276 Comments

Introduction To Keyword Sniping

December 20th, 2007 by Court

Want to get a top ranking for a good keyword in Google? Chances are, you don’t know how to make that happen or you’re just unsure of yourself. A few of you might believe that you know what to do because you’ve read all of the generic, worthless garbage that’s out there, but have never put it into practice. Here’s the honest truth - you can out-rank internet marketing companies or anyone else if you can learn a few, simple techniques.

This lesson is going to teach you how to consistently beat major players that have bigger budgets, better skills, and more ideas than you. I can teach you to make a focused, {insert ninja-like word of choice here}, deadly attack on keywords. This lesson will reveal to you why people like me can beat multi-million dollar companies out for top rankings.

Introducing Keyword Sniping

Keyword Sniping

Keyword sniping involves an extremely focused effort on a single keyword. The idea here is to choose a single keyword, and to set up an entire site (or even an entire group of sites) with the sole intent of ranking for that one keyword.

My most effective keyword snipe to date ended up making me over $3,500 per month with almost zero upkeep. Yes, this was from a single keyword. I set it up while I was working full time at my old job, and after I had it set up, it brought in tons of income with hardly any maintenance. 100% of the income was through Yahoo! ads (like Adsense), so there was absolutely no labor required.

Choosing The Right Keyword

Although you can use keyword sniping to get ranked for almost any keyword, some keywords will be easier than others and I would recommend starting with something that won’t be incredibly difficult. When I did my $3,500 per month snipe, I was using the keyword ‘motorola cell phones’. The reason I went after that instead of just ‘cell phones’ was because it is about 1000 times easier. Getting ranked #1 in Google for ‘cell phones’ would make you flippin’ rich, but it might take years. Choose a more specific keyword and you can get your ranking more quickly.

Not very many sites out there are targeting a brand-specific keyword with an entire site - most of them target brand-specific keywords with a subpage. This will give you a huge advantage right off the bat. You will always be able to get better rankings if you build the site around a keyword.

I use Wordze (paid service but worth every penny) to do my keyword research, but have also used the WordTracker free version and it works well enough for those of you that don’t have the budget. No matter what tool you use, you’re going to look for three attributes in a keyword, two of which can be found using either of the tools I mentioned. Here are the attributes you need to look for in keywords:

  1. They get searched for over 200 times per day (obviously the higher, the better). Wordze and Wordtracker both show you daily search volume.
  2. They have less than 1,000,000 competing pages (less is better). You can find this out by doing a search for your keyword in Google with quotes around it: “your keyword here”.
  3. They have some kind of value to an advertiser. (Anything that can be bought and sold has value, anything that has commissions has value). Some keywords will have more value than others.

The above numbers are guidelines and definitely aren’t hard rules. I would stick to them until you get confident enough to go for bigger keywords. That way you will know you are going after something that has potential for you while you build confidence and knowledge of your own.

When you choose a keyword, try to find something that a tech-savvy person wouldn’t think of. Even ‘motorola cell phones’ has a lot more competition than most other keywords, and finding one without that level of competition will make your life 100 times easier. I like to try to picture a 15 year old girl or a 70 year old grandpa in order to come up with things they would search for. What would they search for on a daily basis?

Getting outside the tech/internet world will not only lessen your competition, it will also increase your conversion. People that aren’t as tech-savvy will click ads much more than people that know what the ads are. You may be able to get 10-20% click-through on ads instead of <1% on a tech-savvy, ‘make money online’ site.

Here are some examples of niches I would look into:

  • Service niches (heating and a/c, legal, delivery, electrical, pest control, repairs, driving services, etc.)
  • Non-electronic product niches (hair stuff, clothing brands, acne treatments, etc.)
  • Select electronic product niches (You will have to dig hard to limit competition here.)
  • Finance niches (specific loans, brand-specific loans, etc.)

