Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley - Nick Jordan on the #1 Thing You Can Do to Scale Inbound Traffic
Episode Date: March 4, 2021Spartan philosophy, built in the black-ops lab of business: https://www.findingpeak.comFinding Peak podcast: https://linktr.ee/ryan_hanleyIn this episode of The Ryan Hanley Show, Nick Jordan, founder ...of ContentDistribution.com and the ClusterAI platform, joins the podcast for one of the nerdiest marketing episodes in the history of this podcast. It's amazing... you're going to love it (and learn something).Episode Highlights:Nick shares his background. (7:17)Nick gives an insight into the conversation around organic searches. (10:18)Nick shares why the opportunities around SEO are bigger than you might think. (14:49)Nick mentions the problem that most businesses have or most business owners feel. (15:03)Nick explains the funnel. (17:35)Nick shares a summary of what ClusterAI does. (26:23)Nick mentions why content velocity is the main thing to do. (28:19)Nick explains the Youtube embeds. (34:16)Key Quotes:“When you're leveraging backlinks to drive a particular outcome, what you're doing is you're praying to the Google gods. And if something goes wrong, you're praying again, because there are too many variables to diagnose and resolve. But when your strategy is entirely focused on being better than any other page, Google could show 100% in your control.” - Nick Jordan“You look for adjacent services or questions that your customer will always have. And then you target those to build awareness there. I call this brandjacking when you rank for other people's brand. And I love it because the more they spend on marketing, the more people going into your funnel.” - Nick Jordan“Google would be a very, very poor user experience if anyone could just post content and it ranks, you know, Google's like the stock market, it's going to bleed up.” - Nick JordanResources Mentioned:ContentDistribution.comNick Jordan LinkedInAgency IntelligenceReach out to Ryan Hanley--Recommended Tools for GrowthOpusClip: #1 AI video clipping and editing tool: https://link.ryanhanley.com/opusRiverside: HD Podcast & Video Software | Free Recording & Editing: https://link.ryanhanley.com/riversideWhisperFlow: Never waste time typing on your keyboard again: https://link.ryanhanley.com/whisperflowCaptionsApp: One app for all your social media video creation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/captionsappGoHighLevel: It's time to take your business workflow to the Next Level: https://link.ryanhanley.com/gohighlevelPerspective.co: The #1 funnel builder for lead generation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/perspective--Episodes You Might Enjoy:From $2 Million Loss to World-Class Entrepreneur: https://lnk.to/delkFrom One Man Shop to $200M in Revenue: https://lnk.to/tommymelloIs Psilocybin the Gateway to Self-Mastery? https://lnk.to/80upZ9This show is part of the Unplugged Studios Network — the infrastructure layer for serious creators. 👉 Learn more at https://unpluggedstudios.fm.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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Hello everyone and welcome back to the show.
Today we have an incredible guest, someone from outside the industry, and his name is Nick Jordan.
Now, I found Nick on LinkedIn.
He was sharing stories from client projects that he'd done in the marketing space.
And essentially, Nick has a very unique and I think forward-looking viewpoint on content strategy,
on how to create content, how much content to create, what types of content.
to create and how you find, and this is what I think is one of the more important aspects of this
conversation is how do you find the right content to create? And I know that's a big hangup for
a lot of you listening. You know you should be creating more content and you're not because you
just simply don't know where you're going to get the most bang for your buck. And Nick,
Nick's company, Content Distribution.com, and the tool that he has called Cluster AI, help you find
the right content to create. I'm using the tool in my agency for a lot of the YouTube videos
that I'm doing and I share that strategy with him, which is a really interesting part of the
conversation. There is one awkward section and it's not in Hicks fault. It's my fault. He asked
for an example and I give him trucking insurance, which had been on my brain for another reason.
And it's, you know, it's just like a really tough example to throw at someone who doesn't know
the insurance industry. But we work our way through that. And I think the meat and
potatoes of this conversation is incredible. So if you're a marketing nerd, if you love this stuff,
if content is something that you're really looking to take to the next level, you're going to
love this episode. Before we get to Nick, though, I want to give a shout out to today's sponsor,
and that is Premier Strategy Box. Mick Hunt and his entire team at Premier Strategy Box is
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I mean, I spent some time with Mick and his team, and they helped me with an hour
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And I've been recommending Premier Strategy Box for a long time.
And then, you know, Mick just being the tremendous guy that he is, said,
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Mick is and that translates to his entire team at Premier Strategy Box.
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All right.
Now it's time to get on to the content of today's show.
Nick Jordan, here we go.
Hey, man.
Hey, how are you doing?
Thank you so much for the reschedule.
I really appreciate it.
I'm sorry I had to do it.
Don't even worry about it.
It's all good.
Podcasters' life, you know?
Thanks.
Things come up.
It's all good.
No, I'm just happy to have you on the show.
To give you some background,
the primary industry that we talk to is, wow, let me start that again.
