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Copy and Paste on Your Android Phone or Tablet

This quick guide will show you how to copy and paste text on your Android device.
  1. It’s all about “tap and hold” – locate the word (or the first word in the text) you want to copy, then tap the screen and hold your finger down.
  2. After a moment a few things will happen. The word or letter that you tapped will become highlighted, it will bring up ‘markers’ before and after that word/letter, and the ‘context menu’ will appear. The context menu is where all the action happens :) While your menu may not look exactly like the one illustrated in the screenshot below (there are dozens of versions of Android, and the menu can even be App-specific) – it will contain the same basic options: select all, cut, copy and paste.
    If you want to copy and paste more than just the one word or letter that’s highlighted, tap one of the markers and ‘drag’ it across your screen until all of the text you want to copy has been selected.
  3. Now, tap the Copy button from the context menu.
  4. Depending on your device, a message may appear letting you know the text has been copied to your clipboard.
  5. Now switch to the App you want to paste the text into. Once again, tap your finger and hold it down on the place where you’d like to insert the text. When the context menu appears this time, tap Paste
  6. Ta-da!
  7. As illustrated in the screenshot below, the context menu may look different or include other options when you’re using a different App.
  8. OR
    This article will show you how it's done.

    1. Long-tap a word to select it on a web page.
    2. Drag the set of bounding handles to highlight all the text you want to copy.
    3. Tap Copy on the toolbar that appears.
    4. Tap and hold on the field where you want to paste the text until a toolbar appears. This can be the URL bar or any text field.
    5. Tap Paste on the toolbar.
    Your copied text will appear in the field.

Increase Your Search Traffic

When you’re just starting out with your blog, you’re going to start with zero traffic. Slowly, you’re going to get your first visitor. Then your first 100. Then your first 1000.
And then… you’ll face what most bloggers face: You’ll plateau and not see any further growth EVEN IF you continue to publish consistent content. This is the #1 biggest reason why people give up on their blogs. And it’s caused by one thing: No defined SEO strategy.
If you’re struggling with getting more search traffic, here are 5 quick wins that you can start implementing today.


1. Create one 2500 – 3000 word article at a time

For any keyword I’m targeting, I actively try to make my content at least 2500 words. Studies have shown that articles over 2200 words ranked better in Google.
I’ve tested and experienced this myself. My pages that go over 2500 words are the ones that rank highest WITHOUT me needing to fire a ton of backlinks at it. That’s because to write that much content means you’ve gone very much in-depth on the topic.
Not only will you rank higher for your targeted keyword, you’ll also rank for MORE keywords than your competitors. When you have more words on the page to be indexed, you end up ranking for a lot of long-tail keywords that your competitors may not even show up for.
That is how you build massive amounts of search traffic.

2. Make it the best resource that you can find

Whatever article you’re going to write, whatever keyword you’re going to target, you should do a thorough check on the current Google results to see what kind of content is already ranking.
The is not just to make it longer than everyone else’s. It’s to make it better.
How do you make an article better? You create something different.
Also Read: How to Start a Blog
For example, these are some of the things that I try and do:
  • Make everything more thorough with deeper explanations.
  • Add in information that others may not have included.
  • Add in personal experiences with the topic at hand.
  • Add in multimedia (videos, infographics, slideshows) to make the content richer.
  • Add in more and better sources where people can learn more.

3. Link out to quality sources whenever you can

Want to know one of the reasons why everyone instantly trusts in the credibility of a Wikipedia article? It’s because they litter their articles with links to external sources. Whatever fact they state on their site, it’s backed up by a link to a source where they got that information.
Look at the list of external sources on a typical Wikipedia entry.
You don’t need to go as far as they do, but you should understand the benefits of linking out to sources.
  • It makes your article more credible.
  • It improves the user experience since people know exactly where to go to learn more.
  • Google likes pages that link out to other quality websites because it makes your own page a better source for information around your topic. And it also helps in one more thing…
  • Getting your article noticed by other webmasters.
Once you publish your article, email everyone you linked out to (or tweet them) and let them know that you mentioned them on your new article. 9 times out of 10, they’ll check it out. And about 5 to 10 percent of them will share or link to your article.
This is an easy way to build links and social shares to your blog without needing to do much extra work.

