AI Blog Case Study (0-$22,000+ Per Month in Under a Year with Mediavine)

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  • Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024

Комментарии • 223

  • @emilysego2400
    @emilysego2400 7 месяцев назад +2

    Just coming here after Ricky from Income School mentioned your case study in his YT live this morning. So encouraging! I'd like to transition to using AI to write first drafts for my future blog posts as well. I've been blogging for 10 years and only saw real success after following Income School/Project 24 methods the last 3 years. Would you be willing to share any advice about editing AI drafts and making them more human? (Besides adding in personal stories/experiences.)

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +2

      Thanks @emilysego2400! I just went back and watched the Income School live stream and saw my mention-very cool and I would have missed that, so thanks for sharing!
      In response to your question:
      1. Use the right tool. While you can generate AI articles with many tools, the better ones have different “styles” or “personas” that you can select. This is one of the easiest ways to make your post sound less robotic.
      2. Add lots of images, infographics, or other visual content. I added custom images to each post which I believe played a major role in making my content sound more natural.
      3. Rewrite the intro and title completely. These are the sections that I find it most challenging to get AI tools to write in a catchy and compelling way. It is much easier to just use the ai content (with some editing) for the rest of the article but to completely rewrite the title and intro.

  • @holgerwaedt6982
    @holgerwaedt6982 8 месяцев назад +2

    Your CTR is very high. Congratulations. Would you mind sharing a title and meta description of one of the web pages?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +1

      I have a similar CTR on my site Blogging Guide (www.bloggingguide.com), and I generally follow the same structure as these titles and metadescriptions, so if you want examples, this would be the best place to look.

    • @holgerwaedt6982
      @holgerwaedt6982 8 месяцев назад

      Thank you. I’ll check it out.

  • @dancewithmebyandreea9076
    @dancewithmebyandreea9076 8 месяцев назад +2

    Hi! Congratulations on the project! It was a total success as return on investment suggests however your meticulous strategy was the winning card for sure!
    Do you mind if I include this video to my humble Medium Post on AI?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад

      Thanks! And please feel free to include the video! Tag me on Medium and I’ll check it out too (@caseybotticello)

  • @FlorianFisher1
    @FlorianFisher1 8 месяцев назад +2

    A content plan with 750 articles is impressive. Even more so as you followed it through. Did you use ai tools to create the keyword list, did you also factor in keyword difficulty and search volume? Could you walk us through the process of creating such a big content plan. How did you prioritize the keywords/ articles?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +6

      This was probably the biggest factor-so good question!
      You can check out my article on topical mapping, where I give some examples (bloggingguide.com/how-to-create-a-topical-map-for-your-blog).
      I used various keyword tools to spot check he competition and gauge relative difficulty ranking, but as noted in my article I go out of my way to brainstorm article topics first, without any seo considerations. Only once I have my article ideas grouped do I try to pick an seo keyword optimized title.
      I look primarily for topical content gaps (so material being missed almost entirely by current competitors). So kw tool metrics are not very useful for this.
      That is why niche selection (and having a great understanding of your niche matters).
      If I were going after a niche that I was less familiar with (as I am on some of my other sites), I’d higher a SME to walk me through topics they are surprised to learn are not being covered in Google.
      I tend to prioritize the articles with the biggest content gaps first as they are usually the lowest hanging fruit (if nobody has written about it you can start to rank in just a few weeks). Do this 5-10 times you may get some fear snippets (for long tail usually low volume search terms) but this is a great signal to Google that your site is producing useful content that should be crawled more and indexed quicker.

    • @FlorianFisher1
      @FlorianFisher1 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticello thank you very much for the insights.

  • @gerard_richardson
    @gerard_richardson 8 месяцев назад +2

    Great overview Casey. Two questions if I may. 1. Where are your thoughts on applying this strategy to an established site that's in the, say, DR40 realm, and already ranking for tons of KWs? I can't think of any reasons why this wouldn't work (so long as content quality is decent), but keen to hear your thoughts. 2. Regarding your content mix, did you / do you plan to add any affiliate articles (round ups, etc.) along with what I assume are predominantly info articles?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +1

      1. I completely agree-I don’t see why this wouldn’t work.
      2. I did some affiliate style listicles (just a few) but I just skipped inserting any links. But now that I have some time, I’ll go back and try to find a few high paying programs! But yes, probably 90% of content would be considered info content.

  • @VenturaIT
    @VenturaIT 5 месяцев назад +1

    Did you say revenue share for blog content creation?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  5 месяцев назад

      Where did I mention this? I may have been referencing the rev share from MV which slowly increased as I got more traffic and ad impressions, and later, in 2024 when I got into MV Pro.

  • @suzilewiz
    @suzilewiz 7 месяцев назад +1

    Hi Casey. Congratulations on your success. Just wondering why you chose not to monetise with affiliate marketing? Although I think I might know the answer, I see that question got missed and I’m interested to hear what you have to say. Thanks!

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      I would have, but it was purely because this niche had such a high RPM, that it was easier to simply focus on optimizing content output. Affiliate monetization is something I'm working on now though :)

  • @hendakremi1154
    @hendakremi1154 7 месяцев назад +1

    Hey Casey, thank you so much for sharing, this was super insightful! I just started a recipes blog and it's a very competitive niche, do you have any tips & tricks on how can I make it a success?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +2

      I’ll admit I have limited experience with recipe blogs but I’m in a few masterminds with food and cooking bloggers, and I’d suggest:
      1. Niching down-don’t let your recipe blog become a lifestyle/parenting/fashion mega blog. If anything, dive deeper into the diets and nutritional preferences of your audience.
      2. Hold off on display ads until you can get into MV or Raptive. You can get very high RPMs on these networks.
      3. Focus on building an email list, driving some social traffic, or creating video content. Organic search traffic is still probably the highest roi but it has become more volatile. One nice thing about recipe blogs is they are very conducive to Pinterest boards, Facebook pages, or video.
      Hope these help!

  • @James_m7
    @James_m7 8 месяцев назад +7

    Great info, thanks! What Wordpress theme and Plugins are you using on the site that you spoke of?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +7

      On all my sites I use something super light weight (I’ve since switched the theme a few times on this site) but I usually start with/use GeneratePress, Trellis, or Kadence. These are all comparable in speed. I also tested astra which was good but required more plugins.
      For plugins, I keep it the bare minimum. I usually start a site with Yoast, a redirection plugin, WPMU DEV Dashboard, and Asset Cleanup Pro. I’ll use other various plugins for a day or two when editing, like WP meta, smoosh, or other image compression themes, but once I use these plugins for their purpose, I make sure to remove them to keep bloat down. Asset CleanUp Pro (and even free version) are great for stripping bloated code from plugins and CSS minification.

    • @James_m7
      @James_m7 8 месяцев назад

      Wow, this is helpful 🙏@@CaseyBotticello

    • @rauldablaing
      @rauldablaing 8 месяцев назад +1

      This was great no hype info. Thank you for sharing!

