Posts Tagged ‘niche network’

Niche Network Marketing Wrap Up

Sunday, September 14th, 2008

This is the final part of the Niche Network Marketing with LAMP series. The earlier parts have taken you from finding a “Gold Mine” niche to creating a large network of sites around it.

At this point you should have a primary niche site with lots of external sites (articles, Web 2.0 platforms like Squidoo and etc.) linking back to it, and you should have several (the more the better) secondary niche sites with their own wheels of external sites linking to them.

If you have trouble visualizing these wheels you can always refer to the video I made and posted here. The details for building them are in my series posts, but the video gives a decent graphic display of how they work and come together if that helps.

One question I’ve received is “how to decide what will be secondary wheels in the network”? That’s really pretty easy, just pick closely related niches for each wheel.

For example, if your primary niche is “weight loss” then you might have secondary wheels for “exercise techniques”, “power walking”, “healthy diets” and so on. In retail we call this “cross merchandising”, that’s why you will always see weekly specials displayed in stores near related items, like if bleach is on sale this week it will get displayed near the laundry soaps and fabric softeners, or if steak sauce is on sale it might be displayed near the Butcher’s counter.

The same principal applies and works in online marketing too. If you have an site about HTML coding you’ll do well to advertise webmaster related softwares or web hosting services on it because they’re closely related to the core topic, and if you’re building a niche network you just expand that idea to give you topics for your secondary niche wheels.

The last big tip I have to offer is in list building. You should setup a mailing list for your niche network at-least by the time you have decent traffic moving through your sites, and it’s a good idea to place your signup form on all of your sites.

However, it’s likely that the main goal and focus of your niche sites is going to be on making sales or delivering visitors to your sales pages. That’s the way it should be and you don’t want to distract or detour your buyers away from that. So be careful and minimalistic in your list building efforts on all of these sites. Adding subscribers should be secondary and not the focus for them.

What I like to do though, since I’m not pushing my list on most of my niche sites very hard, is to build a separate wheel in the network strictly on an “information seekers” term related to my primary niche. Remember, the wheels we’ve built to this point should have been made around “buying terms” for the best sales potential, but there are a lot of people interested in every market who aren’t yet ready to make purchases, they’re just seeking information and these are the best targets for building your email list from.

Lets say you’re selling some graphics program called “ImageStore” and that’s your niche market. People searching for “ImageStore instant delivery” or “ImageStore with free shipping” are in buying mode and should be your targets on most of your network wheels, but people searching for “ImageStore tutorials” are information seekers–plus likely to already have the program if they’re looking for help using it, but that’s okay because you should always be adding to your offerings so if you’re promoting the software right now you should be thinking about products that will help users use it for down the road that you can add to your offerings.

There will be a lot of information seeker traffic out there, often more than there will be buying traffic, so this is where I like to do my major list building at. I’ll build a strictly informational wheel in the network that is related to my primary niche and make the hard pitch for joining the email list to this traffic. They’re already seeking information, so offering them a private list with tips or advice is an easy sell.

Again, it’s okay (and wise) to place your list subscription form on all of your network wheels, but you never want to convert a buyer into a subscriber before he makes the purchase so you have to be careful with it. To really push your list an informational wheel is where you want to focus your list building efforts the most. It’s easy traffic and these people aren’t in buying mode yet anyway.

One addition to this is if you’re selling your own products on your network wheels, then you can always use the delivery system for list building. For example, your sites sell the product, the buyer goes to PayPal or whatever to pay you and is then usually returned to your download page. Well, instead of a simple download page you can return them to your opt-in form and tell them the download link for their purchase will be in the confirmation email they receive.

It’s a little sneaky and will upset a few people who will see it as jumping through hoops, but it will also increase your list by leaps and bounds because the majority of people who reach this point are invested in your product and possibly even you if you’ve established yourself as an authority to them on your sales site, so they won’t have any hesitations in subscribing at this point.

Finally, don’t waste your “Thank You” pages from the email list subscription process. You should have 2 opportunities with your subscription form to present offers to visitors who are already investing themselves into you or your products. First, when they enter their name and email address and hit “submit” they should be taken to a page that tells them to watch their email inbox for the confirmation letter. Use this page to also tell them about some great offering you have, it likely won’t convert very highly from here, but even .5% is an additional sale for every 200 subscribers. Plus it helps put your offering into the mind of subscribers you’ll be upselling to in later mailings so that’s a good thing too.