Example keyword that fits criteria: radiant floor heating - 205 searches per day, and 223,000 competing pages. I found this keyword by searching for about five minutes. If you take some time to brainstorm, there will be tens of thousands of keywords you can find that fit the criteria.

How To Actually Snipe The Keyword You Choose

Set Up An Entire Website Or Blog
Once you have chosen your keyword, you will begin the process of targeting and getting ranked for that keyword. In order to target that keyword successfully, you will want to create an entire website or blog (preferred) around that keyword. I personally will buy a domain for the keyword, because that way I can sell it someday. You can be just as effective at getting ranked by using a Blogger blog, but then you can never sell the site. You’re going to have to pick what’s best for you and your budget, but using a Blogger blog could cost you tens of thousands of dollars someday because you will never be able to sell your profitable site. I use ProudDomains.com to buy my domains and host my blogs and sites.

When you buy a domain to target this keyword, you will need to keep a few things in mind. Getting a domain that has the keyword in it will really help you to get ranked for that keyword. However, buying a used domain can help you significantly to get ranked more quickly. If you’re in a hurry to make money from this keyword, I would recommend using TDNAM.com to find a used domain that you can buy. Any domain that’s been live for more than one year will decrease the amount of time it will take to get ranked.

The reason it can help you to buy a domain that’s been live for over a year is that it can help you to avoid Google’s sandbox (yes, it does exist). I personally have been able to avoid the sandbox on brand new sites, as long as I keep the sites small and target keywords that aren’t very competitive (less than 1,000,000 competing pages in Google). This means that I can spend just $8 to buy the domain and I can usually increase it’s value to a few thousand dollars within a few short months.

Once you get your domain, I would highly recommend installing WordPress to create your site. If you prefer to use HTML to create your own static site, feel free. I warn you that people like me will probably have a huge advantage over you - link building is a lot easier if you use blog software to create your site. Later in this lesson I will be showing you how to configure WordPress to target this keyword properly.

Content Keyword Attack
For the content of the site, I would recommend adding at least ten pages of solid content about the keyword of choice. Even though we will be using blog software to create this site, this site will not be a blog. It will look like a blog and smell like a blog, but there will be no need to post everyday or even every week. I personally would remove all dates that can appear because you don’t want people to know when it was created.

Each of your ten pages should be created with the intent of giving a keyword link back to the homepage with your main keyword. You want each of these pages to be at least 300 words. This is the hardest part of the entire process. I usually surf the sites that come up in Google for the keyword to get ideas for the 10 pages of content. I don’t take their content, but I use it to get ideas for mine. Make sure to link back to the homepage within every post - use your keyword as the anchor. This gives your homepage more ranking ability in two ways:

  1. It’s getting more internal links with the anchor text.
  2. It’s getting more external links with the anchor text. Spammers that rip off your pages will end up linking back to your homepage using your anchor text. This usually makes most bloggers mad, but you should embrace it because it only helps you.

Site Brand
Branding your site around your keyword is one of the most important things you can do to target your keyword. An example of this is Court’s Internet Marketing School. When I decided to switch the keyword I was targeting to ‘internet marketing’, I had to change the branding of my site. Now I refer to my site by this name and am establishing it as a brand. Many people link to me now using Court’s Internet Marketing School as the anchor text, and this gives me links with internet marketing in the anchor. Since I have branded the site this way, it happens naturally.

Note: You don’t necessarily have to use the keyword in the domain to use keyword branding. As you know, I don’t have my keyword in my domain on this site.

Site Structure
Creating the proper site structure is where most people aren’t doing an adequate job - this is good for me but terrible for them. Now I’m going to give you guys some advice on keyword placement. You will need to follow each of these instructions. If you don’t, don’t be surprised when people are constantly beating you into the ground.

Start by using a WordPress theme that has been optimized for use with search engines. My SEO WordPress Themes will help you to outrank people that use regular themes. Once you have installed one of those themes, continue with the following instructions.