You can tell it's starting to be the afternoon on a Friday.
So our primary audience is insurance professionals.
Up and down the value chain, everything from brand new,
producers to, um, to, you know, executives. In some cases, we have CEOs of insurance carriers
that listen to the, to the podcast and all of them. And because we're recording right now,
I'm going to let you all know. You all are terrible at content marketing in general and content
production and general organic traffic growth. And that's why we have Nick on the show,
because this is one of the areas that our industry as a whole is horrendous at. So,
I have been preaching from the top of the mountain for 10 years now,
content marketing, the power of organic growth, what it can do for you.
And I won't, I'm not a master guru in any regard.
But they don't want to listen to me because I'm part of the industry.
So that's why I bring in super intelligent guys like you from outside the industry to tell them things so that maybe some of them will actually take action.
Well, I, I hope they learned something.
All right. So I was, I first found you on LinkedIn. You're sharing all these hockey stick
charts and in terms of organic growth, very eye-catching and wonderful to look at and certainly
enticing. So I went down the rabbit hole, went to content distribution.com and started reading.
And I, you know, it was, I expected, I expected my bullshit me to.
to start like going,
ah,
blah,
stuff seem to make sense.
The concepts make sense.
I think from a very high level,
you have a philosophy that when executed,
I couldn't really poke any holes in it personally.
Again,
not a master guru,
just been a practitioner for a long time.
So I was like,
oh,
there's something to this.
And then I checked out,
uh,
checked out cluster AI and what you were doing there,
what that tool was doing.
I have used it a couple times to get insights into niches.
So I have I've actually done a call with one of your one of your people,
just kind of an onboarding call or whatever.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
So I'm super interested in it.
So I guess before we get to the meat and potatoes, you know,
what brought you to what you're doing today,
helping companies reach these ridiculous organic traffic goals.
What got you here? What how did you, what's the origin story? Yeah, definitely. So I've been in, you know, building early stage companies for my entire career. Since 20, I dropped out of school and, you know, being at someone from Seattle, the thing that you do after you drop out of school is you start a startup. And so I started two that didn't work. And then I ended up joining a company's employee number eight. We grew to 200 people in four years without raising any money.
just by making a handfuls of cash on a really innovative product.
And then at that point in my career, I'm a sales guy.
I'm doing biz dev.
And it didn't bring me kind of, it didn't meet my lifestyle goals.
You know, I couldn't create value after I logged off for work.
I had to live on time zone to talk to my customers.
And basically, the impact I could make was limited by the hours and the day and the number of people I could talk to.
And so I transitioned to marketing by joining a marketing company to run sales and marketing for them without knowing anything about SEO.
And I crushed my first project there completely accidentally.
The blog grew from zero to 100,000 organics a month in about 13 months.
And while I didn't know what I was doing, I took notes on what I did.
And when I repeated those things, I saw similar amounts of success.
And now our biggest project is over 500,000 organics a month.
We got it there from 0, 16 months ago.
And we've done it.
You know, we've brought four projects from zero to 100K.
So that sounds crazy to me.
Like that sounds impossible.
I mean, like when you think about it, you know, who wouldn't want 100,000 organic
visitors coming to their website, especially if they're targeted and in some portion
our market?
Right?
So you're thinking yourself.
geez, that would be a game changer for my business in 13 months.
That sounds impossible.
But like I said, I, again, I'm not like the holy grail,
but I went through all your stuff.
And I'm like, I couldn't poke a hole.
I couldn't say this seems like gimmicky or whatever.
The strategy is super interesting.
And if I'm going to do that very high level,
you tell me where I get this wrong.
Your general philosophy is that most businesses,
who go after organic and SEO, they're driven towards backlinks.
And your position is that while those may be nice, they're incredibly difficult to get
today.
And really, the true driver and what's accessible to everyone is content velocity and mixing
different keywords in a way that others haven't.
That's kind of my high level takeaway.
I'd love for you to break that down and the nuance.
and stuff.
Yeah, I think that's a good highlight, high level takeaway.
I'd like to add some, you know, color to that.
Please.
So right now, the conversation around organic searches heavily indexed towards backlinks
and technical things that, you know, I don't understand.
And I want to circle back and say that I achieved those outcomes that I just talked about
without building backlinks and without really being very technical.
And, you know, like I said, I just got into SEO about three years.
ago and now I might have the best SEO case study of 2020. And what our theory or what our
strategy is based off of is Google, you know, Google being a rational player in the market.
So it's 2021. Google is known as the most innovative big data company in the world. And they also
happen to own Android, Chrome, and Google Analytics. And if you think about it, is there any better
metric that measures whether one page adds more value to a user than another page,
then user engagement metrics.
Things like time on site, bounce rate, pages visited, termination of search, which is
whether people stop searching once they see your page.
Overall site engagement, return visitors, branded searches are, I think a better indicator
on page value than any other metric available.
And, you know, once, once people hear that, they go, oh, yeah, that does make sense.
