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How To Become A Copywriter & Start a Six Figure Business

February 11, 2022 by Strategist Leave a Comment

Copywriters can earn a lot of money, and their salaries are only going to increase in the next few years. In 2022, copywriters could earn an annual salary of around $75,000. This is a great opportunity for anyone who wants to make a living through writing while also having a creative challenge.

How Much You Could Earn As A Copywriter?

This career is not for everyone, but if you're looking for a creative challenge and an opportunity to make a great living, becoming a copywriter may be a perfect choice. If you already have some of the necessary skills such as marketing knowledge or writing experience, there's no time like the present to pursue your dreams!

What Is A Copywriter?

Copywriters are among the most important people in advertising. They have to be able to think quickly and creatively, so being organized is key. They have to be able to think of what words will resonate with their audience and communicate an idea effectively. It's a difficult career, but if you're looking for a creative challenge, this might just be your calling!

Something that's important for copywriters to know is what makes a successful copywriter. In order to produce quality work, you should have a comprehensive understanding of your craft and how it works.

  1. Copywriting experience - You will need to be able to write an effective ad or marketing campaign from start to finish. This means having a background related to writing for marketing purposes as well as other skills necessary for the job.
  2. Creative thinking- For example, think about how you can use descriptive words in ads rather than dull ones that nobody will remember when they leave the room. Also, come up with pressure points in headlines that make people want to read on.
  3. A good degree in marketing - If you don't have any experience or education related to marketing, consider getting a degree.
  4. Ability to work under time pressure - Copywriters are generally expected to produce many ad variations within a short amount of time
  5. The ability to research.
  6. A great portfolio that demonstrates your abilities as copywriter
  7. Knowledge of the target audience - this will come with the process of researching.
  8. Attention to detail. Not only is attention to detail important for writing well, but it's also necessary in order not to make copywriting mistakes that could be costly for your business.
 The above is true as far as you live in a world of pink ponies. Sorry to interrupt, just to remember that this article is still curated by a human author and sometimes the usual bull$hit from top Google results may be disappointing. 

What Does A Copywriter Need In 2022?

A copywriter needs at least a bachelor's degree in marketing in order to be successful in this career in the future, but an MBA is desirable for anyone who wants to work full-time in his or her own company as well as starting their own business. Having an understanding of the target audience is also important because it will determine how effective your writing can be when trying to attract customers and clients. Experience is preferred...

...but not necessary, because it is possible to gain this while working. You will need to be able to write an effective ad or marketing campaign from start to finish. This means having a background related to writing for marketing purposes as well as other skills necessary for the job. Creative thinking- For example, think about how you can use descriptive words in ads rather than dull ones that nobody will remember when they leave the room. Also, come up with pressure points in headlines that make people want to read on.

And you actually could push this as far as you'd like to. With a press of a button:

The question is - Does it create much value? Depends on your outline and goals. It could be an average no-brainer motivational copywriting for some bucks or something that complements your ideas. So it just depends on your goals. Oh wait, it's time for a success story with my over9000$ earnings to get you to read further, Google loves this and it will help this article to rank well after all. Let me tell you one.

Success Story of an AI-Fulltime-Copywriter

I was sitting in my office, looking at my bank statement and grinning from ear to ear. I had just earned over $200,000 in a single year as a freelance copywriter.

But it wasn’t always like this. In fact, when I first started out as a freelance writer, I was barely scraping by. I could hardly make ends meet on the $30,000 I was earning each year. But something changed in 2016. That was the year that I went full-time as a copywriter and really started to hustle. And it paid off – big time.

The secret to my success? A lot of hard work, sure. But more importantly, an understanding of why some copywriters make a lot of money and others struggle. Copywriters can make a lot of money if they know how to market themselves and their skills. Many successful copywriters have their own websites and blog where they advertise their services. They also use social media to connect with potential clients, and they attend trade shows and other marketing events where they can network with other professionals.

Get Into the "hustle" of Copywriting

The one word that I would use to describe how to make money as a copywriter is “hustle”. The reality is that there are many businesses out there who are looking for skilled writers to help them grow their customer base. But not all opportunities will be good opportunities, which means you have to do your research and really sell yourself if you want to land the best jobs. Otherwise, you run the risk of working for clients who won’t pay enough or respect what you do. And if it becomes too tough? You might just want to go back to your day job.

