I noticed a lot of my readers have, but it wasn’t really a blogging-related topic. But I decided to tackle it anyway and it turned out that a lot of my readers really related to that and that led on to me starting a Facebook group on that topic as well. There’s a whole heap of ways you can identify those reader problems that may not even be specific to your overall topic.
A few other quick ideas. You can do a search on
the forum that you joined a few updated 2024 mobile phone number data days ago. You could be looking at some of those blogs that you might have subscribed to a few days ago. Both in the blog post themselves, but also the comments on those blogs.
The last thing I’ll talk about is keywords. One of the best places that I used to always go hunting for questions and problems was the data that Google Analytics reported on the keywords that people were using to arrive on my site. Google used to tell us exactly what people had searched for when they arrived on our site. They still do give us some of that data. You do get some of those words, but nowhere near as much as they used to. You need to be a little bit more creative about how to get that data now.
There’s a lot of really good research tools available that can help with this.
Some of you probably already use some Eins og það sé næstum komið of them, but I want to recommend today if you are just starting out with search engine optimization and digging into these data that you read a post that’s actually a guide that Rand canada people Fishkin from Moz wrote called the Beginner’s Guide to SEO, which has a whole section on keyword research. I’ll put the link in the show notes today, but he recommends a few tools in that that you can start with. They’re not the most advanced tools, but if you’re just starting they’re a good place to start. Google AdWords Keyword Planner Tool is one of them. Google Trends, and there’s a couple of others. I would say Moz themselves have some great tools, too.