I have been following you since last year and I always comeback to you when I want to go to the basics. For the video you mentioned we should look for competition with low DA, so what can we do instead?
There are free DA checkers you can use out there too, to determine which bloggers who are close to you in authority you can realistically compete with. If not, try to look for low-competition scores overall or shoot for original content or new trends that you see emerging.
Yes, you can! Any paid keyword research tool will have alternatives for these strategies. Just find the equivalent feature for each tool and see what you can replicate.
Hello. Adsense doesn't pay by click necessarily, but by overall impressions for their ads. And your earnings will depend a lot on your niche, quality of traffic to your blog and so on. They calculate the page revenue per thousand impressions (RPM) individually for each blog, and mine was anywhere from the average £2.45 to £4 or even £8 on some months, with only 3 ad blocks per page. So if I had 10,000 pageviews, that would earn me £25-40 on average. The more traffic (and ad blocks), the more you can earn. Hope this helps.
@@aathif789 They pay per views/impressions of their ads. So if 100 people see 100 pages or 1000 people see 10 different pages, it doesn't really matter. They calculate the traffic as a whole, and you will get a different pay per thousand of pageviews/impressions. But again, that is highly dependent on your niche and what advertisers they display on your blog (and you can't control that).
I love how you break this down, very easy to follow. Thank you!
So glad this was helpful!
Great tutorial! Thank you!!
So glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching.
Love watching both of you 😍 you guys look like sisters! LoL
@@shimouva Haha thank you! 🤩
Fantastic video, super clear and helpful!
Thank you!
Extremely helpful.
So glad to hear! Thanks for stopping by.
I have been following you since last year and I always comeback to you when I want to go to the basics. For the video you mentioned we should look for competition with low DA, so what can we do instead?
There are free DA checkers you can use out there too, to determine which bloggers who are close to you in authority you can realistically compete with. If not, try to look for low-competition scores overall or shoot for original content or new trends that you see emerging.
hello sweetheart, can you do the same brainstorming with ahrefs that's the one I recently started using alongside spyfu, moz, and semrush.
Yes, you can! Any paid keyword research tool will have alternatives for these strategies. Just find the equivalent feature for each tool and see what you can replicate.
thank you
Do you use the Starter or Pro version?
I use the starter version. You get more than enough features and daily credits.
Hi please can I know how much google Adsense pays per ad click on blogging
Hello. Adsense doesn't pay by click necessarily, but by overall impressions for their ads. And your earnings will depend a lot on your niche, quality of traffic to your blog and so on.
They calculate the page revenue per thousand impressions (RPM) individually for each blog, and mine was anywhere from the average £2.45 to £4 or even £8 on some months, with only 3 ad blocks per page.
So if I had 10,000 pageviews, that would earn me £25-40 on average. The more traffic (and ad blocks), the more you can earn. Hope this helps.
@@TheSheApproach it means they won’t pay per views in google ads.
As you said 25-40£ is this for per pages or for 10,000 views.
Thanks for your reply
@@aathif789 They pay per views/impressions of their ads. So if 100 people see 100 pages or 1000 people see 10 different pages, it doesn't really matter. They calculate the traffic as a whole, and you will get a different pay per thousand of pageviews/impressions. But again, that is highly dependent on your niche and what advertisers they display on your blog (and you can't control that).
What English speaking countries can you use keysearch in?
You can filter the keyword search by location in US, UK, Canada, UAE, Norway, Argentina, Brazil, Turkey, Sweden and Spain to name a few.