Although I have not posted, or replied to, discussion threads about my advertising methods, I wish to dispell some myths on how I'm doing it. To start, I once was a compliant advertiser, however, after seeing my competitors violating the rules constantly, I had a choice to make, either find a way to compete and dominate them, or quit. I do not give up that easily.
First, I have never, nor will I, participate in criminal activity. I do not use stolen credit cards/numbers or identities. Also, I do not use "automation" or hacking tricks to fix the quality score. In most cases, quality or always better than quantity, but not in this case.
Over a four-month period (between June and September of the year) I reversed engineered a system to overcome my competitors. Although I will not "spill the beans" about exactly how I do it, I can tell you that the quantity aspect of the process was needed to find out what works and what doesn't. At first, I was always looking for a way through Google, when I should have been looking for a way around Google.
To say the least, I'm a symptom of a larger problem regarding advertisers' abusing Google's policies and looking for ways to beat the system. Maybe I figured it out, maybe I didn't/
I simply wanted to say my piece regarding stolen credit cards. In closing, Google has a loophole. Finding that loophole was the hard part. My practices are no different from the noobie looking to gain an edge in search marketing, it is just on a different scale.
Anyways, hope that cleared up some discussions on stolen credit cards.
First, I have never, nor will I, participate in criminal activity. I do not use stolen credit cards/numbers or identities. Also, I do not use "automation" or hacking tricks to fix the quality score. In most cases, quality or always better than quantity, but not in this case.
Over a four-month period (between June and September of the year) I reversed engineered a system to overcome my competitors. Although I will not "spill the beans" about exactly how I do it, I can tell you that the quantity aspect of the process was needed to find out what works and what doesn't. At first, I was always looking for a way through Google, when I should have been looking for a way around Google.
To say the least, I'm a symptom of a larger problem regarding advertisers' abusing Google's policies and looking for ways to beat the system. Maybe I figured it out, maybe I didn't/
I simply wanted to say my piece regarding stolen credit cards. In closing, Google has a loophole. Finding that loophole was the hard part. My practices are no different from the noobie looking to gain an edge in search marketing, it is just on a different scale.
Anyways, hope that cleared up some discussions on stolen credit cards.