How To Rank Highly When Competitors Spam and Stuff Keywords
Quick Guide to Competitive Niche SEO.
In competitive niches, SEO’s can have success in ranking highly for key terms related to their business.
The way you SEO is relative to the other internet marketers in your niche.
1. Submit to directories and comment on blogs.
If your competitors are spamming forums and linked to bad neighborhoods, you should first build only the most high quality backlinks in your niche. Your goal is to obtain one-way, top-quality links, as many more than your competitors as possible. One-way link directories and blogs can be your friend. Look for respected authorities that link out liberally and seek new content.
2. Ethically use social media.
Work to write only the most linkable content, and poise your content to go viral so you can gain thousands of backlinks. In a spam-filled niche, you’re likely playing a bit of catch up to the sheer numbers of backlinks your competitors have amassed. Even with more high quality links, it’s still a bit of a numbers game. The backlinks generated from social media aren’t necessarily high quality but they are certain to be of greater value than bad neighborhoods. Remember that your competitors probably don’t know how to embrace social media without spamming forums.
3. Write longer content.
You can rank highly without keyword stuffing. Even when the top 30 results in the SERPs for your niche are all keyword stuffing, white hat SEO has a simple trick that allows you to use the targeted keywords the same number of times as your competitor: make your page content a heck of a lot longer than your competitors! Instead of five paragraphs and spammy sounding text with excessive keyword density, write twice as much and spread out your keyword usage. That way, you’re writing for humans (i.e. not appear or sound like spam) and using your keywords, in context, as many times as your competitors.
Affiliate Project X.
I have never bought an internet marketing product. Never. I’ve read so many…hundreds…of sales letters, that they all sound about the same, though some are definitely better than others. They deliver on catching on to your emotions, particularly fear, and all are selling a grossly over-priced product. Affiliate Project X doesn’t seem any different to me. Every single no-hype, honest review I’ve read has hyped the product to get the reader to purchase through their affiliate link. I wish internet marketing wasn’t so dirty and dishonest, but I’ve been experimenting with the good side of it. Here is a partial experiment:
Affiliate Project X - Talk in the Blogosphere

