Whats So Great About Private Label
Rights?
by Chris McElroy AKA NameCritic
When it comes to marketing online, there can't be enough
said about the value of fresh content. After all, content
attracts web crawlers to your site and helps you to get indexed
by the major search engines. Not only that, but content also
serves as a tool for communicating with your current and
prospective clients.
It's probably because of this - along with the increasing
popularity of adding free reports and article marketing - that
have made private labels rights products and articles so
popular and easy to find.
Private label rights take an article or an ebook and turn it
around into something that you can say that you have written.
At first glance, that sounds great, doesn't it?
You can get the credit for writing an article or an ebook,
you dont have to spend the time writing it, and - thanks to
auction sites like eBay - it doesnt even cost much to have your
own informational article or product.
In many cases, when you purchase an ebook with private label
rights, youll receive a checklist of what you can do with the
product. It will tell you that the product can:
* be edited; * be relabeled with your name as the author; *
be broken down into individual articles (in the case of an
ebook); * be used as content for your website without
attribution; * be sold or offered as a bonus to your customers;
* be published offline.
It still sounds good, doesnt it? With an article or ebook
and private label rights, youll have everything that you need
in order to provide an information product - or will you?
You see, with all of the things that seem so great about
private label rights, theres one huge disadvantage: you are not
the only one who has these rights.
Even if the original producer of the content limited the
sale to five copies, at least four other people will have the
same rights to the content. Without making changes, that means
that any one article could be posted - unedited - to an article
directory with five different 'authors' credited.
If each person who bought that content also sells five
copies, suddenly there are thirty copies of that same article.
If each of the twenty five purchasers sells five copies. . .
Well, suddenly private label rights seems to be a little bit
less of a great thing.
Think about it:
* How much would your credibility as an expert on a topic be
damaged if others were able to claim rights to your
content?
* How would you really be able, with certainty, to market a
product as your own without a risk that someone could buy the
same content with a different name and different author when
they were seeking additional information?
* Would you really be offering your customers or readers
something of value if you only offered private label rights
information?
Of course your credibility could come into question if all
you used were private label rights articles and ebooks. You
wouldnt be offering your customers unique content or
information, and as a result youd likely be offering them
something of a lesser value than they anticipated.
Private label rights products serve a purpose: for those who
are willing to take a chance, who want to have a product or
service and who dont know how to go about creating one, private
label rights are an easy way out. However, taking the easy way
out isnt always the easy way of doing things.
While it may be more expensive or more time consuming,
having an original article or ebook written exclusively for you
or your business is the only way to ensure that youre offering
your customers something of quality.
Whats so great about private label rights? As long as others
keep using them, your custom products provide more value and,
in time, your customer base will grow while others fail.
Chris McElroy aka NameCritic provides Professional
Ghostwriting Services and can help you with Article
Marketing, Original Website Content, Press Releases, eBooks,
and Original Blog
Content.
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