Step 1: Reverse Engineer Your Success
Building a successful website is hard. It’s probably the hardest thing I’ve ever done. The only thing that’s harder is trying to do it without a cause or plan.Here’s how you can avoid failure and make your own life a lot easier.
FORMULATE YOUR “WHY”.
Why are you building your email list? Why do you need more traffic?Seriously.
You’re never building a website to “get traffic” or even to “build a list”. Both of these are means to an end. It’s about what you want to do with them.
For example, you might be building a list to sell your first ebook to, so you can start making some cash on the side and leave the office earlier every day.
In that case, your “why” is relief from financial pressure and stress – and it’s a much more powerful motivation than “get 1,000 subscribers”.
Staying motivated is huge if you’re going to make this work.
So how do you figure out what your “why” is?
Start by asking yourself one question:
What goal, if I achieved it with my website in 6 months, would feel life-changing?
Do you want to see your name on Forbes? Help build schools in Africa? Or earn passive income?
Knowing the end goal and what that end goal enables you to do gives you a point to work backwards from. For example, getting on Forbes might be your stepping stone to a career as a public speaker, and knowing what they require from their contributors will help you write articles in the correct style.
For Four Minute Books, my why is that I want the website to make $1,000/month in passive income because it would allow me to cut back a lot on client work and take the next step towards becoming a full-time writer and coach.
So what’s your “why”?
PICK A WAY TO MONETIZE YOUR SITE, NOW
Alright, now that you have a strong cause, let’s talk cash.If your website is supposed to make money at some point (it is, isn’t it?), you need to decide how exactly that’s going to happen right now.
Deciding this in advance will help you attract the right people and choose a format for your content that hands itself to be monetized.
For example, if you want to publish ebooks, you know you can target people who have a Kindle, and publish your blog posts in series which you can later condense into several ebooks.
Stuck on this? Here are some potential ways to monetize your site:
- Ads: For example via Google Adsense – this takes a ton of traffic to even remotely make sense, but some people, like this Dutch high school dropout, figure it out.
- Affiliate marketing: One of the most popular ways to make money online, and the easiest way to get started. Affiliate marketing lends itself well to creating content daily, and can be a product you’re passionate about.
- Courses: Online courses take a while to create and without an email list you’ll fall flat on your face, but can pay big dividends in the long run.
- Consulting: Use the expertise to offer coaching calls at a premium rate.
- Donations: Some individuals do this, and it can work well if you blog for a good cause, or a solo artist creating things in your garage or basement. Package it into a Patreon campaign.
- Ebooks: Offering an ebook can be similar to courses, but they take less time. Many people have built ebook empires by publishing regularly on Amazon.
- Lead generation: When you have traffic that’s interested in a specific topic, you can refer them to companies that sell products your audience might be interested in, for example through sponsorships.
- Sell physical products: Ecommerce takes a lot of time to get started and requires some initial investment, and is therefore rather a long-term play.
Alright, time to start publishing, right?
Hold on! First you have to…
VALIDATE YOUR IDEA
You didn’t think any true Sumo would let you get away with building something before validating it, did you?If you don’t make sure people will pay you money for what you’re about to build now, how can you know if they’ll pay you later?
Take Coca-Cola for example. 99 years into their unprecedented soda success story, they decided to strip some expensive ingredients off their magic juice and call it “the New Coke”. Instead of testing whether people would love it first, they made a huge fuss about it and switched the formula for ALL products they sold.
But people didn’t want a change. In fact, they hated it. Coca Cola lost millions of dollars in sales and after thousands of protesters and angry phone calls, switched the formula back just 4 months later.
Validate your idea in a weekend, but spend no more than 7 days validating. Here’s how:
Get 3 people to buy whatever you’re going to sell.
Sticking with affiliate marketing as an example, set up your account and start telling your friends about the product. If they show interest, send them your affiliate link and ask them to buy.
To validate my idea, I did two things:
1. Sent my affiliate link to all my coaching clients after telling them about Blinkist and seeing if they’re interested.

Check!
2. Put up a banner on my website and tracked click-throughs and conversion.