Use keyword in the following locations:

  • HTML title tag of every page in the site. I accomplish this by using the All-In-One SEO Pack plugin. My HTML titles are set to show the post titles first, and then the title of my site, which is currently set to ‘Internet Marketing | Strategy & Services’.
  • H1 tag of every page on the site. My H1 tags appear in the upper-right hand corner of my pages. On my homepage, I have it set to ‘Internet Marketing’. On my other pages, I have it set to show ‘Internet Marketing | Post Title Or Page Title Appears Here’. I used a simple piece of code in my WordPress header to accomplish that. You can find the code here: H1 Dynamic Code. You can copy it and insert your keyword where is says ‘Your Keyword Here’.
  • Footer link that points to your homepage. Create a link to your homepage in the footer, and use your keyword as the anchor text.
  • Link within each post to homepage with anchor text. I already talked about this but am going to reiterate. Find a way to fit it in - you need this on all 10 posts.
  • Throughout homepage text. At any given moment, you want your keyword to appear on your homepage at least 6-7 times. This is usually is taken care of since you should be using the keyword in your posts. Since it’s your actual homepage that will get ranked for your keyword, you will need to make sure that it’s there enough times. You also need to make sure that you have at least 1000 words of text there. This is easy to accomplish - 4 posts that appear there with 300 words will more than do the trick. This makes it so you don’t set off a keyword spamming filter with Google.

By using this approach, I’m consistently able to out-rank huge companies. This is because they are using one page to target a keyword, and I am using an entire site. This structure is one of the big reasons why I am running sites into the ground for ‘internet marketing’, even though I’m five years newer and have less links. Imagine what you can do with it if you target less-competitive keywords!

Inbound Link Methods
In order to effectively out-rank other sites, you will need to have a focused effort to get the right kinds of links. This involves a few different factors, here are the basics:

  • Vary your anchor text, but use your keyword in most links. This means if I’m targeting internet marketing, I’m going to try to get links with the following anchors: internet marketing, Court’s Internet Marketing School, internet marketing strategy, internet marketing services, internet marketing tips, etc. This can be done with any keyword and will help you to avoid a link spamming/Google bomb filter.
  • Get links from pages about your keyword. I use articles to achieve this with amazing results. I write an article called something like ‘Internet Marketing Could Change Your Life’. I then submit the article to a ton of directories and use the Author Bio to link back to my site with my desired anchor text. All of the links come from pages about internet marketing, because I wrote the content for the pages! I wrote a separate article about this here: How To Make Your Posts 500% More Powerful With Only 25% More Work. Some people think that article marketing doesn’t work - those are the people that I usually kick into the ground. I use Article Marketer to submit my articles to hundreds of article directories. You can also start forum threads about your keyword an link back with your signature.
  • Get links from other types of pages. These won’t be quite as effective as getting links on pages about your keyword, but are still quite effective. The D-List can be effective for this. People don’t like it when you keyword stuff your comments, but are usually ok with it if you use your brand to comment. This means if your brand has your keyword in it… You get the idea. If anyone doesn’t like it, kindly apologize to them. Respect their decision.
  • More of my link building methods here: 102 Ways To Make Your Site A Back-Link Superstar

Keep in mind that by using this method, you won’t need as many links as you would need to get a single page ranked. Since you’re using an entire site to snipe this keyword, it will come more quickly and easily.

Keyword Sniping Timeline

The time table for getting ranked with a site like this can vary wildly. If you are able to get a used domain that’s related to your keyword, you should be able to get ranked highly within a month or two. A brand new domain may or may not take more time.

The amount of time it will take you to get ranked will be determined almost directly by the amount of competition out there for your keyword. Choosing a keyword with little competition will allow you to get ranked very quickly, possibly within a few short weeks. This is why you may want to start with a single, long-tail keyword. That way you can get used to the method and get a victory and #1 ranking on your first attempt.

With time, you will get more and more confident that you can use keyword sniping to take out major keywords. Start small and then start thinking big.

Questions?
On a lesson like this, I know there will be lots of questions. Consider this an open invitation to ask me anything related to keyword sniping.

