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Old 11-11-2014, 01:05 AM  
Arnox
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Join Date: Sep 2009
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Andreweb View Post
I know that isn't an answer to the following question but I will ask anyway :
How to avoid G penalties for a cam White Label (for thin/duplicate content) ?
I know there is no answer to this because Google will get it sooner or later but who knows any ideea is welcome !
Thanks !
If you're able to customize the white label in any way, write your own description for some of the more popular models on the site. This is the only way to really do it: you can always have a blog section as well where you can create informative articles related to the webcam industry.

There's no real easy way around it: but that's a good thing, in my opinion. Google's top ten should not be dominated by sites that copy other sites and bring nothing of value to the user.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Tdash View Post
What are your thoughts on buying hardlinks for ranking purposes?
In adult, it's sort of required. Building natural links is next to impossible: you have to make sure the links are as white hat as possible, though. A good paid link will most likely be a coverage of that particular site in question. Footer links and other bullshit Google doesn't really care about. Here's an example of what I'd consider to be a good link:

http://www.camgirlresource.com/news/...-squirt-story/

The "whole story" link out to Mia Mei's blog entry is pretty much ideal. It's from a relevant site (camgirl related) and talks about the article she wrote. You'd be hard pressed to get a better link than this. Here's another good link:

http://www.xoptimizers.com/blog/accu...ftware-review/

I wrote an article on Accuranker and talked about how useful the software was. I also gave a natural backlink from the post at the bottom of the article. Relevant, informative stuff that has the link placed well: doesn't get much better than that.

For clients, I typically avoid paying for links as much as possible. I have a lot of resources, so I typically trade a favorable look at a website in exchange for something else. I'll also find mutual linking opportunities. Money trading hands seems a bit seedy, and I only do it where it'll look natural anyway. Google might not like me for saying that, but it's the lesser of every evil as far as SEO goes.

Quote:
Originally Posted by johnny_d View Post
1) Please let me know the exact process of getting search engine traffic to an xxx pinboard site (something like http://sex.com, or http://LustPin.com

2) Does it make sense to work on a network of subdomain Wordpress blogs, from a SEO perspective?

3) Do traffic trading scripts / traffic trading affect seo.

4) What is the difference between mainstream and adult seo / link building. I've heard that they dont work the same way.

5) Is paying for links the only way to go, as the xxx niche is very competitive?

6) Is it possible to have a good amount of Google and search engine traffic with only legitimate seo, and no Black Hat, as far as the adult sites.

Thank you.

1. The process is simple: have a good site that people enjoy using. Quality content that keeps users on the site for as long as possible is the best tactic any SEO service will recommend above all else.

2. Are you asking about blog.wordpress.com, or niche.yourwebsite.com? Wordpress itself has its own subdomain that you can blog on - I'd probably recommend against doing either. There's some arguments about weight being shifted from a subdomain to the main site, but I don't really buy it. Better to keep things separated wherever possible. $10 isn't much and if the site doesn't make cash, don't bother renewing next year. If you're talking about subdomains with regard to .wordpress stuff, I'd actually recommend tumblr for adult: lots of big keywords have recently had some niche Tumblr blogs thrown into the top 10. It's dumb to give these sites exposure, but if you can exploit it, go ahead. I've yet to work out a good way to automate Tumblr, so I've not gone down that road.

3. Traffic trading might be good for you if your site is decent. Some people will remember the name and Google it: this is a positive indication, because if someone is searching directly for your URL, Google is more inclined to think your site is decent. Note that it's only a small difference, but there aren't too many issues with traffic trading if you do it right.

4. Adult SEO is a savage beast. Google gives little fucks about adult, which means some really dumb results come out for top search terms. It's getting better or time, but it still needs to improve if it wants to be taken seriously by adult webmasters. The biggest issue is attractive natural links, because people care very little about talking with regard to porn. This is the main issue with adult: there's no social relevance, so Google can't monitor stuff like Twitter/FB - who the hell shares their favorite porn video? For this reason, lots of adult webmasters buy links. I do a bit of both where required, but as I mentioned in reply to another question, I avoid paying as much as possible. I prefer mutual agreements that give both webmasters decent outcomes.

5. Not always. I've had successful campaigns without paying for links, but you have to produce some top quality content on your site. The main thing to do is analysis/statistics on viewers and provide informative articles about relevant site concepts, such as the fetishes your site focuses on. For instance, a camgirl site might have a weekly top 10, write articles on how to buy tokens or explain how to become a camgirl. A site on escorting might provide tips on meeting girls for the first time, what different terms mean (GFE, BBBJ, etc.) and how to get ready for an escort that's coming over. This is your best bet to getting links: write articles that give users informative that's important to the main purpose of your site. I admit that it's hard to do for certain niches, but you just have to be clever about it.

6. Absolutely. I've made dozens of sites rank well for good terms through white hat approaches only. Some people just have sites that do fantastic things, but on-site issues keep them back. Title tags are the thing that people fuck up the most. After that, it's URL structure and a lack of written content. I'd say most of my clients that come to me already have the ground work of a decent site, they just need me to come in and fix up relatively minor things that actually make a big difference.

I've worked on sites that rank in the top 10 for search terms such as 'teen porn', 'big boobs' and 'london escort'. I've started to build links for newer clients of mine, but all three of those were gotten to the top without any unnatural link building whatsoever.

It's certainly possible to do, it just requires a bit of time and, unfortunately, a little bit of luck.
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