BruteForce SEO (preview)

Brute Force SEO: The name creates an image.
The name is suggestive of a product that might help with SEO but is for sure not refined or subtle.

Peter Drew is making some claims for BruteForce SEO that hardly subtle, but the imagary is pretty refined.

His website at bruteforceseo.com is, at the time of writing, pretty bare apart from an earlybird signup form ( I recommend signing up ) and a link to the feature set of the software.

As membership is limited to 500 people I suggest getting onto the launch notification list.

So, the software
What is the purpose of Brute Force SEO?

Well, it seems to me to be an amalgamation of his previous products that have for some months been on sale to thousands of willing buyers. I’ll provide more information later but in simple terms Brute Force SEO is designed to enable users to build simple sites on a number of Web 2.0 sites, a process called by some search engine marketers ‘parasite hosting’.

When the sites have been created a linking structure is set up so that each page can expect to rank well in its own right as well as linking, ultimately to the money pages.

Next the system submits all the rss feeds from the original site and the newly created ones to some 20 rss aggregators, this helps with getting spider activity to the new pages.
After this the articles added to the system are submitted to a network of article directories where they will be read and, hopefully, syndicated onward.
If any video has been added to the system then Brute Force SEO will forward it to 20 video directories.

Apart from adding content for the sites to Brute Force almost everything is hands-off. Of course where captchas are needed to show that a human is at work then we users need to do some work.

Pete reckons that setting up an entire network of sites using Brute Force SEO will take about 30 minutes, I have not yet had chance to test this claim.)

A point to note is that BruteForce SEO can handle several projects at once so one can spend a morning setting up several networks, interrupted only by the need to add captchas and review progress.

Domination of Google results with Pete’s software seems plausible. Using manual techniques I have gotten similar resutls to BruteForce SEO. A significant warning to potential users is this: I got to be among the top affiliates for some high profile launches without an email list by using some techniques similar to those used by Pete, however I was doing it without website competition from major marketers. I always thought this very lazy and have made very good bank from their short sightedness, but I can only imagine what would happen if a substantial portion of the users of Brute Force SEO all latched onto the same product or launch.
In my opinion users will need to work to find appropriate niches and make careful choices about which products to support, or to accept that in the final analysis, even a tool such as Brute Force SEO needs skill and care to get the best from it.

It is worth noting that some of Pete’s products have not worked as well as buyers hoped. I don’t expect this to be a problem because Brute Force SEO is written using elements from earlier BadAss components and, as a top-line system, Peter Drew’s good name is in the crosswires!

As soon as I learned about Brute Force SEO I signed up as I could see a lot of potential. As long as the software does its job and users apply the requisite care and skill then BruteForce SEO users will do well.

Please sign up and take a look whilst it is still possible!

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