13 Content Marketing Hacks That Will Help You Attract More Clients - Blog Trần Hiếu - Mãi mãi tinh thần phụng sự

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13 Content Marketing Hacks That Will Help You Attract More Clients

Are you having a hard time gaining visitors and attracting clients with your content marketing efforts? Don’t worry, you’re not the only one. The majority of the bloggers out there don’t know how to attract clients through content marketing.
I’m going to show you 13 ways you can growth-hack your content marketing, so you can increase your search traffic by 206% and attract more clients for your online business.
The truth is that you can increase your search traffic by 13.15% in about 30 days, if you implement these tips. And do you know what the end results of that look like?You will…
  • Attract more clients
  • Increase your email list size
  • Generate more valuable comments
  • Encourage repeat visitors to your blog
  • Build your personal brand online
  • And much more…
With a solid plan and strategy, you’ll be way ahead of your competitors. So lets get started:

1. Brainstorm viral ideas

What makes certain ideas go viral, while others go unnoticed? Jonah Berger, Associate Professor of Marketing at the Wharton School, was right when he said that practical, useful content that evokes high arousal emotions (anger, fear loss, pain, laughter and so on) get shared the most. In fact, when your content makes people laugh or otherwise feel entertained, they’re more likely to share your idea.
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Gone are the days when we wrote content that appealed to Google and other search engines. These days, your focus should be on creating helpful and emotionally resonant content, which your target audience will benefit from. At that point, they’ll help you spread your message.
You may not nail a viral idea every single time, but just a few viral ideas in a month will drive lots more qualified visitors and leads to your online business.
This means that you have to stand out in the crowd, or your link will be drowned.
Start a brainstorming session by answering these questions:
  • Do you have a trending idea that people will want to know about?
  • Is your idea funny?
  • Will your idea evoke controversy in your industry?
  • Will your idea provoke an emotional response in readers — e.g., pain, pleasure, anger, surprise, etc.?
  • Can you add video, an infographic, or attention-grabbing images?
  • Of the blog posts and articles you’ve already written, which kind typically receive the most shares?
  • Do your readers prefer short blog posts or longer pieces of content?
  • How easily can you connect with industry influencers and ask them to share your content?
  • What’s the best day/time to publish your content?
Remember that content with a positive flavor or emotions will perform better online. When you consistently elicit positive emotions, people will naturally be attracted to you.
Another approach is to avoid reinventing the wheel. Identify the content writers, website owners, and industry bloggers, who tend to dominate with every piece of content that they create. Find their best performing articles, then leverage their topics and headline styles to craft something more powerful and enticing.
To find viral content in your industry, follow these two steps:
Step #1: Go to Buzzsumo. Type in your keyword (e.g., “on-page SEO”) and click “go.”
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Step #2: Check your results to find the headlines that got the most social shares.
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Buzzsumo shows us that in the past year, the topic “on-page SEO” was extremely popular. Over 10,000 people shared articles about it on Twitter.
Remember that most topics which went viral didn’t explode overnight. The vast majority of them take time to gain traction, which is often sustainable in the long run.
The same virality rule applies to videos and other kinds of content. Sustainability is far better than a viral surge that drops overnight.
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Going back to our list of headlines, the next step is to model your headline after one of those viral headlines. Study it, then craft a better one:
Original viral headline #1: 5 More Brain Triggers to Drive Conversions on Your Website or Landing Page
Fresh and clickable headlines:
  • 15 Powerful Brain Triggers to Drive Conversions on Your Website
  • 13 Foolproof Brain Triggers That Will Increase Your Conversion Rate
Original viral headline #2: Illustrated Guide to Advanced On-page Topic Targeting SEO
Fresh and clickable headlines:
  • The Definitive Guide to Advanced On-page SEO That Works
  • How an Illustrated On-page SEO Guide Will Improve Your Search Rankings
Upworthy uses emotional triggers and a sense of urgency to inspire its loyal readers to share links on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn.
Take a look at some recent Upworthy headlines that went viral:
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Here’s another example of a successful topic that went viral from Copyblogger Media.
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2. Write in-depth articles

