1. Paragraphs are too long/walls of text 📚 Many of the sites didn't seem to practice actually splitting up their paragraphs, many writing in a news style with paragraphs of 4-10 sentences! This is a problem because then the mobile reading experience SUCKS! Try reading your own site on your mobile. Does it feel difficult to scan read and keep your eye fixed where you're trying to read? With huge paragraphs, most likely yes. Instead, write 1-2 sentence paragraphs! Use bold to highlight big points while you're at it!. Not only does this make the article much easier to read, but it also puts your site in a better optimization for ADS (that most people want to get revenue from). More spaces between words equal more space for advertisement placement. Better UX, better revenue. 2. Font sizes are too small! 🙁 Plenty of sites had small font sizes. It seems that they perhaps just use one font size across all versions. You should be looking to use at least 18px font size, 21px max. This helps mobile readability, which keeps users on page longer. 3. Confusing or messy category hierarchy! 🤷♂️ Some sites had terribly confusing categories. Or they used multiple categories per post. Or just too many overall! In order to give users, and Google, a simple and understandable hierarchy you should try to prioritize grouping your content into just a handful of selective categories. It doesn't matter if a post is relevant to multiple categories, pick the top-most relevant. Don't have too many categories. Instead, help users and G understand what your site is about along 5-8 main categories. 4. Tags being used like tic-tacs! 🔖 Several sites just used tags like they were dollar bills. Easy to spend. Use tags to group together relevant content, but again only a few per post (max), to make tags a genuinely useful UX add-on. Otherwise, don't use at all and deindex! 5. Too few images 🌅 A few sites only fit the bare minimum of adding a featured image per post. There's a much better opportunity if you take the time to add several images per post. Like under each H2 if you can. In a perfect world, photos you take yourself. Use alt tags! 6. Not optimizing mobile experience 📱 Again on the mobile issue, you NEED to view your own site on mobile and answer a few UX questions yourself: - Is there actually page content above the fold or do I have to scroll? - Is the header so FAT it takes up half the fold? I realized that many of the sites were making these same (simple) mistakes and missing out on the best their site could offer users. Make users happy = make Google happy. So it seemed only right to share this with everyone. Optimize all of these and you'll see improvement! 👊 That's a wrap! If you enjoyed this thread: https://twitter.com/NicheCampus/status/1536440600492384257
The calculation itself is not complicated, a simple formula: * Net Worth = the value of all your assets minus the sum of all your liabilities. The tricky part is knowing how to plug in the right numbers. So how to work it out? --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1. Make a list of all your assets and all your liabilities. 2. Assign a current market value to your assets. Your house, your car, your investments... If you had to sell them all today, how much would you get? This is the value of your assets for the Net Worth calculation. 3. For all your liabilities, find how much you would have to pay off today to get rid of them. How much is left to pay on your mortgage, what balance do you have on your credit cards... If all your creditors came in today saying they wanted to get what you owe them, how much would it be? That's the sum of your liabilities you need to know. 4. Now, subtract the sum of your liabilities from the value of your assets. The result is your Net Worth. Check this tweet here: https://twitter.com/sumioapp/status/1555131545471488005?s=20&t=0drL0ysqLYbVRz3WnXriAA
I'm working on an affiliate niche website for Women fashion category and lots of keywords are already indexed on Google. Now I don't understand like why my revenue is very very low. If anyone here who can help me figure out exactly what method or practice I need to implement to generate a good amount of monthly revenue. Check my website here https://www.dtashion.com
1) I’m doing SEO for around 8 years now and always experiment on new ways to do stuff This also means I’m started a few sites already (most failed) A handful of them succeeded, with my ‘biggest’ win so far is selling a site for double my yearly salary at this point 2) But this story is for another thread 😄 I prefaced this as an advanced tactic because you already need to have skin in the game to pull it off When I decided on the niche for my new project I knew that I could have success quite fast 6-12 months and I’m golden but … 3) I wanted faster results Aged domain? Could work but I couldn’t find a great fit So I tried something else If already got an authority site in a different niche This was my leverage 4) I produced a lot of content for the new niche and published it on my old ‘authority’ site Enough to build topical authority (or a topic cluster 🤷🏼♂️) I’ve waited a bit and the first rankings started to settle in 5) I let them ‘stew’ for a while and let them get cozy in the serps While I waited I produced more content for the new niche and designed the new site 6) After a few weeks (like 6 days ago) I copied them over to the new site and optimised them a bit further TOC, more images, better structure — stuff like that As soon as I was done I redirected all 23 articles to the new domain 7) I was very curious how well Google will react to this But it looks like Google’s okay with it 8) Some of them dropped and I last a few valuable rankings (temporarily 🥸) But most stayed at their position more or less There’s still a big ? If they stay or I get kicked out of the serps … 9) Currently it seems to work and is a nice ‘hack’ to skip the dreaded Google sandbox I’m happy with the result 🙌🏼 10) If you found this thread valuable I’d appreciate a RT and press the ‘follow’ button while you’re at it. Thanks for reading! ☀️ Check more here: https://twitter.com/saintvienna/status/1537114478738870273?s=20&t=hckMsDVO_RQymqrUvp385Q
