Digital Marketing Question Answer

Thursday, 19 February 2026

What is Email Marketing?

Email Marketing

This module will enable you:

  1. What is Email?

  2. How does email work?

  3. What is Email Marketing?

  4. Types of Email Marketing?

  5. What is deliverability rate?

  6. What is Spam Filtering technology?

  7. How does spam filter works?

  8. Email marketing software’s

  9. Deliverability Metrics and Measurement


1. What is Email?

Email is short for 'electronic mail'. Similar to a letter, it is sent via the internet to a recipient. An email address is required to receive email, and that address is unique to the user. Some people use internet-based applications and some use programs on their computer to access and store emails.

2. How does email work? Email systems consist of computer servers that process and store messages on behalf of users who connect to the email infrastructure via an email client or web interface.

When someone sends an email, the message is transferred from his or her computer to the server associated with the recipient’s address, usually via a number of other servers. In more detail (please refer to the illustration on the right):
  • A user (Alice) sends an email message and connects to an SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) server as configured in her email client or Mail User Agent (MUA).
  • On the SMTP server, a Mail Transfer Agent (MTA) looks at the recipient address and looks up the domain part of the address to determine its destination.
  • After querying a Domain Name System (DNS) server for the name of the Mail eXchanger (MX) for the recipient’s domain name…
  • …the SMTP server will send the message to that server via the SMTPprotocol.
  • The receiving server will store the message and make it available to the recipient (Bob), who can access it via web, POP, or IMAP.

    400px-Email_svg
3. What is Email Marketing?

Email marketing is a form of direct marketing that uses electronic mail as a means of communicating commercial or fundraising messages to an audience. In its broadest sense, every email sent to a potential or current customer could be considered email marketing.
  • Sending emails with the purpose of enhancing the relationship of a merchant with its current or previous customers and to encourage customer loyalty and repeat business.
  • Sending emails with the purpose of acquiring new customers or convincing current customers to purchase something immediately.
  • Adding advertisements to emails sent by other companies to their customers.
4. Types of email marketing

Email marketing can be divided into two types:

a) Single Opt-in

b) Double Opt-in

What is Single Opt-in?

Single Opt-in is a process of sending emails to prospects or customers without consent. Single opt-in is also called non-permission based email marketing. In single opt-in, a user fill the web form or submit information such as email id, but there is no need of confirmation or validating the email id which use to happen in double opt-in.

Single opt-in can be done by below process:

 - ) Collecting users email id through online research.

 - ) Buying third-party data and use it for sending bulk emails. 

 - ) A user filled web form but don’t need to confirm email id.

Double Opt-in

Double Opt-In is when a user needs to confirm their sign up for an email list. This means that when a user subscribes to an email newsletter on your website, they are sent a confirmation email where they must click a button or a link that confirms their desire to be added to an email list. Only after this confirmation is the user officially added to email list.

5. What is deliverability rate?

The deliverability rate implies the ability to get into the inbox of your subscribers. But what it actually measures is the amount of sent email that received neither a hard nor soft bounce. 

6. How Spam Filters Works?

Spam filters are part of the process. If you send email, it will be filtered. 

Filter technology plays a massive role in the success of your email campaigns.

  • What is filter? 

Email filters organize email according to specific criteria. Originally, filters were designed primarily to identify spam and block it or place it in the spam folder. 

As a massage traverses from the sender to the subscriber’s inbox, various types of filters can influence deliverability and inbox placement: 

a) Gateway spam filter

c) Third party or hosted spam filter

c) Desktop spam filter

The basis of filter technology

Spam filter technology may be placed on both inbound and outbound email. Mailbox providers use both methods to help protect their customers.
 
The main types of filtering analysis

Mailbox providers look at three main aspects of mail making filtering decisions.z

1) The source of the email
2) The reputation of the sender
3) The content of the mail they send
 
1) The Source of the email
The two components that make up an email’s source are the IP address and domain.