    • @James_m7
      @James_m7 8 месяцев назад +2

      Thanks for the details! 🙏@@CaseyBotticello

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +1

      @@rauldablaing Thanks! That means a lot as that was my intention!

  • @helvecioguimaraes
    @helvecioguimaraes 5 месяцев назад +1

    Hey, Casey, congrats on your work in general and on this endeavor in particular! Well done, it's highly motivating! Did you by any chance use one of these SEO optimization/helper tools such as Surfer? Thanks.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  5 месяцев назад +1

      I don’t use any on page seo optimization tools. So I don’t use Yoast, surfer, or any tool that might encourage me to change my article and make it more SEO focused. You don’t need to be an amazing writer to edit the content-but make sure you answer questions up front, customize titles and intros, and make sure you are offering asides that a real human writer would include ( information gain) that is not in any competing articles.

    • @helvecioguimaraes
      @helvecioguimaraes 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@CaseyBotticello Awesome, man, many thanks for taking the time to reply. Best of luck with your other projects!

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  5 месяцев назад

      @@helvecioguimaraes Thanks! And likewise!

  • @creatornerds
    @creatornerds 7 месяцев назад +1

    This was so cool! I love test cases like this. I have a lot of questions but will limit it to two. Is the site just one silo on one particular part of this tech? Or was it broader with multiple silos? I'm trying to determine how narrow to go. Also, what is the best tool to use to determine sessions? Thanks!!

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      It’s really 3-4 closely related silos. They are distinct subtopics but lots of overlap between them. You could argue they all art part of a single silo within tech. Just different styles of articles (tutorials, tech news, industry players, reviews, etc.). If you can start with a single solo though, this is closer to what I did and it worked really well for fast initial growth. I only use GA to track sessions (prior to getting into MV/Raptive, and then I use those dashboards too, but they are based of Google Analytics data).

  • @canberksan8706
    @canberksan8706 7 месяцев назад +1

    Hey Casey, were you too lucky to find a very high volume unserved niche and even a small portion of the traffic was sufficient for this success story? How big was your niche's volume? For instance, as December 2023 roughly what percentage of the niche's traffic do you estimate you grabbed? 🤔

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      I have no ideas how big the total niche's volume is, but my guess is if you include all the long tail keywords associated with it, that theoretically, there might be another million sessions or so per month. This would imply I captured about 30% of possible traffic. But again, only Google has this data.

    • @canberksan8706
      @canberksan8706 7 месяцев назад +1

      You've done a great job.. 🏆👍 Hope you keep achieving and sharing successes like this.. 😇👍 @@CaseyBotticello

  • @Zikrcircle
    @Zikrcircle 7 месяцев назад +4

    This is incredibly insightful! Thanks for sharing these monetization strategies

  • @luciiii6907
    @luciiii6907 7 месяцев назад +1

    hey that was a great video. Can I have a quick question as I'm unsure about how to set up topical clusters/silos in WordPress?
    1. If I use pages for all the content, should I use parent/child attributes? and will they be well categorized this way? As I can't put categories on pages(only posts).
    2. If I use blog posts for content(instead of pages), then my main money page will be in 'Category' (and this will be probably the only page in this category) and all the supporting articles and other pages will be in the subcategory of this category? A bit confusing. How you do it?
    The goal of website is to sell my digital products and affiliate items, and to establish topical authority across many categories with hundreds of blog posts.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      There are several ways to do this but if you are creating product listings, these should be pages organized with parent child attributes (assuming you have a range of products).
      The supporting content (which helps build topical authority) is usually in the form of blog posts. These should link to the various product pages.
      I would create all the content first, products on pages and articles on posts, and then go back and see where your topic distribution lies, and based on that add categories. If you add categories up front and don’t have a very clear topical map you may end up writing content that purely focuses on fitting the categories instead of the most useful content for readers.
      Either way, pages and posts should have lots of internal linking in my experience.

    • @luciiii6907
      @luciiii6907 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticelloThank you, that clears a lot of things.
      1. So I'll create a Page called ''Buy Shoes'' and it will be my main money page, and to create a topic cluster around it, in the Posts section, I'll create a category called ''Buying Shoes Tips'' and create lots of Posts in this category and link all of them to that ''Buy Shoes'' Page (and link back). Does that make sense?
      2. Also, let's say that within one topic cluster I have like 50 supporting informational blog posts and 5 product (affiliate or my own) pages. How do I do internal links within this topic cluster so I can rank these 5 money pages?
      3. Affiliate pages should be in the form of pages or could be in the form of blog posts as well?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      @@luciiii69071. Yes, exactly 🙂2. There is no set structure that will always work best-the key is to make sure that you generally try to link to money pages from pretty much every blog post. There should be links between posts as well. 3. You could do either. Usually I make my affiliate content blog posts, unless it is something high level. For example, I have affiliate links throughout my site www.bloggingguide.com, in various posts, but I do have a top level page (Tools) which is a stand alone page with affiliate links.

    • @luciiii6907
      @luciiii6907 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticello Got it all now, thank you for the detailed responses! I appreciate that

  • @lukemounthill699
    @lukemounthill699 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for the video it's motivating! I'm confused I have a few questions.
    1. Other than adding pictures, infographics, what else did you edit/add to the initial AI article?
    2. Did you make silo structures? How many categories?
    3. On my homepage I showcase my main product(instrumentals), testimonials, features, benefits, price etc. But I also want to make a separate page for the same product but I wanna include more details on that page(more features, more detailed pricing, more benefits etc), and it will be my main money page and I want to create a whole silo around it so it ranks (make supporting articles which will all link to that main page). How can I do that do avoid keyword cannibalization? I've been trying to figure it out for a while, the answer may be very simple but I can't find a solution.
    Appreciate the help.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +2

      1. I added my own insights, rewrote portions of article, created tables, added quotes, video, and other information
      2. I didn’t stick to a strict silo structure. I had like 15-20 main categories.
      3. Keep the mention of the main product on homepage clear but brief. Li k to your money page from home page. Link from each supporting article back to money page. Doesn’t need to have perfect silo structure but internal link structure does matter. Also make sure page meta titles and descriptions are unique. And try to avoid reusing same text on homepage as on money page. This is always a bit tricky but you might be able to rank for both with little cannibalization if you focus on keeping content on money page and use homepage to direct traffic to this page.