And second, when visitors click the confirmation link from their confirmation letter they usually land on a “Thanks for subscribing” type of page. Here again is an opportunity to place another great offering in-front of them. If you set it up right this offer will expand or build upon the offering they received on the first submission page. This is important because most people will confirm their subscription right away, so within a matter of 5 minutes you have the chance to display offerings to people who are both interested in your niche topic and who have made a personal commitment to invest in you for advice and recommendations.

Again, don’t expect huge conversion rates off of these pages, but they’re certainly worth the minor effort of adding your sales copy to once you start getting a steady stream of subscribers coming in.

That pretty much wraps up how I go about building a niche network. When I find a good niche that I want to expand beyond a single site these are the basic steps I take to do that because I’ve found this lets me really dominate a market. There’s no limits to how big or wide you can grow your network. I’ve described how to build the primary and secondary wheels, but in truth you can expand this out to have a third ring of wheels each related to sites in your secondary ring, then out to a fourth ring of wheels related to sites in your third ring and so on. The bigger the market the more effective growing outward can be.

The point is that once you make the decision to invest the time and resources to build a network don’t be half-assed with it, be determined to own that market in the end and plan your sites, wheels and rings accordingly.


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Expanding the Niche Network

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

This is part 9 of 10 in the Niche Network Marketing with LAMP series.

In the previous part of this series I explained how I build a wheel of satellite niche sites around my primary niche site, this part is just taking everything you’ve already learned in the previous 8 steps and replicating them over and over.

At this point you’ll want to come up with some related, but peripheral niches to your primary niche.

For example, if your primary niche is “Red Wooden Widgets” then some ideas for related niches would be “Blue Wooden Widgets” or “Red Plastic Widgets” and so on.

You’re just looking for niche ideas that are closely related to your primary site, but not quite identical. I like to think of this in terms of the laundry aisle shelving at my local Grocery or Department store. If my primary niche is laundry soap, then my related niches would be fabric softeners, bleach and etc.

Once you have 3 to 5 related niche ideas, you’re going to build a primary site and then secondary satellite sites around each one (just as you did for your first primary niche site, going through the first 8 steps of this series).

The only place where you may or may not do something different is with your primary site for each of these new niches.

You will have to decide for each one whether to promote sales from it, or use it to promote your first primary niche site.

Either way works and neither is better, it just depends upon your goals and products. Usually, if I’m building my niche network to promote my own product then I will use these new niche wheels to ultimately promote my original primary niche site.

If I’m building the niche network to promote affiliate products, then I’ll promote different products with each wheel.

The big picture–if you think of your niche network as that laundry soap aisle in a store, is just to dominate the entire aisle. You want your network to have points of entry for every type of product in the aisle… whether you promote your sales all from one point or from multiple points is up to you and will likely depend upon if you have multiple good products to promote across several sites or not.

Also, while you’re building your additional wheels don’t be afraid to inter-link from sites on this wheel to sites on other wheels where it seems natural.

Basically, I like to put in-content links from sites on one wheel to sites on another, but never straight reciprocal linking. In other words, if you link from site #6 to site $2, don’t link back from site #2 to site #6, instead link from site #2 to site #7, then link site #7 to site #3, and site #3 to site #6… the goal is to keep your traffic paths (link paths) moving in a circle around your network and not just bouncing back and forth between 2 sites.

Part 10 of the series should be available in a few days so please check back, or better yet subscribe to my RSS newsfeed and be sure to get it as soon as it gets published.


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Begin Building the Niche Network

Monday, July 28th, 2008

This is part 8 of 10 in the Niche Network Marketing with LAMP series.

I became diverted from this series for a while but for those of you who have followed along and asked about the last 3 parts I will be posting them over the next week or so.

At this stage you will begin building your niche network around your primary site. I like to use a mixture of personally owned domains as well as some 3rd party hosted pages for this; places such as Blogger and Squidoo. NOTE: these are not spammy or splog pages, they will be true resources with tailored content targeting specific visitors.