I saw 55 clicks over the first week and 5 conversions (even though people just signed up for the free trial, but the interest was there).
After 7 days the verdict was in: Validated!
If you see people interacting and showing interest in your product (like clicking your banner), and you can make 3 sales to people you know (without forcing your Mum to buy one), you can move on – if not, try a different offer.
Making one sale may be luck, and two can show you that your friends really like you, but repeating the process three times indicates that people actually want you to sell to them, because they get value out of the product.
If you can’t make three sales to your friends in a week, how can you possibly sell even more to strangers?
Protip: If you want to sell a course or other product that you don’t have yet, throw it up on Gumroad and pre-sell it.
And don’t overthink this.
It’s as simple as talking to the person right in front of you at the coffee shop right now – check out how Noah casually does it live, again and again. If you’re really unsure, even after you get three people to buy through you, check out what the competition is doing.
For example, I saw Mike Vardy also promotes Blinkist on Productivityist with a sidebar ad. Since I first noticed it, months went by, but the ad stayed – so it must get results!

Pro tip: Use NerdyData to find who else is promoting your product as an affiliate. Grab a universal part of your referral link (that will be in all affiliate links for the same product), plug it in and presto – a list of sites who use similar affiliate links. Hat tip to Bryan Harris for this strategy.
USE GHETTO MATH TO FIGURE OUT YOUR MONTHLY TARGET
Reason to do all this hard work? Check.Offer you want to sell? Check.
Do people want it? Check.
Now all you have to figure out is how much you have to sell. For example, Blinkist has two pricing levels, Plus at $50/year and Premium at $80/year. My one-time affiliate commission is 50% of the annual fee, so $25 for Plus and $40 for Premium.

(prices translate to € 1:1)
Assuming 70% of people take the cheaper one, this works out to an average of $29.50.

So to make $1,000, I’d have to sell 34 subscriptions in a month.

Looks much more doable than $1,000 right?
Note: Neville Medhora recently built an awesome calculator to figure out your exact numbers easy peasy. Boom, now you have a very tangible goal to work towards.
Time for step 2.
Step 2: Streamline Content Creation – And Everything Else
Remember I said this guide will help you to publish every single day? I meant that. Therefore, you’re gonna be spending a TON of time creating content, so you won’t have any to try advanced SEO tricks, send hundreds of emails, or fix your pop-ups, at least in the beginning.Luckily, you won’t need to, because we’re going to streamline ALL of it.
In fact, we’ll even build a buffer of ideas and research to draw from, so literally all you have to do is sit down, write and press publish every day.
There are 4 parts to streamline.
- Content
- SEO
- Email collection
- Promotion
PART #1: CONTENT CREATION
To create content like you’re an assembly line, you need a structure and ideas.Here’s an easy-to-follow process:
THE 1-IN-1-OUT SYSTEM TO MINIMIZE RESEARCH
You probably have a ton of ideas for articles. I’ve got at least 50 sitting comfortably in Evernote right now.But we’re not going to use any of them for this.
Why?
Because when you have an idea, you want to do it right. The reason these ideas are all still just drafts or headlines in your mind is because you’d never just crank out that article and ship it.
It was YOUR idea after all, it needs to be perfect right? Sorry, we can’t afford perfectionism here. Instead, use what I call the 1-in-1-out system.
You get one piece of content to learn from, and then you write about what you learned.
That’s it. One piece. No more.
It could be a blog post, a question, a Youtube video, an infographic – any kind of content is fair game, as long as it’s just one piece. For example, since Blinkist has over 1,000 book summaries in their library, I can just read one per day and then write about it.
But you can do the same, no matter what you want to sell (I’ll show you how). That way, you limit the time you spend on reading and writing every morning.
In fact, let’s build a month worth of article ideas right now.
I’m big into coffee, so how about we start an imaginary coffee blog? Let’s say you want to promote Bulletproof Coffee as an affiliate and call it Coffee Connoisseur.
Create a new spreadsheet in Google Docs and insert 4 columns: input title, input URL, output title and output keyword.

Now where do you get your inputs from? Here are 3 great places to start:
- Medium
- Quora
- Youtube


5 minutes later, we’re up to 20 inputs pieces of content.
Alright, one last stop: Quora. Search for coffee, but set it to questions.

Pick some interesting questions you already have an opinion about, and add them to your spreadsheet.

Grab another 10 here and you have a 30-day content buffer, awesome!

