Wednesday, January 14, 2009

BlackHat SEO

Black Hat search engine optimization is defined as techniques that are used to get higher search rankings in an unethical manner. These black hat SEO techniques usually include one or more of the following characteristics:

1. One who breaks search engine rules.

2. Unethically presents content in a different visual or non-visual way to search engine spiders and search engine users.

These black hat SEO practices will actually provide short-term gains in terms of rankings, but if you are discovered utilizing these spammy techniques on your Web site, you run the risk of being penalized by search engines. Black hat SEO basically is a short-sighted solution to a long-term problem, which is creating a Web site that provides both a great user experience and all that goes with that. A partial listing of black hat tactics is as below :

Keyword Stuffing : Repeating a keyword or words over and over again on a given web page. Google's algorithms work very hard at trying to find pages that read like normal text not like a broken record. If they suspect you are just trying to "stuff" the content of your site with keywords, they will penalize you for it.

Cloaking : Is a technique where a webmaster will have two versions of a given web page, one version that it shows the search engine spiders, and one version that it shows the regular web surfer. This is done by delivering content based on the IP addresses or the User-Agent HTTP header of the user requesting the page. When a user is identified as a search engine spider, a server-side script delivers a different version of the web page, one that contains content not present on the visible page. The purpose of cloaking is to deceive search engines so they display the page when it would not otherwise be displayed.

Invisible Text : Filling a web page with text that is having the same color as the background.

Doorway Page : A highly optimized web page whose purpose is to direct traffic to other pages using either a redirect method or merely by being full of links that direct you to other web pages.

Spam Page : It is a page that is full of ads by which a webmaster makes money of it if someone clicks on them.

Interlinking : Setting up multiple websites about a given topic and having them all link to each other in order to increase their relevance and subsequently their rankings in the search engines.

Selling PR : If you have a high PR website, you sell links from your site to another for cash. Helping their site rank higher in Google and in turn making your wallet heavier.

Buying Expired Domains : Buying expired websites that had some decent PageRank in order to try and keep the site's inbound links.

Black Hat SEO tricks work temporarily. They end up getting sites higher search rankings until these sites get banned for using unethical practices. It’s just not worth the risk. Use efficient search engine optimization techniques to get your site ranked higher, and stay away from anything that even looks like Black Hat SEO.


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Monday, October 20, 2008

Self Growing Websites

Search Engine Friendly Automation
I was kind of reluctant to write this review, because like anyone who has an "Ace" up his sleeve, you don't want to reveal it unless you absolutely have to.

Self Growing Websites is that kind of Product. I have been using this software for the better of the last 2 years and I have watched it evolve into a monster of increased capabilities. What started out as a functional, good idea, is now a masterful work of art that can litterally allow you to do almost all of your "Adsense" specific profiteering with one software package.

While I often use other programs to achieve different results, I also like to use different software to keep all of my work from having a single footprint. I also have enough "disposable" cash that I can afford to use a lot of different products and evaluate them for this site and for my own profit. I am always looking for a new technique in building traffic and in making money.

Self Growing Websites is a double capability product. What I mean by that is, you can create traffic and backlink building Wordpress Blogs with this product while simultaneously creating a multitude of landing page Content filled Money Sites. All of this, both the Wordpress Blogs and Money Sites, are built slowly will "Drip" technology that will slowly grow or build your websites and make them appear as if a human is adding the additional content to them as opposed to all of a sudden having a 2000 page website pop up on Google all of a sudden. The guys at Google are not stupid and these types of websites have their place (I do it all the time), but they do not have a long shelf life unless you take a lot of precautions with your content and how unique it is (using RSS Feed manipulators, Content Spinners, etc.). This, among other features, makes this product very Search Engine Friendly.

I talk about this stuff in reviews all the time, but the bottom line is this: Self Growing Websites, while pricy, is like having a Blog Building Product and a Content Site Builder all in one. Yes, this product would cost you $297, but if you want a one stop shop for all of your online Wordpress Blog Farm and Money Site Empire endevours, then this is the single most capable product you will find out there. I hesitated in writing this for that very reason. In fact, I am very confident that most people will not buy it just because of the price tag alone, and I am coounting on that because it keeps the Footprint down as far as Google's recognition of the software is concerned.

