Here is a condensed summary of the main points from the video:
The narrator shows how to make money by selling ChatGPT prompts on sites like Etsy. One shop has made $105,000 selling prompts. The narrator gets ChatGPT to generate 100 social media marketing prompts. These prompts can then be formatted into a PDF and sold as an instant digital download on Etsy. The prompts never have to be physically shipped. Creating eye-catching thumbnail images for the listings can be done easily with Canva. Prompts can also be sold on sites like Prompt Base and Fiverr. The narrator emphasizes how easy it is to set up this automated business. Once the prompts are generated and listings created, it runs on autopilot.
The narrator shares three free keyword research tools he uses regularly. The first is HRE's Keyword Generator, which works similarly to AHF Keyword Tool but is free. The second is Keywordtool.io, which the narrator uses a lot. Both tools look for phrase matches rather than individual words. As an example, the narrator searches for "hunting gear" and gets related phrases like "duck hunting gear."
To demonstrate, the narrator searches for laser sight keywords related to hunting. By checking the results in Amazon, he verifies the keywords are relevant. He emphasizes that many people do keyword research first before finding products, but his approach is opposite - finding profitable products first and then identifying keywords. This guarantees popular search terms.
The narrator also shows Keyword Tool which allows searching additional platforms like YouTube and Bing. It doesn't show search volume for free users. He demonstrates searching related questions to find more keywords. After just 6 minutes, the narrator has 28 potential keywords. The key is using your brain to think of relevant keywords rather than relying solely on tools.
For informational sites, the narrator recommends Chat GBT Plus and its Topical Authority generator. This breaks down a niche into categories and subcategories to uncover keyword opportunities. He shows how it aligns with the actual products he sells, demonstrating the logic of the tool.
In closing, the narrator previews an upcoming video on Google Ads Keyword Planner. He emphasizes that the tools shown are free and easy to use without even signing up. The goal is to help viewers perform keyword research themselves to start getting traffic to new sites.
The narrator shares 9 hidden YouTube features that content creators may not know about. These include:
Controlling the "For You" section on your YouTube channel to turn it off or choose what videos appear.
Blocked words list to automatically hide unwanted comments.
Upload defaults to save time filling out video details like tags, descriptions, etc. for each new upload.
Audience segments in analytics to compare subscriber vs non-subscriber or new vs returning viewer engagement.
Seeing how many subscribers have been gained or lost over time in YouTube Analytics.
Checking if shares to sites like Facebook actually generate views and engagement using External Traffic reports.
Separate podcast analytics for podcast uploads.
Seeing how many people viewed Community posts.
Using Channel Grouping to compare metrics across consistent video elements like runtimes, thumbnails, etc.
The narrator explains how to add end screens to YouTube videos using YouTube Studio. End screens help promote other videos and increase views. They recommend having 5-10 seconds at the end of videos for end cards.
In YouTube Studio, go to Video Elements to add end screens. You can choose from templates or create your own by adding elements like subscribe buttons, video recommendations, etc. Make sure elements don't overlap. You can have up to 4 recommended video elements. Extend elements to 10 seconds max.
For existing videos, go to the video in Studio, scroll to End Screen, and import a template from another video. Position it when the video goes black and white. Remember to save.
End screens help viewers watch more videos by providing clickable recommendations at the end. Use them to increase viewership.
The narrator says that most business websites fail to attract leads and sales because they use industry jargon instead of the words actual customers use. Studies show that using your customers' language connects better and gets more business.
The narrator provides a ChatGPT prompt to analyze customer reviews and extract common themes and phrases customers use. This helps create more effective website copy.
Another ChatGPT prompt can analyze your website page-by-page and provide a prioritized checklist of conversion rate optimization suggestions. This is like having an on-demand expert optimize your site.
The narrator also provides a prompt to compare your most important web pages to competitors pages and get SEO optimization suggestions tailored to your audience.
Finally, the narrator shares an "epic power prompt" that takes all the website improvement suggestions and rewrites your actual web pages in bold text. This transforms your site for better messaging, conversions and SEO.