Mailbox providers check the reputation of IP addresses sending emails on the behalf of your domains when determining whether or not to place your mail in the inbox.

There are two types of IP addresses that are relevant to marketers:

Dedicated IP address is used by a single sender or company. An IP address that is dedicated to a specific sender means that no other marketer or company is sending email from this IP address.

Shared IP address is used by multiple marketers or companies to deploy email. Because the overall reputation for the IP address is based on all mail deployed from it, the IP address reputation cannot be managed by individual sender. As a result, all senders are negatively affected if even one sender on the shared IP address is sending spam. 

In order to evaluate your IP address reputation, you need to understand how mailbox providers may be filtering your emails. 

Understanding sender permanence

Sending permanence relates to the mailing history on of an IP address. Mailbox provider will restrict the number of inbound emails they will accept from a new IP address (throttling) and often filter mail into the junk folder until they monitor consistency, legitimate volume over the IP address. 

Following are the few things to keep in mind regarding sending permanence.

Don’t run from trouble. 

You can’t escape from a poor reputation by moving to new IP address. Make the appropriate changes to your program. 

Don’t hop from one IP address to another. 

This technique is called snowshoeing. Spammers often move from one IP address to another in order to game the system. 

Warm up your new IP address

It’s important to start slowly with a low volume, in order to establish an IP address reputation. 

Maintain consistence send volume

Mailbox providers tend to filter mail when dramatic spikes in volume are observed. Once a positive reputation is achieved on an IP address, strive to maintain consistence volume levels.

Domain

A domain reputation is the sending reputation for the domain name. Some of the metrics mailbox providers are likely to use when determining domain reputation. 

Spam folder placement rate

How many times mail from this domain went into the spam folder due to IP address reputation or content filters?

Inbox placement rate

How many times mail from this domain went to the inbox?

Complaint rate

How many times a recipient marked a mail from this domain as spam?

“This is not spam” rate.

How many times a recipient went into their junk folder and marked a message from this domain as “not spam”?

2) The reputation of the sender

List Quality and subscriber complaints

The quality of your email list can have a tremendous impact on your deliverability. 

Mailbox provider monitor the addresses to which you are sending and will filter or ultimately block your mail if poor list quality is identified. There are three types of data you want to monitor within your list: 

1) Unknown Users – recipient that never existed (2%)
2) Spam Traps– Don’t belong to active users
3) Inactive subscribers – Not open, clicked or taken any action

Subscriber complaints

Mailbox providers will perceive your email as unwanted and will block your mail from the inbox. Complaints are among the most important contributors to a poor sender reputation. 

There are three ways a subscriber can register a complaint :

1) This is junk/spam button
2) Postmaster complaint
3) Filter application complaint

Authentication and other infrastructure considerations

Solid foundation (infrastructure) comprised of accurate authentication, bounce management and feedback loop processing. 

Authentication 

Authentication technology allows the receiver and mailbox provider to confirm the identity of the sender. Without authentication, your chances of being filtered or blocked by the major mailbox providers are increased.

Bounce management

When a mail server unsuccessfully attempts to send a message to another server, it will typically result in an automated email response called a bounce. Bounces contain a numeric code and a brief description that helps the sender understand why the message was not delivered.

Bounces are generally classified in two categories:

Hard bounce:  A notice that the email message did not go through to the intended recipient because of a permanent failure; for example, email to an invalid address (unknown user),  or a rejection due to spam filters. Simply sending the email again later will not result in successful delivery. If the bounce is reputation-related and the sender adjusts practices to improve reputation, resending may get the email delivered. A hard bounce code begins with a 5, such as “<subscriber@example.com> 550 Message rejected.”

Soft bounce: A notice that the email message was sent to an active address but was turned away before being delivered to the intended recipient. Often the problem is due to a temporary issue (like a server outage or full mailbox) or volume (telling the sender to slow down). The email may be successfully delivered if sent again later. A soft bounce code begins with a 4, such as “<subscriber@example.com> 421 Try again later.”