There are a lot more capabilities and features of the product that I haven't talked about here, for more information, get to the Self Growing Websites Home Page HERE


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Facebook your business

You have a business telephone number, an e-mail address, a Web site and even a blog. So should you also have a Facebook profile? Probably YES.

The essential principles of business haven't changed much in a couple of thousand years: develop a great product or service and find people to buy it.

Assuming you've got the goods, the next big challenge is traffic. The more people who pass by your stall, Main St. storefront or megamall spot, the more business you'll do.

It's the same online. Eyeballs mean money. Just ask Google. Or better yet, ask Facebook. With more than 80 million active users, it's the sixth most-trafficked Web site in the world and the number two social media site globally, behind MySpace's 100 million-plus users.

So when Ean Jackson looks at the Facebook phenomenon, his first question is "how can I make money from this?" Jackson, an angel investor and faculty member at Simon Fraser University, the University of British Columbia and the University of Phoenix, is also president of Analytics Marketing, a consultancy catering to start-ups and other growing ventures.

Most of the activity thus far, Jackson said, has been around a younger demographic where status is accorded by the number of friends users have and where most of the chatter consists of mindless but mostly harmless details like parties, break-ups, make-ups and other social flotsam and jetsam.

But the Facebook profile is changing as an older demographic logs on, if only to see what their kids are doing. Businesses, too, are being drawn into the conversation, some simply dipping their toes in the pool to see what it feels like, while others are actively exploring strategies to generate revenue.

Currently more than half of Facebook users are outside of college and its fastest growing demographic is people 25 and older.

That's quite a crowd, and deep in there somewhere, Jackson said, is the pot of business gold, though he admits it's early days yet in nailing down a winning formula. He has, however, started to assemble a guidebook on the business use of Facebook. The real money, he said, is not "just selling the picks and shovels to the miners but in creating real value. This is a green-field opportunity."

Just as businesses quickly gravitated to the telephone, fax, Web, e-mail and, in some cases, blogs, Facebook is an opportunity to communicate with a target audience, to meet them on their own terms. The obvious way is to simply create a Facebook page, but it still takes work to keep it fresh and relevant. The more tried and tested path for businesses seeking to get in on the action is a series of tools offered by Facebook in the form of advertising banners, applications and quizzes.

According to Chris Breikss, director and co-founder of marketing company 6S, the starting gun sounded last November when the site formally encouraged small businesses to start a Facebook presence. By creating a corporate Facebook page, customers can add themselves as "fans" (rather than as "friends" on personal pages), write on the virtual wall, upload photos and form discussion groups with other fans. Companies can also send their fans news updates or special news and add applications to trick out the page.

Advertise yourself
And then there are Social Ads, which can be attached to news feeds or on the site's Ad Space. "You can get good results with a campaign spending as little as $1,500, even as low as $50 in some cases, since the advertising is on a pay-per-click basis," Breikss said.

Since the ads can be targeted by geographic, demographic and other factors like hobbies or interests, it's a powerful tool to carve out a specific audience and something Citizens Bank of Canada experimented with last RSP season. "We don't have a huge brand profile in Canada and we don't have the resources of the big banks," said Maureen McCartney, the bank's Web marketing manager. She tried three different ads and found a quirky video explaining RSPs in very un-bank like tones to be the most successful in targeting Canadians 28 to 50 years old. It was good value for money, she said, because the data on who clicked on the ads is also rich and detailed and is about a third of the cost of Google ads.

The bank is going to advertise on Facebook again for their next project, hockeystars.com, which is aimed at youngsters playing the game and will let them post stats and create personalized hockey cards.

When launching a Facebook page, McCartney cautioned that ongoing effort is required. "You need the resources" to support a page, she said, something Breikss endorses strongly, noting many businesses and brands are probably already being discussed by Facebook users so they might as well put up a page as well.

"It takes about 30 hours a month," he said. He also suggests taking a personal approach: Facebook isn't a Web page, so get a little edgy and have some fun.

One of 6S's clients in this space is Earl's Restaurants, a chain of eateries based in western Canada and Colorado, which recently opened up in Mississauga, west of Toronto.

"There were already about 100 Earl's-related groups on Facebook," he said. "And one of the things [restaurants] used their Facebook pages for was recruiting staff, and it was very successful."

Promote yourself
Facebook pages are also extremely effective at promoting events, Breikss said, and in many ways Facebook has already usurped Evite as the medium of choice to announce parties. As such, it's a great tool for new product launches, special promotions and any other news announcements.

