Alright, so this portion is only for SEnuke members. This product was originally created specifically for this portion. However, I felt that in order to get maximum benefits you need to know exactly how and why I do everything I do. That is why I wrote the rest of this course. If you are reading this course and you do not own a copy of SEnuke, then you are probably too late and will have to get on the waiting list. However, you can read through this and see how I do the automated submissions, as I do outline the process I go through. Of course, you will either have to hire someone to do it or you will have to it yourself manually. I am sorry, but I have never seen any other software that works even half as well as SEnuke.
In this portion I will walk you through exactly how I do my SEnuke submissions. This portion of the course will be updated after each time that SEnuke is updated, as my submission strategies will obviously change as more features are added. It will take a couple days for me to figure out the updates and to rewrite this section of the report, but after each update I will try to get this portion updated as quickly as possible.
There is an opt-in form on the download page where you can sign up for a mailing list so I can notify you of updates to the course. If you are not on that list, you should sign up for the list immediately so that I can inform you of any updates to the course.
Without further ado, allow me to walk you through the steps I follow to perform an SEnuke submission. I will assume that you have already read my free report on niche research, and if you have not, then you will need to read it. It is not the only way to do niche research, as I have done it many different ways, but it is a good guideline to follow. So I am going to assume you have chosen your niche, keywords and which product(s) you are going to promote and you now are ready to start promoting.
So the first thing I do when preparing for an SEnuke submission is I write an article on the keyword I am targeting. The title of the article contains the keyword, and if possible secondary keywords. The article can range between 400 words and 1,500 words. If I have a 1,500 word article, I often put the entire article on my main website, and I split it up into two or three articles that I can submit.
I spin these articles so they are 30% unique or more. (Soon I will be using the software Areeb is coming out with instead of doing this manually) The article should have a keyword density of between 2-6%. I know people pick numbers in between, but I vary it so that it is more natural.
Once I have a keyword rich article that is spin-ready, I proceed to the Social Network Nuke (if I am not already there, as I spin my articles there if I do not have pre-spun articles.) I fill in the domain section, using the keywords I am targeting as the domain name. I put a title in, and I spin it so that there are at least 6 different versions. And lastly I choose my tags, following the tagging secrets I discussed earlier in this eBook.
I choose tags that are keywords that people will actually search, and I make sure that I choose tags that I will use for multiple articles, so that I can have many articles appear on the tag pages when they display in the search engine results pages. I choose a few tags that I won’t use in other posts, but I still choose tags that will be searched, so that I can still have the tag pages appear in the search engines for low competition keywords.
I then submit one version of my article to Hubpages and to Ezinearticles, with two links, pointing to different pages. I usually link once to the main page of my website/blog and once to my subpage that is related to the keyword I am targeting.
Once I have submitted to these two, I submit to the rest of the sites, adding the #lasturl# tag at the end of article and adding my affiliate link/redirect link one as well, allowing me to make sales directly from my articles. The affiliate link/redirect link is only if I am promoting a product as an affiliate. If I am promoting my own product, then I only use the other three links in the article.
After completing all these submissions, the submission report appears. I launch the pinger directly from the submission report and ping all of the URLs. I also make note of which sites did not succeed, and I make an attempt to figure out why, so I can hopefully fix it for the next submission I do.
Depending on how aggressively I am marketing at the time, I may also bookmark the URLs immediately as well. If I am doing a short term promotion, I market quite aggressively and I will bookmark the pages immediately. If I am doing a long term promotion, then I wait a day or two before bookmarking the pages I created.
If I am marketing aggressively, then I will bookmark all pages following the bookmarking strategies outlined near the beginning of the eBook. I bookmark using keyword rich titles that will attract attention, so as to gain more traffic from the bookmarks. I also use keyword rich descriptions, and descriptions that basically force people to click through to the website either because of curiosity, or for a sense of urgency, etc. I spin both the title and
the description so that I can achieve more rankings for low competition keywords. I tag the bookmarks using the same methods as tagging on the social networking nuke.