    • @lukemounthill699
      @lukemounthill699 7 месяцев назад +1

      @CaseyBotticello Thank you so much it’s clearer now. So, in general, what we just described, is it a common way to go about this "problem"? How do sites usually deal with these situations?
      Can I have the pricing, features, etc. on both the homepage and money page, or should I just mention my product on the homepage and put pricing and features only on the money page?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      If the focus of your site is selling your product you can list some quick pricing info on homepage but generally I’d put this on either the product/sales page or create a separate detailed price page. My main point was you want internal links from the top level page pointing to your money page.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      @@lukemounthill699 Usually, if the purpose of the site is to sell a product or service, you have a Pricing and or Features page detailing what you are selling. The blog might drive most of the traffic but it is not the main feature on the site's homepage (basically, an eCommerce store layout). I would include pictures on both, but just 1-2 on homepage, and if you have more, include those on product page. More important, make sure you have a button or CTA to buy product on homepage, even if you have separate dedicated product/sales page.

    • @lukemounthill699
      @lukemounthill699 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticello Thank you!! Yes, the goal of my site is to sell my instrumentals(for musicians) and affiliate products within the music industry and earn from ads. Also I have to make sure the titles, h1s and descriptions of these 2 pages are different. That's what I'm struggling with.
      1. Can my homepage be my product page? But I guess it's not worth it because the homepage would be too long. So as we are talking I have to create a separate product page - and I'm going to rank it so I'll make a whole ''topical authority'' around this page.
      2. ''you have a Pricing and or Features page detailing what you are selling. '' so in this case what sections should I have on my homepage? I already have a hero section at the top, then benefits of working with me etc
      3. ''I would include pictures on both,'' pictures of the product? it's a digital product so I there's basically no pictures. I can only put a playlist of instrumentals on my homepage(and on product page as well)

  • @novitekka
    @novitekka 6 месяцев назад +1

    We need an update now about this website.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  6 месяцев назад +1

      Here you go: ruclips.net/video/BrO0nj3U_us/видео.htmlsi=ds7-jBM_4RTyEhHM

  • @winlingthomas
    @winlingthomas 6 месяцев назад +1

    good video ! what did you mean by "...not because Google has a pb with AI but because its gonna be derivative.." ?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  6 месяцев назад +1

      I was just making the point that any time you have highly unoriginal content (whether human written or AI generated) this is bad for your site.

  • @ShifaIdrees-b2p
    @ShifaIdrees-b2p 6 месяцев назад +1

    does the success also depend on the site appearance?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  6 месяцев назад

      Site appearance can definitely play a role. Both in terms of UX which affects how long visitors remain on your site and because site appearance can impact site speed (often times adversely). No single right answer but you generally want the site to look professional, be fast, and render well across desktop and mobile devices.

  • @AnkitSingh-go3nf
    @AnkitSingh-go3nf 5 месяцев назад +1

    Hlo buddy this website affected by February update ?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  5 месяцев назад +1

      I assume you mean the March update, and yes it was affected, but the causation here is tough, since the site was fine until new owner added thousands of automatically generated translated content which I believe may have played a role in the site getting dinged.

    • @AnkitSingh-go3nf
      @AnkitSingh-go3nf 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@CaseyBotticello ok thnku for your reply and also one more question in my mind is it possible to make 500 per month niche website in 2024

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  5 месяцев назад +1

      @@AnkitSingh-go3nf Yes! I just released a case study that is approaching this $ amount (or more):ruclips.net/video/Y3oVIBQtx6c/видео.htmlsi=kq65mLNavLLGbxhS

    • @AnkitSingh-go3nf
      @AnkitSingh-go3nf 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticello thnku big brother

  • @Ebadbhi
    @Ebadbhi 7 месяцев назад +1

    It's amazing 🎉

  • @Financierpro1
    @Financierpro1 2 месяца назад

    So MediaVine accepts AI content correct?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  2 месяца назад +1

      They dont want full blown copy paste ai content. But if you rewrite content, add your own unique images, and add some personal flair, it is really just a tool used in the content creation process. The bigger issue is spammy content, that’s not fact checked or blatantly used someone else’s work, and has no original material. This is basically a scraped site. And MV will reject/remove these. Especially if you are stealing content (which unchecked AI does).

    • @Financierpro1
      @Financierpro1 2 месяца назад +1

      @CaseyBotticello I understand that but I've never stolen anyone else's work. GPT4 passes copyscape every single time

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  2 месяца назад +1

      ⁠@@Financierpro1if it passes copyscape and isn’t a cooking site (where you’re risking ChatGPT stealing the formula but rewriting the wording to just avoid plagiarism) then yes this sounds like it wouldn’t be problematic 🙂

  • @simondev108
    @simondev108 8 месяцев назад

    Congratulations! What's your plan going forward? You've created a baby that needs feeding and a full-time content creation job. How do you plan to move away from generating all the content yourself?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +1

      I’ve already decreased content production significantly. Since I finished posting the 750 posts, I’ve only added a few new ones and plan to add 3-5 per month at most going forward. I’ve basically covered the topic in its entirety so now I just cover the occasional news post. I’ll probably update content twice per year beyond the first year but most is evergreen and I plan to focus on other sites. I’ve only done one post in January and traffic is still growing (it will take 4-7 months for the last few months of content to fully rank).

  • @박희진-f9v
    @박희진-f9v 3 месяца назад

    Is it only income from google adsense ?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  3 месяца назад

      From Mediavine

    • @박희진-f9v
      @박희진-f9v 3 месяца назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticello thank you so much, but I have no any option to apply mediavine

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  3 месяца назад

      @@박희진-f9v Then yes, you could replicate this process using just Google AdSense, although your RPM would almost certainly be lower (eventually, you'll get enough traffic to qualify for MV).

    • @박희진-f9v
      @박희진-f9v 3 месяца назад

      @CaseyBotticello the reason is the other that I am korean and MV is not serviced in here T.T

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  2 месяца назад +1

      @@박희진-f9v Is your traffic primarily from SK? Because MV does not restrict publishers based on their residence/location fyi...now if your traffic is not from tier 1 countries that is a different story:bloggingguide.com/tier-1-advertising-countries/

  • @anaskhan-dt1qh
    @anaskhan-dt1qh 8 месяцев назад

    How many posts you did per day

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад

      It ranged from about 30-150 per month so 1-5 per day on average.

  • @abhijitrg
    @abhijitrg 8 месяцев назад +3

    Great to see the case study working so well showcasing advantages of edited AI articles. Few questions though
    1. Seems like traffic has been going lower towards the end of the year. Did it come back up? or is probably a temporary dip ?
    2. Do you think EEAT signal matters more from the website homepage(physical address and phone number) or author bios?
    3. Am I right to conclude that content on a branded named domain will work better than a generic named domain(both being niche specific names though)?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +3

      1. It was just the normal end of December drop. It will reach its previous ATH in terms of traffic or get very close in January.
      2. I have seen enough sites without any EEAT signals do well, that I’m skeptical of it overall. That said, for making any site appear more like an authority, things like addresses and phone numbers help, although I only used an address on this site. I think having a persona with all the profile backlinks and schema set up correctly are more important.
      3. This is my general experience (assuming the content is also high quality). But I have other sites that are EMDs doing well too so it’s hard to say. It does seem to help CTR which is definitely an important metric.

