How To Live In Bali As A Digital Nomad

How To Live In Bali 2017 edition

In 2005 I bought a little place in Bali, Indonesia. In that time I’ve seen profound changes here, most of them good in my opinion.

Bali sits in a sweet spot between exotic and familiar, inexpensive but comfortable.

Why would I be mentioning this bit of personal info and talking about how to live in Bali on a tech-oriented website?

In the early 2000s I remember meeting a couple of people who were blogging about their travels. I was intrigued at the time, though it didn’t seem too lucrative and I wasn’t sure how it could be. By 2009 I had over a hundred websites, both niche and authority sites bringing in enough Adsense income to support things here.

I never cracked the travel blogging niche, but I did have WageFreedom.com, a non-commercial site where I’d put some of my writing about my experience of Bali, and the idea that if a person is sick of cubicle life or working for someone else that the Internet had changed the situation, that you could wage freedom if you were willing to seize the opportunity.

It was the attitude I’d kept alive in myself, thru years of working jobs I didn’t like, doing things in which I had little interest.

I was surprised to see that eventually most of the emails I got–soon they were coming every day–were less about living in Bali and more about breaking free from employment. How to make enough money from the Internet to live in Southeast Asia, or simply to quit your job and be your own boss in your hometown.

For me these were all related topics, so I put my answers to the most common questions I’d get into a PDF that I could send to people who had questions on the details of living in Bali for longer than a tourist, and some of the ways you can use the Internet to fund it.

Along the way we all became aware of the term ‘digital nomad’. Bali has become a huge destination for them.

My PDF went thru a few incarnations and the latest edition, all new for 2017, is a book with almost 30,000 words.

I thought it might be appropriate to mention it on Digital Media Minute, since I know the average reader has more tech skills than they need to support themselves using the Internet in SE Asia.

The book won’t be of interest to many readers. But for people like the guy I used to be, desperately looking for a way to break out and live a bigger live, you’ll find more info at this link.

My Favorite Keyword Volume And Related Keywords Free SEO Tools

Free SEO keyword research tools

Free SEO keyword research toolsI want to point you to two SEO tools I’ve been using for a long time now, tools that work together to let me do two major SEO tasks very, very quickly: finding related keywords and get keyword volumes/CPC amounts. Even better, they are free. Sometimes a lean tool with fewer features is best, and these tools are a good case in point.

When you’re doing keyword research it’s vital to get a wide range of keywords related to the topic you intend to create content around, or the primary keyword you’ll be targeting, if you have it defined. Keyword Shitter (sorry, but that is its name) allows you to put in one or several keywords and then quickly get dozens or even hundreds of related keywords returned to you.

These related keywords serve a dual purpose. First, you can discover keywords worth targeting which might be even more attractive than the keyword you’re currently targeting, in terms of relatively high search volumes or low SERP competition.

Second, to include as many LSI (latent semantic indexing) keywords is good onpage SEO practice. You’re sure to find many to include in your article or blog post that’s you’d never have otherwise thought of. There are more thorough tools for this but I still find myself using this tool because it’s so fast.

The second tool is Keywords Everywhere. First, find and install the browser extension. Then, paste as many keywords as you’d like into it and immediately get the search volume and CPC amounts for each keyword. Choose to get stats from several different countries or ‘global’ for the whole world.

See video for the 90 second workflow.