#so if you think stealing popular posts will make your newbie blog popular you are deadwrong
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buckevantommy · 11 months ago
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i don't understand why there's a sudden influx of so many stolen tumblr posts reposted on tumblr. this ain't twitter/x or insta stealing our posts - this thievery is coming from inside the house and i need someone to explain W H Y but i also need all you newbies to cut this shit right the fuck out right the fuck now
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eddtober · 6 years ago
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Eddtober Masterpost: About, Rules, Boundries and Prompt Lists.
I hadn’t done anything about it until now due to no response - however the wonderful @ldhenzel​ suggested that I do it this way for mobile users. 
About Eddtober
Eddtober is a list of prompts made in an effort to encourage the Eddsworld Fandom to spread their wings of creativity beyond the norms that they are used to, during the month of October.
It is all without harming others or causing drama, a neutral ground for all fans of Eddsworld to come and have fun, no matter what side of a discourse they’re in.
It hopes to promote inspiration beyond the usual angsty and over-dramatised content, to revive a spirit in Eddsworld that hasn’t been seen in many years, and to stretch the invitation to all who can create.
Eddtober calls not only the artists who have a talent for drawing, painting and so forth, but also: the authors (fanfics, journalists, essayists, diarists, poets, ramblers), the cosplayers, the video-makers (animators, video essays, memers, youtubers) and all those who want to be inspired with unconventional creativity.
Eddtober’s motto for the fandom it came from is this: To come forth, be inspired and break from the old and the mold!
With that out the way, buckle up. This post is gonna be a long one under the cut.
RULES 
Base Rules need to be set so everyone can participate in Eddtober safely and in a fun way. Please read them carefully!
Always tag it with #eddtober. Gore and related NSFW is allowed in the challenge, but please tag it as #Eddtober gore, etc. Also, no shortenings or reimaginings of those tags, so the minors on this site don’t find it on accident. Though many of us may be over 18, please keep these things in mind.  
Be Sensitive and Respectful to Others. I know many of us here in this fandom can take easy offence to certain types of art, so please consider and think on your creative piece before you post.
Credit Where Due. This should be blatantly obvious right now, but please, please don’t steal other’s creative fanwork or post it without credit. Always have permission from the creator to post something of their’s, and always have their username when you post it, not just ‘credit to the artist’. If you do not follow this, actions will be taken for your consequences.
Keep yourself chill. You can do one prompt for Eddtober, some of the prompts or all of them - up to you! It’s understandable if life gets in the way. The goal of Eddtober is not to do every prompt, but to be inspired to create fan-content in a way you usually wouldn’t have.
Spread the word. This is less of a rule and more of a personal request from Admin Panda, but since she doesn’t have many social media accounts you’d expect, spreading word of Eddtober would mean a LOT, so they can join in the fun too!
Sharing is caring. Reblogging and sharing from your fellow creators doing Eddtober would be great to give them a motivation and confidence boost!
Go Beyond the Boundries of Your Imagination. The whole purpose of Eddtober is to promote new, fresh things to come up in the Eddsworld fandom and break a cycle of the same old that’s been there for a while. Take a leap, spread your wings, do your best, and go have fun.
BOUNDRIES
Most of this list will be related to Rule Two of Eddtober:
Be Sensitive and Respectful to Others.
Quote:
‘I know many of us here in this fandom can take easy offence to certain types of art, so please consider and think on your creative piece before you post.‘
Whilst Eddtober is a fun, neutral place to spread our creative wings, there are boundries that need to be taken in order to keep everyone safe. Which means certain parts that are usually seen as ‘common’ within the Eddsworld Fandom will not be acceptable in the challenge.
Edd Gould’s death. Admin Panda wishes to make it clear that creative pieces that draws clear lines to Edd’s passing IS NOT okay. This includes Edd in hospital for cancer, Angel Edd or any AU that depicts him as a divine being of any sort (including Blessworld) unless Tom, Matt and/or Tord are also similar divine beings in the AU. Here at Eddtober, Edd's life is something to be celebrated, not his death. While Admin Panda isn’t 100% offended by this, many others are and it should be more recognised as such.