  • @artemike
    @artemike 7 месяцев назад +3

    Hi Casey, somehow I found your website and I have to say you did an amazing job. Looks good, but more importantly, it doesn't scream Ai all over the place. There are posts where I can kinda tell, but probably it is because I know it is Ai. Keep it up 👍

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  6 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you so much! There are several now lol 😂

  • @happilydesigning
    @happilydesigning 7 месяцев назад +2

    Any video where you have shown the keyword research strategy? Would appreciate :)

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      No, but I'll add this to my "to-do" list of videos :)

  • @Snowz123
    @Snowz123 8 месяцев назад +2

    Hi Casey,
    Thanks for the wonderful insights about AI blogging and showing us that this can all be done successfully with the correct strategy!
    Since niche selection is extremely important, are there any specific niches you think wouldn't work with an AI writer? Examples like hobby sites such as fashion, pets and etc?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +2

      Thanks for watching! I'm not sure if there are specific niches that won't work with an AI writer (because with enough editing, anything can be perfected). But some of the niches I'd avoid would include news or current events, anything with political or social commentary, or any YMYL niche (less because an AI writer couldn't do it, but more because these niches are highly scrutinized by Google anyway).

  • @jssecrets
    @jssecrets 5 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you! Do you research an outline manually? Or you let Koala do that? 👍

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  5 месяцев назад +1

      Both! Sometimes I can see Koala is t taking article in the direction I want so I need to step in. But other times, if Koala is at all close, it’s easier to quickly remove extraneous sections from outline and then edit.

  • @BloggingisHardWork
    @BloggingisHardWork 8 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you so much Casey! It was like a pulling the curtain back on your case study. I found lots of tidbits that should help my own AI site! TY! *since you hit your 750 article plan, will you continue to add content or just let it sit?*

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +1

      I’m glad it was useful! I’m going to add maybe 5-10 posts per month, covering topics I enjoy or are somewhat newsworthy. Maybe try to get some of that discover traffic 😂

    • @BloggingisHardWork
      @BloggingisHardWork 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticello I've heard discover traffic is addictive, haven't figured it out yet, but FB is definitely becoming addictive for me! I love the almost instant feedback with my audience ❤️

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +1

      Same here! I’ve had some luck but no consistent replicable strategy for discover. Facebook is also on my road map to learn more about so maybe I’ll test that a bit and report back my findings!

    • @BloggingisHardWork
      @BloggingisHardWork 8 месяцев назад

      @@CaseyBotticello I'm calling my FB strategy "spaghetti on the wall". I'm trying lots of different things to see what works and doubling down on what does work. So far I have found a few that work and are building week over week. After 6 weeks I have a very engaging audience of about 1400 (from zero). Not too bad and it's now #3 for a traffic source behind Google and Pinterest.

  • @vovaeven
    @vovaeven 6 месяцев назад +1

    🙏🏼🙏🏼🔥✅

  • @MilanMihajlov
    @MilanMihajlov 6 месяцев назад +2

    Hey, I heard about you from Ricky from P24 (it was a YT live stream on their channel), and thank you for sharing some insights from your journey! I am going to consider Koala. PS. Where is the excitement? I would be super excited 😀. Congrats again on your success!

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  6 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks! And haha yes it was very exciting but I was also pretty tired after grinding away at my sites non stop for more than a year straight! 😅

  • @nextlevel1229
    @nextlevel1229 5 месяцев назад +1

    Does your site survive recent google algoriths?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  5 месяцев назад

      I’ve had mixed results across my portfolio of sites. It’s about 50-50 whether one of my sites saw a big change from update.
      However I have some sites that saw growth in this group too.
      This case study site was hit, but I don’t have access to GSC since I sold it. But I don’t believe it’s dead.
      My other case study site on YT was basically unaffected by update, which is why I like to have many sites.

  • @DanielleStewart
    @DanielleStewart 4 месяца назад

    Hello Casey are you still looking for ecommerce sites to partner with? I have an established ecommerce site and would love to chat with you. My site/shop is going on 8 years old.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  4 месяца назад +1

      Sure! Send me an email and let’s discuss your ecommerce site 🙂

  • @_totallybased
    @_totallybased 5 месяцев назад +2

    Hey Casey, I really appreciate this case study! It gives us all an example of what's possible. I'm starting a media blog covering current events and considering using AI for writing. Do you think I need to do keyword research for each article? I'm unsure where to focus my attention.

    • @_totallybased
      @_totallybased 5 месяцев назад +2

      I just now read through the comments and saw where you advise to avoid current events (culture, news, politics) as a niche, which is unavoidable for me given that I do an online show on these topics. All of that said, do you have any advice on how to "slay the dragon"?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  5 месяцев назад +2

      I think current events are harder since the rpms are usually lower and there is lots of competition…that said, if you took some time and figured out AI content production-there has arguably never been a better time to generate articles synthesizing current events using AI to allow an individual or a small team the chance to compete with larger media companies.
      While the content might not be evergreen, you can cut costs using AI, and I’m sure you could make this profitable (especially if you throw in some Google news and Discover traffic).

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  5 месяцев назад +2

      You will still probably benefit doing some keyword research but part of why I like this strategy is it is much more creating high conversion catchy content and less pure long tail keyword research (which is definitely in a period of major decline right now).

    • @_totallybased
      @_totallybased 5 месяцев назад

      @@CaseyBotticello Oh, wow. Thanks! That's not something I had even considered. I'll definitely be implementing this. Thanks again.

  • @SnowiifrogTvChannel
    @SnowiifrogTvChannel 8 месяцев назад +2

    You dident answer if you only monetized by ads. Any affiliate income also?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +2

      Yes, this site was only monetized with display ads (Mediavine). I like the very passive nature of display ads, however, I am looking at adding new monetization methods in 2024.

    • @SnowiifrogTvChannel
      @SnowiifrogTvChannel 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@CaseyBotticello i am already following the same metod you did with koala and SEOwriting with heavy editing. But in a an EU speaking country. It takes a lot time when i also add some affiliate links from the start like you Said 1-3hrs an article. But the traffic is already coming with 33 articles published since Jan 4. And 245 sessions i am pleased.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +1

      @@SnowiifrogTvChannel That's great! I'm glad to hear it's working so well!

  • @dnunn9475
    @dnunn9475 8 месяцев назад +2

    Were you editing the content all by yourself in the months where you were generating over 100 articles per month?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, I was! Only used anyone besides myself in the first month or so when seeding the site with content.

    • @dnunn9475
      @dnunn9475 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@CaseyBotticello Jesus.. that’s very Impressive. You must have been working around the clock 😅. One more thing. Were you aiming for a certain word count per article based on the competition?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад

      @@dnunn9475 it was pretty much a full time job (with long hours) for about 9-10 months. I’m glad it worked but with all the other projects I have, I was working every waking hour.
      I generally didn’t worry about the length of competing articles. Most of the longer competing articles were lacking in the other areas that I focused on (adding custom images, graphics, videos,etc.)