It’s just a plain and simple fact that Google loves in-depth articles. Your potential clients also love them.
The term “in-depth” means giving careful consideration to all details and aspects of a subject. This means that you extensively research your topic, and then carefully craft a 2000+ word article.
serpIQ gives us a clearer picture of the content length of pages that show up in Google’s top 10. Articles of 2,000 words or more tend to perform very well in search results.
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So by consistently publishing in-depth articles, you’ll not only improve your search traffic and rankings, but you’ll also get more social shares and grow your online business.
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In-depth articles convert better, too. Marketing Experiments discovered that long-form copy converted 30% higher than a shorter version on its homepage. Further,Conversion Rate Experts increased CrazyEgg’s conversion rate by 64%, just by using longer copy while retaining the same message.
Here are a few things you should keep in mind when writing in-depth articles:
  • Pick a subject/topic that’s broad – e.g., web traffic, blogging – then dive deep into it.
  • Target a long-tail keyword in your headline – e.g., How to Build a Successful Blog.
  • Research current, accurate data to back up facts and opinions.
  • Make your content extremely interesting.
  • Add relevant images, graphics, videos, or slide presentations.
  • Collect email leads in the body of the article through the content upgradestrategy.
  • Link out to relevant authority sites.
  • Include a call-to-action (e.g., download a free report, opt-in to an email list,or buy a product)
  • Notify the blog authors mentioned in the article and ask them to share.
We’ve been creating in-depth articles for KISSmetrics’ readers from the beginning, growing monthly readers from 0 to 350,000.
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3. Craft clickable and sharable headlines

Ted Nicholas, the renowned direct-response copywriter, once said that “preparing a powerful headline is responsible for at least 73%” of his success in converting readers into buyers.
If you want to capture your audience’s attention, then you’ve got to pay serious attention to your headlines.
You have roughly 8 seconds to grab readers’ attention before losing them to your competitors.
Remember that every piece of content you write has just one purpose – to get the reader to read the next sentence, and then the next. That’s why you need magnetic headlines that compel your audience to click and read.
Here’s how you can write a clickable and sharable headline:
1). Add a touch of curiosity: Upworthy regularly publishes perfect examples of clickable and sharable headlines. No wonder their posts routinely get over 500,000 Facebook shares:
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If you’re a blogger or consultant, writing clickable headlines will help you make agreat first impression on your potential clients.
As they read your headlines and the content that follows, they begin equating your content’s quality with your value. They start to believe that if they hire you, you’ll deliver the same results for their businesses.
Clients aren’t really after more page views or a decreased bounce rate. Clients want results that will generate more money.
Thanks in part to those headlines, Upworthy gets more than 88 million unique visitors a month.
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4. Test call to action buttons

What’s a call to action?
Here’s a concise definition:
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That last line – “a retail advertisement or commercial without a call-to-action is considered incomplete and ineffective” – means that a call-to-action is a necessary element in every article, blog post, video, and ebook you publish.
You can easily boost your conversion rate by 13% or more just by testing your call-to-action buttons. That alone can make a whole lot of difference to your overall client acquisition rate.
According to Unbounce, “the call to action represents a tipping point, betweenbounce and conversion.” In other words, if you don’t want your readers to exit your landing page, then pay attention to the shape, size, and color of your call-to-action button.
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There are different ways to create an A/B test for call-to-action buttons, but the objective is to determine the best color, size, shape, and copy that will inspire more people to take the desired action.
Here are some examples of effective call-to-action buttons:
i). Square Register: Square is a point-of-sale payment solution used mostly by U.S. retailers. Their call-to-action button is white with a cyan background. The color for the text is blue.
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Takeaway: Test different button colors, but don’t use lots of different colors that will seem garish to readers. Split test in order to determine the optimum size/color combination for your prospects.
ii). GiftRocket: GiftRocket is an online gift merchant that uses a call-to-action strategy to engage users and inspire them to click.
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Takeaway: The call to action button doesn’t urge customers to “buy” or “subscribe” — rather, it nudges them to “Send a GiftRocket” to their loved ones.
The landing page copy also has a handful of strong verbs (action words), and is written in the active voice. And the image on the left side further explains the “gifts.”
You can take a page from the GiftRocket “book” and appeal to customers and prospects (most of whom detest feeling “sold to”) by creating call-to-action copy that isn’t pushy
Here are some generic call-to-action buttons you should avoid, as well as somegreat ideas for alternative copy:
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Small tweaks work wonders in call-to-action buttons. When Michael Aagaard split-tested “Order information” vs. “Get information” on a call-to-action button, the result surprised everyone: “Get information” increased the conversion rate by 38.26%.
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5. Leverage your “above the fold” area