What this step involves is building a ring of satelite sites arund your primary niche site, and the truth is you only need to use your own domain and hosting for 1 of these. You could use 3rd party (free) publishing platforms for the rest, but I like to balance it with an even amount of each. The choice is up to you though.

Before you begin building your secondary sites, you’ll need to review the search traffic to your primary site and see what terms are bringing you visitors.

What you’ll want to find is all of the terms that are “information seekers” rather than buyers. For example, “Red Widgets free shipping” is a buying term, but “how are Red Widgets made” is information seeking.

You don’t want information seekers landing on your primary niche site, so your goal is going to be to rank your secondary site pages higher than your primary site for those terms.

By positioning your secondary sites above your primary site in the search results for information seeking terms you’re basically adding a filter to the search traffic that directs most of the non-buyers away from your primary site. It also allows your secondary sites to gain “informational authority” for terms related to your primary site, making your links from the secondary sites more valuable to propping your primary site up.

Plus, this way you can provide information seeking visitors with exactly what they’re looking for on a secondary site, and hopefully funnel a few of them along to your primary site later for sales.

What you’re also going to be looking at while reviewing your keywords are buying terms that your primary site isn’t ranking well enough for. If you were building a single site then you could work to improve the performance of your primary site for these terms, but since we’re building a niche network it’s just as easy and more beneficial at this stage to build secondary sites targeting those terms.

I’m not going into the actual development of your secondary sites because it’s identical to building your primary site from the earlier parts of this series. The only difference will be in how you select your keywords for the sites since you’ll be taking them from your primary site as I’ve described above; but the rest of the process is the same.

When completed, you should have anywhere from 8 to 20 secondary sites online, with about two-thirds of them targeting information seeking terms and the final third targeting buying related terms.

You should have an email list ready for visitors to subscribe to, whether you use a 3rd party option or a self-hosted list is up to you, but every one of your secondary sites should have an opt-in form to this list displayed.

None of your secondary sites should have affiliate links or other advertising on them. They should all funnel straight down to your primary site only.

Even the secondary sites targeting buying keywords. The goal isn’t to make sales with your secondary sites, it’s to build your email list and funnel visitors to your primary site for the conversions.

Be sure to follow the same steps for promoting these secondary sites as you used for your primary site. Articles, bookmarking and etc. Look at how strong your primary site is in search engines today, that’s where you want all of your secondary sites to be in a month or two–which will prop your primary site up even further.

Since several of your secondary sites are likely to be on blogging platforms (self-hosted or 3rd party) a great tool for adding tons of backlinks and literally thousands of additional “point of entry” into your niche network is RSS Submit.

You can use this to submit the RSS feeds from your blog sites, as well as the RSS feeds that article directories give authors to dozens of RSS directories.

To see just how powerful this is check out this video I made a few months ago about backlink power through RSS. At that time I wasn’t yet convinced about RSS Submit and was using my own software for submitting feeds, but after lots of testing I’ve found RSS Submit to be superior to everything (including my own program) for this so I highly recommend it.

Part 9 of the series should be available in a few days so please check back, or better yet subscribe to my RSS newsfeed and be sure to get it as soon as it gets published.


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Strengthen the Primary Site

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008

This is part 6 of 10 in the Niche Network Marketing with LAMP series.

While everything this posting covers is equally vital to every other step in the niche network building process, you should already have a fair understanding of how to achieve everything I lay out below so I’m not going to waste your time repeating a lot of the details and instructions I’ve covered previously.

The whole point to this step is to strengthen your primary site and place it in a position to establish itself online as dominate in your niche. What follows is the beginning of that process.

Start creating additional pages for your primary site. Each page should focus on a single keyword term from your “On Site” keyword list. Your keyword should be included in the page title and URL ( for example: www.mysite.com/new-page-keyword.html ).

The content of your new page should have between a 4% and 8% keyword density. Do NOT force your keyword into the content, but pay attention to it while writing your page content to use it naturally and try to get within that 4% to 8% margin.

For each new page you create use 4 keywords from your “Off Site” keyword list and create 4 articles–1 from each keyword. Remember to use your new page keyword in the article Resource Box link and submit your articles (1 each) to the directories you submitted your previous articles to.

