Sunday, August 11, 2019

How to Rewrite PLR Articles and Content








How to Rewrite PLR Articles and Content to Earn More Revenue 



Private label rights (PLR) are one of the tools used by marketers everywhere. What makes them so popular is that you can find PLR articles on practically any subject and any niche...from parenting to dieting to affiliate marketing. There is a wide variety of material available to be utilized. We will talk about the benefits of using PLR and why you should rewrite PLR articles to make them your own.

What is PLR?


PLR stands for Private Label Rights and is a type of license you acquire when purchasing material. It allows you to edit and make changes to the material and call it your own. Meaning that you can purchase an article on childcare and rewrite it, giving it your own unique ideas and thoughts and publish it to your blog under your name. 

Are you violating copyright? No, because you purchased the material from the writer, rewrote the content to fit within your niche and targeted to your audience. If you change everything about the article then it is no longer the words of someone else, they’re your words, you’re just using the ideas as inspiration.


Here are a few benefits to be gained from PLR articles:


1. Convenience

To people who do not have a talent for writing, it can take hours to compose a readable article from scratch. The words come out in a jumble of your thoughts with no organization or format. Is this going to bring traffic to your blog or affiliate pages? No, probably not. 

Would it help to have something you could use as a guide to help compose your thoughts and say what you want to say? Yes. PLR articles will save you time and effort. Time is something you never truly have enough of, especially when it comes to content creation. “We need content, but lack the time it takes to create it,” says Jennifer Ledbetter (better known as PotPieGirl), a popular marketer and blog owner.  



2. It is Your Content

When you purchase PLR articles or ebooks, you remove any links and put in your own. You can link to your blog, website, affiliate pages, podcasts, YouTube videos, and more. You will rewrite the content so it is your own, add your links, images, and optimize it for SEO. Once you publish it on your site it will start bringing in traffic and readers to your blog hungry for more content.



3. It’s Affordable 


This point refers to saving money as a valuable resource for your business. Acquiring content can get pretty expensive, especially if you have a brand new site and need to fill it with content. For an informative blog page, you will need between 20 and 50 high-quality articles to add to your site. You can purchase PLR article packs from many marketing sites all over the internet and have a writer rewrite them for you and post a few at a time to build links. You can purchase the packs in bulk for a flat rate and rewriting them will cost between $10 and $30 each. Schedule and post two articles per week to start seeing traffic coming in.


4. Create Your Brand 

Content is king, everybody knows this. And it is extremely important to set yourself apart from everyone else by having your own voice and style. When you communicate with your audience on topics they are interested in, you start to build a relationship which is vital to the success of your business. Through your content, you establish yourself and your brand in the world of online businesses. If your site is full of high-quality, informative articles on topics in your niche, your audience will come to view you as an authority and trust what you have to say. This should be very important to you as people will not buy from an untrusted source.


5. Get Professional-looking Results

PLR articles have all of the research done for you saving you hours of research and note-taking. Many of the articles you will find are written by professionals with knowledge about the latest information regarding your niche. You can use the information they have provided and expand on it with your own thoughts, ideas, and opinions. You can use it as an outline and add to it. 


Now that you know why you should use PLR articles, here are some ways you can use them to build traffic and earn revenue.


Ways to use PLR articles to earn revenue:


  • Create a free report
  • Article series for subscribers
  • Compile articles into an ebook
  • Create your own digital product to sell
  • Create a mini-course from similar articles
  • Welcome newsletter for joining your email list



1. Create a free report for your subscribers

Collect a few articles on the same them and create a free report or article series for your regular subscribers. You give it away for free so that your readers feel like they are receiving value from your content. The articles will pique their interest and keep them coming back to read more. 

2. Create a series of articles or mini-course

You can take a few related articles and turn them into an article series. Readers love to learn things and a 5-part series delivered one per week will keep them engaged and eager to read the next installment.


3. Produce ebooks

You can also collect a number of PLR article content and combine them into an informative ebook that you can link to from your blog or other affiliate products.



How To Rewrite PLR Articles:


  1. Use Google Keyword Planner to find a low-competition keyword
  2. Find some related keywords that also have low competition
  3. Rewrite the title, subheadings, and conclusion
  4. Go through and note important points in the article
  5. Rewrite the summary or introduction using your own words
  6. Rewrite the body of the article and include bullet points, numbered lists, etc
  7. Place your main keyword in the title, intro, and last paragraph of the article
  8. Use your related keyword in the article body 1 - 2 times, and in the subheadings
  9. Edit your article for spelling, grammar, and natural flow
  10. Add images, link to authority sites or add affiliate links, embed YouTube videos or links to a podcast. Publish your post and promote it on social media sites.



You have now created your own fresh, new content for your blog. You can repeat these steps over and over to create tons of useful content to bring in traffic and revenue. 

This all sounds well and good, but how practical is it? Is it really possible to produce high-quality articles from PLR content?  Well, you tell me. The article you are reading now was created and sourced from PLR content and is 100% unique and original.

If you liked this article, learned something from it, or would like help in creating articles like it, message me and let’s rewrite PLR articles to create some fabulous content to share with your readers.

Saturday, April 20, 2019

Understanding ADHD




ADHD, also known as Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, is a neurological disorder that affects a large portion of the population and is not exclusive to children. A person of any age can have ADHD. Some children will outgrow it, or find ways to manage it as they go into adulthood. The most common ADHD symptoms are the inability to maintain focus, inattentiveness, hyperactivity, and impulsivity. Kids diagnosed with this disorder are often labeled “strong-willed,” “challenging,” and “disruptive” to name a few.