1. PDF Drive PDF Drive is your search engine for PDF files. Today, there are 80,422,827 eBooks for you to download for free. 🔗 https://pdfdrive.com 2. TinyPNG TinyPNG uses smart lossy compression techniques to reduce the file size of your WEBP, JPEG, and PNG files. 🔗 https://tinypng.com 3. SmallPDF All the tools you’ll need to be more productive and work smarter with documents. 🔗 https://smallpdf.com 4. Photpea Photopea is a web-based photo and graphics editor. It is used for editing, making illustrations, web design, or converting different image formats. 🔗 https://photopea.com 5. Quillbot QuillBot's paraphrasing tool helps millions of people rewrite and enhance any sentence, paragraph, or article using state-of-the-art AI. 🔗 https://quillbot.com 6. Freenom Freenom is the world's first and only free domain provider. 🔗 https://freenom.com 7. Mega 20GB of Free cloud storage. Reliable Storage and Fast Transfers. 🔗 https://mega.io 8. WeTransfer WeTransfer is the simplest way to send your files around the world. Share large files and photos. Transfer up to 2GB free. File sharing made easy! 🔗 https://wetransfer.com Thanks for checking this out. Check original tweet here: https://twitter.com/MakadiaHarsh/status/1553761431560011784?s=20&t=hckMsDVO_RQymqrUvp385Q
Hi Makers! This thread is dedicated to you if you are: (1) launching soon or recently launched (2) looking for beta users (3) asking for feedback on a landing page First, start by helping out another maker. You can check out their launch, give their product a review or share a comment on their launch post. Once you've helped someone else out, share your product link here and BE SPECIFIC about who your target audience is and how we can help. 😊
Hi 👋 I am working on this side project (https://quickchatbot.versoly.page) last few months and appreciate your feedback. This is Wix.com/SquareSpace etc. for Chatbots. Users Select a chatbot template for their business (food outlet/hair saloon/dentist etc.), enter data points and system auto-creates a bot which can be embedded on website and Messenger, Whatsapp etc. Thanks.
I've decided to join the $100, 30-day challenge to becoming an indie hacker. The challenge is a great way to set constraints when validating a product and growing to profitability as quickly as possible. When building my first project, I spent $4,000 manufacturing a new physical product (failed). My second project, I spent 12 months working relentlessly to build a product that wasn't validated (failed). This time, I plan to be meticulous about the way I allocate resources. By choosing to stick to a simple concept, I've created a clothing label for passionate makers like myself, called Maker Threads. There's certainly nothing innovative about a clothing label, but I'm excited to already see promising results in comparison to my past projects. Current breakdown: Spend: $35 (Shopify monthly fee) Revenue: $44 If you're a maker who's ready to get serious about monetizing your product, I'd recommend joining the challenge to see what you can achieve 🙌 If you've previously taken the 30-day maker challenge, I'd love for you to comment below and share your learnings throughout the process.
Hi makers! My cofounder and I are currently in the idea validation stage where we are still interviewing people in our target market. The problem is finding these people - we are looking to chat with people who have a lot of calls/meetings. This could be sales calls, customer discovery calls, UX design interviews, recruiting interviews, important internal meetings, etc. Would really appreciate any leads on where to find people to talk to. 🙂
We are looking to offer API access to our partners. We would like to create keys for them to interact with our system, and also manage a vault that holds their keys etc., What's an easy way to do this? Is there a product out there that I can use?
It's way easier to build an app than you think. Using a few no-code tools online, I was able to whip up a small prototype in under 5 minutes. The tool I used is called Glide (glideapps.com) and it pulls data from a google sheet to fill a few different templates. All I wanted to make was a simple app that lists all my previous live streams in one place, and I already had the past episodes listed on a google sheet, so I changed the formatting a little, plugged it in, and it worked. You can add chat functionality and more to the app, but as a simple database app it worked like magic. Plus, it's free to use and experiment with. There is one catch though, you can't then submit that app to the app store. The app functions like a basic website when you pull it up in a browser, but Glide will immediately prompt the user to add the app to your home screen. If the user does that, it functions just like you downloaded it off the app store. It's no longer in a browser, and you can even get notifications from it. That's great because it's a free way for your potential users to download your app. But that's also bad because it's atypical. It's not the normal way you download apps, so there may be a lack of professionalism there. (would love some thoughts on this) Beyond that, just imagine the possibilities? You could host parties and make an app just for that one party if you wanted to create a certain vibe. It could list attendees, and information about them so everyone can network easier. You could create a scavenger hunt using different password limitations within an app. All of these are simple ideas, yes, but you don't need to be wildly unique to make something valuable. Now, of course, there are ways to build apps with significantly more customization in design, functionality, and be able to actually publish them to the app store. A few tools you should look at are Adalo (adalo.com) and Bubble (Bubble.io) - Adalo seems more design oriented and has almost all the functionality you need, but Bubble takes it a step further, and allows for an insane amount of integrations and action calls from different tools. But, the point is, for 99% of your app ideas, you can build them very quickly without coding a single thing. You'll have to take the time to learn a few tools, but you won't have to worry about development or design. Adalo, for instance, is capable of creating and hosting a two-sided platform like UpWork, including payment, etc. Anything that's been built in some way before is likely going to be super easy to build on a no-code tool. There's a lot of power in that. I did a live stream on this, too - let me know if you're interested in seeing it!
I am an online learning enthusiast and passionate to find the most productive ways to learn online. While working on my first startup, I found for myself that the most productive way to learn is from the recommendations of other founders who made it happen. Try to find more like-minded people to share the best content together