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You are here: Home > Internet and Businesses Online > Internet and Businesses Online > Enough Already! Five Ways Websites Stuffed with PLR Articles Give Themselves Away |
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Casual Articles - Enough Already! Five Ways Websites Stuffed with PLR Articles Give Themselves Away
How People Really Explore New Careers: What Does A Real Career Search Look Like? ou.The traditional model of career choice suggests a linear pattern. Get to know yourself. Learn your kills and talents. Explore careers that seem to best utilize your talents and skills. Today, both research and experience suggest that real career change doesn't happen this way.What's real? Serendipity and zig-zag patternsContemporary researchers find that nearly every career path involves an element of serendipity. John What you can do to slow the advance of junk PLR 1. Notify Google by clicking on the “advertise” or “sponsored” link in the ad box. One of Google’s goals is to get rid of spammy sites stuffed with “scraped” content. You can help them by letting know them every time you’re able to identify a site that exists simply to display advertisements. 2. Back out of the site, and don’t touch any advertising links. Use the back button to get out of the site. If you click on an ad, you’re paying the website owner and encouraging their continuing use of PLR articles to clutter up the Intern Search Engine Submission Tools Open Traffic Floodgates To Websites It just happened again. I went to a site that promised helpful information only to find a useless PLR (private label rights) article. It burns me up!Search engine submission tools are excellent tools when it comes to getting our websites indexed in the search engines. Such tools can either be provided by search engine submission services or in the form of software. What they can do for us is rather straightforward – submitting our website details for inclusion in the search engines. Why is it so crucial that we make use of these search engine submission tools?There are a There’s little that I find more irritating than clicking on the title of what promises to be an interesting, informative article to find . . . junk! Tired and potentially plagiarized (unscrupulous PLR sellers often get their articles from article directories, removing copyright and author information) junk at that. The upsurge in PLR article sites has led to a flood of obese sites bursting with PLR articles. It’s time to fight back. So here are five ways that PLR websites give themselves away and what you can do to stop them. 1. Content three yards wide and a nanometer deep PLR articles often offer the reader an encyclopedic variety of articles crammed with nothing more than tired platitudes on a worn-out subjects. In fact, you’ll never find new, interesting content in these articles. Original content requires original thinking and research. 2. Bad, sometimes even unintelligible, writing Website owners fear Google’s duplicate content penalties, because they’ll lose advertising revenue if Google bans their site. Therefore, unscrupulous site owners often rewrite PLR -- carelessly. PLR rewriters scramble sentence order or even scramble word order within sentences. The result? Meaningless articles. 3. No author or a fictitious author In their haste to post hundreds of articles, website owners who rely on PLR articles sometimes forget to put an author on their articles. Others create fictitious authors for their worn-out articles. You may be able to get information about site ownership by checking Whois. If there is a mismatch between the site owner and author, you may found yet another PLR aticle. 4. No author biography If someone is really an expert, they’ll provide supporting evidence in their biography. No biography? Chances are good there’s no expertise there either. 5. Little or no contact information Experts want readers to be able to contact them. They write articles to encourage contact rather than to serve simply as a foil for income-creating advertisements. If you cannot find contact information, or you find only limited contact information, you’ve probably landed on a site populated with PLR articles. You can safely assume that missing or limited contact information means the site doesn’t want to hear from you. What you can do to slow the advance of junk PLR 1. Notify Google by clicking on the “advertise” or “sponsored” link in the ad box. One of Google’s goals is to get rid of spammy sites stuffed with “scraped” content. You can help them by letting know them every time you’re able to identify a site that exists simply to display advertisements. 2. Back out of the site, and don’t touch any advertising links. Use the back button to get out of the site. If you click on an ad, you’re paying the website owner and encouraging their continuing use of PLR articles to clutter up the Intern Lead Gathering at Trade Shows R websites give themselves away and what you can do to stop them.The primary reason to exhibit in a trade show is to generate sales leads or contacts for your company. So why is it that the majority of trade show exhibitors say that lead gathering and follow up is the biggest area of improvement needed? The reasons can vary greatly depending on the organizations; however some good up-front planning for both lead generation and follow-up will help alleviate many of the problems that organizations 1. Content three yards wide and a nanometer deep PLR articles often offer the reader an encyclopedic variety of articles crammed with nothing more than tired platitudes on a worn-out subjects. In fact, you’ll never find new, interesting content in these articles. Original content requires original thinking and research. 2. Bad, sometimes even unintelligible, writing Website owners fear Google’s duplicate content penalties, because they’ll lose advertising revenue if Google bans their site. Therefore, unscrupulous site owners often rewrite PLR -- carelessly. PLR rewriters scramble sentence order or even scramble word order within sentences. The result? Meaningless articles. 3. No author or a fictitious author In their haste to post hundreds of articles, website owners who rely on PLR articles sometimes forget to put an author on their articles. Others create fictitious authors for their worn-out articles. You may be able to get information about site ownership by checking Whois. If there is a mismatch between the site owner and author, you may found yet another PLR aticle. 