Yeah, no, it makes complete sense to me. And I think, you know, this is why, this is one of the places where I think a lot of, you know, everyday business owners who may hear, uh, someone talking about, hey, you should create content, you should have a brand.
And, you know, I feel like the next level is always some hyper-tactical anchor links and
internal link and all these things that like your, you know, your brain starts to leak out
your ears.
You're going, geez, you know, I know about insurance.
I don't know what the heck you're talking about.
And this, what really drew me in and why I wanted to have you on is this feel, to me,
your methodology feels accessible to everyone.
And that's what really attracted to me to what you're doing is, yeah, there's maybe
some technical reasons why it works, but you don't have to be technical in any way to
actually utilize the benefit.
I love what you said there.
And the word you use was accessible.
And when the outcome comes down to how.
well can you service the user, you know, that's something that's completely within your control
as a website owner. And when you're leveraging backlinks to drive a particular outcome,
what you're really doing is you're praying to the Google guts. And if something goes wrong,
you know, you're praying again because there's too many variables to really diagnose and
resolve. But when your strategy is entirely focused on being better than any other page Google
could show 100% in your control.
Yeah.
So how does that work?
How do you do that?
You know, what does that look like?
Where do you want to start from?
Do you want to start from evaluating the opportunity?
Yeah, yeah.
So let's, okay, let's take a case study.
Let's take a case study.
So I'll use a niche that isn't one I'm using.
So this doesn't sound like just, I,
I hoped you in here for free consulting,
and I'm actually never going to share this.
Let's take trucking insurance, okay?
Not a lot of agency trucking insurance,
but it's a very niche focused market,
but there are some big players that advertise in it.
So if you were to do a search, you go,
oh my gosh, how would I compete against this company or this company?
Right?
You're seeing big, huge names in there that would be a little bit of a,
and I've heard this from agents,
man, how do I compete against the Hartford?
How do I compete against travelers?
They're on a Dow Jones Industrial.
Like I could never, ever compete with them in the organic space.
So, so you're, you know, how would you, where would you start to start to wedge your way into that?
Yeah, you know, when people think about SEO, they usually think, oh, there's like one or two or a handful of keywords that I want to rank for that would like make my business.
And in general, that's, that's not correct.
The opportunities generally significant.
significantly bigger. There's oftentimes dozens of bottom of the funnel opportunities, but then there's
hundreds or thousands of opportunities across the middle and the top of the funnel. And so the problem
that, you know, most businesses have, or at least most business owners feel like they have, is that they
have a great product and they have no awareness. And if only, if only they had more awareness, other people,
other customers would pick their product because it's clearly better. And, you know, the way that,
the way that brands evaluate vendors is they don't consider every vendor in the world.
They consider, you know, just a handful, maybe three to five, ten tops. And it's, you know,
it's by searching Google for those bottom of the funnel things. It's also just brands are
familiar within the industry, maybe the last, you know, for referrals. But when you're able to
answer the buyer persona's question at every stage of the funnel by the time they get to the
bottom you know yeah they might be considering the big boys but they'll also be considering you
because you've really educated them you capture their email address you've showed up in their
inbox a bunch of times and when they're ready to purchase you're in the running yeah that um
so i like this idea because you know there's a lot of um there's a lot of vendors that
that sell into the insurance space because they see, one, that in general, the industry is terrible at this particular topic.
Two, it feels like they have a lot of money.
And three, it's a sales-oriented business.
So growth is incredibly important.
So what you get is you get vendors coming in.
They're like, oh, we're going to rank you for business insurance.
and, you know, that there's, there almost couldn't be like going after that term serves such a little bit, you know, there's this tiny, this minuscule amount of value.
Like it feels like they'll show you.
And I've seen these pitches before.
Like they'll be like, look, you know, 12,000 people a month in your geographic region, search the term business insurance.
And it's like, that's fine.
But when you really evaluate it and I, and I would love for you to talk through this topic, that is like way, way, way, way at the very beginning.
of your search process, you might put in business insurance.
Like you don't even know who's in the space at that point.
So that would be like a very tippy top of funnel term.
So when you say that, what does what is this funnel that you're describing?
And how does a search term evolve as someone kind of moves down the funnel?
Yeah. So let's start with, let's start with the bottom of the funnel.
So, you know, for trucking insurance, there's probably the keyword maybe, would you consider trucking
insurance the top of the funnel or bottom of the funnel? It's probably it's probably towards the top.
You know, you, you haven't really to set. You're not looking for cost or how much or how do I get.
You're just, hey, I own a truck. I need trucking insurance. Like where do I even begin? That's,
that's probably where you're at if you're punching that in. Okay. I don't know much about
that's okay. But take a topic that you do know. I don't want to confuse the idea.
Take something that, take an example you do know and rock and roll with it. It's all good.
Oh man. Oh, man. Yeah. Okay. I really got thrown off. I was going deep into this trucking insurance.
