by rbowen
1 replies
I don't know when he (they) launched this (maybe August, 2010?), but can anyone give me any constructive feedback on Oz's (&/or Daniel Tan's) WPEasy Content?

Also, Oz wrote a 'white paper' a while back supposedly debunking the duplicate-content penalty. I tend to agree with him, but then again, I'm still relatively new to all of this ... so what do I know? However, his sales-page video offers some strong evidence that he can get ranked - has gotten ranked - on Page One.

I searched Google for his keyword 'float frame' and found his site still ranked #1. Even if it isn't his site, the site has a "reoptimized" version of an article that he "borrowed" from some directory, with his own header & footer around it. And I checked the original article on the directory and found it was virtually the same (without Oz's header/footer add-ons). So it seems to me that shows that using his approach with other people's "freemium" articles works: the original author still gets credit and you can get some premium content free ("freemium" content) that pleases the SEs.

So, any ideas on that strategy and/or feedback on having used his strategy (WPEasy Content)?

Thanks,
Richard
#content #wpeasy
  • Profile picture of the author rmoore
    I've been using it since Day 1.

    It works exactly as advertised...but you need to do a few things.

    1) Create at least 5-10 original articles for your blog
    2) Link build for 1-2 months and gain some "Google Trust"
    3) Locate a few hundred low competition, high traffic keywords (I use Market Samurai).
    4) Schedule 2 posts per day with WPEasy Content.

    All of my posts with this plugin get ranked in Google...usually on page 2-5...but some on page 1. Works tremendously well...but you will need to figure out how to monetize your blog.

    I built a case study test blog from scratch to 1,000 unique visitors per day and about 1/2 of the content in from this plugin.

    I'm sold

    -Rusty
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