If you’ve always dreamed of making a living as a freelance writer, it might be time to get serious about making this happen. The reality is that there are all sorts of different copywriters out there, from editorial freelancers to business owners who have employees working for them. What got me into this career? A love for writing and marketing combined with the freedom to control my work life.

 Well, can't agree more with the machine here. You could start hustle right away with Jasper (grab your free words here) taking some freelance writings from Upwork or Problogger Job Board. Take anything from Twitter advertising to blog posts. Any niche, any type of content, AI will cope with it. 

This article is not about how to become a copywriter and make a lot of money. I promised you that if you followed my advice, you could make $100,000 in the next year. But to do that, you need to become a freelance copywriter.

How To Become A Successful Freelance Copywriter

The first step is simple - write. Just like any other profession, it’s only by doing the work that you’ll become better at this craft. That means keeping a journal and writing about your experiences, both professional and personal. This will help you learn how to identify what makes an effective story or passage of text.

  • Decide that you want to be a copywriter
  • Figure out how much money you need to make per month (this will help you calculate the hourly rate for your services)
  • Research the typical copywriting rate in your city
  • Make a plan to get the number of clients you need for this hourly rate
  • Work hard and follow through on your goals

From Zero To Hero

In 2018 I was laid off from my job as a pop culture writer at a local magazine that went under. It sucked because I had no money saved up or any idea what I wanted to do next. So I started looking around at jobs on Craigslist and applying for anything freelance related that I thought might be a good fit.

I started taking one-off gigs from websites like Craigslist, Fiverr and Elance because they were easy to get started with and didn’t require me to jump through any hoops other than writing samples or past work. Things went well for a few months but it wasn’t long before the pay was laughable (and still is) and I realized this wasn’t going to cut it if I wanted to make money and support myself.

Plus, there was something else that really bothered me: almost all of my work could have been done by anyone with a laptop and an Internet. There needed to be a way to stand out from the crowd and get my name in front of people who were already spending money on marketing their business or product online.

Promoting Myself

I started doing research on the websites I submitted work to so that when they asked for an author bio, I could provide one. This helped potential clients find me even when my own website wasn’t live yet. Then I started promoting myself through my writing samples because it made it clear that not only was I capable of meeting deadlines but also generating results . It wasn’t long before these samples became my portfolio.

Soon after I completed my first paying project (with a client who had what was probably one of the worst businesses on the planet), I upped my goal to $1000 a month and began to strategize accordingly. Instead of just reaching out to potential clients, which was surprisingly difficult, I started promoting myself through guest posts on other websites so that people could get a sense for what I was capable of producing.

Over time these articles became more frequent and over 100 websites have published my work so far. To this day, if you visit ProCopywriter .com/write you’ll see a list of all the places where I’ve been featured or interviewed. Getting my name out there was key to generating work because that reminded people who might not have thought about hiring me in months that hey, this boy can write!

 Love these stories, guiding the AI in a proper way. You need Boss mode for Jasper to execute commands (CTRL+SHIFT+ENTER) btw, but it is worth it after all. The story above was made of some commands like:
> Describe how it took me from unemployed to copywriter earning six figures per year as a freelancer.
> Describe the challenges that you faced and how you overcame them.
> What did you do to promote yourself?
.... and finally let's see one more
- What has been the most challenging part of being a copywriter for you? 

The Most Challenging Part

The biggest challenge is probably looking at your work while trying to figure out how it’s going to be used. For example, if I wrote an ad for a local pet store that sells products online and my client wants me to use the same ad on his website, no problem. But what happens when he also wants it added to social media or even sent out as a newsletter blast? I have to find ways to reword everything so that it can easily be tweaked instead of sounding like a robot did the writing. 😀

 Okey, I guess we're done with your profile bio. Let's get to the first orders. 

Persuasive Writing and Core Skills

Persuasive writing is basically when you want someone to do something. It’s when you want people to sign up for a newsletter, click a link or buy a product. This type of writing is more straightforward and will probably feel most similar to the way you normally use language in your day-to-day interactions with other people.

