by Mark E. Mason on May 20, 2009
If you need traffic, I have the answer for you.
Well, that got your attention.
And it should. I am still playing around with the hot new article marketing software that I mentioned a few weeks ago -- Automatic Article Submitter. I know the developer pretty well (we are both moderators inside Coaching With Josh) and he has been implementing some of my suggestions. He is a great guy and a quality code writer -- which makes me like the software even more. Best of all, he implements user suggestions (sometimes the same day).
The bottom line -- I have been using this software for weeks, and I am more convinced than ever that Automatic Article Submitter (AAS) is a program that every internet marketer needs. In fact, it is the only software that I can really say that about (unless you count WordPress itself).
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by Mark E. Mason on May 11, 2009
As many of you know, I have been working with some new article marketing software lately. It is really cool, and has a number of advanced features. One of the important features is called "article spinning." If you are new to article marketing, you may not be familiar with spinning, so I thought I would describe it here.
Spinning Defined
Spinning is something that you do to an article to create multiple versions that are seen as unique in the search engines. This search optimization method can range from totally black hat (in the case where you are generating random junk) to white hat (in the case where every article you generate is truly unique and valuable).
What I will describe below is a "gray hat" use of spinning. The goal in this example would be to take a decent base article, spin it, and create many versions that say the same thing but look unique in the search engines. By my definition, it is "gray hat" because a reader that read 3 different versions of the same article would not get any more information that a reader that read one version. It is not black hat because the resulting articles are pretty decent, and it is not white hat because each generated article is not uniquely valuable.
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