For those who just happened to stumble onto this article and are beginning from the very beginning (a very good place to start), I’ll begin with a brief answer to the question: What is the point of article spinning?
We sometimes spin articles so that we can get added value from the effort that we put into producing an excellent example of Internet writing. We want avoid having the very same article appearing on a large number of websites, because content that is too similar won’t benefit anybody involved in the distribution and consumption chain. The prospective readers do not want to repeatedly find the very same article, the publishers risk getting no benefit at all from a duplicate article since the major search engines try not to list the same article multiple times in any set of results for a given search by a user and we Internet marketers, stand no chance of getting all of the traffic or the search engine optimization value through our links that we could have have received from entirely fresh articles.
Spinning is simply rewriting the article, one bit of content at a time, and then using software to randomly select from the alternatives that we have written for each section to construct a large number of unique articles from our original version combined with our alternatives. We might provide our software alternatives for complete paragraphs, for entire sentences, for phrases or for single words. We can even build our spinning in a way that will result in article with different numbers of paragraphs.
We can also place alternatives within other alternatives, using a process known as nested spinning. For example, let’s say that my original sentence is, “I love my new brown coat.” I may decide to write two alternatives for that sentence. One alternative might be, “I certainly enjoy the brown coat that I recently purchased.” Another option might be to break the original into a couple sentences in this fashion: “I have a new coat that I really enjoy. It’s a dusty brown.” So the computer will randomly choose one of those three alternatives for a given version of my article.
In order to use nested spinning, I give you an example using just the third alternative, although I could nest additional choices into any or all of the three options. Let’s say that I decide to let the computer select either “really enjoy” or “like immensely.” Furthermore, perhaps I can change “dusty brown” to “muted shade of brown” in some cases.
The more alternatives you provide for the computer software, the more versions you will have that are sufficiently different from each other. (A good target is to have each version that you submit to a website be a minimum of 25% different from every other version. I actually prefer to reach a higher standard of about 35% or more.)
Here are the two best ways to maximize your spinning efforts.
Method 1: Rewrite every paragraph one time (two would be even better). Use nested spinning by now rewriting each sentence in each alternative of each paragraph once. Finally, in the first two or three paragraphs and in the last paragraph, add another level of nesting so that you provide many of your words with alternative synonyms and/or rearrange the wording of a number of the phrases.
Method 2: Rewrite every sentence in the article at least one time. Add a third alternative sentence for each sentence in the first two or three paragraphs and the final paragraph. Apply the first level nesting to selected individual words and phrases in the first three and the final paragraph. Also provide some alternatives for selected words and phrases in those middle paragraphs.
The first approach is better, especially if you have a high standard of uniqueness that you want to achieve or if you want to generate a large number of unique articles. While not as thorough, the second method is faster to prepare.
If you choose to contract with a qualified article spinning company, you should make sure that the service will strictly adhere to these broad recommendations. Indeed, consider sending the spinning company a link to this article.