Related Posts:
Introduction To Double Keyword Sniping
Keyword sniping is all about selecting a niche keyword, and getting the #1 ranking for that keyword....
Court’s Keyword Sniper 1.0 WordPress Theme
My 'Introduction To Keyword Sniping' post quickly became the all-time most popular post on Court's I...
Download 90,000 Keywords For Free
Whenever I have talked about keywords on Court's Internet Marketing School, people have commented ab...
Wordze Free Trial Offer!
One of the most important aspects of keyword sniping is properly selecting the keywords that you wan...
Confidence Lacking? Limit Your Competition
Every time I see a newbie start a blog that has make money online or internet marketing in the title...
When Do You Give Up On A Niche Site?
Lately we have been talking quite a bit about a few different concepts that relate directly to SEO (...

RSS feed | Trackback URI

276 comments! »

Trackback by bloggingzoom.com
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 2:12 pm

Introduction To Keyword Sniping

I don’t want to put too much hype into this, but I believe that this lesson is one of the most important I’ve ever written. I can promise you that reading about keyword sniping will help each of you to learn why you’re not getting the Google traffic…

Comment by kevin
MyAvatars 0.2

December 24th, 2007 at 2:17 am

thanks, I am trying your advise:
http://freekeywords.wordtracker.com

it seems we can use the wordtracker to find out the keywords most searched?

are there ways to find out what kidn article with what keywords was can get more adsense?

Articles about Motocycles or about solar garden light vaiours the visitors, it seems articles about motocylces can attract more visitors to click the adsense links?

 
Comment by Carl
MyAvatars 0.2

February 6th, 2008 at 8:23 pm

So, my problem is that I read your article “Starting a blog” and followed the advice as I went. Then I read about keyword sniping and realize that I shouldn’t have just picked a random domain name for my site. Do I just set up my blog as you suggest here? Or do I create a separate site that links to my blog? My site is a blog, so do I create the 10 pages of content on my blog first? I’m just a little confused.

 
 
Comment by Martin Jones
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 2:19 pm

Thanks for the great information! One of the best, most informative posts I’ve read,anywhere.

Comment by Court
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 2:21 pm

You’re welcome Martin. :) Let me know if you have any questions as you dig into this, I know it’s a lot of material.

 
 
Comment by Justin
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 2:41 pm

Freakin Sweet. It was a solid read Court. I do think though that you could have made it a bit longer though.:)

 
Comment by jblu
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 2:52 pm

You were very thorough, and I’ll have to come back and use it as a reference later. I’m in the process of starting another niche blog for mmo, but I’m still in the process of narrowing it down to a specific keyword. Also, I’m targeting a product and category with an attractive visual (eyecandy pics) to make it a bit more appealing at first glance. Thanks for the info.

 
Comment by Mike C Subscribed to comments via email
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 2:59 pm

Sweet post Court! You offer extremely valuable information here. I sure there are a lot of people that don’t realize how valuable the information you provide here is. Many people would pay hundreds if not thousands of dollars to learn this kind of stuff.

By the way I havn’t talked to you in a long time how is everything going?

Comment by Court
MyAvatars 0.2

December 21st, 2007 at 9:21 pm

Doing pretty well Mike! It’s good to hear from you. We’ll have to catch up sometime soon so that I know about the projects you’re working on. ;)

 
 
Comment by Vic
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 3:03 pm

Wow Court sweet from top to bottom.

 
Comment by Bryan
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 3:11 pm

Awesome advice…stuff I’ve had to learn the hard way. Dang you for revealing secrets! :)

 
Comment by Genesis Subscribed to comments via email
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 3:13 pm

Excellent post. Have you tried WOrdtrackers GTrends tool? It was developed during the 30 Day Challenge back in August and it automatically gives you competition and number of searches on a bunch of keywords relating to the one you typed in. Very useful tool that would work well with keyword sniping.

http://freekeywords.wordtracker.com/gtrends/

I plan to use your technique on my upcoming sites. Thanks.