If you want to make money, you need to be able to write persuasively. This means that you need to be able to write in a way that is in high demand.

Learn how to write a headline

Learn how to write a headline that pulls readers in. How to write a subheadline that delivers after the headline. How to create an introduction for your product or service that tells people exactly what they are going to get. What copy works best on social media and why? How to use bullet points effectively so your product is easy to understand.

 That one is easy as there are several premade templates for that. 

Here is my result for this article with a Perfect Headline template:

I actually like this one: Start Your Career As A Copywriter: Here's What You Can Expect to Earn. Good job AI, we've just learned how to make headlines w/o years of studying.

Learn how to write a value proposition

Learn how to write a value proposition that positions your product as one of the best in its category. How to focus on what matters most to people so they will want to buy your product or service. Why you should always have a call-to-action and how to know if it’s working. Start using power words.

A strong value proposition is important for businesses when it comes to writing website and landing page copy, as well as other forms of copywriting. It's not common for businesses to specifically hire a copywriter for this task, but it's definitely a skill that is necessary for good writing.

The most important thing is that a strong value proposition will help a business owner get excited about your writing. Often, business owners find it difficult to quickly and clearly explain the value of their business. Creating a strong value proposition will help them see the value in your writing and create a better relationship with you.

Learn how to write a landing page

Learn how to write a good landing page and what is the most important element on it. How to position your benefits in such a way that people will be drawn to them when they read your copy. What “copywriting formula” works best for writing copy that converts, and why you need all three parts: features, benefits and USP. Learn how to A/B test different versions of your landing pages and what statistics matter most once you do so.

Learn how to write a benefit list

Once you’ve written a headline, subheadline and introduction for your product, use copywriting techniques to transform all those words into an irresistible benefit list . Learn why bullet points should only be used sparingly and why you need three specific sentences before asking for the sale.

 And the story could go on endlessly as long as you do some keyword research. So, if you're reading this - congratulation, you're almost a ready-made copywriter with a little help from Jasper.  

Land Your First Clients

Get some job done from, just take everything as Jasper will couple with it:

  • Craigslist
  • Upwork
  • FWJ daily listings
  • Problogger Job Board
 Start to curate content, do some research and outline topics. Let AI do the writing.  

Start to Outreach and Promote Yourself

You’ll get better at writing persuasive copy if you write it more often. You can start by asking your current clients to give testimonials, then use that text in your portfolio or on your website so they will continue to send business your way. This is my approach when I was starting out as a writer and it worked for me.

You should also begin building relationships with other businesses that may be in need of marketing copywriting services down the line. Over time you can develop enough expertise in this field to offer these services yourself, but in order to do that, you'll need to build up some kind of reputation first.

 You could even create a story or a bio for yourself. Who cares, as long as you deliver quality content.  

I'm not a fancy writer. I don't have an MFA or years of experience. But what I do have is a knack for understanding people, and knowing how to communicate with them in a way that makes them feel heard. Plus, I'm pretty good at staying organized, which comes in handy when you're juggling multiple projects at once.

My clients always tell me how much they appreciate my work. "You hit the nail on the head," they'll say. Or, "You really understand our brand." It feels great to know that I'm making a difference for my clients—and that they're happy with the results.

I am a full-time top performing direct response copywrite. If you'd like to work with me, please feel free to contact me and we can talk about how I may be able to help you with your next project!

- John Doe

How To Become A Copywriter: What's Next?

Deliver some content to your socials daily, fill in a portfolio, get steady orders to flow from clients, expand the volume. That's it!

Filed Under: Writing

Searching for New Niches and Low-Competition Keywords with LowFruits

January 19, 2022 by Strategist Leave a Comment

Hello and let's continue the series about content automation. Today we have a small niche service, which perfectly works with Jasper.ai.

So, let's take the niche from the previous article about paints and product reviews. So, we need to compile a semantic core for a couple of dozen articles and give the content manager to "write" on Jarvis. Earlier I went through a fairly large number of competitors and related keywords by myself in Ahrefs, but today I increasingly turn to automation with LowFruits.io. Lowfruits is both faster and more visual in terms of seo-metrics. Sign up, take some free starter credits, and let's get into more detail in practice.

