WP Snowball 2.0 Your Content, Links, Traffic and Profits (Unlimited Blogs) + WP Indexer
Salepage : WP Snowball 2.0 Your Content, Links, Traffic and Profits (Unlimited Blogs) + WP Indexer
Archive : WP Snowball 2.0 Your Content, Links, Traffic and Profits (Unlimited Blogs) + WP Indexer Digital Download
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We’ve probably never met, but I believe we have a mutual interest.
That focus is in developing valuable, automated websites that attract users and convert them into revenues. I’m about to disclose exactly how you can achieve it by collaborating with 53 of the world’s most popular websites:
Perhaps you’ve experimented with autoblogging previously. Perhaps you want to generate visitors to a product you own, a client’s site, or as an affiliate. I’m not sure. What I do know is that you’ve come to this page because you’re serious about increasing traffic, links, and profit from your websites.
So I’m confident that you’ll find this page extremely beneficial to your present (or prospective) business.
This is why:
Ever wonder why certain blogs (typically other people’s!) inexplicably get thousands of daily visitors while others struggle to obtain a few bot hits?
Have you previously put up a solid autoblog, but getting it to earn money is like pulling blood from a stone?
Do Google’s quarterly SEO airstrikes make you sad?
Why do you never seem to get the homerun you want, no matter what website you use or how hard you try? (And why, if you do, does it never last?)
Is link building always an uphill struggle, even when you have a few sites up and running?
Does the time it takes to set up a blog and start earning money irritate you? Have you ever wondered whether there is a faster way?
Are you weary of using the same old, low-quality, underperforming autoblogging plugins?
Did you know that according to industry statistics, 81% of all bloggers make less than $100 each month? (Not per month, but EVER)
I’d wager the figure is considerably higher among autobloggers due to certain particular problems.
Why do you believe that most individuals fail horribly at autoblogging?
I all, the Internet is a large place; surely there’s enough traffic and conversions for us to set up some successful autoblogs?
Which of these best describes you?
“I attempted autoblogging, but got pathetic (if any) results.” You took the time to master the latest program that was supposed to alter your life. You put up with the glitches and delayed service, and you even manually edited all of the postings. However, the traffic never arrived. All of your content was duplicate, you had an almost 100% bounce rate, and you even started receiving DMCA complaints as a result of your blog’s content!
You placed the concept on the back burner after recognizing that it didn’t work for you.
“Autoblogging appears to me to be spam.” I fully agree. What most people consider to be autoblogging is utter nonsense.
Putting up an auto-poster with duplicate content from 5 years ago is *not* the way to conduct autoblogging nowadays. It just does not work. Google figured it out a long time ago for one very specific reason.
Google has two top priorities. Their AdWords profit is number one. That is the golden goose for the corporation. User experience is ranked second in Web Search. That implies providing them with results that are relevant to their inquiry.
So if you just set up an old autoblogging plugin and post duplicate stuff, you’re not helping anyone. Can you envision someone arriving on an autoblog consisting of low-quality, fluff pieces and like it so much that they stay?
Neither do I.
However, there is nothing inherently wrong about automation. It is the foundation of the world’s top corporations. So it’s simply a matter of merging the two – user experience and automation.
Is it really that simple?
“I’m profitable, but I’m continuously seeking for fresh traffic sources.”
You have a few revenue streams, but you recognize that your earnings are limited by the amount of focused traffic you can direct toward your products and offers.
You’ve probably exhausted (or given up on) the typical free tactics and now rely on paid traffic sources since they’re more trustworthy.
“I’m new to autoblogging, but I’d want to earn some additional money each month.”
You already have a day job, but you want to start your own business in the long run. You’ve recently found it difficult to find time for SEO, blogs, and affiliate work, therefore you really need a shortcut to a consistent, supplementary monthly revenue stream.
I’ve felt like all four of those things at once. But then something happened that changed everything for me…
It All Began With A Napkin…
At my Nephew’s birthday celebration, I was served cake. He was three years old at the time and had much too much energy.
Then it hit me out of nowhere.
