Most people will have heard of Hubpages but what are they and how can they be used to promote your website. Hubpages are basically articles that people have written on just about anything and everything. They can be about anything you like including promoting an online business.
Your hubs as they are know are made up of capsules that can include many different things from images to RSS feeds and links to other websites.
The benefits to using Hubpages
- They allow you to link to your blog or other websites.
- They can improve the page rank of your website.
- They can be used to promote affiliate products.
- They can improve the search engine ranking of your website.
- They can be submitted to sites such as Digg and Blogatiser.
- They track your daily visitors and the source of traffic.
Starting a Hubpage is very easy and takes just 4 easy steps to complete.
- Start by signing up to Hubpages.
- Select a name for it and your main tags.
- Select the capsules you want and fill them with your content.
- Finally publish it.
Making money directly from your Hub.
You can earn money directly from your Hubpage by joining Google Adsense and Ebay and Amazons affiliate programs. Your hubs are designed to draw ads that are related to your content. You can even join the Hubpages affiliate program so you earn from your referrers ads as well.
Popularity: 1% [?]
Related posts:




#1 by lissie on May 14th, 2008
Quote
I have had some success at hubpages and find them excellent for backlinks and for quickly getting indexed in the Googe: my latest hub http://hubpages.com/hub/NIche-Store-Writer-EBay was in the index within a couple of hours – obviously it depends on the keyword but generally its fast and some of my hubs pull 50+ organic visitors today with no promiton efforts from me. IF you want to use HP for promiton though make sure you do it tastefully (see article in the link on my name) as the community is very anti spam – which is why I think google likes it so much!
#2 by Internet Marketing on May 17th, 2008
Quote
Hubpages are good… But they are also quite picky – I’ve found you have to be very careful with them. For example if you link to a blog you can’t also use an RSS feed for that same blog. Which makes the RSS feed quite hard to use unless you have two sites about the same thing – one you can link to in the article and another you link to in the RSS.