Post by account_disabled on Mar 12, 2024 3:02:10 GMT -6
Last night on messenger a person asked me why my content is 400/500 words on average. Now, we all know that, according to urban legends, a text to increase the chances of ranking on Google must be 2,000 characters or more. For a few years my dream has been to stand out with a precise format, in which the reader recognizes my style and distinguishes me from other bloggers. When I created this blog in 2012, my main profession was that of a graphic designer/programmer and I thought it would be useful for my new company.
Rudy Bandiera, my partner, already had India Mobile Number Data a blog where he had managed to create a following and I tried to emulate him. The leap wasn't easy, because in the previous years I had opened and closed a blog several times. It wasn't easy at first. A new marketing blog in a market that already had many. If I had read Seth Godin's Purple Cow before leaving, I probably would never have opened it. Logic dictates that, if the market is saturated, you should look for a niche in which you can be recognizable and have less established competition. It was a fight I fought stubbornly.
The beginnings were disappointing. For eight months I had an average of 30 visits per day, but this turned out to be a good thing, because my posts had no personality of their own and getting an audience with weak content means getting burned. With the increase of the following and of some loyal readers who shared my posts, the climb was continuous and constant. In that period, I learned a lot about the content that the public likes, I understood that composing a good title is fundamental and that the relationship with those who comment and follow is equally important.
Rudy Bandiera, my partner, already had India Mobile Number Data a blog where he had managed to create a following and I tried to emulate him. The leap wasn't easy, because in the previous years I had opened and closed a blog several times. It wasn't easy at first. A new marketing blog in a market that already had many. If I had read Seth Godin's Purple Cow before leaving, I probably would never have opened it. Logic dictates that, if the market is saturated, you should look for a niche in which you can be recognizable and have less established competition. It was a fight I fought stubbornly.
The beginnings were disappointing. For eight months I had an average of 30 visits per day, but this turned out to be a good thing, because my posts had no personality of their own and getting an audience with weak content means getting burned. With the increase of the following and of some loyal readers who shared my posts, the climb was continuous and constant. In that period, I learned a lot about the content that the public likes, I understood that composing a good title is fundamental and that the relationship with those who comment and follow is equally important.