Analogy. Man, I talk about this all the time. Okay. So let's say, okay, I will, okay, so I work in a space. I create SaaS products. And one of the SaaS products I need to buy to build my own app is a way to build customers. And there's apps like rechargely and
Curley and ChargeB, and what they help do is abstract away the development to build my own
billing model, and I can just plug and play their systems in. And it saves me a bunch of time
and development costs and effort building that functionality because they're the experts, and they've
helped 10,000 businesses build this billing model. Now, the people that choose these products
are people like me. And, you know, when I'm, when I'm searching,
for information around how to launch a SaaS product,
there's all this things that I'm going to search for
before I search for how do I do startup billing?
How do I like, what's my billing system look like?
You know, there might be things like how to design a SaaS landing page.
You know, best like, best SaaS like conversion, conversion resources.
So there's all this stuff that I'll search for.
And then I'm like, oh, I got to build a billing system now.
And when I'm considering, you know, who to buy, I'm going to be considering the vendors that I've previously built, you know, good, good mine share with.
You know, that taught me something.
Yeah.
So, okay.
So let me, I'm going to, for the, for the, for all the insurance people listening, I'm going to try to pull this in an example.
And you tell me if I'm, if I'm on this or not.
So, um, so let's say you do, you write business insurance, just just general business insurance.
And, um, you know, one of the things.
that every business has to have if they have employees is a payroll service.
You got to have some way to pay people, right?
So you would, so like maybe you'd start to do reviews of both national and local payroll
companies bringing people to your site.
So now they're going, oh, this guy or this company or this woman, they really know about
payroll companies.
What else do they know about?
Absolutely.
You look for adjacent services or questions.
that your customer will always have.
And then you target those to build awareness there.
And I like, I call this brand jacking when you rank for other people's brand.
And I love it because the more they spend on marketing, the more people go in your funnel.
Yeah.
I actually just did.
So one of the things that I wanted to talk to you about, and maybe this is the free consulting part of the podcast.
But I, so your methodology, because I read every article on your site for the most part,
Unless you've produced any new ones in the last two weeks, which you probably have.
But I've read a lot of the articles because I was super interested in the process.
And as I saw it, the process is you run, say, a keyword research on the general main topics.
You use a tool like AREFs, which I've mentioned before in the show or SCM Rush or one of those,
to get adjacent ideas, you know, related terms.
And you come up with this huge list of keywords, like 20,000, whatever it is, it doesn't matter.
Yep.
And you plug that into your tool.
cluster AI, your tool then takes and looks at all those keywords and says, okay, who's
ranking and what are all the adjacent ideas or clustered ideas, both from a top level keyword
terminology and from subheads that you can use to rank where there are gaps in the market,
where they're, you know, it's not just, well, I'm only going to rank this 600 word blog post
for the most competitive term in our industry.
I'm going to look at some of these others. Okay. So then you create at scale. You create with
velocity and I really like the idea of velocity because I've seen it. It's funny. I don't know
that I ever put two and two together, but I certainly, I have seen it at other times in my own
career where I've driven a lot of traffic when I was producing at a high volume, high quality.
So that's your idea. It's velocity versus backlinks maybe at a super, super high level. Okay.
So I started doing this, but what I realized is one, I don't have the time to write that much.
And two, I don't have the budget to pay the writers.
But what I can do, and this is where I've kind of taken your idea and morphed it into something I can actually produce,
is I've been creating YouTube videos on the same way.
Like using Cluster AI, I can pump out.
Oh, that's amazing.
So how's that going?
It, dude, it's, it's amazing.
because I can, I have a studio, so I guess video, business video is something that I'm fairly,
I've been doing for like 10 years.
So I have a little studio right here.
So I can just mass produce these fuckers.
I can just, I look and I'm just like, and this is where to your brand jacking part that I think is really interesting, what I found what in Cluster AI, the Cluster AI results or whatever that I got was was a bunch of big, big commercial brands.
and the term business insurance.
So like Liberty Mutual Business Insurance, State Farm Business Insurance,
Geico Business Insurance.
So I took all those and I just blasted out YouTube videos reviewing these companies
and their business insurance with obviously the punchline always being and you should contact
us for more information and push those out into YouTube.
Now the goal is get them transcribed, take the transcriptions, build them out a little bit,
put them on the websites.
and I have two. Love it. Love it. That's where I'm headed. But like, this works even blasting
out YouTube videos because now I'm doing a YouTube video almost every single day because I already
know what the topic is. I can do them three to five minutes. I have them templated over here.
And I'm just watching my YouTube traffic goes like this. That's incredible. I've never heard
that use case. We're going hard on YouTube and we never really connected the dots on using
cluster AI. I think building the building the content system,
and just the allow you to get in there, get out,
and be very efficient is like very hard
and we're still very, very inefficient.
Man, I love that.
So okay, so backing up.
Yeah, sorry.