Above-the-fold is that area in your site that’s visible when the page first loads, before the user scrolls down. Recent studies show that people will scroll down a web page, but they’ll spend 80% of their time above the fold and only a measly 20% below the fold.
Always place important elements that will attract potential clients above the fold.
I always place the most important elements on my blog, such as the menu bar, my opt-in form, content headlines and excerpts, and call-to-action buttons, above the fold:
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Try to avoid using sliders above the fold, except where there’s a good reason for it. Sliders disrupt your readers and potential clients, and don’t perform as well.
Potential clients don’t want to waste their time looking for important information on your blog. If you’re a freelancer or SEO consultant, make it easy for your prospects to find your services page quickly.
If you place important information above the fold, you’ll definitely get more views for that info, and convert more visitors into paying clients as well
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Ben Hunt increased his click-through rate significantly. He got 680 people to click his above the fold promotion, while only 109 people responded to the promotion when it was placed beneath in the side column.
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Most smart internet marketers reserve their above-the-fold section for list-building elements. That’s exactly what David Garland did with his flagship blog, The Rise to the Top.
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6. Use advanced guest blogging

There are basically two ways to build an exceptional blog audience through content:
i). Writing in-depth articles on your blog and telling the right people about them
ii). Writing amazing guest posts on other people’s relevant blogs
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While you can build authority links through guest bloggingdon’t make link-building your focus. Bloggers can add a nofollow tag to your link, thus keeping Google from passing SEO value to your site.
(I recently wrote a post on how to increase search traffic without building links. It became popular, because a lot of people were sick and tired of chasing links.)
GrooveHQ documented how they reached 1 million people by guest blogging onKISSmetricsAngelHackBufferOnstartupsShopify and other sites.
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When it comes to guest blogging, my best advice is to do it to build your audience, not to get links or improve your rankings. Of course, in the process of guest blogging, you’ll benefit from natural organic rankings and increased brand mentions. In fact, you can guest blog your way to success.
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The most important benefit of guest posting is the opportunity to give value to a fresh audience and inspire them to pay your site a visit.
Danny Iny became the Freddy Krueger of blogging in 2013, largely by implementing a guest blogging strategy. He built a six-figure online marketing business from scratch. Today, he’s one of the renowned experts online with a highly popular blog.
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If you’re ready to improve your guest blogging game, there is an advanced strategy that can help you acquire more clients. Here’s how it works:
Step #1: Research relevant blogs. A relevant blog could simply be any blog that attracts the ideal people you want.
Go to Google and type in “online marketing tips for beginners.”
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If you’re a freelance website designer, for instance, a relevant blog to you is a small business or startup blog, not a fellow designer’s blog. People reading small business and startup blogs will probably need a website designed for them at some point. Your fellow designer doesn’t have that same need.
Step #2: Gauge the site’s social influence – The fact that a web page is ranking well in Google doesn’t necessarily mean that it will drive a lot of search traffic to your site.
You also want to know how many people are likely going to share your guest post on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, etc. To find this out, plug the blog URL (e.g.SearchEngineJournal.com) into Buzzsumo and check how many social shares each of their recent blog posts generated:
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You can see that in the past 6 months, the blog posts that were published on Search Engine Journal generated over 2,000 tweets and Facebook shares.
This means that when you submit your guest post on this blog, you should expect a decent amount of instant traffic, social shares, authority links, and long-term search traffic.
Step #3: Look through the target site’s archives for older posts covering your topic.
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If you find a blog post that was well received, you’ve found a goldmine. Hack it.Craft a better headline. Improve on the existing idea and write a more in-depth blog post, taking advantage of the content upgrade strategy.
The above screenshot is a blog post that was written in March 2014. It had 22 comments and generated 484 social shares. But the headline isn’t really benefit-oriented. So let’s rewrite it:
Original headline: Contrast in Web Visuals: Why You Looked at This Title First
Freshly crafted headline for your guest posts:
  • How Web Visuals Influence Your Blog Readers to Click (Backed By Science)
  • 15 Scientific Studies Showing Why Web Visuals Attract Blog Readers
Now that you’ve found an idea that will make for a great guest post, write outreach emails to connect with influencers who will promote your guest posts.
This simple but advanced guest blogging strategy can help you generate lots of qualified traffic, attract new clients and achieve improved and sustained search rankings.

