Tuesday, June 26, 2007
And more...
Building on what I have so far, I've found a really nice affiliate program based around my target market. I'm going to implement this program into the website generation, perhaps to the right side of the adsense, so that the apparent choice will be click Adsense or click affiliate link. Not bad options for me!
Monday, June 25, 2007
Beginning effort...
Well I can't afford to buy a slew of .info domains yet. GoDaddy seems to be the best place to start - 99 cent info domains (but $8.97 for privacy). Instead I've opted to create about 18 subdomains off two domains I already own. Three on each will be for blogs, the other 6 apiece for sites. I've picked a focus area and created a nice long list of longtail keywords with decent traffic, weeding out any that have no adwords campaigns running for them.
I'm not sure if this initial effort will meet with success or not, what with the two domain thing being a bit of a tip-off. However, it's worth a try, and before anyone could bust me, I should see results first. So I'm using this for a test.
Next step, I'm a programmer. So I wrote a program to write my websites for me. I created a template file in this way:
I wrote an article using a free online analyzer that tells me keyword density in a block of text.
I broke that article apart by paragraph and sentence, and wrote 9 additional variations for each sentence, keeping the keyword density the same for each. I also made sure that the overall field (I don't want to give it away) for my keywords was decently represented throughout.
Then I wrote my program, which pulls in a list of my domains (or subdomains), a list of the keywords, a list of about 160 random free banners I found, a website template and my article template (and an index template) and generates a page for every keyword for every site.
For each site:
Each keyword gets its own page, featuring a big fat ugly banner at the top, the two rectangles standing on top of each other, and then the sentence-by-sentence randomized article at the bottom. I also google'd several terms around my subject matter and pulled as many high PR sitelinks as possible into a text file, and at the bottom of each webpage 6 random links to these sites are generated. Also my statcounter code is added to each page so I can watch hits when they happen, as well as see where they came from (particularly useful to see which search terms are most productive).
Now my article has 16 sentences total, with 10 variations apiece. I believe the factorial on that (10*10*10*10*10*10*10*10*10*10*10*10*10*10*10*10) makes it pretty likely the same combo will never ever be used twice. Oh, inside the template article, I have a "keyword" I use that is replaced by the actual keyword at article generation time.
Finally, all these webpages are saved into an arraylist, and at the end a "siteindex" page is formed per 50 pages, and then a "highindex" page is formed per every 50 "siteindex" pages, and finally index.html will link to the "highindex" pages, which attempting to look like an official, normal front page to a website.
These randomization tactics have some issues, but the basic gist is that it looks human-written, although it can still seem fairly nonsensical. The articles seem like they were written by an over-enthusiastic foreigner who hasn't quite mastered the English language. I'm happy with it.
I still need to debug the index page creation tonight, and then generate all the sites, post them, and set circular one-way links going around.
I think I'll have to manually produce the 6 blogs, until I can toss a program together that will basically randomize blogposts from a similar template, and post by email (most blogger posts allow that).
Once I have them all up and going and linked, I will use Digg, Delicious, and Stumbleupon to throw a little extra traffic that way, and then see what happens in terms of SEO.
Until next time!
I'm not sure if this initial effort will meet with success or not, what with the two domain thing being a bit of a tip-off. However, it's worth a try, and before anyone could bust me, I should see results first. So I'm using this for a test.
Next step, I'm a programmer. So I wrote a program to write my websites for me. I created a template file in this way:
I wrote an article using a free online analyzer that tells me keyword density in a block of text.
I broke that article apart by paragraph and sentence, and wrote 9 additional variations for each sentence, keeping the keyword density the same for each. I also made sure that the overall field (I don't want to give it away) for my keywords was decently represented throughout.
Then I wrote my program, which pulls in a list of my domains (or subdomains), a list of the keywords, a list of about 160 random free banners I found, a website template and my article template (and an index template) and generates a page for every keyword for every site.
For each site:
Each keyword gets its own page, featuring a big fat ugly banner at the top, the two rectangles standing on top of each other, and then the sentence-by-sentence randomized article at the bottom. I also google'd several terms around my subject matter and pulled as many high PR sitelinks as possible into a text file, and at the bottom of each webpage 6 random links to these sites are generated. Also my statcounter code is added to each page so I can watch hits when they happen, as well as see where they came from (particularly useful to see which search terms are most productive).
Now my article has 16 sentences total, with 10 variations apiece. I believe the factorial on that (10*10*10*10*10*10*10*10*10*10*10*10*10*10*10*10) makes it pretty likely the same combo will never ever be used twice. Oh, inside the template article, I have a "keyword" I use that is replaced by the actual keyword at article generation time.
Finally, all these webpages are saved into an arraylist, and at the end a "siteindex" page is formed per 50 pages, and then a "highindex" page is formed per every 50 "siteindex" pages, and finally index.html will link to the "highindex" pages, which attempting to look like an official, normal front page to a website.
These randomization tactics have some issues, but the basic gist is that it looks human-written, although it can still seem fairly nonsensical. The articles seem like they were written by an over-enthusiastic foreigner who hasn't quite mastered the English language. I'm happy with it.
I still need to debug the index page creation tonight, and then generate all the sites, post them, and set circular one-way links going around.
I think I'll have to manually produce the 6 blogs, until I can toss a program together that will basically randomize blogposts from a similar template, and post by email (most blogger posts allow that).
Once I have them all up and going and linked, I will use Digg, Delicious, and Stumbleupon to throw a little extra traffic that way, and then see what happens in terms of SEO.
Until next time!
Tuesday, June 19, 2007
Project Black Mask is live!
Hey guys,
Check it out here in 20 minutes (3:00 EST, 2:00 CST, 12:00 PST):
Project Black Mask
This blog is my effort to log the efforts of the techniques in this e-book. I will let this be a public record of my attempts to make money using Project Black Mask. Stay tuned - this should get interesting!
Later!
Check it out here in 20 minutes (3:00 EST, 2:00 CST, 12:00 PST):
Project Black Mask
This blog is my effort to log the efforts of the techniques in this e-book. I will let this be a public record of my attempts to make money using Project Black Mask. Stay tuned - this should get interesting!
Later!
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