Comment by Court
MyAvatars 0.2

December 21st, 2007 at 10:09 am

I actually have tried it Genesis! I like Wordze a lot better, but it’s pretty good. I like to have lots of options because that way I can double and triple check keywords.

 
 
Comment by Genesis Subscribed to comments via email
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 3:15 pm

Excellent post, this is a technique that I will be trying on my next site.

Have you tried the Gtrends tool from Wordtracker? It gives all the information you mentioned in one place. I´ve been using it since the 30 Day Challenge back in August.
http://freekeywords.wordtracker.com/gtrends/

 
Comment by Bryan
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 4:17 pm

Court - Can you register a domain with a company’s name in it? For example (if it was available), MotorolaCellPhones.com?

Comment by Court
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 4:24 pm

You can! However, if the company really wanted to take it from you they could. It’s effective for getting traffic, but puts you in jeopardy of having your site taken away.

It also makes it hard to sell because buyers would be risking running into trademark problems.

 
 
Comment by Icheb
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 4:27 pm

Bryan:

If you’re the kind who loves lawsuits, sure.

 
Comment by Allyn Paul Subscribed to comments via email
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 4:37 pm

Great post and info.
This has got to be some of the best advice I’ve seen, and I got it for free!
thanks Court!
AL
PS–I’m going to try it and will report my results in about 6 months.

 
Comment by Jason A Clark
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 4:45 pm

Wow, what a fantastic article! And this is the introduction? It’s a great step by step approach that I think a lot of people will find tremendously helpful if they’re thinking of stepping out into this sort of territory. I know I’m already bookmarking and planning on studying it myself.

My only questions at this point (I’m sure I’ll have more):

You mention the site should have 10 “pages” of content. Are you actually saying Wordpress pages or articles? I’m assuming articles because of what you say later. And this is a stupid question, but it doesn’t make any difference how many articles show on your main page does it?

Also, concerning Wordtracker, when you look up a keyword or keywords is the result it gives you the number of searches per day? You said to look for words that get searched over 200 times per day. If you use that Gtrends tool Genesis spoke about it makes you think that such a low search number doesn’t result in very many clicks…in the examples I found it said like 10 per day. Obviously more than 200 would be better, but is 200 searches per day enough to make any kind of money or is it just completely dependent on the subject matter?

I’ve already found something that’s very niche oriented, centered around something people buy online all the time, Wordtracker says it gets 407 searches and Google shows only 72,100 results…possible it’s a good match?

Okay, that’s enough out of me.

Comment by Court
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 4:52 pm

Hey Jason!

I meant that you will need a total of 10 articles that will be added as posts on the site. I would show at least three or four on the homepage, that way you have a nice, big homepage.

Yes, Wordtracker shows the number of searches per day. These techniques can be used for keywords that hit at any search volume, but 200 per day will give you a pretty decent dollar amount in many niches. The exact dollar amount depends entirely on the niche. In some niches it could give you over $100 per day. In others it would be more like $10 per day.

The numbers you quoted at the end seem like a spectacular match. ;)

 
 
Comment by jim Subscribed to comments via email
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 5:56 pm

What a down right awesome article Court! My only question is if a keyword receives around 300 searches per day and you happen to rank #10 on the first page at Google, how much traffic can you truly expect to bring in?

I’m thinking maybe 10 hits per day if you are lucky? My guess is that you probably will only make less than one dollar per day at that rate.

Am I wrong on this? Help me out…

Comment by Court
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 6:04 pm

Hey Jim!

That’s going to depend 100% on the keyword, but you are probably pretty close.

What people have to start believing is that they can get #1 on a keyword. Once you get into the top 3 it increases by a ton.

Using this method, you can get much higher than #10.

 
 
Comment by Steven Snell
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 6:15 pm

Court,
This is a very detailed and thought-out article. Thanks. I’ve been wanting to do something like this for a while, it’s just a matter of finding the time. I’m bookmarking this page for when I’m ready.

