add to stand out in a saturated blogging market.

It can be done! Just spend some time understanding your market and strategy first before diving straight in to the blogging world.

Biggest blogging myths(Jennifer Leach)

One of the biggest blogging myths is that blogging is easy. It's not.

Blogging is hard. In order to be successful with blogging, you really need to treat it like a job.

Perfecting your writing skills, networking, growing your social media presence, and digital marketing skills are things that are all needed to build a successful, thriving blog.

While these skills can be self-taught and developed, it won't be an overnight transformation.

Most successful bloggers have been working hard on their blog for 5+ years, like a job. So this myth should be debunked because blogging, while rewarding and fruitful, is anything but easy.

Biggest blogging myths(Tarek Dinaji)

"Traffic equals money: This is the biggest blogging myth in my opinion.

Only the page-views will not bring you money, if you have nothing to sell you will have zero transactions thus zero income.

The item you will be selling can be your own or you can forward your traffic to a third-party where the purchase will happen.

Either way there has to be some sort of transactions otherwise you will not earn any money.

There are tons of blogs that hardly get any traffic but the owner is living of that blog.

And yet there are countless blogs that gets decent amount of traffic yet they fail to convert that traffic into income. "

Biggest blogging myths(Faiza Inam)

When I started blogging over two and half years ago, my primary focus was to build credibility and get famous so the brands can approach me. For a while, I kept pushing towards content creation and less on monetizing it. Now when I look back, I wish I did it differently and valued my blog more.

The biggest myth I see a lot of influencers facing is hoping to work with big brands without putting an effort to reach out to them.

If you are starting your blog with an intention on monetizing it, value the time you put towards content creation and don't budge for less.

I undervalued myself because I was living on the myth that brands will work with me once I am credible enough. My advice for any new bloggers out there is to value yourself and the brands will instinctively value you.

Final Words:

Myths are the common part of every business or social life.

Don't be afraid of them. just learn about them and learn how you can handle them for the growth of your blogging business.

If you still have any question, do share via comments.

If you find this article interesting, don’t forget to share it with your friends and family.

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Monday, July 8, 2019

Successful Strategies for Essay Writers: Tips and Tricks

Anyone can learn to write an academic essay with the help of some basics. An educational essay must provide a debatable, solid thesis.

Make sure to support each fact with relevant evidence from other resources.

Successful Strategies for Essay Writers: Tips and Tricks: eAskme
Successful Strategies for Essay Writers: Tips and Tricks: eAskme

Other people are reading: Expert Tips to Write a Research Paper: Short Guide

If you want to become a successful essay writer, here are some ideas to create persuasive, valuable papers.

Start Your Work with an Outline

Before writing an academic essay, you must understand the importance of your topic. To narrow down an essay, you have to create an argument.

With this argument, you can create a basic outline. The structure of an academic essay must have these elements:
  • Introduction to write a thesis
  • The conclusion to tie every fact together.
  • Connect it to your thesis.
For an essay, you must include almost three solid points to support your thesis.

Use external academic resources to increase the credibility of your essay.

Basic Style, Grammar and Punctuation

To write flawless essays, you must have a solid understanding of grammar, punctuation, and style.

These elements are incredibly essential to design a comprehensive document. You will need a solid understanding of grammar and sentence structure.

The basics of grammar include a subject and verb agreement, pronoun and proper article usage and perfect sentence structures.

Understand the accurate uses of common punctuation forms.

Mindfully use comma and period to make your document understandable.

For academic writing, you have to pay attention to voice.

Make sure to prefer active voice over passive voice. For instance, you must write “research proved” because it is better than “it was proved by research”. It can help you to write an essay in a stronger tone. Use concise language and avoid unnecessary transition words. Remember, unnecessary words can make your argument weak.

Pay Attention to the Right Vocabulary

Language of an essay is essential to make it impressive and robust. Try to persuade your readers with an intellectual argument.

You must not use big words to sound intelligent and smart. It may result in opposite effects.

Remember, a reader can detect overcompensation in writing.