Go to the Amazon listing of one of the brands in our niche (for example) and look at the categories of popular products - sealers, primers, paints, enamels, etc. Note them down somewhere in a text file. Now let's move on to the main page of LowFruits and click the green button "Get Keyword Ideas". Type in the main keyword of one of the categories.

And fill in "Website or max DA"  if you already have a site in a niche and want to know how much weaker or stronger it is than competitors. Just optional. Now, if we're building a niche site on a fresh new domain in the DA field type zero or leave blank. If the site has been up for some time already, then specify the URL of your site (or DA), which will be compared to competitors. Press "Find keywords" and get the results:

We are offered three options for analysis - free, but with limited functionality for 0 credits and advanced for 279 credits. In the free variant, we can choose an individual plan and spend 1 credit per keyword, it will be longer, but more efficient. I chose the middle, taking into account the keywords with buying intent (best, review, etc.) and a full report, especially since our main key is initially with the "best" modifier.

We wait about 5-10 minutes for the request to be processed. Great, we see the tabs, filters and a list. While we are not touching specific keywords go straight to the tab with Clusters, where we take the structure of the future website and approximately understand the volume of each group of queries.

Expanding each group gives you the keywords for the articles with more detailed data.

The apples show the number of websites in the top that we can potentially bypass.

  •  Green apple  - DA <20
  •  Blue apple  - Discussion boards
  •  Gray apple  - Outdated content

It goes without saying that there will be not many "best" keywords with low-competition a commercial niche. But let's go to Suggestions tab:

Whether to embed such queries in a more extensive article or write them out separately it depends on the niche and each specific keyword. If we saw that the product is good, then do some separate articles. There is plenty to choose from:

Moving to the Related tab. There, in fact, already begins an infinite amount of our article-related keywords.

So, we form the main semantic clusters, add low-frequency keywords and expand them with related articles. Really, stop a long and tedious to looking at competitors and forums, switch to Lowfruits which is more convenient and faster than filtering out in Ahrefs.

Oh, I forgot. Be sure to check out Competition tab:

It helps to understand immediately who you have to compete in a niche. The fewer review sites will be there (shown with an arrow), the easier it will be to push through in SERP.

Filed Under: Writing

How to Write a Product Review with Writing Assistant

January 14, 2022 by Strategist Leave a Comment

Let's continue the series about product reviews automation. I'm sure it will be useful to those who regularly need all kinds of product reviews, as it works perfectly for any affiliate program. Let me remind you to check out our step-by-step guide before moving on. A trial for some free words for Jarvis could be found here to try it out.

 Before we start make sure you check the final result of this tutorial. 

Choose a Product and Form a Template

Let's take a niche with some not very obvious products, for example, INSL-X SXA11009A-01 Stix Acrylic Waterborne Bonding Primer. If you write reviews of services or software, then instead of the product in the template substitute {product} with service names (like ConvertKit, ActiveCampaign etc.).

Review Template, copy it into Jarvis
H1: {product} Review

{short description or features list from the main listing}

>Write a list of title ideas for this review

H2: What is {product}?

>Write a product description for {product}

H3: Top benefits of {product}

>write a list of benefits for {product}
>write a paragraph expanding the above benefit

H3: Best Features of {product}
>write a list of features for {product}
>write a paragraph expanding the above feature

H2: {Product} Pros and Cons

>write a list of pros for {product}

>write a list of cons for {product}

H3: My experience using {product}

>write a story about a positive first experience with {product}

H2: Conclusion: Should you buy {product}?

>write a conclusion for this review

It will look like this:

Put the cursor at the end of the line and press CTRL + SHIFT + Enter. This will execute the command without deleting the string (as opposed to CTRL + ENTER). I've merged two screenshots, as command execution should be highlighted in blue, and we get the result:

Take one sentence from the list to the title and get a readable, human-like-written headline for the article:

Go on to "What is {product}? We add H2 and run the command.

It is still worth running your eyes over the text and correcting, for example, double commas and missing punctuation marks. I thought that in this case, the writing was too abstruse and too much to correct, so I highlighted both paragraphs and clicked "Explain to a 5th grader".

