How NOT to do link requests
I recently received a link request from a webmaster that was once again a great example of how people get things wrong. He had found one of my sites and thought it would be a “great fit” for his audience. The guy was, for all I know, legit as his name checked out when I googled it and the site he was mentioning in his email seemed genuine. However, why my site on World of Warcraft is a great fit for his Adsense templates site, I fail to see.
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Using reCAPTCHA to protect your site from SPAM
You’ve probably seen one of these things on the Web before:

reCAPTCHA is a free service to protect your site from SPAM. It works for comment forms on blogs, for CMSs, for email addresses and more.
The coolest thing about reCAPTCHA, though, is that you’re helping to digitize books with every CAPTCHA you solve. Read all about it at reCAPTCHA’s site.
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If I read “This is a no-fluff report…” one more time…
… I am going to go for an immediate refund.
You’ve probably bought your share of IM-related ebooks, so chances are you’ve read the above statement, or something to this effect, in one or more of them. Don’t the authors who use this statement realize how stupid they sound?
They tell you that the report contains no fluff and is “all meat”, and then they go on and ramble about why they (supposedly) didn’t add fluff to the product. Why you’re getting the “best bang for your buck” and why their stupid little pamphlet is only 14 pages long.
I’m going to make this easy for all you wannabe ebook and report authors:
Fluff is when you write something that does not add value to your product.
Does the above statement add value to your ebook?
No.
So the statement is fluff in and of itself. It’s like someone screaming in your face: “I’M NOT SCREAMING!!!”
No respectable author should have to tell readers how great their report is. Just get to the meat and don’t tell people that it is the meat. If they’re intelligent enough to understand your material, they’ll notice the meat when they get to it.
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7 Ways To Annoy Ebook Buyers
I buy ebooks. Lots of them. Mostly Internet Marketing-related material. From $17 to $97 - I’ve bought so many of them I don’t (and don’t want to) know how much I’ve spent on them.
While many ebooks in the Internet Marketing field are of good quality, there are lots that are not more than sorry excuses of an ebook. What otherwise would have been quality material suffers from the author’s apparent inability to adhere to even the most basic rules of writing.
I’ve identified 7 “sins” you can commit as an ebook author. Any single one of these will get me, and probably many others, pissed off and when you manage to commit more than one in a single ebook or report, you’re begging for a refund request.
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Free Report On How To Profit From Domain Names
If you have a sizeable domain portfolio or are thinking of building one, you’re probably interested in how domains can make you some cash. Phil Craig from Domains Into Dollars has released a free report on profiting from domain names. It gives you a short overview of the many possiblities of turning domains into cash.
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