Here is a condensed summary of the main points from the text:
The narrator provides a step-by-step checklist for optimizing a Google Ads account based on their experience managing over $73 million in ad spend. The checklist includes:
- Reviewing account-level recommendations in Google Ads for new features or opportunities.
- Analyzing campaign data like budgets, conversions, and click-through rates to catch issues early.
- Checking tracking to ensure conversions are being measured accurately.
- Evaluating ads and landing pages and iterating on the best performers.
- Confirming campaign settings like networks and budgets are configured optimally.
- Using audience insights for refined targeting and segmentation.
The narrator stresses going deep into the account data regularly, not just making quick changes. Following this checklist can optimize account performance by 80% or more. Key opportunities highlighted include separating closely-related keywords into new ad groups and addressing low ad click-through rates.
Here is a condensed summary of the main points from the text in HTML format:
The narrator typically prefers evergreen niches for YouTube channels, but wants to start incorporating trending topics as well to help channels stand out. He briefly mentioned this strategy in other videos, but will now demonstrate how to find trending topics and niches using Google Trends.
First, select the target country in Google Trends to see what topics are trending there. For example, target the United States to likely get higher CPMs. Then explore categories relevant to your broad niche idea (e.g. health, wealth, relationships) to uncover specific trending subtopics. Look for overlap between rising search trends and evergreen stability to find profitable niches.
When analyzing the data in Google Trends, start with web searches to see the top things people are actually searching for. Then check YouTube searches, though the data is less targeted. Look for opportunities to tie trending topics into evergreen content. The goal is leveraging both to drive views and stay relevant.
The narrator demonstrates finding potential niches around education and health. For example, there is rising interest in chatGPT and plagiarism checkers alongside stable search volumes for things like tests, exams and assignments. This could form the basis for a profitable student advice channel.
The key is reading between the lines to connect broader niche ideas to monetization strategies. The examples aim to demonstrate how Google Trends can uncover prosperous niches at the intersection of trending and evergreen topics. Check the links in the description for full channel training.
Pinterest is an overlooked platform for making money online, yet it has 478 million active monthly users. 90% of Pinterest visitors report it influences their shopping choices. It also drives 33% more shoppers to websites compared to other platforms.
To make money on Pinterest without needing a large following:
Use affiliate marketing links in your Pinterest pins to earn commissions when people purchase products.
Sell your own physical or digital products directly through Pinterest's merchant tools.
Get brand sponsorship deals where brands pay you to create and share pins related to their products.
Drive Pinterest users to your monetized blog to earn from ads and affiliate links there.
With consistency it's possible to make $1,500 per week from these methods. The key is creating valuable, engaging pins even without a large following, since Pinterest surfaces quality content.
Keyword research tools like Ahrefs and SEMrush can help find keywords, but aren't great for finding trending keywords. Finding new, trending topics with low competition can bring huge traffic.
Go to Perplexity AI and ask for trending topics in your niche. For gardening, it returned "growing your own bouquets", "cottage gardens", "swapping lawns for meadows", etc. Do this for any niche.
Validate ideas on Ahrefs. For "cottage gardens", Ahrefs shows variants like "rock cottage gardens" with low competition and decent search volume.
Even if Ahrefs shows low search volume, write on those topics. They are low competition. Everyone targets high search volume keywords, so target newer, trending topics.
Use Answer Socrates to find longer-tail keywords and questions people have. Combine with Ahrefs to validate ideas.
These free tools help find trending niche topics. Writing on trending, low-competition topics can bring great traffic.
Here is a condensed summary of the main points from the text in simple HTML format:
The narrator builds an automated content generator that can write articles in the style of digital marketing expert Neil Patel.
He starts with a Google Sheet to collect information on the article topic, type, audience etc. This feeds data into the workflow he builds in Make.com.
The workflow uses OpenAI to first generate an outline and subtopics. It then writes the full article structured with headings and tips, saves it as a Google Doc, and generates an image to go with it using DALL-E.
Finally it adds metadata like keywords and description, to create a complete automated article in under 3 minutes without any manual prompting of AI.
The summary aims to be around 200-300 words based on the length of the original text. I bolded key products, services and people, added pronoun links, and structured it with a headline and paragraphs. Please let me know if you would like me to modify the summary further.