4. No author biography If someone is really an expert, they’ll provide supporting evidence in their biography. No biography? Chances are good there’s no expertise there either. 5. Little or no contact information Experts want readers to be able to contact them. They write articles to encourage contact rather than to serve simply as a foil for income-creating advertisements. If you cannot find contact information, or you find only limited contact information, you’ve probably landed on a site populated with PLR articles. You can safely assume that missing or limited contact information means the site doesn’t want to hear from you. What you can do to slow the advance of junk PLR 1. Notify Google by clicking on the “advertise” or “sponsored” link in the ad box. One of Google’s goals is to get rid of spammy sites stuffed with “scraped” content. You can help them by letting know them every time you’re able to identify a site that exists simply to display advertisements. 2. Back out of the site, and don’t touch any advertising links. Use the back button to get out of the site. If you click on an ad, you’re paying the website owner and encouraging their continuing use of PLR articles to clutter up the Intern The Psychology Of Leadership - Understanding The Influence Of Inspirational Leaders (Part Ii) ners often rewrite PLR -- carelessly. PLR rewriters scramble sentence order or even scramble word order within sentences. The result? Meaningless articles.THE 8 ASCENTS OF THE ULTIMATE LEADER (Continued from Part I) are the Psychological foundations of what makes a great Leader, they are...1. Master Your Rules of Engagement• In War, "Rules of Engagement" are what you do when you engage the enemy.• The enemy in this case is experience of when your surroundings don't match your perception of ‘what should be'• Psychological "Rules of Engagement" exist as react 3. No author or a fictitious author In their haste to post hundreds of articles, website owners who rely on PLR articles sometimes forget to put an author on their articles. Others create fictitious authors for their worn-out articles. You may be able to get information about site ownership by checking Whois. If there is a mismatch between the site owner and author, you may found yet another PLR aticle. 4. No author biography If someone is really an expert, they’ll provide supporting evidence in their biography. No biography? Chances are good there’s no expertise there either. 5. Little or no contact information Experts want readers to be able to contact them. They write articles to encourage contact rather than to serve simply as a foil for income-creating advertisements. If you cannot find contact information, or you find only limited contact information, you’ve probably landed on a site populated with PLR articles. You can safely assume that missing or limited contact information means the site doesn’t want to hear from you. What you can do to slow the advance of junk PLR 1. Notify Google by clicking on the “advertise” or “sponsored” link in the ad box. One of Google’s goals is to get rid of spammy sites stuffed with “scraped” content. You can help them by letting know them every time you’re able to identify a site that exists simply to display advertisements. 2. Back out of the site, and don’t touch any advertising links. Use the back button to get out of the site. If you click on an ad, you’re paying the website owner and encouraging their continuing use of PLR articles to clutter up the Intern Exit Strategies - You Have to Change Your Way of Thinking >If someone is really an expert, they’ll provide supporting evidence in their biography. No biography? Chances are good there’s no expertise there either.To paraphrase Bear Bryant, (Past great Alabama football coach), “When we lose-it’s my fault. When we win it’s their fault.” Take responsibility for the bad and pass out the glory to others. From now on, it’s not about You...If you’re the owner of a business that’s getting ready to be put on the market, consider these words carefully. You need to change your thought process of how the business has been built and how it operate 5. Little or no contact information Experts want readers to be able to contact them. They write articles to encourage contact rather than to serve simply as a foil for income-creating advertisements. If you cannot find contact information, or you find only limited contact information, you’ve probably landed on a site populated with PLR articles. You can safely assume that missing or limited contact information means the site doesn’t want to hear from you. What you can do to slow the advance of junk PLR 1. Notify Google by clicking on the “advertise” or “sponsored” link in the ad box. One of Google’s goals is to get rid of spammy sites stuffed with “scraped” content. You can help them by letting know them every time you’re able to identify a site that exists simply to display advertisements. 2. Back out of the site, and don’t touch any advertising links. Use the back button to get out of the site. If you click on an ad, you’re paying the website owner and encouraging their continuing use of PLR articles to clutter up the Intern Paid Survey Scams ou.Paid survey scams – isn’t the internet full of paid survey scams?These paid survey scams make out that we can make massive amounts filling in surveys and quit our jobs working only a few hours a day.Is it really possible to get paid up to $100 an hour to sit around in my underwear filling in surveys?The plain truth is: NO!How does that sound for honesty?The truth is that you will not get paid $100 What you can do to slow the advance of junk PLR 1. Notify Google by clicking on the “advertise” or “sponsored” link in the ad box. One of Google’s goals is to get rid of spammy sites stuffed with “scraped” content. You can help them by letting know them every time you’re able to identify a site that exists simply to display advertisements. 2. Back out of the site, and don’t touch any advertising links. Use the back button to get out of the site. If you click on an ad, you’re paying the website owner and encouraging their continuing use of PLR articles to clutter up the Internet. 3. Let the website hosting company know if its customer plagiarizes content. Legitimate hosts don’t want to wreck their reputations by hosting sleazy sites, so they’ll usually cooperate by removing them. Keep after PLR Internet abusers, and we’ll all benefit from having original content to enjoy!
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