7. Use A.I.D.A. to get more comments

A while ago, I shared a case study of how I generated $25,000 with 249 comments. That story surprised many, but it’s true. High-value comments can drive traffic to your blog, as well as help you establish a relationship with a blogger.
Comment keyboard key. Finger
The 249 comments I left on other blogs sent me 3,973 visitors and six consulting leads. I was able to turn one of those leads into a $25,000 corporate speaking gig. In a nutshell, comments helped me acquire a new client.
You can create the same kind of results by turning the strategy around. Instead of leaving comments on other blogs, allow other people to comment on your blog posts. A quick growth hack you can implement today that yields great results relies on the AIDA strategy.
AIDA stands for:
  • A – Capture Attention
  • I – Build Interest
  • D- Create a strong Desire
  • A – Call to Action
When you use the AIDA strategy, you’ll not only get valuable comments that can help motivate your ideal clients to contact you, but you’ll also get improved search rankings from the added text.
The more in-depth your content is, the more search traffic and rankings you’ll generate.
Remember that 78.82% of blog readers prefer to read “how to” articles that contain tips and tricks for achieving a specific result.
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Here’s how to use the AIDA. strategy to write content that readers will enjoy and that will prompt them to leave valuable comments:
i). Capture Attention: There are two places to capture attention on your blog. The first is the overall design, but the most crucial is your headline.
If your site design is weak, but your headline is strong, you may not attract tons of people. But a design that’s user-friendly, professional, and well-branded, coupled with a catchy headline, will inspire people to click the headline and read further.
Derek Halpern uses curiosity to capture attention on his headlines:
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Note: Use these headlines as a model to help you craft a better one. For example, let’s make the second headline even more clickable:
  • The Psychology of Your Customers That You Didn’t Know
  • How to Tap Into The Psychology of Your Customers and Earn More
ii). Build Interest: You build interest in your blog post by starting off with a strong and persuasive introduction.
For example, Steve Kamb, founder of NerdFitness, usually starts his blog posts with an emotional question that tends to challenge the status quo:
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Asking the right questions will prompt people to react in the comment box and share their own worldview. Open-ended questions give enough room for people to respond fully to any question they’ve been asked.
Starting your introduction with a question will get more people interested in your content. Then, once the interest is there, the desire to work with you or remain loyal fans increases.
Your introduction should also be brief and to the point. Remember, you can’t get readers to opt-in, buy, or do extra work on the intro, but you can use the intro to draw them inside the body, where you convert them.
iii). Create Desire: Good copywriters understand how to create desire for a particular product. One method for doing this uses subheads, bullet points, and quotes.
You can do the same. These elements will make your content easily digestible, so that your ideal client will fall in love with it.
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Use bullet points to format your content and your readers will find difficult topics easier to understand and implement.
iv). Call to Action: A simple way to attract more clients is a gentle nudge that tells people what to do at the end of every blog post. Better calls to action are sometimes all you need to convert blog visitors into readers, and readers into paying clients.
Time for Action
For example, if your blog post is about conversion rate optimization, you could use this conclusion:
Have you been trying to improve your sales conversion rates? I can help you out.Contact me today for a free strategy call.
Spencer Haws, founder of Niche Pursuits, uses the same strategy to generate comments on his blog posts. At the end of a recent blog post, here’s what he wrote:
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You can use the AIDA strategy when writing your blog posts and articles, creating videos, recording podcasts, or giving a presentation. It works equally well for any kind of content.

