harrytwatter
just be nice ffs
- Joined
- Jan 13, 2017
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We've all seen syndicated content bring in traffic for multiple domains, but it is usually a small portion of said domains total published content. Those sites that get traffic for syndicating also usually have super high authority metrics and are often in Google news/syndicated themselves.
My question is: Let's say you have hyper industry relevant domain that's been aging since 2013. It has <10 articles that have just been sitting. Would this site potentially benefit from syndicating new industry news/content?
Naturally publishing 100% unique juicy long form "good stuff" would be optimal, but pretend for this scenario you are extremely budget restricted.
So, in quick summary, you have an industry relevant (partial match) domain, aged sitting with some (<10 pages) unique content and no budget. Do you:
A) do nothing, keep letting it sit until you can afford to build out unique researched content or
B) set up some RSS and re-publish industry news/updates (including original source citation/crediting)
My question is: Let's say you have hyper industry relevant domain that's been aging since 2013. It has <10 articles that have just been sitting. Would this site potentially benefit from syndicating new industry news/content?
Naturally publishing 100% unique juicy long form "good stuff" would be optimal, but pretend for this scenario you are extremely budget restricted.
So, in quick summary, you have an industry relevant (partial match) domain, aged sitting with some (<10 pages) unique content and no budget. Do you:
A) do nothing, keep letting it sit until you can afford to build out unique researched content or
B) set up some RSS and re-publish industry news/updates (including original source citation/crediting)