1 Google Cheat Code Difficult for Bloggers to Understand

  June 15, 2025 blogging tips 🕑 5 minutes read
Yangon Myanmar

Yangon Myanmar

 

I teach bloggers how to cheat to rank on page 1 of Google.

 

Oops.

 

Let me re-word that.

 

I teach bloggers heavily resistant to Google truths how to cut through difficulties, to awaken their mind, to facilitate understanding, to create an easier way to succeed. “Easier” is not easy but it is easier.

 

The Google Cheat Code for Today

 

For whatever reason – usually self-sabotage fuels this one – most bloggers find it difficult to understand that promoting their blog posts consistently across a wide range of channels increases their page 1 Google traffic indirectly.

 

Here is the cheat code: sharing your blog posts 5, 10 or 30 times daily to Twitter and 5 or 10 times daily to Facebook, LinkedIn, Threads and BlueSky – consistently following this approach – inspires a healthy collection of people to click and visit your blog. People need to click/visit for this cheat code to work.

 

Imagine 5, 10 or 50 of those clickers who already visited your blog searching for, say, “blogging tips” on Google. What appears on page 1? Well, if you publish long form, targeted content consistently……your blog!

 

Getting a lot of people to click through to your blog via an aggressive link sharing campaign tells the Google algorithm to send people to your blog *over other page 1 Google Incognito results* because you visited the blog once, twice or frequently.

 

The way most bloggers treat promoting their old content, all but dismissing it, you see why most look past this somewhat easy way to access a cheat code.

 

What 3 Steps Challenge Bloggers from Accessing this Cheat Code?

 

Well:

 

  1. publishing detailed, targeted content consistently; you need to in order to sniff page 1
  2. promoting dozens of blog posts daily across 5-10 marketing channels; most bloggers severely resist this idea
  3. following steps #1 and #2 consistently

 

Blogging From Paradise readers are more likely to see my blog posts on page 1 of Google because each visits Blogging From Paradise Dot Com frequently. Google knows this. Google serves frequent visitors some of my posts on page 1 versus content from say, Neil Patel, or Pro Blogger. Why? Google plays matchmaker. My readers want my content here. Google assumes my readers want my content on page 1.

 

I do not necessarily outrank the heavies consistently. Sometimes I do (this post has been at page 1 position 1 for 11 years straight). Other times I do not. But some BFP posts surface at position 3, 4 or 5 on page 1 for you because you visited BFP often.

 

Why did you visit BFP often?

 

In part, I promote dozens of blog posts every single day for years through:

 

  • X/Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • X/Twitter communities
  • Facebook Groups
  • LinkedIn Groups
  • Facebook Pages
  • Threads
  • BlueSky

 

Is copying and pasting blog post links easy? Yeah.

 

Does automating this process seem easy? Yeah.

 

Is it a Google cheat code to share a heavy volume of links daily spread out across a bunch of channels? Yeah.

 

Why?

 

The hard work – aka the non cheat code – is writing detailed, targeted, page 1 worthy blog posts.

 

Copying and pasting ’em across channels for a while every single day is not hard at all. Anyone can do that.

 

Doing that consistently inspires some people to click some links. Google loves that because it tells the algorithm to give the Google users what they want on page 1. I love that too, by the way.

 

Detailed Content Combined with Aggressive Self-Promotion Levels the Playing Field

 

Sharing your truly helpful posts tells Google to rank it for readers who click on it via social media or any marketing channel that you persistently work.

 

I do not consistently outrank the top blogs in the world for blogging tips via Google Incognito.

 

But if my blogging tribe searches some competitive to lower comp blogging tips keywords via their logged in Google profile which records their browser history, you bet your ass that you and I see an increasing volume of Blogging From Paradise content on page 1.

 

Do you understand the importance of tribe building now?

 

Getting loyal readers to click on your blog link increases the chances of ranking on page 1 of Google for them.

 

What happens then?

 

  • Google sends traffic to your blog from page 1
  • loyal readers deeply trust your content
  • loyal readers drive increased referral traffic based on their fortified trust

 

Think Deeply and Indirectly

 

Start thinking deeply by considering indirect traffic strategies.

 

Bloggers just want to:

 

  • research a blog post
  • write a blog post
  • publish a blog post

 

to let the Search Engine Fairies sprinkle Google Pixie Dust on the post, magically teleporting that sucker to page 1.

 

No.

 

Google does not work that way.

 

Build your tribe. Share content aggressively across a wide range of targeted marketing channels. Boost your clicks. Grow your tribes. Loyal readers who visit your blog tend to see some of your blog posts on page 1 for niche specific keywords because Google perceives your frequent visits to be a “virtual thumbs up”.

 

Take Whatever Power Google Gives You

 

Google viciously protects its algorithm.

 

Seize whatever power the Big G lends you.

 

Why would you ignore this cheat code?

 

Google all but begs you to promote old posts frequently through various channels so visitors see your content on page 1 versus content from the heavies. Or, so loyal readers see your content besides content from the heavies.

 

What happens if you resist building a tribe? What happens if readers rarely click to and visit your blog posts because you shy away from self-promoting aggressively? Blogging Big Dawgs dominate page 1 traffic. Perhaps your blog reveals itself on page 2, 5 or 10. Frankly, the deck is stacked against solopreneur bloggers who do not hire teams to run content mills. Brilliant content published by blogging one man band types reaches the top, here and there, but you and I need another weapon in our blogging arsenal.

 

Promote old – and new – content religiously through 5-10 marketing channels. Boost clicks. Build a loyal tribe based on those clicks. Blog visitors who frequent your blog are more likely to see your content on page 1.

 

Practical Proof

 

Query a search term via Google Incognito.

 

Query the identical search term while logged in to Google under your user name with your browsing history fueling the results.

 

See what I mean?

 

Some results match up perfectly.

 

But other results are quite different based on blogs you previously visited.

 

Conclusion

 

Promote blog posts freely via multiple marketing channels.

 

Get clicks.

 

Grow a “frequent visitor base” into a loyal tribe.

 

Drive page 1 Google traffic when they see your content on page 1 (being a frequent visitor) which edges out industry leading blogging big dawgs.