Avoid Making Private Label Rights Content Utterly Useless
You’ve undoubtedly read quite a bit about the various ways you can use private label rights content to make more money online. If you’ve been doing your homework, you’ve discovered that PLR materials are incredibly versatile and that you can press them into action in many different ways.
What you might not have read is how to completely destroy the value of PLR content. There are a few ways to do that, and far too many Internet marketers inadvertently find them. Here are a few examples.
Spinning out of control. The idea of editing or rewriting PLR content is just too much for some people. They refuse to recognize the fact that PLR content gives them a massive head start even after a manual rewrite, so they reach for an automated solution. Relying on automatic article spinners, they quickly convert high-potential private label rights content into mind-numbing drivel that makes less sense than the adults in a Charlie Brown special. The output is unique, but it’s incomprehensible.
Letting it rot. The most common PLR error is buying the content with the best of intentions and then letting it sit around, unused. Countless hard drives all over the world are filled with PLR content that will never see the light of day. If you want to put the tool to use, you need to have a project planned. Too many marketers buy PLR without having a plan or fail to follow through with the plans they do have.
Leaving it alone. We’ve talked about how a little laziness can lead to the horrors of an automatic article spinner. Some folks are too lazy to even run their content through the software. Instead, they just toss up the PLR content “as is” and hope for the best. The best doesn’t come. The folks at Google aren’t really prone to rewarding people for copying and pasting work that’s already been published—and don’t be fooled, someone else has already put that material up without modification.
Being a cheapskate. When you see one of those “you can get 2,493,881 PLR articles for a dime” specials, don’t bother. The quality of the material is going to be horrible. Many marketers, however, take the bait and end up saddled with a lot of horrible content. It makes editing and rewriting things harder. It also eliminates the potential for the non-web content “as is” uses you can find for quality PLR content. You can buy quality PLR for a fraction of the price associated with original content. There’s no reason to get even greedier when that bargain hunting results in the acquisition of unusable material.
Those are just four of the ways you can utterly destroy the value of PLR content. Private label rights material can be a great weapon to add to your marketing arsenal, but it’s only going to create friendly fire if you follow any of those examples.


July 4th, 2009 at 5:38 pm
Thanks for the tips Fred!
Over the course of the last two years or so I honestly think I have been guilty of all of these sins.
Even though I know better now it is still hard to get past the temptation of taking the easy way out.
Most people are not even aware that some of these options are not good ones. There is so much banter all over the internet about what you should and shouldn’t do that most people probably don’t even realize what they should be doing with their PLR content.
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