If you are not sure about the meaning of a word, you must not write it. In this way, you can decrease the risk of incorrect words.

Use of obscure language may affect the clarity of an argument. Make sure to consider this fact before pulling out the thesaurus.

You must not choose a word because it looks beautiful. Remember, a wrong word can completely change the meaning of a sentence.

Understand an Argument

When writing an essay, you have to understand the argument. It will help you to analyze the evidence critically.

Sometimes, side notes can decrease the conciseness of your documents.

Before adding evidence in your essay, you must analyze it critically.

You have to ensure if it can support your thesis. Exclude every unsupported evidence.

Before adding anything in your essay, make sure it must have a strong connection with your argument and topic.

Conclusion

Writers often overlook the end of academic essays.

Remember, a conclusion must tie your research together to support your thesis.

You must not copy a part of your thesis. Moreover, it must not be a rewriting of introduction.

With a strong conclusion, you can outline the main evidence in the body of an academic essay.

If you have any question, do let me know via comments.

If you find this article interesting, don’t forget to share it with your friends and family.

Why?

Because, Sharing is Caring!

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Expert Tips to Write a Research Paper: Short Guide

Everyone has to write a research paper during his/her academic career. During the writing process, you may feel overwhelmed. It is necessary to complete your research paper professionally to get better grades.

If you want to write an academic paper successfully, you have to understand the requirements.

Expert Tips to Write a Research Paper: Short Guide: eAskme
Expert Tips to Write a Research Paper: Short Guide: eAskme

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Carefully read instructions and feel free to share your queries with the supervisor.

For professional assistance, I prefer to do my paper online.

These professionals can guide beginners to write a term or research paper.

Here are some expert tips for writing a research paper.

Pick an Interesting Topic

In the first step, you can to pick an interesting topic. If the topic is already available, use different academic resources to start writing.

Even a general topic needs proper research.

Before you begin writing, understand the subject of an assignment.

Feel free to visit the library of your school to find the necessary resources.

Collect some notebooks and index cards for record keeping.

You can record title of book, article, and name of author n APA or MLA format.

Start reading different articles and books.

Feel free to write necessary quotes and facts on a notebook.

Create a Good Outline

To make your writing easy, start your work with an outline.

With the help of an outline, you can shortlist essential ideas.

It will help you to keep track of writing. A thorough framework is necessary for your guidance.

After preliminary reading, you can draw up an outline or a mind map.

Feel free to include essential, provocative, and interesting points.

Include your ideas about a topic.

With a mind map, you can create questions and find answers to these questions.

It is possible to revise your mind map to reorganize a research paper.

Formulate Your Thesis

You have to write a focused and well-defined thesis statement.

Remember, you can revise this statement later.

You must have sufficient time to craft a thesis statement.

It may help you to control the development and direction of the entire paper.

Researching Facts

Start your work with heavy-duty research, such as newspaper articles, reference books, electronic databases, and library books.

Make sure to write down each source on an index card.

You have to write publication information for works cited APA (bibliography) or MLA page. Note down important facts, details, examples, and points.

You must distinguish between paraphrasing and direct quotes.

Remember, an expert opinion is necessary to support your written material.

You must not rely on internet sources only.

These may vary widely in authority and quality.

Sometimes, this information disappears before completing a paper.

Avoid copy and paste from other sources because plagiarism is not acceptable.

Rethinking and Drafting

After gathering and reading plenty of information, you have to revise or expand your outline or mind map by adding explanations and information.

Visit a library to get the necessary information. Start your paper with an introduction and support the content of body with systematic and logical facts.

After completing your paper, read and revise it to organize each idea. Your paper must have a strong thesis statement.

Make sure to paraphrase and quote accurately. A final draft must have an introduction and conclusion.

With a strong introductory paragraph, you can impress your readers.

Carefully proofread your paper after completing a final draft.   

If you have any question, do let me know via comments.

If you find this article interesting, don’t forget to share it with your friends and family.

Why?

Because, Sharing is Caring!

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