Pro tip: If you want to make it even easier for yourself, stick to one source for each month. For example, grab 30 articles from Medium, then 30 Youtube videos, etc.
The reason you have to skim the content is so you can come up with a potential headline. This needn’t be final (you’ll see why soon), but will make your life so much easier when you sit down to write.
For example, the very first article is an interview with Alan Adler, inventor of the AeroPress.
You can easily mesh and tweak the headline and sub headline from the original piece for your own purposes – “He Invented The Perfect Cup Of Coffee At Age 76” and make your sub headline “Today I Learned How The AeroPress Was Born”.
Or, just use Sumo’s cool headline generator.
Similar to the validation part, don’t overthink this. Spend no more than an hour on generating ALL your headlines for the month – it took me 20 minutes for this example.

There you go, an entire month of daily content mapped out in an hour.
Some other good places to discover input content are StumbleUpon, Flipboard, Product Hunt, Buzzsumo, and the Google.
Now you have to put a structure in place (don’t worry, we’ll get to the keywords).
HOW TO CREATE AN EVERGREEN STRUCTURE FOR YOUR BLOG POSTS (AND WHY YOU NEED IT)
What’s an evergreen structure? Basically, it’s a way to outline your blog posts that you can use over and over again.For example, Buzzfeed has several different structures, like lists (“22 Avocado Recipes Worth Trying”) or quizzes (“Which Carly Rae Jepsen Song Are You Based On Your Zodiac Sign?” – yes, that one’s real).
What’s great about it is that you can define the structure once, save it, and pull it out of your digital archive every time you publish a new blog post of the same type to save tons of time.
For Four Minute Books, I knew I wanted to share lessons from non-fiction books, so there had to be some information about the author of each book. Since I planned on promoting Blinkist as an affiliate, a review component also makes sense.
Here’s the structure I came up with:
- One sentence summary of the book.
- Estimated reading time.
- Favorite quote from the author.
- Intro with information about the author and 3 lessons from the book ~ 100 words.
- First lesson ~ 200 words.
- Second lesson ~ 200 words.
- Third lesson ~ 200 words.
- My personal takeaways ~ 100 words.
- CTA section to get Blinkist.
- What else can you learn from the summary on Blinkist ~ 100 words.
- Who would I recommend the summary to ~ 50 words.
- Related summaries (done with Yet Another Recommended Posts Plugin)
By using this same structure again and again I make sure to have all of these valuable elements in every single one of my blog posts, without having to think about them.
All in all, this comes out to roughly 1,000 words per post, which is a good mark to shoot for.
It puts you above the 300 word blurbs and listicles on Buzzfeed, but below the long and actionable guides, which take a lot longer to produce.
This is what it looks like in action:

You might think that’s rigid, but having a structure that’s this clearly defined will allow you to literally copy and paste it, and fill it in for every new blog post, which is exactly what I do.
Pro tip: Save your structure as HTML in Evernote and then drop it into the text editor in WordPress for each new post, to minimize formatting hassles.

However, you can’t copy and paste the one I’m using, because it depends on what your topic is about and what you’re trying to make people take action on, so here are some guiding principles for the intro, core section, and conclusion.
INTRO
Start with something engaging. A thought-provoking question. A shocking fact. But grab your reader’s attention. If your first sentence is boring, no one will read the rest of your post.Provide some background information. Who wrote the article you’re referencing? What’s that Youtube show about you just watched? How did that study come about? People want to know.
Tell people what they’re about to learn. Nobody wants to wait until they’re 75% through a post to find out what they’re actually getting out of it. You wouldn’t have read this far if you did
Include a signature picture, but no more. I don’t mean a header image and I don’t mean screenshots. Make it part of the structure. It could be a quote of the day, a cool coffee wallpaper, or a fun fact. This will help SEO, plus people are 80% more likely to read a post with a colorful image above the fold.
CORE SECTION
Chop it up. Don’t try to fill your middle section with 600 random words. Using 3 parts works well. You could answer 3 questions, provide 3 lessons, give 3 intriguing thoughts or ideas, or even a mix of all of them. It’s so much easier to write 200 words several times than 600 in one go.Keep it valuable. Don’t rant, gossip, complain or point fingers. Make it helpful. You can include your opinion and personal experience where applicable, but don’t give an award speech – you haven’t won an Oscar (yet).
CONCLUSION
Re-state what people learned. Do it in a quick list of bullet points. It’s the easiest way to wrap up and helps people remember your post.Share your opinion. But again, stay objective. Don’t use harsh language, but don’t praise something to the skies either.
Have a call to action. Tell people what to do next, even if it’s just reading another post on your site, or signing up for your email list.
Don’t worry about the nuts and bolts of your structure, at first, there’s plenty of time to fix it. When I started publishing, my structure looked a lot different. When I look back at my first post, I think it’s awful.
The point is I set a structure and stuck with it until I could come up with a better one.
It’s much better to have a bad structure and ask every single reader for feedback to make it better than to have no structure at all and thus, no readers.
But for you that won’t happen. Why? Because next, we’ll make sure that Google is your fan and sends you a whole bunch of them.
On to SEO.
PART #2: SEO
Professional SEO’s will probably definitely want to slap me for this, but it works.The only thing you’ll try to do with SEO in this guide is to tell Google that a new blog is in town (in your industry).
If you don’t do this now, it’ll be incredibly hard to get Google to notice you later. Get a few basics right, however, and you put your blog into a great position with a good baseline of organic traffic, which you can explode later by landing a few big hits (and watch all your posts rise in Google’s ranks).
Here’s how to do it.
FIND THE KEYWORDS YOU ALREADY HAVE
Think of the most generic word you can that people might search for when looking for your blog. In our example, it’d be “coffee”.Now go through your list of headlines and check if you can find a word combination of 2, 3, 4 or even 5 words in each one that includes your top level keyword.