Submit your new page and each of the published article pages across the social networks you’ve been active in where the content is relevant. Remember, you have to be active in the social community to gain any real benefits from submitting to it, and your content has to be relevant to avoid being considered spammy by community members.

Be sure to link to your new content pages from your main site page, and with each new page you create rebuild your XML and text based sitemap files using GSiteCrawler.

You Do NOT Have to Resubmit Your Sitemaps! In-fact, there’s some evidence that suggests resubmitting them to Google can have a negative effect for you. But you should update them as you add new content to your site and let the search engine bots find the updated sitemaps on their own.

There’s no limit to the number of new pages you can or should create. From this point forward creating new primary site pages should become an ongoing part of your work schedule. I like to try to add 1 new page per day, 4 days per week–you should find a routine that works for you. Sticking with it is the most important part. If you decide to build 5 new pages every week, great, but make sure you do it. Losing focus is the worst thing you can do at this point.

Just follow the points from this step for each new page you build and you should soon begin to see your inner (new) site pages climbing up the SERPs for their respective keywords. And from that you’re actually helping to strengthen your main site page for your primary keyword as well, since these new pages should all be linking to your home page with your primary keyword in the anchor text.

Here’s a little secret that I’ve learned over the years; search engines credit backlinks from pages on the same web site. It’s true, though it’s not really a secret–more like an overlooked resource most of the time. So, now you’ve got all these new pages being supported and propped up to the search engines by backlinks from the social networks and article directories you’ve been using and submitting content to… and these new pages are all relevant to your main site topic, and supporting your main page by linking back to it. See how it all comes together and works? You’re building up your own site dominance from within, of course also with a little help from those networks and directories where you’ve become a respected contributor and participant. It’s all very natural, ethical and strategic.

Part 7 of the series should be available in a day or two so please check back, or better yet subscribe to my RSS newsfeed and be sure to get it as soon as it gets published.


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Marketing Launch

Wednesday, December 26th, 2007

This is part 5 of 10 in the Niche Network Marketing with LAMP series.

A short preface is in order for this installment. Under optimal conditions you will have at-least a small budget on hand to enhance your marketing efforts via paid advertisements (links, banners and etc. on related sites) and/or Pay Per Click campaigns. These methods aren’t essential in the long term, but will provide you with a faster start.

However, I’m trying to provide this series on Niche Network Marketing in a manner that anyone should be able to do–and afford–so what follows are the free steps I take in marketing a new Niche Network as I’m developing it. Please read them with the understanding that it’s best–though not crucial–to be able to compliment them with some of the paid options I’ve mentioned above for maximum initial impact.

First, prior to anything else in this step, you’ll need to ensure you have two sitemaps ready for your site. Some blogging and other CMS software have sitemap options pre-installed. These are good, but even they usually only provide a single XML (Google preferred) sitemap file. What you want are an XML and a pure text URL list (Yahoo preferred). Yahoo seems to be able to pick up your pages from an XML sitemap, so this may seem like overkill, but in my own non-scientific testing it seems as though Yahoo picks up pages faster if you provide the pure text URL list sitemap with the XML one, so I strongly suggest creating and keeping both.

There’s a nice, free tool available that automates the whole sitemap process, and will create both the XML and text based files for you. It’s called GSiteCrawler and you can find it at http://gsitecrawler.com

Once you have both files, just upload them to your primary niche site and be sure to link to them on your main site page. You can then go to Google and Yahoo and submit your sitemaps. At Google only submit your XML sitemap file. In Yahoo you can submit both the XML and the text based files.

Now it’s time to get into some dirty work. You’re going to need to create (or pay someone to create) 8 thorough, well written and useful (to readers) articles around your primary niche topic.

These can not be fluff!

They must be as informative, entertaining and engaging as you can possibly make them.

They must also be well crafted!

You’re going to create each article using 2 of your keyword phrases. In each case, the article itself should be focused around one of your “Off Site” keywords. These are the highest competition keywords you have researched earlier. The article title should contain the keyword, it should also appear in both your opening and closing paragraphs of the article; and if you can use it at-least once more in the body content of your article that’s great too. Just be sure that it fits into each use naturally. You CAN NOT keyword stuff in these articles (and you really shouldn’t do it anywhere else either) or you’ll ruin the foundation of your whole network. Trust me.