Feedback loop processing 

To help email marketers track complaints, many mailbox providers offer what is called a feedback loop (FBL). When an email recipient reports email as spam, the mailbox provider forwards that email back to the sender. Generally, mailbox providers expect that these transactions will be processed as unsubscribe requests and that the sender will research the nature of the request to reduce complaints.

3) Content: 

Content analysis technology scans every part of an email, including the header, footer, code, HTML markup, images, text color, timestamp, URLs, subject line, text-to-image ratio, language, attachments, and more. For some content filters, there is not one part of the message that the content filter ignores. Other content filters may look at only the structure of an email, or they might simply parse URLs out of the message and then reference them against blacklists.

Spam filters are an integral part of the email ecosystem. Without them, email simply wouldn’t work—billions of spam messages would overload the system. Filters are our friends; as users we appreciate when they keep unwanted mail out of our inbox but we’re also pleased to get the mail we do want. And filters are the reason that important transactional emails land in our inbox, where we can find them when we need them.

Various email marketing software available in the market.

There are many software available in the market based on varied functionality & features. The concept & process of using these software’s are almost same. The software’s are as follows:

1) SendGrid
2) Autopilot
3) Benchmark
4) Getresponse
5) MailChimp
6) Constant Contact

Here with ITCoil, we will provide your indepth coverage of Getresponse software. With GetResponse, you will be able to learn:

1) How to create campaign?
2) Adding contacts to your campaign?
3) Single opt-in & double opt-in
4) Creating templates for sending mails
5)  Integrating web forms on website to collect email information or subscribers
6) Analyzing metrics such as open rate, click rate, bounce rate & much more. 


Deliverability Metrics and Measurement

Analyzing metrics of your email program can be daunting task, but it is one of the most important aspects of email campaign. After you send relevant messages or promoting your brand through email campaign, marketers dissect the performance of email campaign and in order to do so, one must look at the advance email campaign metrics. 

Metrics can be classified into different categories depends what they actually tell you about email program. Accordingly, email metrics can be divided 16 of the important metrics into three categories: Awareness, clarity, and connection.

Metrics to enhance your email performance

Delivery rate: Calculated by dividing the volume of emails delivered by the volume of emails sent. Note: “delivered” doesn’t necessarily mean your email hit the inbox—just that it wasn’t bounced or rejected.

Inbox placement rate: Inbox placement rate measures the percentage of sent email that actually lands in the subscribers’ inbox—a far more accurate measure than delivery rate.

Bounce rate: Bounced email is the opposite of delivered email. These are the messages that fail to get delivered for any reason.

Open rate: Calculated by dividing the number of emails opened by the number of emails delivered. This metric is actually less useful than you’d think, because an email will not register as “opened” unless images are displayed in the message—either through settings or active loading

Rejected rate: Rejected email is a subset of bounced email, and includes only those messages that fail to get delivered due to reputation issues (e.g., complaints, spam traps, blacklisting).

Click-through rate: Calculated by dividing clicks by the volume of email delivered. This metric is commonly used to measure email engagement, but it is actually far less useful than click-to-open rate, discussed later.

Metrics that provide clarity around email performance

Hard bounce: Hard bounces are messages that are permanently rejected, typically due to issues with list quality (e.g., invalid email addresses or domains).

Soft bounced: Soft bounced are messages that are temporarily rejected, typically due to issues with the recipient’s mailbox or server (e.g., mailbox too full or server down).

Read rate: Read rate is similar to open rate, but it is far more accurate because it accounts for all emails viewed, regardless of image rendering

Complaint rate: Calculated by dividing the number of spam complaints by the number of emails delivered. Complaints are a strong indicator of negative engagement and this metric is useful for identifying patterns and sources of complaints, but may be distorted by deliverability issues.

Deleted before reading rate:  Measures how often a recipient deletes email without reading it. This metric provides powerful insight into the difference between subscribers who do not want to read your email and those who may just check their email infrequently.