Everyone was performing autoblogging incorrectly. They were trapped in the past, playing see-see-do, wanting to relive the golden days when traffic flowed freely and everyone clicked on advertising.
Ideas were coming to me, so I took a napkin and scribbled down the obvious approach to produce genuine results.
To save you from reading my chicken scratchings, I’ve put them down below with some explanation:
Natural Randomization
Autoblogs are far too mechanical. They, for example, publish 5 posts each day, all year. That doesn’t seem very natural, does it? I required a one-of-a-kind but NOT spun
I wanted the material to stand out without being mangled by a spinner. There’s (maybe) one halfway nice spinner available, but I didn’t want to be bound by an API restriction. It would be disastrous if I could only make a few posts every day.
Innovative Concepts
It needs to feature a number of new, distinctive, and successful variations on the standard autoblogging concept. I knew I wasn’t going to go anywhere by doing what tens of thousands of low-quality bloggers were already doing.
Numerous Content Sources
It required a large number of content sources. Another issue with other auto-posters is that they are all inbred, publishing from the same small number of sources. Do you believe Google isn’t aware of these issues?
Backlink Campaigns Included
If I’m going to put up a tiny army of blogs, I don’t want to be establishing links to all of them. Every post required a multi-month link building strategy.
Auto-Monetization
For starters, this new idea would require Clickbank, CJ, Amazon, and AdSense. To optimize commissions, I required adequate scope to test multiple monetization sources with distinct themes. The advertising should be completely automated, relevant, and look the part on my blog.
Particulars, Particulars, Particulars
Apart from the standard options (crediting material, link cloaking, auto-formatting keywords, and so on), I’d want it to go a step further. For example, bot clicks on affiliate advertisements have to be carefully managed. Some affiliate networks do not appreciate it when you send bot traffic since it decreases your EPC (Earnings Per Click).
Relevant Content This is most likely the biggest issue with existing autoblogging systems. I wanted something with a robust content structure and fail-safes to guarantee that only relevant stuff was submitted.
I devised a method based on these eight principles. A novel method of autoblogging that couldn’t fail because it satisfied both Google and users.
So I began doing some math…
What is the typical affiliate commission? I realize it’s a how long is a piece of string question. However, in order to measure the effectiveness of my proposal, I had to make certain assumptions. As an example, consider digital cameras from Amazon. In this situation, traffic converts at roughly 5% on Amazon, and you make $10 each transaction (I know since I run a digital camera blog).
And suppose we want each blog to earn $3 each day on average. As a result, each blog must produce one sale every three days (or 10 sales a month).
How much traffic would we need to get there? I’ve been receiving 1-3% CTR from my blog to Amazon, so let’s be conservative and call it 1% for the time being.
Let’s first figure out how many visits we’d need to make one sale, and then we can figure out how much traffic we’d need every day to make this work.
2000 visits would result in 20 ad clicks to Amazon (at 1% CTR), resulting in 1 sale (at 5% conversion). So 2k visits equals $10 in commissions from that one sale. And 2,000 visitors divided by three days (our aim) indicates that a blog need 666 daily visitors to earn $3+ each day with Amazon.
The specifics will vary depending on the ad provider and topic, but this should give you a good sense. And now for the greatest part…
When you reach this point, you just create another blog in the same topic (at first) but with a little different keyword concentration. And with our 8-point napkin strategy, creating new blogs would be a piece of cake. I could accomplish a lot in a day… alternatively, if I utilized WP Multi Site, I could have 100 up and running in no time.
The statistics began to intrigue me…
1 blog: $30 per month
10 blogs: $300 per month
100 blogs: $3,000 per month
1000 blogs: $30,000 per month
Now, I’m not saying you should create 100 blogs in the same area. My strategy was to continue expanding in the same area until I noticed diminishing returns from fresh sites, then move on to another.
I filled multiple yellow note pads with similar estimates for a variety of themes and monetization sources. Everything appears to be going well. All I needed was some program to do all of the work for me…
WP Snowball is now available.
Let’s get down to the nitty gritty of what this new plugin does…
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