Mark covers Google AdWords Keyword Tool basics in this episode, breaking down the three concepts that trip up new internet marketers most often. He also shares his experience visiting Leo Laporte at the TWiT studios and updates the corn sheller site earnings.

What You'll Learn in This Episode

  • The difference between broad, phrase, and exact match keyword data and why it matters
  • How local versus global search volume affects your affiliate marketing projections
  • Why the competition score does not measure organic ranking difficulty
  • What Mark learned visiting the TWiT studios about building a media business from podcasting

Episode Summary

Mark records from San Jose, California after visiting Leo Laporte's TWiT Brick House studios in Petaluma. He is inspired by what Laporte built from a small podcast into a full production studio with multiple shows and a dedicated staff — all driven by genuine passion for technology.

The core of the episode is a tutorial on the Google AdWords Keyword Tool. Mark identifies three things new marketers consistently misunderstand: match types (exact versus phrase versus broad), local versus global search volume, and the competition metric (which measures advertiser bidding competition, not organic ranking difficulty). He also covers the CPC estimate, seasonal trends data, and the limitations of the tool's accuracy.

The episode includes updates on the corn sheller site (steady traffic growth but volatile eBay earnings), the snoring niche site (declared a failure due to a previously penalized domain), and Mark's plans for the Forever Affiliate coaching program.

Key Takeaways

  • Use exact match keyword data for conservative, reliable traffic projections
  • Match local search volume to your monetization geography — global numbers can be misleading
  • The Google Keyword Tool competition score measures ad bidding, not organic ranking difficulty
  • Leo Laporte's TWiT network shows what a decade of passionate, consistent content creation can build

What's Changed Since This Episode

The Google AdWords Keyword Tool was replaced by Google Keyword Planner in 2013. Modern keyword research relies on tools like Ahrefs, Semrush, and Ubersuggest for more accurate and actionable data. The match type concepts Mark explains remain relevant for understanding how search queries work.

Google Keyword Planner now requires an active Google Ads account with spending history to access detailed search volume ranges. Free alternatives and third-party tools have filled this gap for organic SEO researchers.

Resources Mentioned

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Listen to Late Night Internet Marketing on Apple Podcasts or subscribe at latenightim.com/internet-marketing-podcast/. Have a question for Mark? Call the digital recorder at 214-444-8655 or drop a comment below.

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