Unsubscribe rate: Calculated by dividing the number of unsubscribes by the number of emails delivered. Be cautious of using this metric in isolation, as a declining unsubscribe rate can result from various things such as improving engagement or a decreasing inbox placement rate—two very different situations.

Metrics to evaluate subscriber connection

Click to open rate: Measured by calculating the ratio of total clicks to total opens. Click to open is the best and most accurate of the clickbased metrics, and provides valuable insight into the effectiveness of your email content and design.

“This is not spam” rate: Measures how frequently recipients click on the “This is not spam” button after an email is delivered to the spam folder. This metric is a powerful indicator of subscriber engagement.

Forwarded rate: Measures how frequently subscribers forward your email on to others. This metric is useful to gauge the virality of your content, and a high forwarded rate indicates strong subscriber engagement.

Conversion rate: Calculated by dividing the number of conversions by the number of visits. Although a strong indicator of subscriber engagement, this metric typically speaks more to the quality of landing page or website content than email content.







Sunday, 15 February 2026

Most PPC Campaigns Fail for One Reason

They're built for traffic, not conversions

A winning Google Ads account isn't about hacks or tricks, it's about structure. The exact PPC campaign structure that consistently drives leads and sales.

Intent-Based Campaign Mapping

Winning campaign begin by separating user intent, not dumping keywords together.

High-intent searches convert.

Low-intent searches educate.

If both live in one campaign, your budget leaks and performance drops fast.

Proven PPC Account Architectrue

A revenue-focused Google Ads account usually has:

  • Brand Campaigns
  • High-Intent Non- Brand Campaigns
  • Mid-Funnel / Consideration Campaigns
  • Ramarketing Campaigns
  • Each serves a different role in the funnel and gets a different bid strategy.

Protect & Convert Demand

Brand campaigns capture users already searching for you.

They deliver:
  • Highest Conversion rates
  • Lowest CPA
  • Strong Quality Scores
  • Never mix brand terms with non-brand, you'll lose visibility and control.

Where Sales Are Born

These target keywords like:
  • "service near me"
  • "best software for"
  • "pricing / cost"
  • Use tight keyword grouping, exact & phrase match, strong negatives, and conversion-focused landing pages.

Educate Before You Sell

Not all users are ready to convert.

These campaigns target:
  • Problem-aware searches
  • Comparison terms
  • Solution research queries
  • Goal: warm the user, collect leads, and feed remarketing, not force instant sales.

One Theme = One Ad Group

Forget SKAG obessinons, think thematic relevance.

Each ad group should have:
  • Closely related keywords
  • Ads written only for that intent
  • A matching landing page
  • This improves CTR, Quality Score, and CPA simultaneously.

Message Match Wins

Winning ads mirror:
  • The exact search query
  • The user's pain point
  • The landing page headline
Focus on outcomes, not features. Google rewards relevance, users reward clarity.

Structure First, Automations Second

Smart bidding works only when structure is clean.

Separate campaigns allow:
  • Accurate conversion data
  • Proper budget allocation
  • Scalable autmation
Bad structure + smart bidding = faster failure.

PPC Is a System, Not a Channel

High-performing Google Ads accounts are:
  • Strategically structured
  • Funnel-aware
  • Ruthlessly optimized
If your campaigns aren't segmented by intent, you're not running PPC, you're gambling with budget.



LLM SEO Checklist

LLM SEO Checklist(2026)



RESEARCH & KEYWORDS

Discovery Layer (How AI Finds you)

- Target question-based queries (how, why, compare, best, vs).

- Identify prompts where your brand should be cited but isn't.

- Audit where competitors are being cited by AI.

- Cover full topic journey, not single keywords.

ANSWER OPTIMIZATION

Answer Layer (How AI Use Your Content)

- Write direct answer first, explanations second.

- Include FAQ-style Q&A blocks.

- Add examples, scenarios, & comparisons.

- End sections with one quotable takeway line.

- Avoid filter (every sentence should earn its place).