Oh, that's different story now:

We end up with:

Very well, let's move on to the benefits.

Put this paragraph above the list and delete the system commands. Do the same with what remains. In my case, there is almost no information on the product online and near the end of the Jarvis began to blatantly repeat. So, just highlight the paragraphs and press Re-phrase or Explain it to a 5th grader. Could even write a story about how my father advised applying the primer first 🙂

Done. We write out the conclusions, add pictures, make it into an article, or give it to a content manager. You could see my final result with this product review here.

Have a good day and happy writing!

Filed Under: Writing

The Ultimage Guide to Creating Authority Content for Affiliate Websites

January 10, 2022 by Strategist Leave a Comment

This guide will be useful to anyone who is involved in affiliate marketing regardless of niche or method of monetization. As for now, mainly we're using it to create heavily review-based websites for Amazon Associates affiliate program. Nowadays, we came to the point where we can craft expert-written content on any topic by ourselves. Rocket engines and home alarm systems or even life of snails in aquariums, without any copy/re-writing services.

 Before we start - check the final result of an article made by Jarvis in every word. Just to clarify what we'll be talking about. 

Earnings, Yes

Some stats from a six-month-old affiliate website filled with AI content. Basically, you can start earning online just by finishing reading this guide no matter what affiliate program you'd like to start with. The source of ANY content you'll need is here.

The content creation process is quite unified by templates, so basically, what you'll need for a start is some understating of keyword research and a jasper.ai account. You may grab a trial with 10K bonus credits - here.

Step-By-Step: Start Producing Affiliate Content

Let's take a closer look at what we will need for a steady workflow. In general, we are talking about expenses like hundred bucks a month. Let's consider this as a new threshold for entering affiliate marketing. Drastically cutting expenses for any enthusiast with a basic knowledge of SEO.

I would like to warn you right away that this is not a one-button text generator. We must have an understanding of what should be on the other end as an output. No need to hammer nails with a microscope. Our main goal is to use tools in assistance and not just rely on them to do the job for us.

Quick Start Toolkit

  • Trained AI based on GPT-3 for writing - jasper.ai
    Having tested several services, the clear leader today is jasper.ai. There are competitors, but this particular thing already has the right modules for reviews and how-tos, which saves a lot, a lot of time. Essentially the article we'll be putting together is like a puzzle of modules for the right semantics. You will need a Boss-mode for $100/month in which Long form Assistant is available.
  • Keywords research and analytics - Ahrefs
    Further development of websitesite and low-frequency queries (100 $/month).
  • Grammarly spell checker - Grammarly
    It is unlikely you will need anything but Grammarly. The free version is enough. Correct commas and misspellings of words.
  • Video to text transcription - Rev.com
    Quite often it is easier to spend a dollar and get a ready-made outline for an article. Either way, Rev.com is often useful.
  • Check texts for uniqueness - Copyleaks
    Better through https://copyleaks.com ($9/month or free credits).

Content Types

The main types of articles that we use on our sites are informational ("how-to" queries) and reviews ("best" queries) collected in the buyer's guide, reviews of individual products do not differ from them anything except volume. Other types of materials also somehow take them as a basis. For example, a product overview can be integrated into how-to's, and two separate products are combined into a comparison article of the form "<item1> vs <item2>" and so forth.

Well, now let's see how we could do better with jasper.ai than an average copywrites from TextBroker that usually priced like a hundred bucks for 3000 words.

Preparing an Article Outline

Let's say we have a gardening website and we want an article for a niche keyword like "clay pebbles" and its low volume long-tail keywords. Check it in Ahrefs.

Login to jasper.ai and start with Blog Post Outline module, which will help us to outline the article.

Fill in blog post title - Clay Pebbles Your Epic Growing Guide. Tone of voice - professional.

Сhoose 2-3 outputs and click Generate.

I liked the following option, such inaccuracies as highlighted in red need to cut yourself. This is a good basic version of an article plan, especially for informational requests.

  • What are clay pebbles
  • Benefits of using clay pebbles in your garden
  • How to use them in your garden
  • Tips on how to care for them and maintain a healthy growing environment
  • FAQs about Clay Pebbles
  • Have questions or need more information about the benefits of using clay pebbles in your garden , contact us today! (Phone number)  

Finding Additional Keywords

Let's use answersocrates.com to find and unload them to .csv tables. Then just sort it by query types.

