Links I need

samgeneric

New member
Jul 26, 2009
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Deerfield Beach, FL
Just did a press release submission for a site in a fairly low competition niche.

It was one of my more successful press releases, and I got links on a ridiculous number of sites super high quality sites. Anyhow, they are really deep and Google doesn't seem like it's finding them very easily. So i thought I'd throw a few low quality links at each article. Any services that ya'll know of that allow unlimited URLs for cheap, shitty ass links?
 


Thanks for sharing.
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It was one of my more successful press releases, and I got links on a ridiculous number of sites super high quality sites. Anyhow, they are really deep and Google doesn't seem like it's finding them very easily. So i thought I'd throw a few low quality links at each article. Any services that ya'll know of that allow unlimited URLs for cheap, shitty ass links?

Does not compute.

If you can find the sites that are linking to you, then google can find the sites that are linking to you. I'm assuming you're measuring your press release distribution by googling the title or text right?
 
Does not compute.

If you can find the sites that are linking to you, then google can find the sites that are linking to you. I'm assuming you're measuring your press release distribution by googling the title or text right?
Yes, I used Google to find content that Google hasn't indexed.

Obviously I didn't do that. What isn't computing? Are you having trouble understanding that there are other ways to find links? Like for example, if you had ever done a press release, you might know that the press release site oftentimes gives you a report of all the sites that link to you.

I make all my money consulting with very large companies and a few small caps. If it were true that anything a human can find on the internet, a SE bot can also find, I'd be out of a job. That might be the most hilarious, insulting (ignorant if it's not insulting) assertion ever made in a forum full of search full-time, professional marketers.

I asked a question. I didn't ask for advice or a lecture. I asked if anyone had any ideas about cheap links I could throw at content that is not indexed. If you want to answer that question, feel free. If you want to question whether I actually know what I'm doing, I suggest you go back to your affiliate marketing and leave the search to those of us who understand how search engines actually work.
 
Yes, I used Google to find content that Google hasn't indexed.

Obviously I didn't do that. What isn't computing? Are you having trouble understanding that there are other ways to find links? Like for example, if you had ever done a press release, you might know that the press release site oftentimes gives you a report of all the sites that link to you.

I make all my money consulting with very large companies and a few small caps. If it were true that anything a human can find on the internet, a SE bot can also find, I'd be out of a job. That might be the most hilarious, insulting (ignorant if it's not insulting) assertion ever made in a forum full of search full-time, professional marketers.

I asked a question. I didn't ask for advice or a lecture. I asked if anyone had any ideas about cheap links I could throw at content that is not indexed. If you want to answer that question, feel free. If you want to question whether I actually know what I'm doing, I suggest you go back to your affiliate marketing and leave the search to those of us who understand how search engines actually work.

calm down bro. If you want cheap bulk links, you can use a commenting, profiles or bookmarking service. I know that Swinny allows a large number of urls for blog commenting and xpressbookmarking allows unlimited urls for bookmarking. For profiles, pretty much any seller would allow. Now calm down please :D
 
I make all my money consulting with very large companies and a few small caps. If it were true that anything a human can find on the internet, a SE bot can also find, I'd be out of a job. That might be the most hilarious, insulting (ignorant if it's not insulting) assertion ever made in a forum full of search full-time, professional marketers.

For God's sake just make sure you don't have your client tweet about the sites that have picked up their press release.

Not only would that not be spam, but it would probably result in the PR's being indexed, naturally.
 
Tweeting the same press release out on different sites many hundreds of time wouldn't be SPAM or lose them followers?

Also, this isn't for a client's site. I very literally want the question I asked answered. If you know of good services that achieve my goal, then please share. That is all.
 
Tweeting the same press release out on different sites many hundreds of time wouldn't be SPAM or lose them followers?

Yeah it would, it would also be spam to try to index 500 posts on low quality PR directories.

If your PR had really been picked up by publishers who really gave a crap you'd not be worrying about indexing.

