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We then made a table with some of the main publications in which we found Snippets for a keyword. Then, we began to create definitions for each of those words, adapting the definitions to the good practices that we saw in the previous topic. At first we didn't see great results. But after a certain period of time we started appearing in some of those Snippets. Look at some of them and how they fit perfectly into the practices we explained above. In all of them we put the definition after an H with the ideal question to answer the Snippet. That is why we can affirm that the practices taught - always try to maintain a number of words between and and use a good and direct definition - can bring the results you are looking for.
My final advice is: focus on achieving good positions. Do not change HT Lists your focus with link building, content promotion, etc., but insist on this and add optimizations to your publications to, who knows, reach a Snippet. It's good that you remember that none of this is a rule. Some Snippets, as I already showed, still do not provide ideal answers. In addition to that, they are not eternal: many Snippets tend to change. The Content Marketing one, for example, was already ours, it went to another response and now it came back to us.

A last very good anecdote is that of the Snippet “ Who is Neil Patel ?” In the story we did about how we positioned ourselves first for the name Neil Patel, I didn't confess it, but we believed that we wouldn't win the first position. That's why we focus on optimizing content to steal your Snippets. In the end the opposite of what we thought happened. It didn't work for Snippet, but we stole the first organic spot! (laughs). But currently, the Snippet is ours with the phrase that we optimized at the time. Well, that's it! I hope you liked this post on Featured Snippets.
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