You can batch check several of these groups in Ahrefs to add to the article only low-frequency with volume above 0-10.

With some persistence, you can include all the keywords in general, but it is more logical to check with Ahrefs and take a quick look at where competitors are ranked:

Hydroton in this case, the company that sells this product on Amazon is https://www.amazon.com/Hydroton-Original-Clay-Pebbles-Lightweight/dp/B01KYYZ9DE.

Well, how deep to dig in each case is a question of traffic profitability. In this case, we'll take two keywords - hydroton clay pebbles and expanded clay pebbles.

How to Quickly Prepare an Article Structure Based on Competitors from SERP

First of all, we need to install a Detailed SEO Extension for Chrome - https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/detailed-seo-extension/pfjdepjjfjjahkjfpkcgfmfhmnakjfba

The rest is simple enough:

  • Type the main keyword in Google.
  • Open the first top 10 in separate tabs.
  • Copy headings (H2-H3) in a separate document.
  • Delete duplicates.
  • Have an optimized structure for a new article to start with really fast.

Let's look at an example. Suppose our main key is still the same - clay pebbles.
We are not taking marketplaces from the top SERP results and open up only articles . Let's take 5 as an example:

  • https://university.upstartfarmers.com/blog/pros-cons-hydroton-hydroponics
  • https://www.epicgardening.com/expanded-clay-pellets/
  • https://www.maximumyield.com/the-dos-and-donts-of-expanded-clay-pebbles/2/1320
  • https://www.nature-and-garden.com/gardening/clay-pebbles-moisture.html
  • https://balancemmc.com/index.php/2020/03/18/expanded-clay-pellets-for-sale/

Taking the headlines.

One

  • Pros and Cons of Hydroton (Clay Pebbles) in Hydroponics
  • Why clay pebbles are one of our top picks for small growers
  • Pros of hydroton
  • Cons of hydroton
  • Tips on using hydroton

Two

  • Hydroton (Expanded Clay Pebbles) Growing Guide
  • What Are Expanded Clay Pellets?
  • Benefits and Downsides
  • How to Use Clay Pebbles
  • Don’ts
  • Best Brands to Use
  • Alternatives to Clay Pebbles

Three

  • The Do’s and Don’ts of Expanded Clay Pebbles
  • Major Do’s for Expanded Clay Pebbles
  • Rinse and Soak Before Use
  • Add a Small Amount of Nutrients
  • Mister and Cycle Timer Method
  • Crush Media Method
  • Cloning Method
  • Periodically Rinse
  • Major Don’ts for Expanded Clay Pebbles
  • Additional Uses for Expanded Clay Pebbles

Four

  • Clay pebbles to increase moisture around indoor plants
  • Key facts for clay balls & moisture
  • Clay pebbles to raise moisture around houseplants
  • How to prepare the set-up
  • Why clay pebbles?
  • Replenishing water in the clay pebbles
  • How often to add water
  • Best way to top-up water
  • Cleaning and rinsing the pebbles
  • Which plants to use moisturizing clay pebbles for
  • Problems that might arise
  • Mineral deposits due to using tap water
  • Insects and pests
  • Smart tip about using clay pebbles for extra moisture

Five

  • Expanded Clay Pellets for Sale
  • Growing Plants in Clay Pebbles

As you can see, such a structure will cover almost all of the low-frequency keywords. However, let's see what we have after the final grouping and removing of headers duplicates.

The more detailed breakdown by paragraphs we get, the easier and faster the text will be generated by Jarvis.

