How to rank a blog on Google
[Note: Google released a feature called “People who visited your blog”. The recommendation suggests a better “Next Way to Start Your Blog” topic but if you’re not exactly sure which topic you want to start out with, feel free to make one for me…]
Google recently tested a feature called “People who visited your blog”. The newest version of this feature surfaces a top six most blogs that used Google search engine to find this information. Here are the six most frequently published blogs I’ve seen:
Step 1: Map out the idea of the top 6 most popular
Connect the dots, that’s it
It’s often difficult to come up with a list of the top six most frequently published blogs — but looking at the most recent numbers, it’s easy to gather some useful information.
If you’re hoping to find the next top-ranked blog on SEO terms of Search Result Generator, you need to collect the data for each blog. It’s a good idea to look at the top six records as a template for the algorithm to use — which means that the number of records is going to be relative (Facebook’s most popular website had well over 100,000 users, however, that isn’t 100,000 users).
The algorithms can always scale up, if you’re doing well, but this will depend on which topic you’re looking at
In my case, I found that the top six most commonly published blogs were:
1. Blog Post Credit, A Taste for Love
2. Blog Post, A Taste for Love
3. Blog Post, What Can You Get?
4. Blog Post, Pages.com
5. Blog Post, Bookmarked
6. Blog Post
The idea is to map out the top 6 posts from each blog to see which topic you should create the next blog around. I know these aren’t the only topmost read blogs but this comparison proves that people visit certain blogs and that’s the people that go to them. People are going to the blog they like, so once you have a top 6 most read blog, that means you have that topic that people are searching for.
Step 2: From the top six most popular, what are your top books?
Open the list of the top six most frequently published blogs and then go to pages 3–5 and then open the top six books that use the Google search engine to find this information. If you’re stuck on the top six books list, you need to explore the full list of the top pages from these blogs using Google’s much better Search Result Generator. I’ll let you guess which blog has the most books on it…
Sometimes it might be helpful to join your posts to avoid making errors
For example, let’s say that all of my blogs are:
1. Blog Post, A Taste for Love
2. Blog Post, Pages.com
3. Blog Post, What Can You Get?
4. Blog Post, Bookmarked
5. Blog Post,
If you’re feeling pretty good about your blog, you can move on to the next paragraph of detail. The idea is that if you don’t yet have a well-defined topic for your blog, you need to work towards finding it. For example, for Blog Post, A Taste for Love, a reader might see a page on A Taste for Love, and this gives them the idea that they’re going to A Taste for Love. However, if you don’t know what A Taste for Love is about, then you can’t give them the opportunity to read your blog so it won’t be getting as many reads as you’d hope.
If you’re looking at the top six most commonly published blogs and you’re confused at what topics your blogs are talking about, Google’s Search Result Generator will take some of the guesswork out for you — as the most commonly published blogs are, hopefully, the easiest to formulate a blog about.
Here’s what my top six blogs are based on my favorite terms for Search Result Generator
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