Here’s a little story to prove that statement. Let’s take the “How many kW to run a house” keyword in the solar energy market. According to the Keywords Everywhere tool, this phrase has 0 searches per month, but it came up in the People Also Ask list. That means that someone asked for it. In fact it means that many people asked it, but none of them were counted. Huh? OK, let’s try that in a YouTube search. The first non-sponsored video has had 2k views in three years. That’s 55 views per month. The video immediately under that one has had 331k views in five years. That’s over 5k views per month. The next one down the list has had 60k views in two years. That’s 2.5k views per month. Hmmm… That doesn’t tally up to 0 searches per month. It also doesn’t explain why there are paid positions in that search. Would you pay for a search term that would bring you 0 views? What does this really mean for you? This means you should target every zero or low-volume keyword you can find. The keyword tools are telling you that these are the ones the “smart people” are ignoring. Can you say, “No competition?”. Can you say, “Instant ranking?”. The big problem with this approach is there’s too much opportunity. There are thousands of keywords in your niche that are not being targeted by anyone because they “have no traffic”. Mwahahahaha! The fools. Niche domination is mine. Oh! Bugga. That means I have to create a lot of content. Thousands of blog posts. Hundreds of videos. My fingers will be worn down to little stubs, and I’ll be exhausted. Nope. AI is here to help. Create your articles here: https://llclickpro.com/h9f7s9nz/em. Create your videos here: https://go.wm-tips.com/invideo. Regards, P.S. By the way, Google is still reporting that over 30% of the millions of keywords that are searched every day have never been searched before. When you write articles and make videos based on those supposedly zero-volume keywords, you’ll automatically include keywords that haven’t been searched yet. That’s free traffic in spades. There’s no point in calling Saul; you’ll have to do it yourself. |