AUTHORITY & TRUST

Trust Layer (Why AI Choose You)

- Show firs-hand experience, not just theory.

- Publish original insights, data, or opinions.

- Support claims with credible external sources.

- Make authorship & sources explicit & scannable.

- Timestamp insights & clearly show when content was last validated.

AI VISIBILITY & TRACKING

Retrieval/Visibility Layer (What AI Shows)

- Track AI citations & mentions across tools.

- Monitor answer inclusion, not just traffic.

- Compare AI share of voice vs competitors.

- Audit gaps between SERP & AI visibility.

- Identify which pages are repeatedly reused or cited by AI.

CONTENT STRUCTURE

Understanding Layer (How AI Interprets you)

- Open with a clear context sentence ("This page explains...").

- Use question-style headings.

- Write sections that can stand alone if quoted.

- Add a TL;DR or summary box at the top.

- Structure answers using lists, tables, definitions.

BRAND SIGNALS

Entity Layer (How AI Knows Who You Are)

- Clearly connect brand <-> people <-> topics.

- Use consistent naming across site, bios, profiles, mentions.

- Add authors bios with experience, not fluff.

- Reinforce 1-2 primary topic associations consistenty.

TECHNICAL FOUNDATION

Technical Layer (How AI Reads Your Site)

- Implement FAQ, HowTo, Article schema.

- Maintain strong Core Web Vitals & mobile ux.

- Use clean internal linking & topic clusters.

- Keep URLs, headings, & structure simple.

- Match schema & format to search intent (answer, guide, comparison).

FUTURE PROOFING

Longevity Layer (Staying Relevant Over Time)

- Focus on principles over hacks.

- Reduce dependency on trending tactics.

- Update context, not just timestamps.

- Publish unique stats & data.

- Build fewer pages with higher citations potential.

- Use hybrid formats (text + visual + structured). 

Saturday, 14 February 2026

8 Steps To Rank in Google AI Overviews

8 Steps To Rank in Google AI Overviews


1. Find Long Tail Informational Queries

Target Complex, multi-part questions that trigger AI Overviews 

2. Structure Your Content For Extraction

Make every paragraph self-contained and scannable

3. Add Schema Markup

Implement FAQ, Article, Product and Review structured data

4. Create Unique, Expert-Driven, Content

Include original research, expert quotes and first-hand experience

5. Ensure Your Site is Crawlable

Check robots.txt, fix broken links and don't block AI bots

6. Refresh Your Outdated Content

Update stats, add new subtopics, and show recent modifications

7. Build Authority with Backlinks & Mentions

Get cited by trusted sources in your industry

8. Track Your AI Overview Rankings

Use the AI Visibility Toolkit to monitor performance across AI Overviews

8 Google Analytics Hacks

 8 Google Analytics Hacks Needs to Know for SEO Hacks 

(Only Experts Know These)

Google Analytics Hacks

Think you know Google Analytics?
This guide shares 8 smart tricks that experts use to find SEO wins faster.
These simple hacks will help you spot hidden insights and boost your SEO performance.
Let’s go.....

1. Use Session Source + Medium

Combine the “Session Source” and “Medium” dimensions to see where your organic traffic is really coming from.
These are often missed in basic reports but can bring quick SEO gains if you start targeting them properly.




2. Create  Custom  Funnel

Create a custom funnel to track how organic users move from blog pages to your product or service pages.
This helps you understand which content guides users closer to conversion and where they drop off so you can fix gaps and improve the journey.



3. Use “Session Start Page”

Check the “Session Start Page” dimension to find out which pages users land on first from search.
This helps you spot hidden entry points that bring in high-quality traffic and conversions even if those pages aren’t your top-ranking ones.



4. Set Up Alerts for Traffic Changes

Use GA4’s “Insights” feature to set up alerts for sudden drops or spikes in organic traffic.
This helps you react quickly to ranking issues or unexpected growth. You’ll get an email notification when something important happens.



