Hey guys,
This may interest everyone who needs a reliable method to overcome slaps. I recently got my landing page Google slapped - promoting a legitimate product.
Now, in the past, the way that I've solved Google slaps is simply to copy the source code of the actual merchant landing page (the page where I would have sent traffic if merely direct linking) into a NEW domain of mine and then make a new campaign for it. Obviously, I get merchant permission to copy their HTML on my domain's landing page.
I would then embed my affiliate ID to be tracked into the checkout button. All the links on this page would actually go to the merchant's site including privacy link, about, etc.
Basically, I am a single bridge page with its links to the merchant site.
In the last Google slap a few days ago, this method did not work as my new domain (with copied over landing code) got re-slapped in a few hours later.
I wanted to know if anyone has tried or feels this method below would work instead:
=> Just copy over the entire merchant's site (given their permission) on your own new domain and then run it up in a new campaign. This way, it's not seen as a one mere "bridge page" but is a full-blown site now. This means I even copy over the privacy pages, etc all onto my own domain.
Also, if the case is that Google slapped the merchant and slapped me because of the merchant, then this method also precludes this possibility because none of my links would go to the merchant's domain. It would all stay on my domain (with all the content).
Will this work to not be slapped? Curious what people think or have proof experienced.
Thanks guys for the synergy
This may interest everyone who needs a reliable method to overcome slaps. I recently got my landing page Google slapped - promoting a legitimate product.
Now, in the past, the way that I've solved Google slaps is simply to copy the source code of the actual merchant landing page (the page where I would have sent traffic if merely direct linking) into a NEW domain of mine and then make a new campaign for it. Obviously, I get merchant permission to copy their HTML on my domain's landing page.
I would then embed my affiliate ID to be tracked into the checkout button. All the links on this page would actually go to the merchant's site including privacy link, about, etc.
Basically, I am a single bridge page with its links to the merchant site.
In the last Google slap a few days ago, this method did not work as my new domain (with copied over landing code) got re-slapped in a few hours later.
I wanted to know if anyone has tried or feels this method below would work instead:
=> Just copy over the entire merchant's site (given their permission) on your own new domain and then run it up in a new campaign. This way, it's not seen as a one mere "bridge page" but is a full-blown site now. This means I even copy over the privacy pages, etc all onto my own domain.
Also, if the case is that Google slapped the merchant and slapped me because of the merchant, then this method also precludes this possibility because none of my links would go to the merchant's domain. It would all stay on my domain (with all the content).
Will this work to not be slapped? Curious what people think or have proof experienced.
Thanks guys for the synergy