8. Hack audience through multimedia sources

“Multimedia” here refers to the use of all marketing media to reach your target audience. In other words, don’t just write articles or blog posts. Video content is dominating the web these days.
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Here are some of the leading multimedia channels you should take advantage of:
Mobile marketing: Who isn’t aware of the impact of mobile technology in today’s marketing world? Tons of marketing and online transactions take place either on a smartphone or tablet.
Remember that many of your prospective clients have mobile devices, but not all of them have PCs that are connected to the internet.
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How do you create mobile-friendly content? You need a responsive design for your website.
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Podcasts, videos, etc.: Pat Flynn uses different kinds of multimedia content to reach his target audience, including blog posts, videos, podcasts, books, speaking gigs, and more.
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Slide presentations: Ana Hoffman creates slide presentations that generated243,000 views for her blog.
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9. Give away valuable materials on your resources page

resource page is a special page where you list the tools and materials that you use to build and run your online business. In most cases, it generates money for the site owner.
Steve Chou prefers to call his resources page “Tools.” No matter what you call it, it’s important that you set one up. Just add a new page to your WordPress blog or site and list your favorite tools.
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However, instead of trying to sell an affiliate offer, why not use your resource page to capture leads? Better yet, give away valuable e-books and short reports that would benefit your ideal customers.
They’ll come back to pay for your premium services if you impress them with your free, valuable content.
That’s exactly what MailChimp does on its resources page. Take a look at the valuable e-books you can download for free.
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Unbounce takes a slightly different approach. Instead of only giving away e-books and whitepapers, they also give free access to anyone who wants to watch their high-end webinars. Even their Page Fights Videos are all up for grabs:
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Note that it may take some time before you reap the benefits of giving away valuable information in form of webinars, ebooks, and videos. But don’t give up. As long as you’re making the world a better place for your prospects, they’ll eventually come back around and feel obligated to work with you.

10. Upgrade a top 10 list post

Top 10 list posts or articles are extremely popular. In fact, if you search online for several keywords, you will find a “top 10” article somewhere on the first page. For example, let’s say we do a search for “business startup tips.” Here’s the result from Google:
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Implement this growth hack if you want to create an in-depth content that will be evergreen, highly useful, and packed with actionable tips.
I’ve created top 10 (or similar) list posts, each of which has helped build over100,000 monthly blog visitors. I usually generate more than 100 comments on this type of blog post.
Follow these simple steps to upgrade a “top 10” list post:
Step #1: Type your keyword + “top 10” (e.g., “top 10 + SEO tips”) into Google’s search box.
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Step #2: Analyze your results. Click the first result to carefully study the content and how valuable it is. Do you think that you can create a better piece on this topic?
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This web page contains an infographic, with fewer than 1,000 words of additional text.
The title of the blog post is “Top 10 Most Important SEO Tips for URL Optimization.”
Upgrade the headline by following these simple steps:
  • Write a headline that exceeds the original “count” – e.g., “Top 15 Most Vital SEO Tips for URL Optimization.”
  • Research accurate data to back up your points.
  • Write a longer post. Since the original blog post is less than 1,000 words, you could write a 2,500+ word article.
  • Capture screenshots to show exactly what you’re talking about in the content.
  • Find sharp, relevant images and include them in your post.
  • Link out to authority content pages to support your points.
  • Use lots of subheads and bullet points to increase readability.
  • Utilize content upgrade to collect email leads.
  • Include a call to action.
Your potential clients are looking for that defining factor that makes you stand out from the competition. If everyone is writing a “top 10” list article (probably because it’s easy to do), then your job is to dazzle your clients and prospects by doing more — say, by crafting a “top 30” or “top 50” list article on a hot topic.
This was exactly how Michael Dunlop grew his blog to 100,000 visitors per month.
Examples of “top list” posts that generated 100+ valuable comments along with several thousand social shares are:
  • 55 Quick SEO Tips Even Your Mother Will Love
  • 15 Types of Content That Will Drive You More Traffic
  • 21 SEO Techniques You Can Use Today to Get More Search Engine Traffic