 
Comment by Costa
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 7:18 pm

Fantastic!

I find you and Vic complement each other real well. While Vic tends to gives us the tips, he expects us to sit back and digest the tips ourselves, which in a way is good exercise for our brains, LOL, you give it to us meat and flesh.

So clearly and simply explained that I really couldn’t think of anything more to ask. The only exercise my brain need now is to brainstorm for some good keywords.

Thanks!

 
Comment by Desty Subscribed to comments via email
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 8:53 pm

How about using a subdomain as a keyword and attach it to a site already out of the sandbox?

Comment by Court
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 9:02 pm

Not a bad idea Desty! I can see two things that could possibly be negatives: 1. You couldn’t really sell it. 2. Google is going to start ranking subdomains as folders on the site, which means the keyword relevance wouldn’t be site-wide.

You could still get an awesome ranking with it though, so if you just want to get ranked and hang on to it, it would be a great approach. :)

 
 
Comment by Silki Garg
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 9:04 pm

Court,
What is your take on the Gtrends from keywordtracker.
I find it very interesting and very easy.
But am not sure about the accuracy of the results.

Comment by Court
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 9:15 pm

I like it, but I always like to test the results against results from other sites. Wordze is by far the best and most accurate tool I’ve used - I still check the results against those of other tools though!

 
 
Comment by Furniture Store
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 9:49 pm

Thanks for a very detailed and illuminating post. There is so much for me to learn and so much that i learn from you over here!

 
Comment by DayJobNuker (Bruce)
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 10:09 pm

Between you and Vic there is too much good stuff to read.

 
Comment by Fred Subscribed to comments via email
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 10:58 pm

Court,

This is one of the best internet marketing articles I have ever read. You are going to get tons of links for this one (watch for my link tomorrow :)

What do you think of a keyword that has 800,000 competing pages and 2,250 searches a day? Am I shooting too high for my first attempt at this?

When you talk about using directories, are you talking about article directories like ezinearticles.com or like website directories like dmoz?

Again, thanks for an awesome post.

Comment by Court
MyAvatars 0.2

December 20th, 2007 at 11:28 pm

Hey thanks Fred that means a lot. That sounds like it would be a really good keyword. What I would do is take a look at the people that actually come up in the top 10 in Google for the keyword, since it falls in near the top of the competition standards I talked about.

The easy thing to do is look at the pagerank of the top few sites in Goog. If they’re PR5 or less, I’ll know I can take them out.

Yes, I was talking about ezinearticles and other article directories. I use Article Marketer to submit to tons of them - I think it submits to over 700 article directories.

 
 
Comment by Scott Ficek
MyAvatars 0.2

December 21st, 2007 at 12:54 am

Wow. I thought I was doing about 90%+ of the SEO stuff I need to do, but you just gave me another couple great ideas to beat the big guys.

One question…Call me naive, but I don’t do any adwords and internet marketing (I am a real estate agent)–You got me thinking about advertising for some spare money. So you get yourself ranked really high for Motorola Cell Phones and people click on to the Wordpress Site, then what? Are you making $3500 per month because it has ads on it and the people click on them to other sites selling Motorola phones?

Would you share the URL of one of your sites to allow us better understand and see what you are talking about?

Comment by Court
MyAvatars 0.2

December 21st, 2007 at 1:38 am

Yes Scott, I make the money because the site has ads on it and people click on them! Usually the people that pay for the ads are sites that sell the phones.

As far as posting a URL for you Scott - I do everything I talked about with my site here. This is why I’m ranked now on the first page of Google for ‘internet marketing’. If you study the lesson and examine my site, it’s all here. You will simply be doing it on a lower level with a keyword that’s less competitive.

Comment by Mike Pedersen Golf
MyAvatars 0.2

December 22nd, 2007 at 8:12 am

Court, I was going to say congrats on the first page ranking for ‘internet marketing’. VERY impressive! You are the REAL deal. Not like many of the scammer internet marketeers shlepping their products and then bragging about it.