    • @dnunn9475
      @dnunn9475 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticello I know people working full time making around 20k a year! So I'd say the time investment was definitely worth it. I may need to get on some type of one on one call if you offer that at this point but I have just one more question lol. Seriously this time though. And thank you so much for your time by the way, I hope I'm not bothering too much. When doing keyword research do you aim to earn the top position, to be in one of the top 3 positions, or just to be on the first page in general?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +1

      @@dnunn9475 haha no worries! I created this video to help bloggers, and I'm happy to answer questions!
      I do offer consultation call (link in video description). But this is more for people with existing sites with questions about how to grow/improve their own site.
      To answer your question though, for this site in particular, there was a major focus on winning the featured snippet. That's because I had a lot of custom images and I test a lot of meta descriptions.
      That said, if something ends up at the bottom of page 1 it's not a total failure. But I will likely go back at some point and optimize the title, meta description, and featured image to give an article a second chance at ranking higher by increasing the CTR.

  • @disturbingthepeas3387
    @disturbingthepeas3387 7 месяцев назад +1

    I’m a bit confused on the topic of topical authority. It’s often suggested that we niche down to become an authority in a specific space but I guess my question is that when we do niche down, how far exactly should we be niching down? For example, if I wanted to create a blog about protein powder, which is already a sub niche within the fitness supplement space, would I then need to niche down even further to whey protein to gain that authority? The reason I’m a bit confused is because at this point I feel I’d now be going after a micro niche instead of a sub niche and I wouldn’t want to unnecessarily limit myself just for the sake of niching down.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      Good question! Obviously you can stick with the larger topic (protein powder), but even this topic will require thousands of articles to cover the niche in its entirety. This means it takes longer to achieve some degree of topical authority. TBC, protein powder is perfectly fine, but if you are just starting your site today it may be too competitive.
      If you go narrower in topic, you can cover this micro niche much quicker, and if you really are ambitious can expand into new adjacent topics.
      But I guarantee you that if you pick the right sub niche within protein powder you will find there is still hundreds of thousands of sessions per month that you can rank for.

  • @r3sh99
    @r3sh99 8 месяцев назад +2

    Hey Casey, a very informative video you have there with lots a tips and motivation for someone like me who is considering this strategy.
    I've got a couple of questions though and i will be happy you get your insights on these questions.
    First, do you use the default outline provided by Koala when generating an article or you use your own custom article outlines?
    What GPT version do you prefer using for generating articles - 3.5, 4 Turbo or 4 Legacy?
    Do you include the FAQ section and Key Takeaways in your articles?
    Also do you use extra prompts for your articles or you just allow Koala to do its thing?
    Many thanks.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks for watching!
      I use the default outline in most articles. Sometimes I will edit the structure if it’s missing what I think is an obvious section. But since I’m editing the content so much, it make sense to let it generally over produce content and just delete extraneous content.
      I used ChatGPT 3.5 for most of this site in Koala. I did this partially because of the cost, but also because 4 and 4.5 didn’t exist for much of this case study.
      But I’ve since tested them extensively. And on new articles (or if I’m going to completely update an article) I really like 4.5. At the current credit price, this makes sense for more complex articles (so now I pretty much never use 4).
      Still, conceptually, when I’m picking articles or even topics for an entire site, I look for topics that work with 3.5. Given how much cheaper it is (and for some topics it doesn’t produce noticeably worse content) and the fact I can still use the other Koala features like internal linking, I think finding this “3.5 friendly content” is a great strategy.
      Other settings in Koala:
      I don’t use faq sections or takeaways on this site. But I am using takeaways on other sites (I think it’s a useful feature, just not as applicable to most of the articles on this site).
      I generally let Koala do it’s thing but I use different tones (usually friendly or professional) on many articles. I also add a few basic custom prompts like limiting paragraphs to 3 sentences and special instructions on title formatting.

    • @r3sh99
      @r3sh99 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticello Thanks for your insights mate, they were really helpful and answered my questions perfectly. I guess it's time to really get my AI journey started then ;-)

    • @r3sh99
      @r3sh99 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticello Hey Casey, sorry I forgot to ask one more thing.
      How do you go about featured images? Do you just download them online, generate using AI, design your own custom featured images or go with no featured image at all?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад

      @@r3sh99 I am a big believer in custom featured images and include them in almost all my posts. I didn't use AI for the images on this site but that is definitely a good secondary option!

    • @CompanyBusinessCards
      @CompanyBusinessCards 7 месяцев назад +1

      This video really is motivating and and, can you talk a bit more about the Special instructions on title formatting. What do you mean by that. Thanks

  • @1dluep
    @1dluep 4 месяца назад +2

    how did the March 24 Google update hit it?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  4 месяца назад

      I no longer have access to this site’s analytics but I know it’s generally down. The new owner also made some changes right before update I strongly disagreed with so it’s hard to know what caused what.

  • @cinemarevisit7916
    @cinemarevisit7916 Месяц назад +1

    This was great! Thanks for bringing this eye opening Case study on RUclips! I have a question, did you do SEO/Keyword research for all the articles? I am asking cos you mentioned that articles were ranking for a "long tail keyword." That would have taken a lot of time!

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  9 дней назад

      I did some kw research but relies primarily on topical mapping:bloggingguide.com/how-to-create-a-topical-map-for-your-blog/

  • @marilyn-wo
    @marilyn-wo 6 месяцев назад +1

    great video Casey :) you mentioned this is something we can do today, and you have launched a few more like that early 2024. How are your new sites doing with the recent update? And with this update, would you still build your new sites the same way? If not, what are the changes you would take to monetize them within 6 months? Thanks for your time.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  6 месяцев назад +2

      So far (update is not over yet), they are all doing pretty good. There has been some traffic drops and spikes, but nothing more than 30% either direction and no penalties so I’m generally happy with how they are holding up given how many people were nuked during the past few days.

  • @boyfriendpresh
    @boyfriendpresh 7 месяцев назад +1

    "Absolutely blown away by this AI Blog Case Study! 🌟✨ I'm eager to dive into the details and apply these insights to my own strategy. Kudos on the incredible success! 🙌💡 #AIBlog #Inspiration"

  • @ShifaIdrees-b2p
    @ShifaIdrees-b2p 6 месяцев назад +1

    If you are a personal blogger simply using a beginner-level blog site - the theme is not so interactive but the content is - does it have anything to do with views and ranking?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  6 месяцев назад

      Anything that keeps your readers engaged with your content longer is better for rankings and usually leads to higher display ad earnings. And rankings likewise affect views. So yes, having interactive content, even on a personal blog, can have a major positive impact.

