Hello January! Make 2011 the Year You Stopped Putting Crap on Your Websites for Content

We’ve made a lot of changes  at Keyword Content over the past several months.

In case you don’t know, along with being a writer and artist, I supplement my income doing affiliate marketing.

I made all the classic mistakes, fell for all the classic scams – let’s see Google Adwords for Free (sucked), every Ninja, Sniper, Robot and Easy Click Cash program that came out – I tried.

I paid macho bucks to attend seminars and I heard one of the guest speakers say to another guest speaker (before another round of talks) that “anyone that bought those $47 IM products was an idiot” and he went on to say those idiots had made him rich! Hyuk, yuk, yuk.

I’ve ghostwritten and done the copy for affiliate marketing guides you’ve probably bought. After years of doing this, it’s basically all re-hashed information.Yes, you can make money online but it takes a lot of effort and dedication. There is no easy, push a button system for making money online that works.
Needless to say, I no longer buy ANYTHING marketed as an IM product – I know what works now.

What works as far as affiliate marketing is this:

Don’t put crap on the Internet.
Stop using rehashed crap on your websites.
PLR (private label rights) articles are cheap and easy to find but they are nothing but regurgitated spew on your website.
Learn what keywords apply to YOUR website and go for them – you can build traffic from there.
The majority of your visitors are as smart as you are – give them real content and real reviews.

After all the secret codes, secret tricks and other just b.s. – I started being real. If I liked a product or knew someone that did – I’d promote it and write a real review. I stopped hyping every single IM product and in fact started a website AGAINST b.s. on the web that is sold to newbies.

And the best part – the money started coming in on a steady basis.

Make 2011 the year you stopped using crap on your site and get some real content – use our writers or our uPLR articles (that’s unique PLR -sold only one time) and you’ll find you’ll go up in the rankings and your visitors will trust your site because it’s unique and REAL.

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Writing Scams That Are Pretty Clever

I know you know the basics on spotting writing scams and fortunately the scammers make it pretty easy to spot but I’ve seen two scams sucking in writers lately.

1- Creating email addresses and writing flirty emails.

A company will pay you to create Hotmail, Gmail and Yahoo email addresses (they prefer Hotmail usually for some reason) and you write emails that are vague but pertaining to the fact the sender has seen the receiver’s profile (could be from a dating site or just a profile on yahoo, myspace blah, blah, blah) and they would LOVE to get to know them better.

There’s a link to click to contact the sender of the email and it leads to a dating site where the recipient of the email will have to sign up (read:pay a small fee) to write back.
Unfortunately, a huge segment of the population is just lonely enough that this technique works. They also give people copied Myspace and Yahoo profiles to copy for dating site profiles.

The money looks good for this. Most of the writers I have talked to were promised 400.00 or so a week for doing this. However upon turning in the email address list, profiles and other work – they are told their work is substandard and only a very tiny portion is actually “purchased”. I think you guessed the company actually uses everything.

These companies tend to disappear and reinvent themselves over and over. I know one writer that had the bad luck/insanity to actually work for one of these companies and then they disappeared and the same writer applied for the same type of job again on Craigslist and lo’ and behold it was the same company just new servers, emails and stuff.

2-You Need to Use *This* Software to Work With Us

This scam is pretty clever and no matter what – the scammer makes money. I actually read about this in a blackhat forum post.

This guy places ads on Craigslist seeking web content creators -he offers at the extreme high end for content – sometimes even higher than industry standards. This means a lot of writers will be answering.
He then asks for a sample article – pretty standard right? And then a few days later you will get a “Congratulations and Welcome Aboard” email that outlines their bogus company and their bogus reasons for needing web content. It looks good, I went trolling Craigslist until I found one of these places and I applied.

Then, you are sent your first assignment – woohoo it’s like $350 for 1000 words on XYZ topic. Hell yeah you want this gig. There’s ONE small hitch – the client wants to be able to speak directly to the writer via Skype or other web collab software program. This will cost the writer $7 and so since most of us writers are used to a little “out of pocket” that we later get reimbursed for – most writers will pay this.

The project falls through at the last minute, the scammer made $29 commission and you’re out a sample article and $7. The scammer will refund the $7 to the writer if asked but only if asked. He’s still up $21 bucks a writer even if he has to make a refund.

Those are two that I’ve seen on Craigslist – keep your eyes open and avoid the scams!