 
 
 
Comment by Scott Ficek
MyAvatars 0.2

December 21st, 2007 at 12:57 am

Another question….For your primary site, are you targeting just one keyword or many? People find my real estate site (and I rank on page 1 Google) for lots of long tail keywords I would have never thought of.

If you apply your lesson in this article to a larger site, do you still just target one keyword or do you repeat this for multiples (if that is even possible)?

Comment by Court
MyAvatars 0.2

December 21st, 2007 at 1:45 am

In all reality Scott you can target many different keywords but that is an entirely different strategy that is more difficult.

I am ranked #1 in Google for probably a hundred different keywords that I know of, but the reason I have niche sites is that they don’t take work to maintain. You don’t have to be constantly adding content to a site in a small niche.

You set up a site, get ranked, get 200-500 visitors per day, and do basically nothing at that point. It’s much easier to get ranked for the keyword of your choice if you’re only targeting one keyword.

So a simple answer to your question: Yes you can target multiple keywords - it just makes it harder to get a top ranking.

 
 
MyAvatars 0.2

December 21st, 2007 at 3:21 am

[…] Introduction To Keyword Sniping by Court’s Internet Marketing School. […]

 
Comment by Emma
MyAvatars 0.2

December 21st, 2007 at 4:01 am

This is one of the most informative Internet marketing articles I’ve ever read. Others have eluded to some of these things. But, you put it all together in one place. Thanks, Court.

 
MyAvatars 0.2

December 21st, 2007 at 5:00 am

[…] it and let’s publish this as an ebook, this is how powerful this article is. It is called Introduction To Keyword Sniping, this is the basis of niche blogging. Please take the time and read this at least twice so you can […]

 
Comment by Sutocu
MyAvatars 0.2

December 21st, 2007 at 5:17 am

Excellent article. It combines most of what is needed for success in this method. I need to try out some of what you said. I’ve never actually built a group of sites for a single keyword, but I think I’ll try.

 
Comment by Heather
MyAvatars 0.2

December 21st, 2007 at 5:55 am

This is a terrific article and justifies once again why I subscribe to only a few RSS feeds and yours is the first one I go to each day. You are raising the bar here in bringing information and resources to the little guys without all the marketing hype that seems to accompany the rest.

Thank you!

 
Comment by Elliott Cross
MyAvatars 0.2

December 21st, 2007 at 6:17 am

Court,

Wow, amazing article!

One question with the article submissions however, do you need to worry about duplicate content if the article is the same, or does Google see article sites like news sites and not penalize duplicate content on them?

Comment by Court
MyAvatars 0.2

December 21st, 2007 at 8:43 am

Right now Elliot Google is seeing them like news sites. I personally don’t publish the articles on my site anyway. This protects me from any duplicate content issue that could arise.

To make an article for article directories, I usually take something from my site and totally rewrite it. That way it’s a totally different article and doesn’t take much time.

I’ve been able to get a lot of good rankings because of this method and it still works.

 
 
MyAvatars 0.2

December 21st, 2007 at 6:46 am

Hi Court,

Awesome stuff! This is just tying in nicely with Vic’s info. Gee, I need more hours with all my current projects. :-)

One question: how can I delete the dates on the WP blogs?

Thanks for this cool tut, it is bookmarked and will be included in my next round up.

Comment by Court
MyAvatars 0.2

December 21st, 2007 at 8:51 am

Hey Monika!

That’s a great question because you probably would want to remove the dates on a site like this. The dates that appear at the top of posts in WordPress blogs can be removed by deleting a small piece of php code in your index.php, single.php, page.php, and home.php.

Usually this little snippet is called the_time. It’s basically going to look like this , except it will have question marks in there (I can’t put the full code here or it won’t show up). If you delete that little snippet it will get rid of the dates.

Let me kno