  • @ShifaIdrees-b2p
    @ShifaIdrees-b2p 6 месяцев назад +1

    What if you are generating 100% unique content around a specific niche following a specific strategy, yet the views ain't stable?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  6 месяцев назад

      Views will not be steady if you built a site using a fresh domain. It will take a long time to gain traction and then if you get lucky, you’ll see exponential traffic growth.

  • @dzulhelmi81
    @dzulhelmi81 7 месяцев назад +1

    750 posts per year, it means you did about 63 posts a month for a niche website?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад

      Yes, on average. Actual range was ~29-140 posts in any given month.

    • @dzulhelmi81
      @dzulhelmi81 7 месяцев назад

      @@CaseyBotticello per website???

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад

      @@dzulhelmi81 This case study is only covering one website.

  • @rasekhon
    @rasekhon 6 месяцев назад +1

    Could you let us know how you edit your posts? How do you research an article? this will be valuable info, Thanks.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  6 месяцев назад +2

      I generally:
      - completely rewrite title
      - rewrite most of into and conclusion to add personality and to directly answer questions for featured snippet in concise manner
      - I edit transition sentences as these tend to be redundant
      - Fact check AI content
      - Create/add in original images, videos or audio
      -do heavy internal linking to my other related posts
      Research is more after the fact since AI covers most of the content (mostly shortening this content). But I do spend a lot of time planning out the bulk of the articles before I start writing based on my own working knowledge of this niche. If you were less familiar with topic you may need to do several weeks or even months of hands on research to make sure you understand what that audience really wants.

    • @rasekhon
      @rasekhon 6 месяцев назад +1

      A lot of value in this reply. Many thanks, I'm actually going to screenshot this reply and read it from time to time.@@CaseyBotticello

  • @bobgeorgeff
    @bobgeorgeff 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks a lot for sharing this case study! Very instructive.
    Did you use AI to help you brainstorm and cluster the 700 articles?
    Can you share a visual map of the site?
    Would you still put out 50-150 articles per month given the recent March 2024 update?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  6 месяцев назад +1

      I used AI to brainstorm a bit but this was more of a month of manual research. I can’t share the actual map, but here is an article I created on topical mapping to help explain this:bloggingguide.com/how-to-create-a-topical-map-for-your-blog/
      I would probably be a bit more cautious in terms of articles published (maybe 50 max per month) but that’s also how this site grew so fast. If you are covering a niche that is largely overlooked you can definitely be more aggressive adding content.

    • @bobgeorgeff
      @bobgeorgeff 6 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you for the reply! That article on topical-mapping looks great. Will dive in later.

    • @bobgeorgeff
      @bobgeorgeff 6 месяцев назад +1

      I understand why you can’t share a site map. I should have asked if you could share a generic structure map with link ideas that shows a typical silo structure, such as how many types of posts and how they connect together. I’m thinking of hub/pillar posts, how to posts, info posts, etc. No article titles, just types.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  6 месяцев назад +1

      @@bobgeorgeff​​⁠the site began with a very tight topical map-3 main categories that stuck to a loose silo structure. Meaning I grouped content by category but did not follow strict silo structure in URLs. As I added more posts I tried to make sure I had plenty of hub pages to further increase articles being interlinked. I think having a mix of page types is key as this sends more of an “online business” signal to Google. I had maybe a dozen standalone pages offering free content. I tried to make sure each category roughly had at least 10 posts overtime (and if they didn’t-I changed the categories up to reflect content). Customer category pages always are a best practice (not just a blog roll but having their own featured images, additional text contextualizing key articles, and even videos). The site structure is similar to my site Blogging Guide if you want to see custom pages (I call these guides on BG).

    • @bobgeorgeff
      @bobgeorgeff 6 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks you, Casey!

  • @SunFlowerSurfer21
    @SunFlowerSurfer21 6 месяцев назад +1

    Awesome video & thanks for sharing! I first heard about this on the niche podcast so I had to check out your videos 💁‍♀️💕😍

  • @hannahspl
    @hannahspl 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for this podcast - very insightful! Just wondering if you think it's worth building out a content piller in this way rather than starting from scratch? I'd quite like to add a relevant new niche to my existing site - and it will make it easier to ride on some of the traction I've seen already. Are there any disadvantages to doing this? Would love to hear your thoughts and look forward to the next video. Thanks!

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад

      It’s tricky-if the new content cluster is pretty closely related it might be fine. But if it’s starting to cross into a new niche or makes your sites focus less clear to Google, you might be impacted negatively down the line. Topical authority is hard to build, so I am always hesitant to recommend someone dilute this value in their site by adding what’s essentially a new niche. If you are ok will some volatility and you really want to cover it, it may be ok. But usually what happens is you see short term success (since your existing site has relatively high DA and ranks well in Google) but at some point you go too broad and during an algorithm update your site might be at greater risk at getting hit. Again, it may not occur for 6-12 months, but it’s definitely worth debating before doing. Very hard to resurrect a site hit by Google.

    • @hannahspl
      @hannahspl 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticello thanks that's interesting. I actually don't have a very high DA and my site's only really just taking off. The niche is relevant to the original site, vbut
      I guess it may look a bit lopsided going all in on it like your case study! Just really don't want to start from scratch again!

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад

      @@hannahspl I totally get that and if they make sense together on one site (and you plan to cover both topics extensively) it may work out well. Just wanted to note that going broad can increase algorithmic volatility in search overtime.

  • @Dipmedia
    @Dipmedia 8 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks for producing this video Casey, I know I have asked you a lot of questions in the FS forum and I appreciate your time and feedback!

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +1

      No worries Shawn! I'm happy to help bloggers any way I can. That's why I did this video (trying to address many questions in one central place).

    • @monetaryprotocol
      @monetaryprotocol 8 месяцев назад +3

      @@CaseyBotticello Why are so many authoritative and influential marketers saying Niche Sites are dead?? I see recent case studies such as your own that show this business model is still alive and well. And by the fact you are currently ramping up multiple sites So many mixed messages, it's so irritating!!!! I understand this is a skill that is built over time but why so much doom and gloom.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +2

      @monetaryprotocol I get it. But keep in mind both things can be true at once. As I explained in the slide with costs, AI technology is what makes this model so attractive despite the risk. And there is risk, but that’s a natural trade off for the high rewards (even valuing my own time very highly, we are talking 30%+ annualized returns). If I had to spend 100x on a team of freelance writers, I wouldn’t ever go after these new and largely exploratory niches. I am still using writers and writing myself, but only for the sites that still make sense in a post HCU blogging future. I hope this helps!

    • @Dipmedia
      @Dipmedia 8 месяцев назад +2

      @CaseyBotticello How do we learn to recognize what niches can be successful in a post HCU world. It it as simple as failing, or do the steps you provide in your guides still hold some nuggets that can be a barometer to choosing successful niches? And by successful, I mean from 5k per month and more. How do we keep from going through the insanity of throwing things at the wall to see what sticks, or has HCU mad this world all just chance?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +2

      @Dipmedia I don’t think my advice for niche selection has changed much from before HCU-avoid YMYL niches first and foremost, look for niches or topic clusters where there are clear gaps in topical coverage, and make sure your niche is narrow enough that you can build topical authority relatively quickly.