When you have the article completed you’re going to select a keyword from your “Longtails” keyword list (I’m assuming you created the 3 keyword lists as described in part 2) that will be the anchor text for the link in your Author’s Box when you submit the article to a publishing platform. The link itself should point to your primary niche site.

For best results, the anchor text keyword should seem naturally related to the high competition keyword you created your article around, so it’s actually a good idea to select both keywords before writing your article. This way you can find two that are closely related and that should help make everything more natural once published.

Repeat this process over and over until you have 8 perfect articles ready to publish. Notice that I emphasized the word perfect. That was to stress two points. The first is that you should approach every aspect of building a niche network with a goal of perfection. It’s hard work to get everything right, but by striving for perfection you will give yourself the best possible chance for success.

And second, to reiterate that these articles must be of high quality and value to readers. They can not be fluff or junk.

Once you have all 8 articles ready, you’ll want to submit 2 each to the following article directories: eZineArticles, GoArticles, SearchWarp and Content Caboodle.

NOTE: There are a lot of theories and debates over how to submit articles, whether they should be submitted to multiple directories and etc. I’m only going to say that I suggest you manually submit every article, and only submit each one once to a single directory. That’s why you create 8 articles, so that you have enough to submit 2 to each of the 4 directories I’ve mentioned.

In the interest of candor and full disclosure I am involved with the Content Caboodle web site and business. That’s not my motivation for including it here, but I think it’s only fair that readers be aware of my involvement there. I have 2 reasons for adding that site to the list of directories. First, I know that Google is showing it a lot of love since it went online and newly published articles are being indexed within hours every day. So this is great for building your SERPs and search engine traffic.

And second, because unlike any of the other article directories listed, Content Caboodle pays authors for submitting quality articles. Article directories make money from advertising to visitors. Content Caboodle does as well, however keeps the advertisements low-key (a single ad on each page). Still, understanding that the directory makes more money from more page views, and that quality articles always generate more readers (page views), Content Caboodle pays authors a flat-rate per page views their articles receive, so it’s beneficial to everyone–authors and the article directory–to have high quality content being created and submitted.

After you’ve submitted all 8 articles you’ll want to watch for when each gets accepted and published. GoArticles and SearchWarp publish instantly, however eZineArticles and Content Caboodle both go through a manual editor’s review for quality and email authors upon publishing.

As each article is published on a directory, you should then submit them to any relevant social communities that you can.

Do Not SPAM Social Networks!

I’m not advocating that you blindly submit your published articles to every social network out there. I’m saying that where the topic of your article is something that makes sense to submit to certain social networks then you should submit it to those networks only. You should be actively involved in the social networks you joined from part 4 of this series (if you’ve used them each daily as I mentioned), and should have a solid understanding of what topics will fit which networks by now.

It may seem odd that I’m telling you to essentially promote pages on another web site (the article directory’s page holding your article), but the point here is that you’re developing a web of linking and traffic flow for both humans and search engine bots to follow around, and everything about this web of linking is ultimately pointing back to your primary niche site in the center.

As just one example, lets say you create an article titled “Article A” and submit it to Content Caboodle. Once it’s published you then submit it to Digg. Now we can follow the trail that humans and bots will find:

The submitted listing appears on a Digg page, that links to the article page on Content Caboodle, which has a link in the Author’s Box to your primary niche site–and it’s all related! That’s important because it means the humans are interested (and likely have a growing interest with each step along the way) in your topic, and the bots just love related linking.

Maybe your niche is something technical, so there’s a submission on Digg in the “Technology News” section that links to this article on Content Caboodle in the “Computers and Technology” section, that then links back to your site which is in this technology niche.

That’s how it all starts to come together, and it happens with each social network that you submit each article to.

But again, and I really can’t stress this enough, it all only works if you create quality content and articles to begin with, and if you’re selective and careful in your social network submissions to only submit pages that will be relevant and interesting to the communities. Take any short cuts along the way and you’ll blow it.

Part 6 of the series should be available in a day or two so please check back, or better yet subscribe to my RSS newsfeed and be sure to get it as soon as it gets published.


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