There are 101 Indian dudes in BST who'd love to spray your pages with all manner of rubbish, go look.
 
I'd like to make this thread more interesting to everyone's interests.

OP, what service did you use for the PR? If PRWeb or something similar, what package did you pay for that was different than before? If not different, what made this particular PR do so well in your opinion?

Anyway, to answer your question, dripfeedblasts, BST section here to blast them with profiles and web 2.0s, fiverr crap links, etc.
 
I'd like to make this thread more interesting to everyone's interests.

OP, what service did you use for the PR? If PRWeb or something similar, what package did you pay for that was different than before? If not different, what made this particular PR do so well in your opinion?

Anyway, to answer your question, dripfeedblasts, BST section here to blast them with profiles and web 2.0s, fiverr crap links, etc.
I did the $499 PRWeb option. Got deep links on places like Boston.com and such. They are deep and aren't indexing quickly, and I know from previous blasts that a lot of these deep pages just kind of get ignored without links. So I thought I'd throw some links at them. I had thought about DFB but I'm not sure if I'll be doing that. It's a good suggestion.

I'm not sure what made this PR more successful than others. It was long, included a lot of links, a lot of quotes, and it was pretty simple. But it wasn't about anything particularly exciting or interesting. It ended up getting picked up by a bunch of financial blogs. And 160 different major news sites also listed it. I think I got something in the area of 30 PR7 and 15 PR 6 links out of the submission. The rest are a smattering of PR3-PR5 sites. I just want to make sure to squeeze all the lemonade out of these lemons, if you know what I mean.

I had thought about nofollow linking to all the places it was posted on the main release itself, and letting Google index those pages. But since there would be so many links on one page there, I was thinking it would dilute the quality of the other (important) links on the page, so I decided against it.

Diggler, you're being summarily ignored. You're too stupid to talk to. Just to point it out because it needs to be done, you suggested that I tweet out the posts to get these PR indexed. You said it was a good solution because "Not only would that not be spam, but it would probably result in the PR's being indexed, naturally." When I pointed out that it was SPAM, and that the suggestion was a bad Twitter strategy to boot, you became angry and suggested that somehow getting Google to index a press release on many different legitimate sites was also SPAM. I think you need to find out what SPAM is because you apparently don't know.
 
Diggler, you're being summarily ignored. You're too stupid to talk to. Just to point it out because it needs to be done, you suggested that I tweet out the posts to get these PR indexed. You said it was a good solution because "Not only would that not be spam, but it would probably result in the PR's being indexed, naturally." When I pointed out that it was SPAM, and that the suggestion was a bad Twitter strategy to boot, you became angry and suggested that somehow getting Google to index a press release on many different legitimate sites was also SPAM. I think you need to find out what SPAM is because you apparently don't know.

Sorry, clearly I've completly failed to understand this concept.

See, what I thought was that you did PR to promote your company and hopefully have insiders and industry people pick this up and comment / blog / mention it, hopefully with a link back.

Obviously in that case you'd not need to worry about buying 5 mil social bookmarks to try and have your buried, duplicate content indexed on a site already flagged by Google as a link farm.

You've worked for some big brands though, so I guess the only thing left here is for you to go fuck yourself.
 
Obviously I didn't do that. What isn't computing? Are you having trouble understanding that there are other ways to find links? Like for example, if you had ever done a press release, you might know that the press release site oftentimes gives you a report of all the sites that link to you.

I asked a question. I didn't ask for advice or a lecture. I asked if anyone had any ideas about cheap links I could throw at content that is not indexed. If you want to answer that question, feel free. If you want to question whether I actually know what I'm doing, I suggest you go back to your affiliate marketing and leave the search to those of us who understand how search engines actually work.

I very literally want the question I asked answered

Diggler, you're being summarily ignored. You're too stupid to talk to

Perhaps not insulting every person who replies to your thread may help you get what your looking for.

That or you can continue being a douche bag and loose your client simply because you insult and derail everyone who tries to help you. Good luck in life your going to need it