TopRehabs.com was created using our blog content generator. We created a design using basic HTML and CSS, wrote 15 paragraphs, added 100+ targeted keywords, checked off the states and cities options, and uploaded the script. Now you can see how it actually works. You can do a site search to see what pages have been indexed. We started this brand new site November 28th 2009. Take a look to see how many pages Google has indexed. SEE GOOGLE INDEXED RESULTS
AIMcontent blog content generator Allows You to Add State Names and City Names to Your Keywords and Create Pages.
This is one the greatest feature about AIMcontent Generator. This feature allows you to ad state names and there cities to your targeted keywords. It creates pages like, Michigan (your keyword), Detroit (your keyword) and all other states and cities. You can turn 10 keywords into hundreds of thousands of pages.
We Do Not Scrape Other Websites to Create Your Content. It Is Your Own Words That Generate Pages
If you search for blog content generator you will find that there are many content generators out there that find websites that are related to your targeted keyword then copy it and put into your web pages. WE DO NOT CREATE PAGES THIS WAY. These scraper generators violate copy write laws and produce content that is not relevant or readable to your visitors. They simply make content that might show up in the SERPS. This type of blog content generator violates webmaster guidelines for all the major search engines.
If You Are Worried About Duplicate Content Using blog content generator, Don't! Here Is Why:
The truth of the Google duplicate content penalty is quite simply that there is none! If that confuses you, then you have been reading too many misinformed forums or blogs where people get stuck on some popular term that they have no idea what it means, and then profess to be experts.The only experts on the Google duplicate content penalty, and the only people who are qualified to define it, are Google, and in Google's own words "There is no such thing as a duplicate content penalty". This comes directly from Google's Webmaster Central Blog.