I posted an article recently on how a spoof website I set up temporarily grabbed email addresses in a matter of weeks. I was testing out a new system that claims it can seduce the spiders to visit any website, and in the process of my experiment, the following also happened. . The site had an Alexa ranking of . . It had captured the No. Spot for the core keyword phrase on Google, Yahoo!, MSN, AOL, Lycos and Ask Jeeves. . My hosting service traffic stats reported , visitors. So far so good on a spoof but was it a fluke? There was only one way to find out and that was to assess the effectiveness of the technique in a real measurable marketing scenario. Enthused by the results of the spoof I then applied the system to two of my real websites and you can check out for yourself what happened this time o Go to www.bt.yahoo.com and enter how to products in the search box and you should find that http://howtoproducts-xl.com ranks at No. out of ,,, competitive pages (yes, one billion, million) as it does as I write this on October th . o Go to www.google.com and enter writing for profit in the search box and you should find that http://www.writing-for-profit.com ranks at No. out of ,, competitive pages as it did on October th . There was no fluke this time Both of the websites I tested out are well established and have always enjoyed high rankings in the major search engines but to achieve No. on Yahoo! out of billion, million pages is off-the-wall positioning. Ive decided now on the basis of this quantifiable evidence of its efficiency to inject the system into all of my websites and Ill let you know how I go
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