The key to understanding Facebook is to look beyond what it appears to be, said Michael Fergusson, chief product officer at Kinzin.com, a Vancouver subsidiary of telecom company Uniserve Communications. While it started as a straightforward social networking site, it has since grown into a platform with more than 400,000 developers and entrepreneurs who have created 24,000 Facebook applications and who add new apps at a rate of 140 a day. Approximately 95 per cent of Facebook users employ at least one of these add-on apps.

For users, the apps are mini-programs customized for Facebook which allow people to share values, ideas, events, videos—just about every aspect of their virtual lives. Since Facebook is an open platform, developers are constantly writing new code and, with more businesses coming in, the Facebook off-the-shelf solutions are valuable. Restaurants, for example, can simply add an online order or reservation function to their page, something which would be more problematic with a standard Web site.

Mine that data
Kinzin, Fergusson said, is focused on two functions: tying Facebook and the social media concept of sharing to other media such as e-mail and snail mail, and secondly, writing apps that mine the rich demographics of the user base to uncover valuable nuggets of information.

While the initial demographic of Facebook users skews young, there are many others in the users' family and friends group—their etribe—who aren't on Facebook for a variety of reasons.

Kinzin seeks a subscriber base which amplifies any posting of a picture or news on a Facebook page into a broadcast via other media, such as e-mail, IM or even snail mail, the latter designed for grandma who doesn't have a computer but still wants the latest pictures of her grandkids.

The other revenue stream is in the creation of apps like Are You Normal?, a simple five-question survey which can be programmed with questions around morality, sexual behaviour and ethics, and spreads virally so respondents can determine, anonymously, how their own responses rate with the majority.

But as Fergusson said, the questions are the sharp end of a data mining drill that can extract much more than the obvious. With some 900,000 users who have taken these polls, Fergusson and his team built a database of values reflected by Facebook users who, while anonymous, still have unique demographic tags. "I can tell you we have 100,000 people under 20 who are religious conservatives, believe in God, vote Democrat but think recreational drugs are okay," he said.

Kinzin creates revenue by having companies interested in the data sponsor the polls, a market research tool which he claims is more insightful than the traditional process of screening panellists and assembling them in a room.

First, he said, it's a wider base; second, it takes less time than even telephone polling.

What Facebook has done is tap into the genetically wired human need to socialize and share while at the same time giving users a set of tools customized to their needs. But Jackson pointed out that buying ads, launching a page and maintaining it are the simple steps. Creating a community, a viable etribe of "fans" who act as viral agents to support and promote your business, is a tough step forward and, as of yet, there's no magic solution.

That doesn't mean he's given up looking. He is preparing another International Internet Marketing Association (IIMA) seminar on all this in Vancouver, since the initial event in May was such as success with participants like McCartney and Fergusson. And you can point to Facebook itself for the response. When he first announced the seminar, the response was lukewarm. Then he posted it on his Facebook page and it took off.

"We sold out and got in trouble with the fire department because we had too many people in the room," Jackson said. "We got so much response we're holding a second one this October."


SIDEBAR

Facebook's own resources

The site wants businesses on board and has created a number of how-to resources.
If you want to... Visit
Create a business page www.facebook.com/business/?pages
Build a Facebook app http://developers.facebook.com/
Advertise on Facebook www.facebook.com/business/?socialads
Monitor your Facebook traffic www.facebook.com/business/?insights
Conduct consumer research www.facebook.com/business/?polls

Face time: businesses on Facebook

Ean Jackson doesn't claim to have completely cracked the business code for Facebook, but he has lots of good ideas. The International Internet Marketing Association (IIMA) event on Facebook for Business last May and the second version planned for this October have already instigated the development of a guide called "61 Hints and Tips You Can Use to Facebook Your Business... Now!"

Here's a quick look at some of these tips. The full list is at: www.backbonemag.com/facebook.

If you're a Facebook member, check out Backbone's new Facebook group.

1. Facebook is a soft sell through engagement. Point fans to your company blog or contest.

2. Offer something of value, expect nothing in return. Use Facebook as a brand awareness tool.

3. Ask for referrals: referrals from friends or fans are still the most trusted.

4. Provide interactivity with applications or polls; it'll drive word of mouth.

5. Build a Facebook page with a widget and Facebook ad. Build the relationship. Keep it edgy with the audience in mind.

6. Use status updates to disseminate information about self/business. "Sarah is in Vancouver for a business meeting. Call me if in town" or "Jim is congratulating Jane on her recent promotion."