5. Use Path Exploration

Path exploration in GA4 lets you see how users move through your site after arriving from search.
You can trace their steps from landing pages to key pages like services or checkout, helping you understand what’s working and what needs fixing.



6. Link GA4 with Google Search Console

Connecting GA4 with GSC gives you a full view of your SEO performance.
You can see which keywords bring traffic, how they perform on landing pages, and where you need to improve to get better results.



7. Connect GA4 to Looker Studio

Link GA4 with Looker Studio to build clear, custom dashboards and track long-term trends.
It makes reporting easier and faster, so you can spot patterns and share insights without digging through raw data.



8. Group Landing Pages by Content Type

Group your landing pages into categories like blogs, product pages, or service pages.
This helps you see which type of content brings the most traffic and conversions, so you can focus more on what works best.


Wednesday, 27 February 2019

Google Analytics

what is sessions? 30 min or change page of same site
what is user?
what is pageviews?
what is page/session?
what is avg. session duration?
what is bounce rate?
what is exit rate?
what is new sessions?

Friday, 13 April 2018

Should You Spend Time on Meta Tags?


Anytime you do a Google search, what do you see? Well, of course you see a listings page, but you also see a title and description of each website. The title and description are meta tags, which Google pulls from your website. There are a few different meta tags. The title and description that I described above. As well as a meta keywords tag. A meta keywords tag is where you tell search engines what keyword the page is related to. This meta tag is useless and search engines ignore it. Now when you first create a new web page, don't spend too much time on your meta tags. Instead of stuffing keywords into them, focus on making them appealing so people click on them. The reason you don't want to spend too much time on your meta tags is that new pages tend not to rank well on search engines. Once your page is 6 months old you'll notice that it will get more traffic. From there you'll want to log into Google Search Console and see what keywords Google is driving to that page. You can then integrate those keywords into your title and meta description and over time your rankings will climb higher. Just make sure when you modify your meta tags you keep the user in mind. They should ideally contain keywords and be appealing when people read them.

Wednesday, 11 April 2018

SEO For Beginners: 3 Powerful SEO Tips to Rank #1 on Google in 2018

Do you want to rank number one on Google in 2018? Well, I hate to say it, it's tough. Ten years ago it used to be easy, but now it's hard. And you know what? Unless you watch this whole video, you're not going to be able to rank number one on Google. There are three ways you can rank #1 on Google today. #1: Focus on content Google has this update called Hummingbird, and with Hummingbird, websites who just have content on everything won't do as well as sites which focus on one single niche and are super thorough. You want to be VERY thorough with your SEO content. Poke holes in your content and fill them all up, so then that way people are like, "This is the end all site "that you should end up reading "if you're interested in dating online." #2: Optimize your title tag and your meta description Have you ever done a Google search, and noticed that every time you do it, there is this link at the top, and then there's this one sentence with a link at the top is called the title tag. And the description below is called the meta description. Now think of it this way, if you search for the phrase online dating, and you don't see the word online dating in neither the title or the description, are you going to click on the result? Well if you are, there's something wrong, because why would you click on a result that isn't related to what you're looking for? In addition to that, have you ever searched for a term like online dating? And have you ever noticed that the word isn't in the title or description? That's because Google tracks who's clicking on what listing, and they've learned that when a keyword is in the listing, that same keyword that you're searching for, they know you're way more likely to click through. So in your title tag and your meta description, make sure you include the keyword. But you can't just add the keyword, "online dating," right? The easiest way and what I would do and I wish it was this simple; I will just put "online dating, online dating, online dating, online dating." If I could put it 20 times so people would know that the article is on online dating, I wish I would get more clicks. But it's not that simple. Yes you have to include the keyword in your title and your description, but it has to be appealing. If it doesn't flow in a sentence, it's not easy to read, and it's not appealing or evoking curiosity, no one is gonna click through. #3: Use Google Search Console Did you know that Google gives you a tool that teaches you how to rank number one on Google? Yes I know that sounds ridiculous but it is true, and it's called Google Search Console. If you're not already a user of it, sign up. It doesn't cost a dollar. You're missing out if you're not using it. I can't emphasize that enough. So now that you're using Google Search Console...give it a few days because it takes some time to populate data. You'll see a screen that shows Search Analytics and this shows you all the pages on your website that are getting you traffic. But the cool thing about Google Search Console is they also show you which articles are getting impressions. Take all the keywords you're getting impressions for and start adding them to your copy. Now we have an article on Instagram, and it teaches you how to get over 300 targeted Instagram followers per day. The article is around 10,000 words. When I first wrote that article, it wasn't 10,000 words, it was roughly 2,500. I went to Google Search Console, I saw all the people that are searching for terms related to the article, I added them within that article. I made it more thorough and you know what? My SEO traffic more than tripled to that article. Yes it is that simple. And when I made that change, it didn't happen right away, but I noticed the results within 50 days. That's not a long time. Now that you've learned these three tips, I challenge you in which I want you to take these tactics and implement them, and then after you implement them, in the next 45 days I want you to leave a comment with your results. Because if you're not doing well, that means I'm not happy.