The final structure of the article

  • Hydroton (Expanded Clay Pebbles) Growing Guide
  • What Are Expanded Clay Pellets?
  • Why clay pebbles are one of our top picks for small growers
  • Key facts for clay balls & moisture
  • How to Use Clay Pebbles
  • Tips on using Hydroton
  • Clay pebbles to raise moisture around houseplants
  • Major Do’s for Hydroton Expanded Clay Pebbles
  • Rinse and Soak Before Use
  • Add a Small Amount of Nutrients
  • Replenishing water in the clay pebbles
  • Cleaning and rinsing the pebbles
  • Benefits and Downsides
  • Problems that might arise
  • Mineral deposits due to using tap water
  • Insects and pests
  • Cons of Hydroton
  • Best Brands to Use
  • Alternatives to Expanded Clay Pebbles
  • Growing Plants in Clay Pebbles
  • Which plants to use moisturizing clay pebbles for
  • Additional Uses for Expanded Clay Pebbles

Later, by adding common questions from answersocrates we get exactly what is usually called Epic Niche Article.

Do we always need a detailed plan with high-volume keywords? Not necessarily. Basically, only if we take broad keywords like 10K or even 20K volume to maximize their long-tails coverage.

So, if we take a keyword like cocoa pebbles (20K Volume), then make a detailed plan of the article. If the article is for low-frequency keyword, then generate structure through Blog Post Outline. In both cases, the outline of the article is extremely important. The more logical the structure is, the less work with editing there will be later on.

Block Structure of Epic Article in any Niche

Absolutely any review article we can fit into a typical block structure, which we will fill by jasper.ai modules. Like LEGO. We will build an article block by block and fill it with content for any niche. VPNs or Water Salt reviews, it actually doesn't matter.

Typical structure template:

  • Introduction
  • Comparison Table (TOP5 or TOP10)
  • General Information (Materials, Manufacturers, etc.)
  • Multiple Product-specific Reviews
    - Photo
    - Product Review
  • Question and Answers
  • Conclusions

Let's Start Composing. Title and Introduction

Open up Blog post assistant and create a new document. Choose Blog post workflow, and fill out the basic forms.

A bit earlier analyzing competitors in Ahrefs, we've found that we need to add hydroton and expanded to hit the traffic with clay pebbles niche article. Let's create a new post:

And put it in:

 Hydroton Expanded Clay Pebbles  Epic Growing Guide. A full-length article answering common questions with product reviews and useful tips about expanded clay pebbles.

This is a universal template, so just substitute  Hydroton Expanded Clay Pebbles  with your niche keyword.

Click Continue and Generate Ideas to generate titles for the article. I liked this one: "Hydroton Expanded Clay Pebbles: Everything You Ever Wanted to Know + Reviews".

And the introductory paragraph, which often briefly explains what the guide can solve or improve and why it is needed at all. Let's choose one of the options.

And move on to generating the article itself by pressing Open Editor.

Working with the editor is very simple - in front of the titles put two bars ## and select them as H2-H3, and three asterisks *** in the place where everything is written above will not count (say, if we change the subject or start writing out keys that are not semantically related).

It is also worth using three stars if you need to write a lot on a very close topic and Jarvis begins to repeat itself. Like this:

If the sentences are too difficult to read, Grammarly will tell us by underlining them in blue. In a few tries I was able to generate a paragraph of text like this as an example:

You should rewrite such sentences. To do this, highlight it and click on the smiley face - "explain as for a child" function will appear. And just confirm a new version of this sentense.

At first, it may seem a bit confusing, but one way or another you will have a finished article of several thousand words in about an hour.

Content Creation

We start by moving in all the headings we have saved and filtered. Put ## in front of the headings and indent the paragraph. In the Output Length field, be sure to put L, in order to get the maximum length of the text.

Press CTRL+J to start generating next paragraph.

Of course, we can say that we will have to read and figure out what "clay pebbles" are in order to push Jarvis in the right direction. But not to waste time, just open any list of so-called transition words, which will be used to move text further. I prefer this list: https://www.smart-words.org/linking-words/transition-words.html

Look at where the engine stopped. There was something like "which allows them to aerate the soil" (see screenshot above), so go to the list of transition words and choose from the column "Cause / Condition / Purpose" - in order to, paste into the text and generate further. Like this:

Was it time-consuming? Not counting the time you've just read "How does it all work?". Two presses of CTRL+J and another minute to choose a transition word.

Let's move on and try to read what Jarvis wrote to us.  Pay attention to the fact-checking and semantic load of the text that we have received.  Our main goal is to generate unique texts that make sense and reveal the topic.

