Ugly Truth About Xposed Magazine News Blog

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Xposed magazine news blog are a dime a dozen, but they’re always trying to differentiate themselves.  This blog is a resource for news updates and interviews in the world of art and design. The blog covers subjects such as design, architecture, illustration, photography, animation, etc. This blog is also a great resource for interviews with prominent artists and designers from around the world. For example “Interview with David Maxwell” published on April 1st 2017: In this post he discusses his perspective on digital art and his career as an artist.

Ugly Truth About Xposed Magazine News Blog was first published on July 29th 2012 by Tim Boudreau Jr., the editor of the website xposemagazineonline.com. The styles and colors of the website are very pleasing to the eye, although at times it can be difficult to navigate due to the large amount of content that is posted on a daily basis. It’s great to see a new blog dedicated solely to news updates and interviews in the world of art and design, as we don’t get many resources like these. 

Ugly Truths About Xposed Magazine :

1. It’s a trap – 

It’s just a way to get you to click their link. It’s an old internet trick that isn’t really clever or useful. It’s like saying “read this diet,” then it links to a site that offers you a free diet plan and other dieting tips, when you click on the diet plan link it asks you to give them your credit card details and buy the package. It’s all just a trick to get you to pay for stuff that you don’t need. If they were really offering some kind of free guide or service, they would just say what it is right in their post, instead of linking to a totally unrelated affiliate website.

2. Only small content creators benefit – 

If someone posts a large amount of good content, then yes, having affiliate links posted on their blog would likely help sales. However, if someone is posting only one or two small posts a week and then they post affiliate links as their links to their products, it is unlikely they will get many sales or clicks. A lot of the time it’s not even relevant to the topic they are writing about.

3. It takes away from trust – 

This is kind of the same thing as above – readers don’t want to feel like they are being tricked into buying something on an unrelated site. They may build a little skepticism towards whatever content creator is posting up these links now. This will likely cause them to not click on affiliate marketing links in the future and instead search for something else that doesn’t have any affiliate links on it.

4. They’re hungry – 

There’s nothing wrong with being a bit hungry and trying to get some good content out there. However, they’re all affiliate links which means that they are in fact selling something, which isn’t really what their blog is about. They are literally trying to trick people into buying stuff that they don’t need by making up news stories and linking them to the affiliate websites where the products can be found.

5. This is a double edge sword – 

The only way to make money on these affiliate websites is to have a lot of traffic coming to your website. If you are posting affiliate links in your content and trying to sell products, then this is going to make you lose credibility with a lot of people.  This will cause them not to click on your content anymore and it might even get you banned from some social media sites. This coupled with the lack of actual news updates might get you blocked by search engines for having too much irrelevant and low quality content.

6. It’s like advertising –

If you notice a lot of the Xposed Magazine websites only have their affiliate links on them. They don’t have any article links or anything about their blog and what it’s about. The whole purpose for this is to make money. Some of these affiliate sites that pay out cash have really low quality content, so they need these clickbait titles with big images to get you to click on them so that they can make money off of you too.

7. It doesn’t spell trust – 

The other thing that this does is it makes your blog look like a website that is trying to scam people into buying stuff on an affiliate website. It’s not even relevant to what you are posting about. People will immediately be skeptical about the products that you are trying to sell and whatever else you might post in the future.

8. It diminishes credibility – 

If a person posts a large amount of good content and then posts only affiliate links in their new articles, it will cause them to lose credibility with a lot of people because they don’t want to feel like they are being tricked into buying something on an unrelated site. This might cause search engines to block your domain or it may get your blocked by certain social media sites.

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