Two More Research Hacks - Amazon and for Popular Searched Questions

by Kurt
2 replies
Here's two more content and idea research hacks. These are related to the techniques I shared on these threads...

Quora and Yahoo Answers Research Hack:
http://www.warriorforum.com/main-int...arch-hack.html

Twitter Research Hack:
http://www.warriorforum.com/main-int...earch-tip.html

This tool is a keyword tool with a twist. Enter your main keyword(s), then select the “Only Questions” filter to come up with content for the questions people are asking. Without registering you're limited to 5 (I think) searches per day. However, you can sign up for a free account and you'll then get 30 (I think) searches a day for free:
https://serpstat.com/keywords/suggestions

This is a great method that combines SEO with solid writing techniques. The search tool, when set to "Only Questions" is returning questions that are the most searched for kewyord phrases in Google, assuming you have it selected as the source.

Just add 5-10 questions "as is" as sub headers on your article page, then answer the questions with a few paragraphs each. If you don't get enough questions, come up with some related keywords and repeat. By posting the questions "as is", you're using actual search terms and by answering the questions, you're providing information people want and are searching for. A win/win.

This next hack is useful when trying to find popular products on Amazon by searching Google, using a special Google function called “Range”. We'll be using an Amazon footprint to find pages that contain a certain range of numbers. Bascially, we're telling Google to find product pages on Amazon that have a lot of answered questions and/or customer reviews. The train of thought is that products that have a bunch questions and/or a bunch of reviews are very likely to have made a lot of sales.

Enter either or both of the following into a Google search, substituting your own keywords:

Keywords + “20…10000 answered questions” site:amazon.com
Keywords + “20…10000 customer reviews” site:amazon.com

In each of the above, notice the 20…10000. That’s the “range” we want Google to locate products on Amazon.com that have at least 20 reviews and/or 20 answered questions. Change 20 to anything you want.

This is a very good strategy for finding popular products on Amazon.com, with the theory being if they've sold a lot of these products, then they'll probably be easier for you to sell. It also can give you ideas as to what people are interested in.
#amazon #hacks #popular #questions #research
  • Profile picture of the author JohnMcCabe
    Kurt, you just earned yourself a folder in my Evernote app...

    Keep'em coming big man...
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  • Profile picture of the author conscolor
    have the real value, Thanks
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