Sinsworld. Believe it or not, the sinsworld tag was specifically made back in the day to keep the porn out of the main. But due to a certain in-fandom event, this intended action has been long-lost. Because of all of these events, any sinsworld (porn, lewds and related NSFW) that’s Sinspired by the Eddtober prompts WILL NOT be accepted into the event by any means. This is because many in this fandom are minors/underage and more who are 18+ are repulsed to porn and such (Admin Panda is part of the latter group). So please, it is fine to be sexually inspired by the prompts, PLEASE keep your Sinsworld content away from the Eddtober tag - don’t put both tags into that post, essentially.
Abusive/Self-Harm Creative Content. No. Just. No. Death or pain like this isn’t allowed to be depicted in the challenge and should never be romanticised or supported. Eddtober aims to be a safe and uplifting space for all creative people, no matter what their space is at the moment.
More sensitivities and boundries will be added onto this list as Admin Panda recieves questions and requests for this area through the askbox here.
PROMPT LIST
Quick reminder: when this list says ‘create something for’, it’s not just referring to fanart - it refers to any medium, digital, traditional or unconventional, that can be used. The challenge here is to be creative as possible, not to stay conventional.
The List features Admin Panda’s Commentary. Some useless, some useful.
Create something for Edd. (Not his real-life counterpart, but the character. That needed some clearing up based on 2017’s results.)
Create something for Tom.
Create something for Matt
Create something for any pre-legacy season episode, except WTFuture. (You can do WTFuture if you want, but seeing that much of this fandom is currently made of people who came in after The End… It’d be worth having a crack at pre-legacy episodes.)
Create something for the crew’s symbols.
Create something for Superhero Alter Egos! (It doesn’t have to stop at PowerEdd’s canon either! Go nuts! Give Edd and his friends new superhero alibis and outfits!)
Create something for Supervillain Alter Egos! (Reminder that it doesn’t have to stop at the ‘Green/Blue/Purple/Red Leader scenario! Again, go nuts! Get wacky if you must!)
Create something for Minor characters of the show. (Except the Neighbours - they already have their own prompt.)
Create something for descendants of the main four guys. (Sure, you can make it about the love children of your favourite ships, but the point of this prompt specifically is to not be ship-related. See if you can come up with descendant characters from the bloodlines of the main four.)
Create something for Tord. (He’s late in this list for a reason. Trust me.)
Create something for the neighbours of 29 Dirdum Lane. Are Kim and Katya still there, or are there newbies in the street?
Create something for the neighbours of 25 Dirdum Lane.
Create something for unlucky things happening to the guys, or one of them. Feel free to go as dark or as humourous as you like!
Create something for genderbends of the guys, maybe as if the Ellsworld we know never existed. Or you can stick to canon, up to you.
This prompt is a wild card. Do with it as you wish. (In 2017 everyone was told to quote: ‘go whole hog on this’. The next thing we all knew, everybody literally drew pigs with the guys. That wasn’t supposed to be literally taken, but by god it was hilarious.)
Create something for your crew. Whether you’re the main character with your friends or have OCs taking that place or a mix of both is up to you.
Create something for an AU of Eddsworld. You can make one up on the spot, or even fan content for an AU that already exists is cool too. (As of rule number two of Eddtober, the Blessworld AU will not be accepted for this prompt. I know it is a popular AU, but if you have any issues with this, please contact me in the blog asks myself.)
Create something for Eddsworld as a video game. Whether it’s concepts and covers for your own ideas or fanart for games in the making such as Eddsworld Armageddon, up to you.
Create something for Todd, or whoever the ‘Tord’ figure is of 25 Dirdum Lane.
Create something for a Saloonatics-WTFuture Crossover. (What? Shenanigans could be made here, guys. Just take it!)