If bookmarking more than one page, I choose the setting to bookmark two websites. I do not bookmark more, as I have tested it and bookmarking more than two gets your accounts banned quickly, but two is a fairly safe number. Bookmarking one website is not as effective as two, so because bookmarking two of the websites is unlikely to get the accounts banned, I always bookmark two websites.
Many people ask if SEnuke remembers which pages it has bookmarked and whether or not it chooses them randomly. SEnuke does randomly choose the two websites to bookmark. There is no order or anything that it uses to choose which websites it bookmarks. Also, SEnuke does not remember which websites it bookmarks, as it does not have any sort of memory built in.
The memory is not even something that is required, or even useful. You do not want to go back and bookmark the rest of the pages under the same account anyway, as that would get your account banned, so there is no reason for SEnuke to remember which pages have been bookmarked.
I bookmark the pages using the same techniques and using different titles and descriptions every couple of days if I marketing somewhat aggressively. I bookmark them every day if I am marketing very aggressively for a short term promotion, and I bookmark them once a week for a long term promotion.
After bookmarking the pages for the first time, I submit the RSS feeds in the RSS nuke. The RSS nuke is probably the most simple module in SEnuke, as you simply copy your RSS feed URLs in the box, select the categories for the submission sites that require it, choose how many to submit and choose your tags.
The tags are chosen in the same manner as with the other modules, so you should already know which tags to use for the RSS nuke. With the number of feeds to submit, I choose 3, as I have not had any problems when submitting 3 feeds to each place. I have submitted more than 3 and not had my accounts banned, but it is spamming the sites, and if everyone started to do it then the sites would not be nearly as effective, so for the long term it is much more beneficial to stick with 3 feeds to submit.
I have had many people ask how I manage profiles with SEnuke. I create one profile per day for the bookmarking and networking sites, but not for the video sites and RSS feed submission sites. If you don’t already know, video marketing is not one of my areas of expertise, and I am terrible at making and submitting videos. I do know however, that submitting the same videos many times is not effective, and will just get your accounts banned, so I only have a few profiles for the video sites. One for each niche I am in, to be specific.
I have one account on the RSS feed sites, because you can only submit each feed once, so there is no need for extra accounts.
I create one profile per day on the bookmarking sites and the networking sites. More is unnecessary and can get your accounts banned, and some will not allow you to create more than one profile per day. If I miss a day, I don’t worry about it. It really doesn’t matter that much if you don’t create a profile per day. I just try to create a new profile per day.
I have no set rule about how I use the profiles. I make sure that I don’t submit the same spin-ready article to the same profile more than once, and I make sure I don’t bookmark the same sites under the same profile more than once, but that is basically all that I worry about. The only organizing I do is keeping track of which profiles I have used for which article submissions and which profiles I have used to bookmark the pages.
You can use a spreadsheet to keep track, or whatever you choose. Different people find different methods of keeping track more effective for them, so just set up some sort of system of keeping track that will work for you.
Another question I have been frequently asked is how many submissions you can do with one article. The first thing you need to remember is that you always need to submit your article under a different profile each time. Depending on the uniqueness of your articles, you can submit them more or less times.
Based on a 30% uniqueness, I have found that you can submit the article between 3-8 times. I personally continue to submit it (once per day under a different profile each time) until I stop seeing results from it. The maximum number of times I submit it is 10. If you submit the same article extra times, the duplicate results will not show up in the search engines, but you will still gain backlinks from the pages created, and the backlinks will come from relevant pages and will contain anchor text.
Once I have submitted the article usually a minimum of 5 times, I create a new article, spin it, and continue the submission process. Once my site ranks for the keywords I am targeting, I move onto the next keyword. For higher competition keywords it will take more articles to rank for the keywords.
By following this process I can rank for low competition keywords in a matter of days, medium competition keywords usually within a week, but the process does not work for high competition keywords. In order to rank for high competition keywords you must combine this strategy with blog commenting, forum posting, press releases, and other promotional methods. I have discussed these in the “Making it Natural” section, so you can follow the strategy outlined there to rank for the high competition keywords.