7. Incorporate the tools you're already using into your profile. Do you blog, Twitter, Pownce or Jaiku? Do you read feeds? There are Facebook apps available for all these services. If you have already used these tools professionally, why not add them to your Facebook profile?

8. Make it personal: focus on the human element of your business and products, and your employees. When consumers can relate personally to a business or product, they are more likely to promote it and feel a stronger connection.

9. Update your business page frequently. The more often you add content, the more customers will return.

10. Choose the right Facebook applications. There are thousands of free applications on Facebook, but that doesn't mean every one of them should have a place on your business page.


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Friday, February 8, 2008

Affiliate Gold

The advice here can help you make money on affiliate programs, maybe even as much as a few thousand a month. But what about people who make six figures off of affiliate programs? What's their secret?

Well, I call that Affiliate Gold, and really it's a very simple principle: Build a site around an affiliate program. The easiest way to do this is have a review site. For instance lets say you make a site where you review all of the online dating websites, and each review is an affiliate link. So basically every visitor comes to your site looking for information on which program to sign up with, and every time someone signs up you make money. Chances are 90% or more of your visitors are going to signup with someone, that's why they're at your site in the first place.

Reviews are not the only way to do this though. You can also make a site that sells anything via an affiliate program. The site can even be one page with only a few paragraphs of content and a link to a place to buy the product. The real trick here is not in making the site, it is in promoting the site.

Going back to our original example of a photography site (if you're reading this article as part of the website success guide), lets pretend Ray makes a page that gives a brief overview of Digital Camera's and then includes prices on popular models from leading e-tailers, like Amazon.com and Buy.com, in the appropriate affiliate fashion. He might earn some money from it, but not all of Ray's visitors are interested in digital cameras, or are interested in buying a camera at all. However, now imagine that this page is #1 on Google when you search for "digital cameras." Ray will likely get thousands of visitors to that page each month, visitors who are looking for digital cameras.

There is no greater partnership than that between an e-commerce site and a content site. A site that offers photography information, and a site that sells photographic equipment, would be a perfect match. However running an e-commerce site is complicated, and often requires a large investment to setup inventory. So for the small guy the best partnership is a content site and an affiliate site.

So you make a small site selling a single product, or group of products, via an affiliate program, that's the easy part. The hard part is getting it to the top of the search engines. If you think back to the chapter on search engines you'll remember that to get to the top you need incoming links, right? But then, who would want to link to your small affiliate site? Well, you will.

You can build a content site related to the product you are selling. You don't even need to put advertising on this site, as your sole purpose with this site is to gain incoming links. People link to free content, directories list free content, you can offer free content and get a large page rank. Then, using your knowledge of search engines and link popularity, you link from your content site to your affiliate site.

If you can get ranked #1 on the search engines for the product you are trying to sell, you've struck affiliate gold and you will make very good money.

Now you shouldn't just link from any site to your affiliate site. Off topic links made specifically to increase rank are frowned upon by search engines and may result in negative action taken upon you. This is why you build an on topic site to link from, there is nothing wrong with cross promoting two on topic sites.

Sure, building an entire site, or maybe two or three sites, just to promote an affiliate program does seem like a lot of work. However the payoff can be huge. Imagine how much you'd make if you ranked #1 for "Viagra?" Additionally your affiliate site need not be only one page, nor need it be a separate site, you could promote it as a subsection of your content site just as easily.

Before you try to make an affiliate site like this you need to research your keywords and the competition. You should first of all figure out which terms related to your product are searched the most. For instance which is searched for more often, "Digital Camera Deals," or "Digital Camera Sales." Once you find the most popular set of keywords for your product (the keywords you will use to link to your affiliate page) then you need to find out the current competition for those words. So do a search on Google for those words and check the PageRank of the first site to come up. If your Overall PageRank Power is greater than the PageRank of the current #1 site then you will likely have the #1 spot if you make this affiliate site and cross-promote it with your current site. This is especially true considering that 100% of your incoming links will be using your keywords for the anchor text (afterall, you will have complete control over that) and for your competitors this isn't likely to be the case. Using your Overall PageRank Score in calculations like this is a good way to decide when to create a new site, and also to predict how successful that site will be.