When asked to complete the beginning of the paragraph, we just slightly rephrase the headline, for example:

At the end of highlighted sentence press CTRL+J again to continue writing:

Here, I wrote a lot more after "has" (highlighted in light green) and GPT-3 continued:

At this point, it seemed to be enough volume as we already have a decent 617-word material. I've just cut off all the rest and finished here. The grammar underlined in red is corrected in one click with Grammarly.

Repeat the process with the rest headings and proceed to actual product reviews, which we will embed in the article. A link to the final document will be at the very end.

Creating Subheadings

Improving Readability

In some cases, the text is either too difficult to read or written in the first person. So use the Content Improver module and rewrite it on the fly, generating several outputs.

Jarvis is also able to work with lists. For example, in one of the subheadings Jarvis saw that we need "key facts" and gave them a list:

Often it's just enough to specify that we need lists or key features.

Okey. I've finished an article of 3170 words in about 40 minutes which I decided to check for uniqueness in Copyleaks. In general, see for yourself, 97%. Common phrases occur, but at this volume is a drop in the ocean.

If you scroll below:

If you set your mind to it, you can get 100% uniqueness by rewriting paragraphs with the same Content Improver module. In general, this is the easiest and fastest way to improve those parts of the text that raise doubts.

Lastly, finish it with product reviews that will bring us some income.

Creating Product Reviews with Jarvis

First, let's find the necessary listings on Amazon. Simply type "hydroton clay pebbles" into the amazon.com search box and note down Hydroton products and a couple of other products with a good rating:

  • Mother Earth 714123 Hydroton Original Expanded Clay Pebbles, 50 Liter, Terra Cotta
    https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01KYYZ9IE
  • Seachem Flourite Black Clay Gravel - Stable Porous Natural Planted Aquarium Substrate 15.4 lbs
    https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0019J0ISU
  • Organic Expanded Clay Pebbles Grow Media for Orchids, Hydroponics, Aquaponics, Aquaculture Garden (2 LB Cz Expanded Clay Pellets)
    https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00GN9A6LK

Let's analyze the first one in detail as other products will be done the same.

Our task is to find the advantages and disadvantages in the listing, make a list of them and feed them to Jarvis to get an objective overview. Take advantages and disadvantages directly from the description and top comments. This is what I got as a source:

Mother Earth 714123 Hydroton Original Expanded Clay Pebbles, 50 Liter, Terra Cotta

  • Lightweight Expanded Clay Aggregate Made In Germany
  • Ideal Surface Structure
  • Size: 50 Liter
  • Semi-porous & generally does not float like other products
  • lighter than hydroballs
  • very small amount of broken pieces
  • improvement in roots
  • Great for self watering systems

And a few negative points to make the review fairer. To do this, scroll down to some 2-3 stars reviews. And write down a list of drawbacks:

  • 50 liter size are Giant balls - it's not the normal size leca
  • A little too dusty
  • a good number of misshapen ones

Open the Product Description module and put all the benefits into it. Be sure to set the tone: friendly. Generate 2-3 options to have something to choose from. Pay attention to the numbers (underlined in red), in this case we need to correct the size of 15, 25 and 50. Double-check all the dimensions, volumes, and exact characteristics. That's where usually Jarvis fails.

And now it's the same with the flaws, just setting the tone: critical:

Great. We'll add these lists later as Pros/Cons. Start rewriting it into using "Explain it to a 5th grader", see below:

Questions and Answers Section

Very simple. Start asking questions at:

https://answersocrates.com/q/en/US/clay%20pebbles

Press CTRL+J and get the answers.

Correct it through Grammarly and simply cut out unnecessary things. If the questions are very close in meaning and the text begins to be similar use Content Improver rewriting again such paragraphs on the fly.

Writing Conclusions for the Article

Finish it with general conclusions. For this, we'll need the Blog Post Conclusion Paragraph module. At this stage we should already understand what our article is about. Again, if it's hard, we can take something from advertising texts on product listings.

I liked the first option:

Done. Well, the final volume of about 3800 words, and if you add two more reviews, we pass 4000 words. Now clean the titles from ##, replace hydroton in the text with Hydrotone (with a capital letter) and publish article on your website. Congratulations, our Epic Guide is ready!

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