  • @simon.stjohn
    @simon.stjohn 7 месяцев назад +1

    Hey Casey, Thanks for the great Case Study. Can I ask for your seed content, (1) what sort of content did you post - was it broad content on the niche or did you focus on a particular area? (2) was it quality content (3) what number of articles did you do? (4) what was the seed timeframe (sorry if I missed that!). Just interested to get a feel for the extent of the content required.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад

      Great question! It was a broad homepage covering several of my ideas for this site (I originally thought I might make it an ecommerce store as the name was broadly catchy and could have been used for a few business models). But the pages were pretty drilled down topic wise. I was able to keep most of them after I narrowed the site focus. Some page ideas like this that tend to work are: statistics pages (industry stats), pages contextualizing major players in space, maybe one broad post defining you niche, a post with your unique perspective or origin story to niche, and a few broad posts that outline products or services that you’ll eventually edit once you get to those articles. I wrote these myself or had my best writers so it was pretty high quality. I think there were like 10 posts or custom pages + legal, about, author, contact pages. I put these up pretty quick (less than a week) because I wanted to submit them to GSC asap!

    • @simon.stjohn
      @simon.stjohn 7 месяцев назад

      @@CaseyBotticello Awesome answer - thanks Casey....this points me in the right direction for sure! Thanks, Simon

  • @sp1375
    @sp1375 Месяц назад +1

    Won't Google rank you lower with AI-generated content?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  Месяц назад +1

      In my experience, no. Google is looking at a number of factors (site authority, backlinks, engagement, etc.). If your content is good in the eyes of readers you’ll do fine ranking.

  • @sustainlifejournalyoga
    @sustainlifejournalyoga 7 месяцев назад +1

    Impressive! Thanks for sharing.

  • @sp00ky313
    @sp00ky313 7 месяцев назад +1

    I've got some questions.
    1. Do you still post regularly since I assume that you already written the 700 something posts?
    2. How do you source/create images?
    3. How do you manage internal links? Dping them by hand or....?
    4. How is the site monetized besides mediavine?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      1. Yes I add 5-7 new posts per month and plan to keep this up for the foreseeable future.
      2. I take my own photos, use various elements from stock photos (or even free photos on Unsplash ) and create custom backgrounds, overlays and text, or I create infographics. The important thing is that they are all original enough that when I run a reverse image search there are no results (or that they add lots of value).
      3. A mixture of using Koala’s internal link tool and my own editing.
      4. Just Mediavine currently. Looking at adding an e-commerce element or some other add on business to it soon though.

    • @sp00ky313
      @sp00ky313 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticello thanks for answering. Isnt modifying stock photos "forbidden"?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      @@sp00ky313 Assuming you paid for them, the license on most stock photos allows for customization/edits/modifications. In fact, in some cases you need to make substantial edits to a stock image otherwise you might run into trouble later (not super common but does happen on platforms like Canva depending on the image size).

  • @knowhowplus1630
    @knowhowplus1630 7 месяцев назад +1

    you are inspiring us, great job

  • @hiphopfeed1238
    @hiphopfeed1238 7 месяцев назад +1

    Where do you get your images?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад

      Some are original photos that I take, some are heavily edited stock images (digital collage), and some are infographics or other custom visuals.

    • @hiphopfeed1238
      @hiphopfeed1238 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticello thank you for your timely response, Casey. I’m guessing you’re editing the stock images so that they’re coming off to Google as being original as possible. Would you be able to tell me how you’d go about editing these photos or even where you’d be going to find photos?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад

      @@hiphopfeed1238 Yeah, in general, I run a reverse image scan for each featured image and make sure that the version I post does not return duplicates. You can start with stock photos, but I would only use portions of the images (clip them using whatever graphic design tool you use), recolor other parts, add text, etc.

  • @IOFLOOD
    @IOFLOOD 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for sharing! Seeing the RPM was super helpful. I've got a blog with AI content with 1m monthly sessions I haven't monetized yet. Looks like I'm leaving a huge pile of money on the table!

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      Glad it was helpful! And wow with 1 million sessions I’d say you’re definitely leaving money on the table and should monetize! Congrats!

    • @IOFLOOD
      @IOFLOOD 7 месяцев назад

      @@CaseyBotticello Thanks! I applied to mediavine, do you think they'll accept a site whose content is mostly programming? (Python, Java), or would you recommend something else?

    • @IOFLOOD
      @IOFLOOD 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticello thanks, appreciate it! Got some basic tags set up today but trying to get into the other networks you recommended in your videos. Any ideas if programming content such as python pays well or if any specific network is good for it?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      @@IOFLOOD Programming tutorials are a fantastic niche, and I can almost guarantee you'll have a high RPM. I'd still aim for Mediavine or Raptive, but if you don't want to wait you could always try Google AdSense just to get a very rough sense of where your RPMs are at.

    • @IOFLOOD
      @IOFLOOD 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticello Great! I've applied to both. Hope to get approved soon, fingers crossed : )

  • @NikhilYadav-hg6sw
    @NikhilYadav-hg6sw 7 месяцев назад +1

    Hi casey, this was great saw your podcast on the affiliate school..
    I got a question regarding content upload-
    For topical authority it is recommended that you go category by category and im assuming technology niche must have more than 4 categories to target on your case study site.
    So when starting out did you just started with 1 category completed it and then introduced another category?
    Or it was other way around you started with 4 5 category populate them, then saw which one google liked and then started coverage from most liked category first and then the other one?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      You can do it either way. The first posts that I seeded the blog with covered multiple categories but after those 29 posts I generally focused on one category at a time. If you are less confident in your niche, trying a broader range of posts may be worthwhile. But assuming you’d finish the posts either way, doing one category at a time is usually faster.

    • @NikhilYadav-hg6sw
      @NikhilYadav-hg6sw 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticello thanks sir, got the answer. 🙂
      If possible can u do more niche selection video if possible

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      @@NikhilYadav-hg6sw any specific video topic requests? 🙂

    • @NikhilYadav-hg6sw
      @NikhilYadav-hg6sw 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticello i have two which comes to mind after watching this case study--
      How to find low competition angle for a tough niche.
      ex-
      1.Personal finance (you did stealth wealth but im confuse on topics) how do you find topic within that scope?
      Cuz if u go outside u will lose the essence.
      2. Cycling
      3. Home decor
      U can create a video on these niches im sure not only me others would also enjoy this how to find less competition angle video.
      2. Video topic - how you create article outline. You have a gem share it please😂

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      @@NikhilYadav-hg6swThanks! I'll try to work these in to future videos!

