Niche Socializer Review – Pros and Cons of Niche Socializer
Archive for category Tips
Driving Traffic to Your Social Network
Posted by admin in Tips, niche socializer on March 29th, 2009
There are few ways to get traffic, free and paid, but there’s not doubt that Google is the biggest and the most consistent source for both.
Taking your site to the top of Google results for your keywords is what SEO is all about. In essence, there are two steps in order to achieve this – on-page SEO which ensures your page is relevant to the keyword and off-page SEO which involves getting backlinks. If you’ve selected your keywords with competition in mind, getting to the first page of Google is a straighforward task.
The on-page part of this process is very simple, all you need to do is make sure that:
- Your keyword is in the page title
- You have the keyword in h1 tags
- You have your keyword mentioned in the content of the page at least few times
On-page SEO is really only a small part of what Google considers important, so even if only include the keyword in the title and maintain good off-page SEO, you will be fine. However, it is important to note that these elements define how your listing will be displayed to the people who search. For that reason you must make sure your title not only includes the keyword (which is bolded in the results), but also that it is attractive. Also make sure to include an attractive meta description, because that will also have influence as to how many people will click your result and not others.
Off-page SEO is a whole science. It has many strategies and methods to it, as well as many assumptions and myths. Google doesn’t disclose what brings a certain page to the top, but many marketers have gotten a pretty good idea through trial and error. One thing is certain, back-links to your site with your target keyword as an anchor text is in a nutshell the one and only basis for off-page SEO.
However, that doesn’t mean you can go out there, start spamming other websites, get thousands of links and immediatelly rank as #1. No, the quality of links is the major factor to Google. For that reason you should only try to get few but quality links. Sounds difficult, but luckily there’s a good measure to tell the quality of a page in Google’s eyes, and it’s a PR. Install Google Toolbar to your browser and you will always see what PR each page has.
OK, so how many and what quality links you should get to secure your position in Google? The answer depends on the competition for the keyword, but for a competition defined in my post on keyword research, few PR 1-5 links or even less PR 6+ links should take you to page one easily. In fact, often you’ll see that a single link even with PR 1 will take you to the first page.
Now, you will hear a lot about getting as many links as possible through article marketing and social bookmarking. You will hear that from Niche Socializer too. And that is also a way to go, but keep in mind that a high PR link will beat thousands of zero or no PR links everytime. To compete for more competitive keywords and to really etablish your site so it doesn’t fall down the result pages, you will need all links you can get.
To conclude, here’s a simple plan for easy SEO:
- Do on-page SEO, make sure to build a good search listing, consider it an ad that must attract viewers’ attention.
- Submit your site to several big social bookmarking sites (Digg, Mixx, Jumtags, Propeller work good for this) to get your site indexed quickly
- Find blogs with high PR and post comment with your keyword as the name.
- Create a few blogs and other Web 2.0 pages (WordPress.com, Blogspot.com, Weebly.com, Squidoo.com, Hubpages.com), write unique content on them and link to your site, again with the correct anchor text. Submit these to bookmarking sites too, to get them indexed.
- Write unique articles and submit to high PR article directories (Ezinearticles.com, Goarticles.com, Articledashboard.com). Again, you can submit these to social bookmarking sites to get them indexed quickly.
Repear 2-5 as much and as fast as humanly possible and you will rank for competition of 100,000-150,000 pages and sometimes more.
Your Own Social Network with Niche Socializer
Posted by admin in Tips, niche socializer on March 28th, 2009
In this post I want to cover the Niche Socializer software itself. In a nutshell, you will be creating someting that looks like Facebook, but that’s too vague of an idea, so here is the detailed breakdown of what your site is going to look like and how you will monetize it.
The authors divide the software into 8 main parts based on the monetization methods:
- Membership module as the main monetization method. This way you can sell membership to your site, and keep charging your members every month. This is the real power behind a community website. In this software, there are also ways to help you market your paid membership, such as free trials. You can also create few levels of membership for different price, including free.
- Viral Marketing capabilites to build a community like a snowball. In essence we copy other networks in this and do not charge for membership, but rather let them join for free and let them bring their friends. Then we market to our members. It’s a similar idea to email marketing with a difference that an active community helps to grow the member base virally.
- Social community modules come as we’d expect, it’s a all about social networking sites after all.
- Built-in email marketing is a nice feature, it also integrates with Aweber if you’re already using that service. It also means that having your own social community website, you will not need an autoresponder to do email marketing anymore. And I can tell you for sure that email marketing is still one of the best marketing techniques, and it’s great to see that Niche Socializer isn’t stripped off of it.
- Video and photo sharing is still hot and so it is included in Niche Socializer as well. That’s another way to draw attention or even monetize your site by letting your members sell their videos and collecting commission.
- Another big side is Ecommerce. This will allow you to set up your shop with your products of someone else’s products, in either case you can make money selling them.