Kids with this disorder are not “bad” but many are misunderstood because there is still a lot of research to be done into this disorder and how it affects the brain and thinking processes. Many of the disciplinary tools that work well for other children don’t work with kids with ADHD. It’s like their brains are wired differently. This is exactly true, by the way. Their brains are different. A study using brain imaging discovered that certain areas of the brain are smaller or under-developed in kids with ADHD.

What Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Does

ADHD affects the executive functioning parts of the brain that govern problem-solving, critical thinking, organization, and impulse control. The study looked at brain scans from kids as well as adults with the disorder. The differences were less noticeable in the adult brains, which may indicate that something changes as they get older. They still have the disorder but they are more able to manage the condition as they mature.




As a mom to 4 kids, all of whom have the disorder, I can attest to the fact that the symptoms do not disappear as they get older but they do change. My two older sons have learned to channel their hyperactivity into work and their careers. They are always on the go, take on extra projects, and hate being bored. As teenagers they were never at home, always had something to do, and would work two jobs sometimes to avoid boredom. They learned to use their challenges to their advantage.

My youngest, however, is a different story. He is hyperactive, impulsive, aggressive, and gets in trouble a lot. He was diagnosed with ADHD Hyperactive/Impulsive with ODD (Oppositional Defiant Disorder) and shows many signs of ASD as well. We’re still working on getting a complete diagnosis for him because the last psychiatrist I took him to said that he shows a lot of signs of Autism Spectrum Disorder, but not enough for a diagnosis. Basically, she said he is “borderline.”

Other Conditions That Often Accompany ADHD:


  • ASD (Autism Spectrum Disorder)
  • ODD (Oppositional Defiant Disorder)
  • OCD (Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder)
  • SPD (Sensory Processing Disorder)
  • Anxiety

Ways to Treat ADHD

Medications combined with Applied Behavior Therapy is how many families treat this condition. Medications used to treat this condition include stimulants, non-stimulants, and sometimes anti-depressants. Finding the right balance takes time and is sometimes hard on the child having to adjust to changes in dosage and dealing with possible side-effects. For this reason, many families choose not to medicate their child and opt for natural remedies and dietary changes to manage problem behaviors.

The choice to medicate or not to medicate is a personal one. Nobody should shame you for deciding to use medication to make your child’s symptoms more manageable for them and the family. Kids with ADHD are often ostracized by peers, made to feel like their bad, and other adults who don’t understand the condition will say they just “need discipline.”

I totally support any parents choice when it comes to their choice of treatment options. This condition can be treated but not cured, so whatever works to bring peace and family harmony to the home is worth its weight in gold.


Friday, February 1, 2019

If You Think Your Child Has ADHD…



If you found your way here you are probably looking for answers to the burning question...does my child have ADHD? If you haven’t gotten a diagnosis yet you are not alone. Sometimes ADHD kids go undiagnosed for years until someone notices their behaviors, habits, and mannerisms and mentions it. It takes a trained eye to spot the symptoms sometimes because there are just as many cases that are misdiagnosed as there are ones accurately diagnosed’. The reason for this is because many of the symptoms of ADHD and similar conditions overlap and mimic each other.

 As a mother of 4 kids all of whom have ADHD, I can tell you that it is hereditary. If you have siblings, parents, aunts, uncles, or anyone blood -related with ADHD then it runs in your family. Also if you have one child with ADHD it is possible that any siblings they have later on may also have the disorder. That old saying “the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree” means that if you have a child with ADHD more than likely one of his parents has undiagnosed ADHD or ADD (though they don’t refer to it that way anymore). It’s funny when you can start to see some of your child’s traits in yourself.

 The best piece of advice I can give you as a parent is to stick to your guns. You know your child best and if you see a difference in them from children their same age and between siblings, you know when something is not adding up. Read and learn all you can about ADHD and if you believe your child has it then get him or her diagnosed as soon as possible. You will need to become your child’s advocate with doctors and teachers who will not listen or want to brush it off as them “just being a kid”. Yes, there are normal kid behaviors like not paying attention, having too much energy, and being disorganized. But these things come and go, they don’t remain constant with kids who don’t have ADHD.

 Kids with ADHD share some of the same symptoms but each child is different so they do not all display the same symptoms. Some include an excessive amount of energy, has trouble settling down, difficulty falling and staying asleep, low frustration tolerance, temper tantrums past the age when they should stop, impulsive, distractable, trouble focusing on more than one task, difficulty regulating their emotions, difficulty organizing tasks and materials, lacking motivation for tasks that are boring (chores, homework, etc.) hyperfocus on video games, television, and other stimulating activities. This is only a small list there are many more.

 Between my 4 kids, the two oldest are most like each other. Both have non-stop energy and can’t stand to be bored. They are the best workers in their jobs because they are fast and always moving. My daughter is more like me, quiet and reserved and a little slow to be motivated. She does tend to be more organized and accomplishes things on her own timeline.

 My littlest one is the most like me and probably why we butt heads a lot. He’s a sweet boy when he wants to be but has his days when he just doesn’t want to cooperate at all to anything I ask him to do. I know I’m going to have to endure a half hour or more of whining and crying when I tell him he needs to pick up his toys or clean his room. Neither one of us is very organized (you should see my desk) it’s an effort to get him to clean. It just goes to show how kids with the same disorder can show different symptoms.