AMAutomation and Article Submissions
Hi folks. In Mark's AffiloBluePrint training material, he highly recommends the use of AMAutomation.com to spin and submit articles to relevant blogs and also to submit spun articles to article directories like ezinearticles.com and others.leeloo02 wrote:WOW, I elanced out my first set of 20 articles for AMA with proper syntax of 3-5 rewrites (approx.) per sentence, etc. as explained. Requested the first one back as a test, went off without a hitch and WOW!!!
The power of pressing refresh over and over and seeing these awesome different variations! Fantastic.
Don't have my site fully up yet so it is still set in draft mode, just wanted to make sure my elancers are doing the syntax correct.
Sorry if I am not answering questions you originally posted, just wanted to share my enthusiasm for this. Really if you can afford to I wouldn't bother with anything but getting article rewrites done in this format for the future. I plan on ONLY getting rewrites with at least 3 variations of each sentence, I am showing close to 200% uniqueness each refresh, this will be my most powerful off page seo tool I can see now why Mark almost suggests it as a necessarity part of your toolkit.
kieran wrote:I have been using AMA for a few weeks now and have got quite a few backlinks from blog sites. I have also used it to get unique versions of my articles for submission to the various article directories such as ezine.
Seems like a great idea, except that I sense that the "better" sites like ezine, Article Dashboard as well as Squidoo and HubPages, have some way of telling that an article is similar to others published through AMA (I have been achieving at least 175% rewrite with AMA). I have been slapped by HubPages and Article Dashboard for lack of unique content.
Also, I have come across advice somewhere in Affilorama (I think in a webinar) that, when submitting a spun article to ezine, you should save it as a draft in AMA until ezine has published your submission, then release the draft for AMA distribution. This seems to confirm my suspicion that ezine, at least, can tell if an article has a "sibling" somewhere else on the internet, and they like to have only unspun work submitted.
Any thoughts anyone?
Kieran
wollowra wrote:I have found the same thing Kieran,
I just write a completely new article for EZA etc... or as you said.. submit it first and then get it out of the draft folder in AMA. There is not a whole lot you can do about it really.
If you are not a good article writer then you may need to outsource.
It would be good to see if others are having the same issue.
Regards
Troy
I had an 98% acceptance rate at ama over 8 months of using it. personally i found faster and cheaper ways to get links that are higher quality than some crappy blogs with no pr, no traffic, and often never even indexed by google.
jmpruitt wrote:it takes ama apx 3 months to submit 1 article, and the strenght with using them is doing alot of submissions. so if you are on a limited budget, I would recommend outsourcing it. there are several people who will do a submission for you pretty cheap, saving you the monthly fee, and still getting the benefit. one of my favs to use is http://www.thearticlemarketingcenter.com/ (no affiliate, just a happy customer)
jmpruitt wrote:yep, you can find a lot of ways to outsource. I like the article marketing center because she does the article spins it and submits. I am getting bout 2k links for each submission she does. It cost me $300 to basically turn over 2 of my jetpack sites for her to build links to. I couldn't have hired freelancers to do all that for the price. basically, all I had to do was rewrite the articles and put the site together. send her the project, and go on to the next one.
OF the two sites I gave her a month ago, about 30% of the pages are starting to show up in the top 2 pages in google. knowing that alot of those articles are drip fed over time, by next month, I expect those sites to be up on page 1, and I havent built any links to them myself.
jmpruitt wrote:yep, you can find a lot of ways to outsource. I like the article marketing center because she does the article spins it and submits. I am getting bout 2k links for each submission she does. It cost me $300 to basically turn over 2 of my jetpack sites for her to build links to. I couldn't have hired freelancers to do all that for the price. basically, all I had to do was rewrite the articles and put the site together. send her the project, and go on to the next one.
OF the two sites I gave her a month ago, about 30% of the pages are starting to show up in the top 2 pages in google. knowing that alot of those articles are drip fed over time, by next month, I expect those sites to be up on page 1, and I havent built any links to them myself.
Centered wrote:From what I've learned that one will have a problem if he gets dozens of backlinks to an article in a period of a few days/weeks as that would look unnatural to search engines and his site might get penalized. How is article marketing center dealing with this?
Thank you.
jmpruitt wrote:I had an 98% acceptance rate at ama over 8 months of using it. personally i found faster and cheaper ways to get links that are higher quality than some crappy blogs with no pr, no traffic, and often never even indexed by google.
I do use Rapid rewriter, and use the optional paragraph feature regularly. it helps keep my content fresh and unique. I dont use any mass submission software because high quality sites wont allow mass submissions, and the sites in the mass software are not worth wasting time on.
Blog networks can be effective if you can afford to keep posting over a long period of time, but you have to add a lot of articles every month in order to keep up your rankings, and replace the links that disapear rather quickly.
That has been my experience. I know Mark and some others disagree with me on it, but my experience with it was that it wasn't a good value for my money or the hours of time invested.
jmpruitt wrote:Kakaboo, I buy 2 of the large packages to do 1 AB style 30 page site. I will also use some of the links to link to Hubpages and Squidoo lenses, so that I get more link juice going.
I also do some of my own article submissions using article marketing robot, and other things as well. I do a lot of social bookmarking, and when I start getting pingbacks, I will bookmark some of those as well, as long as they read well (which the ones I have submitted to her have been pretty good so far. )
rivihe wrote:I have quit AMA with the new Panda update. I don't think it is worth the money you pay - you can get full link building services on the warrior forum for 10 dollars cheaper than AMA. Admittedly I have tried them, but I"M SURE you get better ranking results with them. If google is trying to get rid of content farms - why pay money to be in one?
smpmedia wrote:Sounds like the one. Just a question...how much did you pay for the 3-5 re writes and did you get them to use p software to do this??. Also did you rewrite a article from an origional article from your site?
Cheers for your time
This topic was started on May 06, 2009 and has been closed due to inactivity. If you want to discuss this topic further, please create a new forum topic.