The Truth Behind Duplicate Content And PLR - PLR mini course part 3

Today I want to go through with you on the “duplicate content” side of things… there is a lot of talk about duplicate content and how terrible it is.

But before I go into that I want to tell you about the VRE Handbook(which is no longer available for free and has been beefed up and is for sale at www.vrehandbook.com) this has been designed by the guys over at PLR Pro…,realy GREAT stuff, just check it out for yourself…

You can download it at:

*VRE Handbook*

This isn’t some basic ‘free report’ that gives you just 15 pages of stuff you usually can’t use.

This is 181 pages, and goes into exact detail on what you need to do to build your content sites.

Ok, as for duplicate content, for the most part, it’s not true, HOWEVER, if you slap up the same article, with the exact same website as someone else, then yep, you’re likely going to fall into problems.

Think about it, the actual content of the site USUALLY makes up such a small portion of the overall page, in a normal site, that automatically your site will be at least 50% different, add in a 25-50% rewrite to the article on top of that, and you’re looking at an almost original page.

Now, there is no hard and fast rule about this… only Google knows what Google knows, and they keep it that way for a reason.

It all comes down to, make sure you are using an original template, (especially when using blogger blogs) and give yourself a “healthy rewrite of the articles” and you should be fine.

At the end of the day, test, test, test, and test some more. Anyone who says “you should do this” without backing up their claims with test results, with an added “do your own tests” is usually talking the talk without walking the walk.

This was a relatively short post, but it will hopefully give you some clarity on the “duplicate content issues” that we are seeing.

Oh, one last thing, when you get your articles from a PLR article site, they should be 4-600 words in length, have a keyword density of around 1-3% (although not AS important these days), and be written for HUMANS to read… this means no rehashed junk, no poor grammar/quality.

I will be honest here though, no one is perfect, so allow about a 1% mistake rate, because mistakes DO happen.

To your success,

Robert Mollers

www.buildvre.com

Go To Part 4 >> Online Success Using SIMPLE Business Strategies

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