Post by account_disabled on Mar 12, 2024 20:02:27 GMT -8
The contents at this moment are irreplaceable. If you want to obtain an excellent result, they require obsessive care in packaging the text, graphics, abstracts and titles so that they adapt to the media chosen for their distribution. In addition to this, they require effective triggering and distribution, which is important to avoid the very high risk of them going unnoticed. Before the birth of social networks, blog contents aspired to be indexed and positioned in Google results and bloggers physically connected to each other, in order to grow synergistically. Today, this practice has become more complex than just 10 years ago and perhaps even useless. Let's also admit that positioning content in SERPs is a feasible practice with a minimum guarantee of success.
The question is who needs such a practice, in a world that India Mobile Number Data quickly burns information, making it obsolete in a matter of days. Only a minimal percentage of bloggers actually need SEO . Those who do not need it are above all those who deal with current affairs which, by their very nature, "live" for a few hours/days. In my opinion, we are in an era in which the most important objective of content is to spread as quickly as possible and to propagate through shares, certainly not to settle in search results. Positioning yourself in searches is only important for evergreen content , a small part of what is produced. Textual content is easy to duplicate and adapt as your own. Since blogging has existed, it has been a frequently occurring habit.
A few days ago, my friend Giorgio Soffiato wrote “ When they copy one of my posts they always manage to make me smile. I like to think that the added value lies in being a first mover, in intuition, not in a fair copy of someone else's thinking (moreover, if there is an area where what has already been seen does not hold up, it is web marketing) ”. In just a few lines he wrote two sacrosanct truths, well known to those involved in blogging. The copy and paste phenomenon, very widespread and affecting all those who have greater visibility and the need to be among the first to post it. I immediately associated what Giorgio said with a tweet written by Fabio Di Dio Rosso : “ Too much content? The need for influencers is growing ”, in which, with lapidary clarity, he summarizes a concept I analyzed in a post last week. Giorgio and Fabio have brilliantly highlighted how, today, contents are pure creative energy, an intuition codified in the form of text (or video) that comes to life and runs out within a few hours.
The question is who needs such a practice, in a world that India Mobile Number Data quickly burns information, making it obsolete in a matter of days. Only a minimal percentage of bloggers actually need SEO . Those who do not need it are above all those who deal with current affairs which, by their very nature, "live" for a few hours/days. In my opinion, we are in an era in which the most important objective of content is to spread as quickly as possible and to propagate through shares, certainly not to settle in search results. Positioning yourself in searches is only important for evergreen content , a small part of what is produced. Textual content is easy to duplicate and adapt as your own. Since blogging has existed, it has been a frequently occurring habit.
A few days ago, my friend Giorgio Soffiato wrote “ When they copy one of my posts they always manage to make me smile. I like to think that the added value lies in being a first mover, in intuition, not in a fair copy of someone else's thinking (moreover, if there is an area where what has already been seen does not hold up, it is web marketing) ”. In just a few lines he wrote two sacrosanct truths, well known to those involved in blogging. The copy and paste phenomenon, very widespread and affecting all those who have greater visibility and the need to be among the first to post it. I immediately associated what Giorgio said with a tweet written by Fabio Di Dio Rosso : “ Too much content? The need for influencers is growing ”, in which, with lapidary clarity, he summarizes a concept I analyzed in a post last week. Giorgio and Fabio have brilliantly highlighted how, today, contents are pure creative energy, an intuition codified in the form of text (or video) that comes to life and runs out within a few hours.