11. Follow the 7-rule email marketing tactics

The rule of 7 may seem outdated, but it’s very effective when applied to your email marketing campaigns.
The rule of 7 simply states that before you introduce your paid product or service to a potential client, you have to give plenty of value to them over the next seven days. In other words, if potential clients sign up for your email list today, don’t make the mistake of pitching them tomorrow. Be patient. Effective marketing is never done in haste. The rule of 7 will not fail you if you put other people first, and your product second.
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The only reason why people ever opt-in to your email list is because they believe you’ll educate, inform, and/or entertain them, to help them reach a personal or professional goal.
If you constantly bombard your subscribers with promotional emails, yourunsubscribe rate will be very high. Avoid too many emails in the first seven days. Instead, focus on building rapport first.
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Your valuable content doesn’t have to be something you offer for sale. It could be a collection of your best blog posts.
If you’ve been on my email list, you know I only send blog posts, instead of promotional emails. Yet, I get decent open rates; in fact, my email list accounts for28% of my traffic. This is exactly how my autoresponder emails arrive in my list members’ inbox:
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Use an autoresponder solution (e.g. Getresponse) to set up follow-up emails that will be sent to your new subscribers daily or every two days for a week. Those email should be short, but full of helpful information.

12. Curate viral content, don’t create

For our purposes, “curate” means to organize, compile, and make content easily accessible in a single web page or blog post. Positioning is the secret of successful content curation.
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Brian Clark agrees that content curation can help you create a recurring stream of revenue. After all, if you let your prospects browse the entire web, looking for the right information, they’ll probably switch to the competitor site that makes it easier for them.
It’s time-consuming to find the best content that meets a particular need. But if you do it, potential clients who regularly benefit from your content curation will come to trust you.
A perfect example of curated content is this post written by Jeff Walker on CrazyEgg. In the screenshot below, you’ll see how he links out to the right blogs, while adding a style that makes the content uniquely valuable.
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Where to find amazing content to curate (compile): Go to Google and type in the keyword or headline you want to write about. Every search result that appears is a potentially viable URL to link to, when you curate.
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Alternatively, you could use a content sharing network to find relevant pieces. One such network is GrowthHackers.
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Personally, I discovered that creating content from scratch is much easier than curating content. It’s time consuming to read and digest that much material on a regular basis. It’s not a good strategy for lazy bloggers or content marketers.
But for those who want to truly make a mark and save enormous time for their clients and blog readers, curation works.

13. Capitalize on current trends

Every other day, a new product is launched. Or some terrible thing happens. Or Google goes haywire with a new algorithm update.
Instead of whining over these changes and current trends, take advantage of them to create rich and valuable content that your prospective clients will benefit from. You could get instant traffic if you’re among the first few to write about a new development.
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For example, while thousands of people where complaining about Google algorithm updates and penalties, I created one of the best articles on Google Panda, Penguin, Hummingbird and Pigeon updates. Although the post is still new, it’s generated buzz and over 70 valuable comments so far.
One vital thing to note is that if you capitalize on current trends, your traffic will grow – but if your idea is outdated, it could tank your traffic.
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In the internet marketing and business industry, several sites are always ahead of others. The reason is because the authors attend dozens of conferences and seminars where industry experts announce new trends or developments.
You can keep on top of the latest happenings in the tech and entertainment industries by frequently visiting Mashable and Techcrunch.
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If you’re a blogger, content marketer, or SEO consultant like me, you want to visitSearch Engine Land to stay informed.
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Remember that current trends by themselves will not drive visitors to your blog. It’s your responsibility to create high quality content, and promote it to the right audience using guest bloggingblogger outreach, and, of course, social media marketing.

Conclusion

Most content marketers struggle to generate search traffic and acquire new clients. One of the best means that you can use to attract high paying clients is through word of mouth referrals.
But word of mouth referrals are only possible when you offer great service, deliver on time, and make the client’s goal your #1 objective.
No matter what SEO tactics you decide to implement to improve your blog’s search rankings and traffic, at the end of the day, “word of mouth” is what matters to your brand.
What other strategies have you used to attract paying clients to your online business?

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