Does publishing PLR first means the PLR will be 'unique'?

by ToryBorysewicz Banned
2 replies
If I am the first to publish and get indexed a bunch of brand new PLR article, will the articles be unique?
#means #plr #publishing #unique
  • Profile picture of the author ContentWritingPhD
    Banned
    Tory, sometimes, the word "unique" has a deeper meaning than just having a "Copyscape-passed" content. As a content writing service provider myself, the immediate definition that comes into my mind is that if I say "I deliver unique content", that means "I deliver Copyscape-passed content". But going at a deeper meaning, if you just had rewritten somebody else's work before publishing your work, somehow, we can say it's not unique because you just told the story that was already told by the original author.

    But going back to your question, if you are asking if you won't be marked down by Google if you were the first to publish either an original or rewritten content, you won't.
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  • Profile picture of the author Michael D Forbes
    Your question isn't as clear as it should be.

    I'm not sure if you mean:

    1) You created the articles, you got them indexed, and then you plan to sell PLR rights to them. or,

    2) You purchased some existing PLR articles (which I would assume have already been published by the original author, but possibly not) and are hoping you are the first to publish and get indexed.

    I would think only under option #1 would you have any grounds for calling them unique, and that's only until others exercise their right to distribute them.

    Unique means, pretty literally, "One of a kind". I don't see how PLR articles ever meet that description, unless they are heavily re-written..
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