4. Update/Improve older articles

This is something a surprisingly large percentage of people don’t do.
Go back to your older articles and improve them. Make them more thorough. Add in more sections and sub-topics to make it more extensive and thorough. Combine multiple articles together if it makes sense.
It might sound like a chore, but optimizing your on-page SEOcan improve your search traffic a lot. Oftentimes, even more than if you were to create new articles.
That’s because these pages have been indexed (and even ranking) for a while now. They may have even picked up some backlinks and social shares.
By going back and updating my older articles, I’ve seen as much as 25% more search traffic. And that was within a week’s time! It doesn’t take Google long to re-crawl, re-index, and re-position you in the search results.
The benefits of doing this are big, and the results come quick.

5. Run a link building campaign

To build blogs to those big search traffic numbers of 100,000 visitors/month, you NEED to be building backlinks. Getting quality white hat backlinks to your blog is the #1 biggest ranking factor for search engines. If you build more links, you’ll get more search traffic.
And the cool thing is, you won’t only get more search traffic to the page you built the backlinks to. You’ll get more search traffic across your entire blog since your domain authority increases with each strong link built.
Even going out and building just 2 to 3 strong links can make a big difference in the overall search traffic your blog gets.

Double Down On SEO

For me, it took a very long time to build my first successful blog large enough that I could quit my job and pursue it full-time. The reason is: I had shiny object syndrome. I was moving from one thing to the next. Paid ads, CPA affiliate marketing, Facebook, freelancing, and even mobile apps!
It wasn’t until I decided to drop everything else and doubled down on building a real blog with SEO that I was finally able to turn it into a big enough income where I could do this full-time.
The life and blood of a blog is traffic. If you know how to build traffic, you win. If you don’t, it won’t work out very well for you. More traffic = more revenue. It’s just the way blogging works.
So how do you get this traffic?
There are a ton of different traffic sources out there. Pinterest, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube…
For me, I only focus on one main traffic method: SEO. It’s the ONLY sustainable traffic source that lasts for years, and builds on top of each other.
Like compound interest… but for blog traffic.
All other traffic sources are short-lived, and requires work or money to keep it going. For example, with Facebook, you have to pour money into ads continuously so that your posts go viral. Stop spending money, and your campaigns will eventually dry out.
For example, this is what most traffic looks like to blogs that depend on paid ads or social media:
stopping paid ads traffic results
With SEO, once you do the work to rank in Google, then you’re going to get traffic month after month.
If you can get good at SEO, growing is only a matter of scale.
I’ve been building blogs for a long time myself now. And I’ve tried just about every traffic method you can use. Trust me when I say, if you want to build a real business out of a blog, then mastering Google and SEO is the best, most consistent way of doing so. All my blogging businesses are built around SEO as it’s key driver of growth.
You can be bad at a lot of things when it comes to growing a blogging business. But get SEO right, and you’ll see your growth curve go up and to the right.

The Adsense approval process today

adsense-approval
Although it’s not quite as easy to just get an instant approval today as it was in the past, the process hasn’t changed.
There are already a bunch of articles online that list guidelines and rules you need to follow, so I’m not going to repeat what they say.
Instead, I’m going to talk about passing the quality standard of the Adsense reviewer who’s going to look at your website.
From what I’ve seen, most people who get rejected aren’t rejected because they were missing something.
It’s because the site didn’t meet the quality standards of the reviewer. It just wasn’t seen as a high quality site that provided value to the internet.
But what exactly is a “high-quality” site that “provides value?”
A lot of the points in this article are my own opinions and not officially stated guidelines in Google’s Adsense policies.
You can disagree and that’s fine, but I think they’re common sense tips since…..