  • @idehenebenezer
    @idehenebenezer 8 месяцев назад +1

    Pls what was the average monthly search volume you pursued for each keyword?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад

      As mentioned in the video, I didn’t use kw volume to pick topics and many of the topics I brainstormed would have been “0 volume keywords “ that actually ended up being much more.

    • @idehenebenezer
      @idehenebenezer 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticello Wow. Thanks alot for the reply. I usually thought that if you pick keywords with no search volume, then your content may not get any traffic at all.
      I will keep that in mind now. Thanks. I honestly appreciate you taking your time to reply me :) Have a nice day.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      @@idehenebenezer You'd be surprised at how "wrong" many of these third party keyword tools can be. Definitely don't let these tools limit what topics you cover! I've had many "0 volume kws" generate 1000s of pvs per month!

    • @idehenebenezer
      @idehenebenezer 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@CaseyBotticello Really? Thanks for the info

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад

      @@idehenebenezer yes! There are tons of these!

  • @ariela_
    @ariela_ 7 месяцев назад

    Was it all organic seo or some promotions on social media like maybe Facebook groups or something? Because this is super motivating for someone like me who has a lot of free time and wants to dedicate that to growing my blog. And I want to know if I can do that just by writing quality posts covering topical authority and the other things you mentioned

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад

      This was 95+% organic seo traffic. And the remainder was just people organically sharing it (not me doing active marketing).

  • @avum
    @avum 8 месяцев назад +12

    A few questions:
    1. Why is it so hard to find editors? What is it about this particular kind of editing work that makes it difficult?
    2. Where did the expert quotes come from?
    3. How would the human-written intros/conclusions be different from what the AI created?
    You know what would make a great video/blog post? Doing an '"over-the-shoulder" tutorial of this editing process from start to finish -- what you change/add, why you change/add it, and how you change/add to it.
    Thanks for the video and sharing all this.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +5

      1. It is not so much that the editing work itself is that hard, rather, the ideal editor would have both subject matter expertise and understand where AI tends to fail. I don't think it's impossible to find or train someone on this, but it would drive up the cost per article significantly.
      2. The expert quotes were from a few days where I did some cold outreach to professors, other bloggers, and professionals in the industry (usually via email social media). I just asked them a few simple questions on a number of topics, asked if I could use their responses in my article, and while only a small number agreed, those that did usually gave me several great quotes, that I could sprinkle throughout multiple articles.
      3. The intros/conclusions that I wrote would usually strike a more informal tone and were less about synthesizing or summarizing content of article (which is what most AI tools do), and instead focused on quickly answering a question, while also providing some sort of hook to keep the reader reading. You probably could keep refining the intro or conclusion by themselves using ChatGPT and get something decent, but this was an area that AI seemed to struggle with, so it was more efficient to just do it myself.
      I like your suggestions! I'll try to come up with some examples and do a video with it. It's just a bit harder to show this since I rely on my niche specific knowledge quite a bit in this process...but I'll try to find a topic that works for a video!

  • @Dan11111-p
    @Dan11111-p 8 месяцев назад

    For 0 or low search volume keywords, what word count did you go for?

  • @saniafarooq1070
    @saniafarooq1070 8 месяцев назад

    what topics are underserved to start a blog?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад

      Here are a few:
      bloggingguide.com/low-competition-niches-for-bloggers/

  • @ClaudioPascual
    @ClaudioPascual 8 месяцев назад +2

    You look very excited about your success

  • @glendashaw8876
    @glendashaw8876 8 месяцев назад

    What security do you use for your sites? Thanks, I learned a lot from this, great work.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад

      The most important security feature imo is having multiple backups of your site (ideally through your trustworthy host and that you export to a third party service like AWS and have a physical copy of your blog backup data). This makes any hack or even error easy to fix.
      Beyond that:
      - Reconfigure your login page URL to reduce the chances of hackers finding and attacking it.
      -Get rid of old or unused plugins. This is where many hacks come from. And keep all software updated.
      -keep access to WP limited to current freelancers and use plugins to monitor what they are doing and restrict what they can access. These plugins generate temporary passwords that you can revoke with one click. Never share your login info to WP, hosting, domain, ad network, or other crucial service!

    • @glendashaw8876
      @glendashaw8876 8 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks so much for taking the time to answer my question. @@CaseyBotticello

  • @TheOzora86
    @TheOzora86 8 месяцев назад

    Hello did you use AI detector tools and bypass it ?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +1

      Nope! Google has stated it’s fine with AI generated content as long as it’s helpful so why bother with AI detector? None of them are reliable. When spot I checked some of the early articles they were usually 70% human written according to software…and this is before my edits (and similar to numbers when I ran 100% original content through it…so it doesn’t even work and more importantly, readers love it (high engagement, CTR, dwell time, etc.)

    • @TheOzora86
      @TheOzora86 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@CaseyBotticello Hello, Thank you for your reply,
      if you dont mind please make a tutorial video about editing AI content that google loves, from editing intro, body, and conclusion. You can use Koala as an example. From that video i think you will help alot of people :D

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  8 месяцев назад +2

      @@TheOzora86 Definitely! I've added this to my upcoming video to-do list!

  • @ModernDatingLifeFJ
    @ModernDatingLifeFJ 3 месяца назад

    Hey just finding your content and it is exceptional and high quality. Only negative I would say is that you speak a tad slow and monotone for me and I had to bump up speed to 1.25x. I know these results vids can be a bit boring for you as its an hour long of you talking, but just thought I would give some feedback. Subscribed and looking forward to more high quality feedback.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  3 месяца назад +1

      Appreciate the feedback and thanks for watching!

  • @sathya1495
    @sathya1495 7 месяцев назад +1

    Hi Casey, can you please share the interlinking strategy for these articles?

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад

      First, I used Koala's internal linking tool, which did a pretty good job incorporating ~80% of articles...beyond that though, it's important to make sure that any page in your site can be reached in 3 clicks (making all pages easily accessible) so I tended to link quite liberally throughout my content. This includes linking to category pages, about pages, and other less common pages as well.

  • @mintingprofit
    @mintingprofit 7 месяцев назад

    Hi Dear Casey... Thanks for the informative video. Please let me know, are you doing any humanization in AI-generated content manually or tools like hemingway app, undetectable ai.

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      I’m glad you found it useful! I don’t use either of these since I’m rewriting a substantial amount of the ai content.

  • @TikTokTrends-dc5sb
    @TikTokTrends-dc5sb 7 месяцев назад

    idk but it feels like a marketing campain for koala lol

    • @CaseyBotticello
      @CaseyBotticello  7 месяцев назад +1

      You can follow these steps using ChatGPT as I did in beginning for free (Koala didn’t even exist then). Or you can use another ai tool that you prefer. I can only explain what worked for me. The key was content velocity + topical authority + niche selection. Koala helped in my case with content velocity but the harder part was mapping out content in advance based on extensive niche research. No ai tool can do that for you.