No, no, I was going to say,
it works exactly the same way because when you, when you,
so I'm using the subheads as bullet points.
So I basically take the subhead recommendations,
make them bullet points in my video.
And then if you,
if you get the video transcribed or the,
or you upload an SRT file for the closed captions.
Now you've just fed Google's number two search engine
exactly what your tool is telling them to do.
Okay.
So you put the keywords in the what?
So I say the keywords in the video as if they would be subheads.
So I take,
so I'll take one of your lines.
So your first keyword result or the first cluster A desire result
is the top level keywords.
So that becomes the,
Oh my God.
The title.
Then the subheads, I break out into bullet points and I just write them out on a little sheet of paper.
And I just, you know, so I kind of.
And then I say them during the video.
So now YouTube is transcribing the video to get a few.
Yeah.
And you just get all of those different ways that people are searching for the same thing.
Because it's like, it's all long tail.
Like what, something like 40% of Google searches are your D or have never been made before or something crazy like that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Dude, I love that.
Okay, I'm going to tell the actually slack the team while you're saying that.
I was like, we're doing this.
Yeah, dude, do one of your hockey stick charts on, you know, do it and then do one of your hockey stick charts.
It would be cool.
It would be fun to see that.
That would be super cool.
Yeah.
Man, that's great.
What's up, guys?
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Peace.
Let's get back to the episode.
Okay.
So you were saying earlier, I want to summarize what cluster AID does.
It basically maps out all the opportunities to get in front of your qualified audience.
It gives you the main keyword, gives you every variation of the main keyword,
and it gives you the total search volume that the page can capture.
And this algorithm is mathematically proven to be correct because it uses data from Google to make keyword decisions.
And even the most talented SEOs, they just guess when they're doing keyword research.
So it really levels the playing field.
And it allows anyone without any SEO skills to do keyword research as long as you have a great vocabulary.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It just feels like you're down a rabbit hole and you don't know what the heck you're going to get out of it, you know?
And what's required for learning is iteration and basically implementation and feedback.
And with SEO, it's implement, wait for a long time, and then feedback.
And so that makes it very difficult and very stressful to know whether you did it right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Going to velocity.
Velocity is the number one thing you can do to scale up organic search outcome.
And when you look at all of my projects that have gone zero to 100,000 organics a month,
the thing that they had in common wasn't the industry, it wasn't the number of backlinks,
it wasn't, you know, how much money was raised, it was how fast we published content.
And I say I have, you know, for zero to 100,000 organics a month projects.
I also have, you know, the same number of much worse projects.
and the things that didn't get done there was content didn't go live for whatever reason.
Maybe it wasn't approved.
Maybe the approval process was too brutal.
Maybe the client turned out all the writers.
Maybe only the CMO could approve content.
But whatever reason, content didn't go live and the project's worn is awesome.
So the reason content velocity is the number one thing you can do is if there really truly
are hundreds of thousands of ways to get in front of your target audience,
like you said, you just went through all the insurance companies.
There's probably 50 more plus different products that you could brand jack to,
maybe hundreds of products.
So this is thousands of pages.
And you can't rank for a group of keywords until you have a page about that group of keywords.
So if there's 500 opportunities to get in front of your target audience and you publish 10 pages per month,
it's going to take you four years, maybe five years, to be able to be where your audience already is.
today. And so you really, you just get it out the door as quick as possible. You start that
Google rankings countdown. And if you can front load those 500 one year, by year two, it'll all be
mature and giving you business impact. Can you talk about mature? And take, yeah, take your drink.
That idea, I think the idea of content maturing is something that might be foreign to people,
but is really important. You know, Google.
Google would be a very, very poor user experience if anyone could just post content and it ranks.
You know, Google's like the stock market.
You know, it's going to, it's going to like bleed up.
It doesn't like, well, maybe not nowadays.
Depends if you get listed on Wall Street bets or not.
Yeah, for real.
But in general, you know, you start on page eight or nine or whatever and then you just like walk
upwards over the series of time.
on very established sites, you know, I can rank in one day.
On newer sites, it might take three or six months.
On medium sites, you know, and it'll range from there depending on the keyword that you're targeting and how you compare to the competition.
Yeah.
You know, what's interesting is, so I launched my insurance agency in March.
I launched the website in February.
And it's been, what's been funny.
And I don't, I don't geek out on marketing like this a lot for,
for these guys because I know a lot of the listeners,
they just don't go this deep,
but I love these episodes when I can.
What's been,
what's been,
what you just said is wholly true.
What I've watched is when I first published content,
um,
uh,
back in say March,
April,
I mean,
my site's months old.
I mean,
it's a baby.
It's not even a baby.
It probably isn't even born yet technically in Google world, right?
So I'm ranking 70th position,
80th position for these different keywords.