1. It’s a manual review, not an algorithmic review.

The most important thing you have to realize is that an actual Google employee is going to visit your site, click around, and read your content.
It’s not a robot that just crawls around your site to check if you have everything outlined in their requirements list.
That means… some ridiculously smart human being who works for Google is going to visit your site, click around, read your articles, analyze your source code, and then….
Decide that it’s a nice, high-quality website that provides value to readers.
Following the guidelines is just part of the equation.
To pass the manual review process, your site has to be high quality.
So how do you make sure you have a quality site?

2. Make sure adsense-approval have enough pages

There are a lot of reasons a site can get rejected. But when you do everything right, and still aren’t accepted… this is usually the reason.
From my conversations with others, some people have been rejected with 50+ pages, and some people have been accepted with 10.
These things aren’t set in stone here.
It’s more about the overall quality of the site than it is about the number of pages.
Really… all it takes is just some common sense.
Don’t just order 5-10 articles at $10 each and then submit for approval.
Even with 100 pages… those types of articles seem to be the most common thing amongst sites that were rejected from what I’ve seen.
………..Low-quality, generic 500 word articles full of fluff.
They don’t add value to the internet.
If it were me, I wouldn’t apply until I had at least 5 really in-depth, well researched posts above 2000 words.
These 5 long-form content combined with around 10-20 normal 700-1000 word articles should be enough to please any manual reviewer.

Buying articles

A lot of people buy articles for their site, and there’s nothing wrong with that.
But if you’re going to apply for Adsense with a site that’s full of articles that you paid for, make sure you paid a good amount of money.
If your site is full of $5-$10 articles, don’t bother applying.
It won’t get accepted.
Spend at least $30-$50 per article.
It may sound like a lot of money, but it’s the price of a quality article.

3. Make your site about one topic

If you’re submitting a site with less than 100 pages, stick to one topic, and provide value for one specific audience.
A lot of rejected sites I’ve seen are “magazine” type sites that talk about anything and everything.
5 posts about childcare, 5 posts about sports, 5 posts about design, and 5 posts about SEO.
Unless you have 100’s of pages on your site, don’t do that.
Make your topic narrow. Make it about one thing only.

4. Build traffic BEFORE applying

Traffic is not a factor that determines whether your site is accepted or not.
But why apply before you have any traffic? You need traffic to make money.
This is probably one of the biggest mistakes that I see: Applying too early.
Honestly, though…. I really don’t understand this from a logical point of view because everyone seems to do it.
What’s the rush? You’re not getting much traffic at this point. Why not wait until you do before applying, and grow out the site in the meantime?
Build out the site first.
Put out some great content.
Build traffic.
Build some backlinks.
Rank for something.
Get some engagement on your site from readers.
There’s no need to rush.
If it were me, I wouldn’t apply until I grew the site to at least 50-100 visitors per day.

5. Wait at least a month

I would prefer you wait until your site is at least 3 months old before you apply, but it really shouldn’t be less than a month old.
You can try it sooner, but it takes time to build and grow some traffic, too right?
Remember, a human being reviews your site.
Quality content is one thing, but if you have a site on a domain that was registered last week, with 20 posts slapped onto it, all published on the same day……
I think it’s a pretty obvious sign that you just threw something up to get your account approved.

6. Stick to a publishing schedule (at least in the beginning)

Show the reviewer that your site is a REAL site that’s here to stay.
A domain registered a few days ago with 20 posts bulk published on the same day, and then none after that, doesn’t show that you have a real site that’s being grown into a quality site.
Show that it’s being grown out consistently.
Stick to a consistent publishing schedule.
Doesn’t have to be everyday, but if you can show that a new post is being added on every X number of days, it shows that the site is providing more and more value to readers as time goes on.

7. Get a premium WordPress or Blogger theme and a custom logo

Getting a premium theme isn’t absolutely necessary, but I recommend it for 2 reasons:

1. Some free themes have spammy links or malicious code written in them.

I’ve tried a few free WP themes where I would see a bunch of links coded into the footer. Usually, they’re links to the theme creator’s own niche sites.
A few times, these links weren’t even in the theme files but hidden in secret javascript files so that I couldn’t easily delete them.
You don’t want anything like that showing up in the review process without you even knowing it.