Neil Patel's Top 10 Rules For Success

He's best known as a co-founder of customer analytics platform KISSMetrics and visual analytics company, Crazy Egg. The Wall Street Journal calls him a top influencer on the web, Forbes says he is one of the top 10 online marketers, and Entrepreneur Magazine says he created one of the 100 most brilliant companies in the world. In addition to successfully starting new business ventures, he's a well-regarded writer and blogger - his work has been featured in TechCrunch and Entrepreneur Magazine. He's one of the most inspiring entrepreneurs in business, He's Neil Patel, and here is my take on his Top 10 Rules for Success.

PATEL'S RULES

1. Take growth seriously The Wall Street Journal calls him a top influencer on the web. 2. Execute fast Forbes says he is one of the top 10 online marketers. 3. Learn from mistakes Entrepreneur Magazine says he created one of the 100 most brilliant companies in the world. 4. Flip around your funnel He was recognized as a top 100 entrepreneur under the age of 30 by President Obama. 5. Focus, focus, focus! He has also been awarded Congressional Recognition from the United States House of Representatives. 6. Get personal Today he's working on creating a billion dollar company. 7. Love what you do He helps companies like Amazon, NBC, GM, HP and Viacom grow their revenue. 8. Hire loyal people In addition to founding companies, he's a well-regarded writer and blogger. 9. Be consistent He was recognized as one of the top 100 entrepreneurs under the age of 35 by the United Nations. 10. Make signing up easy He speaks at over 25 conferences per year on entrepreneurship and Internet marketing.