So, to summarize, there are two main steps for reaching affiliate gold.

1. Build a site whereby your visitors are already planning on joining something or making a purchase before they ever visit your site (ie make your site a normal step on the path towards completing the transaction).
2. Get your site to the top of the search engines, possibly by cross promoting with a popular free content site.




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Affiliate Program Primer

Many webmasters think of affiliate programs only as last ditch attempts to make money. They serve affiliate program banners as defaults after exhausting the ad networks, make little money on them, and decry affiliate programs as poor earners. Nothing could be further from the truth.

The most successful affiliates usually don't even use banners, instead they integrate affiliate links within their content, and sometimes the affiliate link is the content. These people can make more off affiliate programs than off advertising, much more. However, it takes a lot of planning to be successful at affiliate programs, and I'm going to show you how to do it.
Choosing an Affiliate Program

The most important thing with affiliate programs is to choose the right one. I don't mean choosing the one that offers the biggest commission, because a big commission won't mean anything if you never make a sale. You need to choose the right program for your users, and that means understanding your visitors. You must be able to answer the question: "Why do people come to my Website?" If you answer "to get information", think again. You need to know why they want that information: you need to know their motivations.

Why do people come to your site? Think long and hard on that question, it may seem simple but in reality it is very tricky. If you ran a video game cheats site you may say that people come to your site because they are interested in video games. That would be wrong. Sure people who visit your site are interested in video games, but that's not why they visit your site. They visit your site because they are looking for cheat codes.

Would you think that people that go to a classic literature site are interested in classic literature? The fact is, they aren't. Most of them probably hate classic literature. So why do they visit the site? They're students, they're working on homework.

An affiliate program selling video games would do okay on the video game site, and a program selling books might make a few bucks on the literature site. However, if you want to make good money off affiliate programs you need to use programs that will help your visitors reach their goals. In both of the examples listed above that means you need to help your visitors cheat. Obviously if you're looking up video game cheats you want to cheat at video games, selling a product that helped you cheat would something that would interest your visitors. And of course students often want any help they can get, especially when they have a paper due the next day, so an essay affiliate program would perform very well.


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Advertising and Affiliate Jargon

The words presented below are very common in any discussion of the online advertising or affiliate industries. Knowing them is essential.

CPM: Cost-per-thousand-impressions, or CPM for short, is a term used in describing the amount that advertising costs. It gets it's abbreviation because M is the roman numeral for thousand. CPM is a type of advertising that pays per impression, which we know from the previous chapter as a page view. For instance if you made $10 CPM you would be making $10.00 USD per thousand impressions, or 1 cent per page view. Most advertising, even if it is not sold in CPM form, is usually measured in CPM form. For instance you may measure a CPC campaign (see below) in virtual CPM, or based on the revenue generated what would be the equivalent CPM amount for this ad.

CPC: Cost-per-clickthrough, sometimes called Pay-Per-Click, CPC advertising is advertising that pays only when a banner or other advertisement is clicked. A typical rate might be 33 cents per page view, so to make the equivalent of $1 CPM or a virtual $1 CPM this ad would need to be clicked on 3 times out of every 1000 displays.

CPA: Cost-per-action, sometimes also called Cost-per-sale, CPA advertising is advertising that pays when a banner is clicked and a user then does some action on the advertiser's site. The exact action will differ from one campaign to another but typically the user either has to sign up for something or buy something. In reality CPA advertising is pretty much the same thing as an affiliate program.

Affiliate Program: Also possibly called a revenue sharing program, a partnership program, or any other variation of the term, an affiliate program is a program in which you typically sign up with a merchant to sell or advertise their products and then they give you a commission based on the sales you generate. Variations of the typical affiliate program could also pay you based on user registrations or any other user action. As has been mentioned there isn't much of a difference between affiliate programs and CPA advertising.

Tiered-Systems: You often find a tiered-system in an affiliate program, although some ad networks have them as well, and it is seen as a way to increase the funds you make from the program. How it works is that not only do you get commissions based what products you sell, but if you refer sometime to the program you also get commissions for what they sell. How many tiers there are depend on how far the referrals go, for instance in a 4 tiered-system you could get commissions from someone referred by someone referred by someone referred by you. Many of you will undoubtedly find this type of system familiar because of other Multi-Level-Marketing or Pyramid systems like Amway. Typically these systems look good at first, but in reality the kind of exponential growth you may envision is not realistic. Don't bank on these systems, just appreciate them for the little extra revenue that they may generate.