And,
and what's been.
really interesting is especially since I hit that six, seven month mark, I've watched almost as a
group, the keywords have started to move down. And now almost all of my keywords are flirting in
the 20s and 30s. And we're not even at a year yet. So what I'm hoping is continuing to produce
couple posts a week, doing the YouTube, driving traffic in from that way. And I have a very technical
question for you. But you know, you can just steadily watch these, this content, push down.
It's another reason why I am an advocate for having some sort of tool that allows you to watch
where your keywords are ranking for because otherwise you can lose faith in the process.
You know what I mean? If you don't have a way to see what's going on, you can lose faith.
But it really has been exactly what you said. As the site is mature and as I've continued to produce
content, I've watched as a group, not just singular keyword, some of them have answered and others.
So I'm saying this to the audience to say, this is real life.
Like this actually happens as these stuff just matures and moves closer to that first page.
Yeah.
And you know, if you're planning on being in the real estate, sorry, the insurance industry for one year, don't do this.
But if this is a career move for you and you plan on being here for a while, you know,
it's really powerful when you can get leads and you're sleeping or you're on vacation or you're doing whatever.
versus having to rely on like one-to-one methods or like, you know, like B&I or whatever.
B&I, oh my gosh.
Nothing against B&I.
Please don't come after me, B&I.
I think it's perfectly fine.
I just had a rough B&I experience.
I was in a B&I for four years and I thought all these people really liked me.
And then the moment I was just like, I can't come here.
I started, I matured to a point in my career where like I couldn't come to the meeting every week
at this certain time.
It just didn't work anymore.
So I was like, I have to leave.
And like 75% of them move their insurance
to the next guy the next week.
And I just was like, oh, really?
You don't actually give a shit.
You know, you're just because you were forced
to be in this meeting with me.
And I was like, I'm not really into that.
So here's what I was going to ask you.
So engage me.
You're saying, you know, a great way to show Google
the value of a page is the engagement,
the interaction with it.
So one of the things that,
I have done for a very long time in multiple businesses, not just this business, is embedding
YouTube videos on inside a blog post and then positioning content around them. I'm super interested.
I have a way that I do it. I have no idea of how I do it is the most optimum way,
which is usually like a little bit of intro text, the video itself, maybe a call to action
or some sort of capture after the video
and then more text after it to a certain regard.
I just, I wonder, you know, my page, my page,
my time on page is always pretty decent.
But I do feel like sometimes those pages with YouTube videos,
they tend to take longer to rank or they don't or,
or versus say like a 2,000 word page,
a 700 or 1,000 word page where the YouTube video doesn't rank as well.
Does that make sense to you?
So YouTube embeds can slow your site down a lot.
You want to look at a plugin called like WP YouTube Light or something like that,
and it makes it so it doesn't kill your page speed.
PageSpeed super big for ranking.
I usually do it in the intro just to catch anyone who likes, you know, video format.
You know, I generally like to read, but some people like video.
And I've found like a correlation between embedding YouTube videos.
in ease of ranking.
You know, I think,
one,
Google wants to promote pages
with YouTube videos in them
because it's another Google property.
Two,
I think once,
you know,
Google starts testing it
on the first page,
generally videos,
pages with videos
will have better user engagement metrics.
The next thing that we're going to try
is you can,
you can now add like chapters
on YouTube videos or something.
So we're going to,
we're going to slice up the video
and we're going to put the relevant chapter
under each section to see if we can get like a bunch of watches
is and um yeah i i i have a a friend of mine is a big is big into content marketing and he he did
some tests around um i say a friend a person that i know not not it's not like a friend friend
i couldn't text him but um he he was telling me that um so one of the things that he was testing
was almost he created chapters with anchor links so he basically took he basically took he basically
a video that may have been 20 minutes long or like a or you know maybe could have been a webinar
or something but they did it in a nicer way 20 minutes long and and had seven chapters in the 20
minutes the seven chapters became a playlist on YouTube so he created a playlist around this
particular topic seven videos and the whole video and then in a blog post used anchor text to where
you could click down to a certain video so we had seven in bed seven YouTube and
beds on the page, but, but you could click down to the one you wanted to watch. So if you were
more. I'd love to see that page. Yeah, it was really, I got to see if I could find it. This was like a
year ago. And now I'm telling you this and I'm like, oh my God, I'm not going to have any
the reference material for this. And I'm saying to him, I will find it. But that to me was a
really interesting concept because now one, you're getting engagement because someone's
clicking an anchor, clicking an anchor link that's driving them further down the page. Just that,
movement alone is going to keep them on the page longer. And then if they like one of the videos,
they're going to watch another portion of the video. Now you're looking at three, four
interactions on a singular page. And that's, that's really interesting concept to me.
You know, that, I mean, I know, oh, man, remember, shoot, what was that website? They used to do,
Well, they're still there.
They do lead capture.
They start his lead capture and they got the guy.
Oh, my gosh.
Why am I missing all these references?
This is going to kill me.
It doesn't matter.
Sumo, Sumo.
Yeah.
Noah Kagan.
Noah Kagan, yes.