Tuesday, 10 April 2018

3 GUARANTEED Ways Stand Out On Social Media

The world is becoming increasingly hectic and chaotic. How do you stand out when there's much noise out there?
Especially in the world of social media marketing. Today I'm going to share with you three ways you can stand out in a hectic world. The first strategy for social media marketing is to story tell. No matter what, it doesn't matter if Facebook changes their algorithm or something new comes out like another social network that competes with Instagram or Snapchat, the one thing that people love, no matter what is storytelling. If you can tell a story that hooks people, drives them through an emotional roller coaster, you'll do extremely well. The second tip I have for social media marketing is to be unique. Don't go out there and be like "Hmmm. Why isn't my content doing well on Facebook? Why isn't it doing well on Instagram? Oh, it's because their algorithms, they're making it harder." Yes, they are making it harder, but that doesn't mean you still can't do well. If you can't figure out how to do well on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, there's one thing that's typically in common, and it doesn't have much to do with their algorithms. It has everything to do with your content. Yes, if you write amazing content, no matter what, or amazing videos, or amazing podcasts, you're going to get traction no matter how difficult or how strict they make their algorithms. So instead of worrying about "Hey, Facebook's gonna do this with their algorithm," you can't control that. But you know what you can control? How good and amazing your content is. And if no-one's liking or sharing it, you can't blame Facebook for everything. You can't blame Instagram. The only person you can blame is yourself. So after you do those two things, I have one little last piece of advice for you if you want to stand out from the crowd in this noisy and hectic world of social media marketing. Be part of the community. I know that may sound simple. You've heard it before. Everyone tells you-you've got to participate, you've got to be involved in the community, but don't do it because I'm telling you to do it. Do it because you love people. You love helping them out. When you care for people, you want to get them results, even if they don't have enough money to pay you. That's okay. And it's a good thing, because when you help people, I believe in karma, and it will end up coming around. And, on top of that, by helping other people and participating in the community, and going above and beyond, people are gonna be like "Oh, wow, David's an awesome person, Sue's amazing, You have to participate and help people in social media marketing. It's something that you can't take for granted, and most people are like "Yeah, I'm gonna participate, I'm gonna respond to comments." They do it for a day or two, and then they're like "Ah, this is time-consuming. I don't see the ROI in it." Not everything's about an ROI in marketing. Helping people, building goodwill, and caring about your potential customers, it does wonders for you. If you follow these three tips, you'll do extremely well and stand out in a hectic world. You're not going to see results tomorrow, you're not going to see results in the next 30 or 60 days, but you give it a year, and you notice gradually, week over week, month over month, you're going to be growing. So if you liked this video, like, comment, share. I do appreciate it. And if I can ever doing anything to help you out, genuinely, even if it's giving you some advice, I don't care for the money, just leave a comment below, and I will do my best to try to help you out and answer all your questions.

Top 3 Ways to Generate More Organic Search Traffic | Content Marketing Secrets!

You know when people tell you, "Write content. Use content marketing, and you'll get a ton of traffic" They're lying. That's not how it works. Just because you write content, it doesn't mean you're going to generate any more visitors. Today, I'm going to share with you how to write content that generates traffic. See, if you can write content on anything and generate traffic, then everyone would be successful when it comes to SEO and content marketing, but that's not the case. If you don't want to be one of those people who's writing content and getting no results, you need to do a few things. #1: Go to ahrefs. Put in your competitor URLs. When you put in your competitor URLs, you can see a list of all their most popular pages. Go to every single one of those pages, and write better content than what they have written. #2 Once you have done that, the next thing you need to do is put in that specific URL that your competitor had that you rewrote and made way better, so, if their article explained ten ways to double their search traffic, you explained 101 ways to double your search traffic. Then, what you want to do is see who links to them and hit up every single one of those people with an email that goes something like this. Hey John, I noticed that you linked out to Harry and his article on ten ways to double your search traffic. I have an article that's way more thorough. It's called 101 Ways to Double Your Search Traffic. Let me know if you want to check it out. Cheers, David. Once they end up emailing you back saying, "Yeah, I would love to check it out," you want to email 'em back saying, "Here it is. "Cheers, your name." It's that simple. When you start sending that email template, you're going to get more links, and, eventually, you're going to rank for the same terms your competitors have and even outrank them, because your content's way better and more thorough, which Google promotes with their hummingbird algorithm. #3 The last step I have for you go to Buzzsumo and do the same exact thing. Type in your competitor's URL, and you'll see what's popular from a social perspective, where they're getting their Facebook traffic, their Twitter traffic, their LinkedIn traffic. You take their most popular articles. You write way better ones. If they had an article on ten ways to do something, you write an article on 101 ways to do something. Once you follow all those tips, your content will be way more amazing.


Saturday, 16 December 2017

Articles submission or benefits

An article submission is one of the oldest link building strategies many people tend to underestimate the power of this method in improving the link popularity of website. The process of article submission involves publishing informational articles to online article directories.

Classified submission or benefits


Image submission or benefits


Search engine submission or benefits


Link juice


Do follow or No follow


Link Wheel


External Links


Link baiting


What is Email Marketing?

Email Marketing This module will enable you: What is Email? How does email work? What is Email Marketing? Types of Email Marketing? What is ...