Advertising Network: Most advertising buys are in numbers that small sites cannot deliver, so in general smaller sites, meaning almost all of you reading this book, will join one more many ad networks. Ad networks help attract advertisers by providing a large inventory of available impressions, they do this by letting an advertiser buy ads on hundreds or thousands of sites at a time. The advertising is usually low paying and untargeted but it is the best kind of advertising a smaller site can get. Networks often take a commission that can be as a high as 50%, of all ads sold on your site.

Advertising Agency: An advertising agency is one that will represent your site and seek out advertisers to buy targeted advertising. Targeted advertising brings in substantially more money than untargeted advertising but it is harder to get. Here is also where demographics are the most important. The right demographics can bring in good targeted advertising which will in turn fatten your wallet. Some advertising agencies also function as advertising networks as well, and these are the types of networks you usually want to join. Also, like ad networks, ad agencies will charge a commission on all ads sold.

Scumware: A relatively new term that describes unscrupulous programs that infect your system, usually without your knowledge, by being bundled with other popular software. Scumware can do a variety of things from popping up extra advertisements when you view websites, to replacing existing website advertising to their own, to adding additional advertising to websites. Scumware controversy is a very hot topic now with civil lawsuits and criminal investigations being fairly common news topics. This is also called spyware.

Pop-Up: Advertising that pops open in a new window on top of the window you are viewing a website in. Pop-Ups are almost always sold on a CPM Basis. Also known as an interstitial.

Pop-Under: Advertising that pops open in a new window underneath your current window. Like Pop-Ups Pop-Unders are almost always sold on a CPM Basis. Also known as an interstitial.

Superstitial: A superstitial is an ad format created by Unicast (http://www.unicast.com) it is basically a popup ad that uses Flash. However it can do much more than the traditional banner because it can be interactive enough to allow a user to even make a purchase entirely through the advertising, so they never leave your site. One major issue with this ad format is that Unicast has invested money in proving it's effectiveness in various studies. These statistics, and perhaps the ad's similarity to TV commercials, have drawn some big name advertisers to this format.


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Friday, February 1, 2008

DLGuard Review

As a fellow digital publisher, you probably have a few nagging concerns in the back of your mind. Are my downloads protected? What if my customer shares my download link with others? Will a search engine index my download pages making my downloads available to the world?

These are all legitimate concerns of anyone serious about becoming an infopreneur. Whether your digital product is an ebook, a complete website, or simply a pdf file it’s important to not only track your customers activity but ensure that your digital product doesn’t wander around the net.

Fortunately a great string of products have been developed to calm these fears and ultimately increase your bottom line. After performing my due diligence I continued to hear wonderful things about a product named DLGuard.

Some of the more powerful features include:
Shopping Cart (sell and protect multiple products)
Membership Subscription Support (support recurring payments)
Set download time limits (protect your downloads with expiring links)
Collect email addresses (develop that mailing list you’ve been thinking about)

DLGuard is written in the powerful PHP programming language which ultimately means that any important code stays secure on your websites server far from prying eyes. You buy the product once and say goodbye to monthly fees!

Digital Audit Trail

Online disputes between buyers and sellers online are usually mediated by your transaction processor(PayPal, 2CO, ClickBank, Stormpay) and defined in their terms of service. However, it’s important to understand that the person that usually ends up prevailing is the one that can provide the most compelling evidence. DLGuard provides this through this by providing an audit of the digital trail including the buyer’s ip address, number of download attempts, and more.
DLGuard supports all of the popular third party payment processors including:

Paypal
Clickbank
2Checkout
WorldPay
PayDotCom
Ebay
E-Gold
AlertPay
DLGuard also supports custom configurations if you already have a standard merchant account.

Sam Stephens, the author of DLGuard is one of the most active and responsive software authors on the net today. Honestly, this man may have cloned himself for I see him repeatedly in the Warrior Forums as well as his own forums not only giving specific detailed answers to users questions but frequently offering to actively fix a user’s challenge. Ultimately, this fanatical support is what finally led me to the buy button.
My next journey with DLGuard will be utilizing it’s support for eBay’s vast digital product marketplace. Check back for an update on the progress. As a DLGuard user myself, I think that’s strongest testimonial an Internet marketer can provide.

You can get more information about DLGuard Click Here!


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