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SEO Is Not That Hard
Are you eager to boost your website's performance on search engines like Google but unsure where to start or what truly makes a difference in SEO?
Then "SEO Is Not That Hard" hosted by Edd Dawson, a seasoned expert with over 20 years of experience in building and successfully ranking websites, is for you.
Edd shares actionable tips, proven strategies, and valuable insights to help you improve your Google rankings and create better websites for your users.
Whether you're a beginner or a seasoned SEO professional, this podcast offers something for everyone. Join us as we simplify SEO and give you the knowledge and skills to achieve your online goals with confidence.
Brought to you by keywordspeopleuse.com
SEO Is Not That Hard
Best of : Create More Than You Consume
SEO Is Not That Hard is hosted by Edd Dawson and brought to you by KeywordsPeopleUse.com
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"Werq" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Hi, ed Dawson here, and, as I'm a bit busy at the moment and need a break, welcome to another one of my best of SEO is not that hard podcasts. These are the episodes from the back catalog that I think have the greatest hits and ones that are still relevant and provide great value for you. So, without further ado, let's get into the episode. Hello and welcome to episode 76 of SEO is not that hard. I'm your host, ed Dawson, the founder of keywordspeopleusecom, the solution to finding the questions people ask online. I'm an affiliate marketer, seo, and I've been building and monetizing websites for over 20 years. I've built sites from the ground up, bought sites and sold sites in large exits. I'm here to share with you the SEO knowledge, hints and tips I've built up over the years.
Speaker 1:Today, I'm going to talk about why you should create more than you consume. Today, I just wanted to talk a little bit on the subject of why it's so important to create more than you consume. Now, maybe a bit ironic, because you're consuming a podcast at the moment and I also have to admit, I consume loads of podcasts too but what's really important and what sort of makes the difference between making a success of what you're trying to achieve or just sitting back and never getting anywhere. Is that difference between creating and consuming? Now let's look at, say, some examples. So let's take SEO, for example. You could be someone who's spent the past 30 years consuming all the content you can around SEO, listening to all the viewpoints, all the knowledge building up. You know a complete factual library in your head of everything about seo and you know you might have the most seo knowledge of anybody out there. But unless you actually create something, what have you actually achieved? You've not achieved anything. You know you've not built anything. You've not moved anything forward. You've not moved the needle for yourself or anyone. You might have all this knowledge, but it's not serving you. It's only going to serve you if you start by going out and creating something.
Speaker 1:Now that could be creating a website on a completely different subject and using all the SEO knowledge to push that website forward. Get loads of eyeballs on it, turn it into a business, turn it into whatever you want to do and help other people. If you get that other content in front of people, you help them, you help move them forward and that moves you forward at the same time, and I think that's just the real key. You better have less knowledge on a subject but actually get out there and do something with it. And the actual act of creating also, at the same time, improves your own knowledge. Um, I know there's studies out there that show that that, for example, if you are taking in information, if you write it down, then you remember that information and understand that information much more than if you just take it in verbally and then you can take it to another level. If you then go on and teach somebody what you've learned, that reinforces your knowledge even more so. The very act of creation whether it's creating written content for yourself or then going out and teaching somebody else on top each one of those steps actually increases your effectiveness, your knowledge.
Speaker 1:Secondly, creating good content or creating anything is something that you start off with having low skills. You need to practice and experiment with creating content to actually get good over time. It's like anything you know, like you see a child starting to draw, you know no one is an artist straight away. It takes practice, it takes repetition and you know. That's how you go from being a child doing scribbles on paper to being a world-class artist. You only do it by practicing your art, and creating anything is an art. So that's why you need to be creating all the time and not just consuming. Now, that's not to knock on consuming at all, because it is really important to consume as well, because that's how you find new viewpoints, how you learn new things, and that can help improve your creation process and the content that you create and whatever it is that you create.
Speaker 1:But the key thing is you can't just consume and do no creation whatsoever, because you'll just end up static. You won't improve anything. Like I said, you might learn a lot, but if you don't ever put it into practice, you don't truly learn and then you don't actually improve. You don't build anything of any value. Now, I think the hurdle that most people need to get over when it comes to starting creating things is they worry that they're not going to be any good, that what they're going to produce won't have any value or will be of poor quality. And you know what it's actually true. The first things you produce and create probably will be rubbish, but you've got to give yourself permission to be rubbish. It's better to be rubbish but then improve than to never start at all.
Speaker 1:Take this podcast, for example, when I started it, it took me ages to record a single podcast just a few minutes long. And even now I'm not saying I'm making brilliant podcasts, but I know for myself that I am producing them faster. I think I'm producing them a little bit better. I think they've improved, I think there's still a way to go. But the whole point was I started, I got going, I started creating and see where it took me and actually the things I talk about. It's helped improve my thinking about some of the things I talk about.
Speaker 1:Sometimes I come up with a concept for a podcast that I'm going to talk about and actually just the whole process of producing the podcast and thinking about it and then producing that content actually helps solidify, sometimes, information. Sometimes it helps me change my mind. Sometimes it fills in some blanks that was missing just through the whole process of creation. So the important thing is you know you've just got to start and admit it's not going to be great to start with, but it's only by starting and then carrying on that you'll improve and that's how you get better and better. And it's like with many things I've done over the past 20 odd years or more is you know, I'm much better at some things I've been doing for a long time, but if I'd never started them in the first place, I wouldn't have got as good over time.
Speaker 1:It was the starting, the creation, then carry on the creation process that actually improves you and then brings you results. It's what's built me businesses. So, yeah, it's just, don't be afraid to start, don't be afraid to create. Yeah, it's just, don't be afraid to start, don't be afraid to create and don't be afraid to put it out there. Don't worry about what other people think. There's probably people listening to this podcast who haven't thought it was great and have never listened again, and that's fine, that's completely fine. But there's plenty of other people who listen to this podcast and got in touch and I've met new people and I found new opportunities just by getting in the weeds, starting creating and putting it out there and seeing what happens. And that's why I strongly urge in whatever it doesn't have to be a podcast, it's not your website whatever it is that you're interested in and whatever it is that you want to improve at and whatever it is that you want to bring to the world and bring to people, just do it, start it, get creating and just create more than you consume. You won't regret it because it will bring you results. Thanks for being a listener. I really appreciate it. Please subscribe and share. It really helps.
Speaker 1:Seo is not that hard. It's brought to you by KeywordsPeopleUsecom, the solution to find the questions people ask online. See where thousands of people use it every day. Try it today for free at keywords people usecom to get an instant hit of more seo tips. Then find the link to download a free copy of my 101 quick seo tips in the show notes of today's episode. You want to get in touch, have any questions and I'd love to hear from you. I'm at channel 5 on twitter. You can email me at podcast at keywords people usecom. Bye for now and see you in the next episode of SEO. It's Not that Hard.