So they used to do really interesting things with anchor text at the top of the post
to drive engagement where they would get people to jump topics down
further because then what do you freaking do you read a topic then you scroll back up and you read
the section beforehand and now you're on this page forever and you know and it just takes the page
and goes you know I don't know that's it's just this this topic I don't know why it interests
me so much but it does um and what I've seen with YouTube is that my YouTube videos that I can
drive external referral traffic to end up ranking better and faster and my theory is that
you know YouTube's goal is a key
keep people on YouTube longer.
And so that's going to drive who it recommends and auto plays and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Yeah, but when you launch a video with no traffic, Google doesn't have any data on you,
you know?
And so it's kind of risky for Google to try it.
It just takes a lot longer.
But if you can jam it full referral traffic and that traffic is engaged as, you know,
the videos that's currently showing the people searching for that, then I'll start popping you in there
and you can create a lot of traffic.
Yeah.
The interesting thing for YouTube, when it comes to YouTube for me too, in using kind of mashing
these two strategies together is YouTube still feels like undiscovered country to me for a lot of
industries. Maybe not for every industry. If you run a SaaS business or you're into unboxing,
I think, you know, those might be fairly flooded or you do like camera tricks. But if you,
for service businesses, for, you know, a lot of businesses, I feel like YouTube is completely
undiscovered. I just think there's these videos that are there, but man, you want to talk about,
you want to talk about density of content in Google versus density of content in YouTube search.
I think for a lot of these, for a lot of business classes, YouTube is still wide open.
I mean, I produced 150 videos so far in a year. And, you know, I would put my YouTube traffic
up against just about any other insurance business in the country right now. So,
Oh, that's fantastic.
That's cool.
You know, and I look at that and I'm like, oh, my gosh, what's it going to be like in three years when I have 600 videos?
You know, that, that, and I don't think, and it's just one.
I mean, anyone, anyone who's listening to this could come behind me.
There's plenty of space.
You know what?
There's what seven to ten YouTube searches shown when someone.
So I think, I think it's really interesting this topic.
And this is what I want to go back to.
I'm just kind of, you said something that's really interesting to me.
And I think this gets lost on a lot of people.
You said, there's a tremendous amount of value in capturing leads while you're sleeping or on vacation or doing any other thing in your business, right?
You're calling one lead and someone else is filling out a form on your website, right?
Like that kind of stuff couldn't happen if you haven't built this up.
And, you know, that to me, I don't know, that to me is something that's completely lost on.
people.
It's the long game, you know, like you have to balance what needs to be done today with
what's going to set you out for success in the future.
And it's very easy to ignore the second thing because you're on the hamster wheel today.
Yeah.
So if someone's listening to this and they're like, man, I would love for this guy to help me.
Like what is, so you have content distribution, which is an agent, a content agency.
And then cluster AI is your is a tool that that mashes in.
technically two different things.
Cluster AI is a tool that you can subscribe to.
And then Content Distribution.com is an agency.
That's correct.
Yeah, Content Distribution.com is focused on like Series A and beyond startups in San Francisco,
with huge amounts of capital to deploy very quickly.
Cluster AI is a SaaS product that anyone can use.
It removes the skill level from doing world-class keyword research.
It helps you understand every opportunity to get in front of your qualified, you know, buyer.
And there's a lot of free content on the website that is generally enough to get you going in the right direction.
Like you said, you know, at the beginning of the call.
So I want to be respectful of your time.
But I'm very interested in like, so you've kind of taken the voice of this idea of content velocity and really push it to a whole other level.
I mean, I think you're doing a tremendous job on LinkedIn, just in that space.
I mean, you certainly caught my eye for sure.
And where do you see?
Like what are, you mentioned maybe a couple tests that you're doing.
What are just maybe things you're not ready to test yet, but things you're like looking down the road going, geez, it would be really interesting to test this.
Or I wonder, is there anything like really intriguing to you down the road that you're looking forward to testing or you think might work?
Greg? Yeah. So there's there's two things we're looking at, you know, three, two things that we're
looking at testing coming up. So the first is meta titles. So right now we have, we're working on
some projects. They have a couple thousand pages of content across maybe different, 20 different
content verticals. And we, you know, that's a lot of clicks. And so if we can increase our number of
clicks by by 10% it ends up being, you know, like a significant amount of revenue.
And so we're going to start playing with that at scale.
Yep.
Metatititals really.
I mean, for so long, people have just said, nah, they don't do anything.
They don't even look at them.
You don't believe that.
So I think that meta titles will drive a certain percentage of click through rate.
So I try and be.
I actually.
have a very, I guess,
inflammatory meta-tidal strategy.
I'll try and go the opposite of what
everyone else is saying. So I'm at
a puppy website, and I'm talking about
you know, Cocker Spaniels,
and everyone's saying how cute and fluffy they are,
I'm telling you why three
reasons vet say to avoid Cocker Spaniels.