For the ones you can’t, leave for now.
In this case, 24 out of 30 headlines already had a usable keyword in them. For example, “How Filtered Coffee Was Invented By A Frustrated Mom” lends itself well to the keyword “filtered coffee”, and so on.
RE-WORK HEADLINES THAT DIDN’T INCLUDE A KEYWORD ALREADY
Now you can simply do a second run-through and re-work the headlines a bit in order to integrate a multiple word keyword that fits.For example, “What Can You Do To Get The Most Out Of Your Coffee?” isn’t great, but “What Can You Do To Enjoy Coffee More?” isn’t so bad, as you can get “enjoy coffee” or “enjoy coffee more” from it.
Most times it’s just a matter of re-ordering the words.
When “Is Coffee The Greatest Addiction Of All Time?” turns into “Is Coffee Addiction The Greatest Of All Time?” you can now target “coffee addiction”, for example.

CHECK SEARCH VOLUME
Now, copy the keyword column and plug it into the Google keyword planner. Check if all keywords show a search volume. If they do, you’re good.
If not, move on to the next step.
ADJUST THE LAGGARDS
Some of your keywords might not show any search volume.
But that doesn’t mean people don’t search for them.
Just open Google and see if their auto complete feature recognizes them.

If it does, you’re good – you can still create this content. If not, adjust it to the last recognized part. In the example above you can adjust “enjoy coffee more” to “enjoy coffee”, the other 2 work out.
Done! Now here’s how to integrate your keywords into your content.
INTEGRATING SEO INTO YOUR CONTENT STRUCTURE
There really are only a few places to use your keyword in for maximum effect.- Title/headline of your article.
- Slug (=the URL) of your article.
- Once or twice inside the body’s text, maybe in a sub-headline and a paragraph.
- As the alt tag of your signature picture.
- Inside your meta description.

The signature picture is important because it makes sure you have at least one picture with the right tag.

I only use my keywords once in the body (if you can do twice that’s even better).

The meta description is the short excerpt that’s shown in the Google search results.
The easiest way to edit it and simultaneously make sure you check all the other basic on-page SEO boxes with each post is to use the Yoast SEO plugin (the free version is fine).
It’ll show the meta description right at the end.

Once you’re done you can simply go through the checklist at the bottom, if you’re green overall (shown at the top), you’re good to go.

DOES THIS REALLY WORK?
Yes.You’re building content and loading Google with texts for it to index, centered around a certain topic or main keyword.
You might even see a few top 10 rankings based on this minimalistic SEO approach alone, just because the scope of keywords you’re targeting is so broad.

It works because you’re clearly making yourself heard in Google’s ears for the same topic, again and again, and again.
After a quick keyword comparison between a few book titles for “summary”, “book summary”, “review” and “book review”, I found that [book title] + “summary” usually had the most search volume, so I stuck with that formula for all my posts, and still do.

The lack of time you spend with the optimization of each individual post is forgiven by Google because publishing daily will shoot your number of indexed pages through the roof quickly.

Over 2 months, this will slowly but steadily lead to climbing impressions and clicks and build a baseline of organic traffic that you can blow up later.
Even better: Because by then you have so many ranked pages, landing one big hit – for example with a relevant and well-written affiliate article – will drag lots of your older posts right with it and boost SEO traffic even more.