- Some marketers say Craigslist is the second Google, millions of people visit it whether they want to sell or buy something. This is where you can capitalize as well, by creating your own classified ads directory on your own site. You can make it available to you members as a free resource or charge fees to post listings.
- A business directory is another concept with a great potential. That’s a great way to sell affiliate products or allow members to add more content to your site and make your site more attractive.
If you notice, almost every single part involves user generated content, which means your site will grow on autopilot. That’s why social networking websites are so popular, they only need the initial boost. In that way these sites are so different from your classic content sites or long sales pages, giving you more and easier ways to profit from your sites.
Also, I want to note that this package of features gives you the ability to come up with any variation. That means you can not only create a webiste like Facebook, you can create a website like Youtube, like Craigslist, any combination of them and much more. That’s where the real power in this software is.
Niche and Keyword Research
Posted by admin in Tips, niche socializer on March 27th, 2009
When you do business online, you have to understand that you have access to thousands of different markets and you can choose any of them. Therefore it’s never a good idea to keep beating a dead horse, when there’s plenty of others. If you get stuck in your business – move on.
Having that in mind, it would be good if you could choose a good niche from the beginning. That’s what Niche Socializer training starts with and I will show you how it’s done.
One thing you should always consider first is what you like to do or what you already do. You can start in the market you already in and look for those sub-niches that are worth conquering.
If you don’t have any ideas to begin with, start brainstorming. Go to Amazon, Ebay Pulse, look what is popular. Look at Google Trends. If you’re a member of any social networks (Facebook, MySpace, etc.) see which groups get most attention. Finally, pay attention to everything around you, look for niches offline, see what sells in the shops. Try to create as big list of ideas as possible.
Once you have that list, you can dig deeper. This is where the keyword research begins. And to begin to research keywords, I always start with Google itself. Start typing your idea in the search field in Google and see what suggestions it gives.
Type down those suggestions that you think you can use. In this example, all of them are good to use, except maybe ‘slippers uk’, unless of course you are doing a local business.
Another place to get more keyword suggestions is to complete the search for your root keyword and look at the bottom of results in Google. There are also keyword research tools that you can also use, but for the sake of simplicity, I’ll only cover what Google provides and that’s a fair amount of tools.
Next thing you want to do is find out how much traffic each of those keywords get. To do that, let’s use Google External Tool, where we’ll look up each keyword from the first step.
In some cases the Keyword Tool will give you good keyword suggestions as well. But keep in mind that you want to see as much traffic as possible, in this case of “slippers for women”, we can expect 18,100 searches per month, or 603 searches per day. That doesn’t mean that you will get all of those visits to your site. If you managed to get your site to #1 in search results for this keyword, you’d get approximately under 300 visits per day. That’s a good number, normally I would look for at least 300 searches a day (that means 9,000 and more in the Keyword Tool).
Repeat the process for all of your keywords and write down the traffic estimates.
Next we’ll see which keywords are realistic to compete for. For that we go back to Google and search for each of our keywords in quotes (phrase match).
Two things to look for here, the number of result pages (93,900 in this case) and the ads. If you see any ads for the keyword, that’s a good sign and it means that there’s a commercial intent in those searches for this keyword. The result pages is the main factor to decide if you want to compete for this keyword and anything under 150,000-100,000 means you can compete pretty easily. The less pages you see, the less competition there is and the easier it is to get your traffic. In this case 93,900 competing pages is a pretty good number.
But that’s not all. We want to also see if there’s any chance for us to get on page one. To see that, let’s search for our keyword again only this time without the quotes, as our target searchers would. There are few things to look for here:
- How many results have the keyword in the title? You want to see at least one that hasn’t got it, the less the better. In case of “slippers for women” there are only 2 that have the full keyword – that’s a good sign.
- How many back-links each page has. To find out this you will have to search for each result page in Yahoo (I’ll explain why) in the following format (changing the url and the domain name respectively): link:http://www.example.com/result-page.htm -site:example.com
- The PR of each site of the results. To do that, install the Google Toolbar, if you haven’t yet and go to the home page of each site (note, the homepage, not the page from search results, unless it’s one and the same). You want to see at least 2-3 sites that have a PR of 3 or less.
Note that you have to use Yahoo to look up the number of back-links, beacause Google gives little information about it. Also, all this information can be retrieved faster if you use FireFox and the free SEO for FireFox extension. I recommend using that to save a lot of time.
Once you have all that information, you can decide whether to compete to rank in Google for this keyword or to move on. If the keyword meets all criteria above, you should get to page one easily. For example, “slippers for women” that I used meets all criteria perfectly and therefore is a very good keyword to work with. Which is quite surprising, because I didn’t prepare it before writing this post and discovered it on the fly. Just shows that there are thousands of niches and probably millions of keywords that are literally gold mines.
That’s it for the first post in the series, hope it helps. I’m pretty sure that these same guidelines will be used in Niche Socializer only of course in much more detail. They are pretty standard and work every time. The important thing is to know what kind of audience you want to target from the start, and look for those keywords that these people would type into Google.