2. Most free themes don’t have a nice design

It’s tough to find a great looking WordPress theme you can download for free.
It’s easier to find a theme with a design you like and install that instead.
A shiny, custom designed site isn’t necessary to get Adsense approval. But once again… it’s a manual review from a human being and it helps you get a good first impression.
Even I find myself discrediting a lot of sites as soon as I land on them if they don’t have a good, clean design.
If you don’t have a WordPress theme already, I recommend the Newspaper theme.

Logo

Getting a custom-made logo for your site isn’t absolutely necessary either.
But again, it helps.
Logos don’t cost that much money these days anyways. You can get one for $5+ at Fiverr or just make one yourself using Photoshop or Pixlr.
Pixlr is a free online browser that’s pretty robust, and is also what I used to design the RankXL logo.

8. Ditch categories

If you don’t have over 25 posts in every category, ditch categories in your navigation.
I come across a lot of sites that were rejected from Adsense, and this is a common feature that everyone has on their site.
Having categories are a bad user experience if every category you click only has a few pages in them.
I’m assuming people do this to make their site look more vibrant and “full” but it actually has the opposite effect.
Ditch them.

9. Link out to other helpful sites

Don’t be a dead end on the internet. Link out to helpful resources and sites.
But don’t just blindly link to random wikipedia pages.
Link to actual helpful resources that support what you state in your articles.

10. Remove any ads from other ad networks

Google gives you a maximum of 3 ad spots for a reason.
Any more than that… and it usually makes your site really spammy-looking.
Your site is there to provide value first, and make money second.
Your site essentially makes money by providing value to readers.
Plastering your page with ads from several networks makes for a bad user experience.
Even if you decide you want to mix in other ad networks in the future, remove them when you submit your site for approval.

11. Build backlinks, but don’t buy backlink packages

Having some nice quality links pointed at your site from established sites is a good thing to have before you submit your site.
This should be common sense, but don’t order any link packages to your site, and don’t submit sites where you have spammy links built on them.
Yes, SEO and Adsense are not related to each other, but no manual reviewer who sees 20,000 comment links built last week is going to take your site seriously.
adsense-approval

Conclusion

Just imagine how many spammy sites the Adsense reviewer has to go through in a day.
Remember that for every site that gets rejected, a person had to sit there and go through it.
It’s been said that only 3 out of 1000 sites are accepted.
That means… these reviewers are going through about 997 sites before finding one that meets their standards.
Following the policies and guidelines of what Google wants is important.
But it’s also important to review your site for quality in the shoes of the Adsense reviewer.
If you can do that, you should be able to get your Adsense account approved with no problems.

Fix Blank Ads Issue

A few months ago, I faced this problem and figured it out. I would like to share my experience so it might help you. See following steps to figure this issue.

1. Make sure you are strictly following Google adsense program policies and didn’t get any mail about blocking from adsense.
2. Make sure you don’t have adblock installed or no block for adsense in server firewall/ security suit.
3. First test in another browser(chrome/firefox/IE) and see whether it’s working. It would be better if you could test on another PC.
4. Check adsense sandbox for your site and see whether it shows ads.
5. If you have not received first payment and earnings have reached $10, Google sends PIN number for verification process. Make sure, you have verified PIN number. If no, wait for PIN or request it again from your adsense account.
6. If you are using wordpress/Joomla..etc CMS. It might be due to configuration. So create a test HTML page and put adsense code, upload it independent from CMS and see whether it works.
7. Your privacy policy must be adsense compliant.

Blank ads only on few pages:

If ads aren’t showing on specific pages, there is a problem with that individual page. The most common reasons for ads not showing are a lack of text (don’t count images and videos) or the use of stop words (all the common swear words plus others they have decided aren’t family safe).
It’s also possible that there are no advertisers for the keywords in your page’s content. Either you get them PSAs (Public Service Ads) or a blank ad block. To remedy this, you could use alternative ads in place of the blank spots. See here for specifying alternate ads.
Hope, It helps. Share your opinion to fix this issue.

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