And then, you know, when you see that in the search
results, and you're like, fluffy, fluffy,
avoid, you're like, what's wrong with
Cocker Spaniels? I got to click this one.
and if people jump over position one, two, three, four, five and click me on six,
eventually Google is going to be like, these guys better answer the question.
They're going to put me up.
Yeah.
Put me up towards number one.
I love that.
I mean, it's just, it's just wild to me how, you know, this, this game, we'll call it.
I mean, it's so much more than that, but is, is wild to me because, like I said,
especially I think in professional services in SaaS and startups and in tech world, like this is,
this is part of, I mean, this is warfare, right? I mean, you are, you are full out.
You're picking your, your, your, your, your battle partners and going to war every day against your
competition. I think in the professional services space and insurance for sure, man, there's just so many
people who have not invested the time or energy, man, I can't tell you the number of people
who email me and they just go, geez, I, I don't even know how to get a blog post out a, a month,
let alone a week, you know, and I'm just like, yeah, I don't, I don't know what to say.
Keep cold calling, you know what I mean? Like, that's the best you're going to be able to do.
And again, not to not cold calling because it can be productive.
I just, I think you have to do both.
And this to me is taking some piece of this conversation and starting to implement it,
it will pay so many dividends down the line.
It's not any funny.
I mean, you're talking about stuff that is definitely advanced,
but I do like to show them how far you can go.
You know, I forgot who did this case study,
but this marketer did a case study on the CRM industry.
And I think what he was doing is he's mapping employees to revenue.
And what he saw is that one company in particular generated way more revenue per employee than the entire industry.
And the thing that was different than them is they had published like 3,000 videos across every aspect of sales over the last like four or five years.
and when every other CRM company
a giant sales team
to go close deals and SDRs and all this stuff,
these guys didn't because it was all inbound
from content they generated three years ago.
Yeah.
Dude, I appreciate your time.
I think, you know, I wanted to get,
I wanted to talk about my experience with your tool
because I didn't, you know,
I haven't yet really and I have had such a positive experience with it.
That's fantastic.
It's presenting opportunities for me
that I didn't see and I would like to say, you know, I would like to say I at least know how to
use, I've been using keyword research tools for a long time. Like I know how to use them and all
a sudden, you know, I'm starting to find things that I didn't know were there. And like even that
example that I gave you about like, Geico doesn't do business insurance. So this is,
this is the example for those listening at home. I want to put this in real insurance terms.
Geico doesn't do business insurance. So for a wonk, an insider, the idea of sticking Geico a personal
auto insurance carrier with the term business insurance,
I would have never done that until I saw in cluster AI that it was like the number
15th most searched term with the term business insurance attached to it.
It was GEICO business insurance.
So then I went back in and I was like into I started digging around in ARAPs and starting
to do some other searches.
I'm like, holy shit.
Like this, there's no one, no one is targeting this because no one would think to target,
but people are pumping it into Google.
So now all of a sudden, I have a piece of content.
I'm going to build off of it.
I would have never found that otherwise.
And how much business does that bring me?
I have no idea.
Like, yeah, I mean, because I just put it out a couple weeks ago,
but the idea is over time you find enough of those gaps and holes
and you're unbeatable.
It's an ironclad.
You've built a moat around your business.
Yeah, you know, I think I also like, you know,
content velocity is great because it's,
It means that, you know, when you're only focusing on a couple keywords at the bottom of the funnel,
if one page doesn't rank, your whole campaigns fail, you're not getting your investment back.
But when you take a lot of shots on target, you know, it's kind of like being a good doctor.
You're not going to, you know, good doctors, the best doctor isn't going to save everyone,
but they're going to save more people than normal.
And when you take a lot of shots, you just get a lot, you know, you just hit a lot.
And so your traffic is constantly going up.
Your conversions are constantly going up.
but you're not paying particular attention to any given page,
but more about the campaign as a whole and the systems.
Yeah.
And, you know, when you look at the ROI, like,
how many deals do you need to make up for, you know,
a $200 page of content?
You know, if that page of content goes on to generate,
if each page of content generates one deal per year or two deals or whatever it is,
you know, it's still a lot of impact.
Yeah.
Dude, I appreciate your time, man.
This has been tremendous.
and I really appreciate you sharing it.
And I hope anyone who's a ball or blocker who's looking for a real strategy,
you know, reach out to Nick, content distribution.
Great follow on LinkedIn, too.
By the way, I'll have it linked up in the show notes.
Nick Jordan on LinkedIn.
And then if you are going to get up off your ass and actually do this content strategy stuff
that I have been talking about for a decade now, my friend,
please, I think Cluster Eye is a tool that you should absolutely consider.
I am not joking when I say, and I'm not being paid for this in any way, people.
It's shown me opportunities to create content that I wouldn't have otherwise seen.
And I think it's important.
I wanted to share that with you guys.
So thanks, my man.
And I really appreciate your time.
Brian, thank you so much.
Yeah.
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