Create something for the future selves of the guys. Or if you want to take it up a notch, make your own versions of them! Have them all be hobos (#HoBrosforlife), or have cola not be banned in the future… up to you!
The End who? Create and elaborate on how you would finish off the Eddsworld Legacy season. (For the purposes of this prompt, I can accept an angsty end for this, but I personally do not recommend it. The Eddsworld fandom has had enough unnecessary angst already.)
Create something for Zanta. (I guess you could call him a Nightmare Before Christmas, then.)
Create something for an Eddsworld movie. Whether it’s stuff for the Eddsworld Fan Movie or your own ideas, up to you!
Create something for the deal with Tom’s eyes. If you want to call them that.
Pick a song, any song, and put that on repeat. Use it as inspiration to create something in relation to Eddsworld.
Create something for Edd Gould himself. Not his character in Eddsworld, the real-life person.
An obligatory prompt without Eddtober in the beginning: create something for Edd’s birthday. (This was made into a prompt and will permanently remain as one as Edd’s birthday shouldn’t be taken away from today.)
Create something for someone/multiple someones in the fandom who inspire you - even the small artists and writers and such who are just starting out!
Are you afraid of the dark? Are you getting goosebumps? Create scary/monstrous/terrifying things happening to the guys. Interpretation and how far you go with it is up to you.
Happy Halloween! Create something about the guys on this special spooky day. Interpretation is up to you.
If you have any questions, concerns or queries as to all of this, don’t be hesitant to come shoot an ask through this blog. Have fun and a safe Eddtober!
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mittensmorgul · 6 years ago
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Hey mittens! I have a new friend on tumblr who is struggling. She wants to be a writer but her fics aren't being seen. She's frustrated. She wants to give up. I've given her the best advice I can give. I'm a small blog but I keep writing all the time. Trying to give her advice, but not sure what else I can do. She's in her mid twenties, lives at home, doesn't have a job or a car but desperately wants to. She's stuck and needs help. What else can I do and what advice would you give? Thank you!
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Heck, I have no idea. D:
Write good? >.>
(haaaaa three hours after I started typing this, with the intent of replying privately, I’ve officially invested too much time in it not to post it… under a cut for length, and because I have officially run out of mental energy and real-world time for dealing with it for today…)
I mean, I see advice all the time on how to get seen/noticed around here, and half the advice conflicts with the other half. It’s hard to even guess what worked for anyone sometimes.
There’s networks she could join (I have no idea how networks work, and I’ve been here nine years, so someone who actually uses networks would probably be better to ask about how to do that, but I do know that the point of them is for a group of people to see/reblog member works, so that might help her get noticed).
There’s also things like Profound Bond and Writers of Destiel. These are discord groups, but they both have a tumblr presence (especially @profoundnet which she could look into.) They run challenges, have a really vibrant community over on discord with hundreds of members, and regularly reblog member works on tumblr.
Plus, making friends, working with beta readers or other writing partners will help find new friends and followers who will help spread her works, too. Volunteering to beta read when a “bigger” writer puts out a call can also help– not only in building friendships with other authors but also gaining experience with writing as well as editing.
Interacting with other authors on tumblr, reblogging their work and commenting– even if it’s just “OH GOSH I LOVE THIS” kind of stuff– ESPECIALLY with other “smaller writers” and thereby spreading the word around about each other’s writing will help grow up a community around all of you.
None of us started out popular, you know? And “popularity” is definitely a relevant term. When I started writing fic, I lucked into a situation that I attempted to recreate with the Christmas collaboration thingy I ran, but ouch that proved to be way more work than I really had the time or energy for. I’d be happy to help others run that type of collab and offer advice, but heck if I’ll ever do one myself again. :P
A lot of fic challenges are a good way for new writers to get noticed, too. There’s a TON of challenges out there. Now, something like the DCBB or one of the other larger and more established challenges might not be the easiest place for a newbie writer to cut their teeth. There is A LOT that goes into challenges that newbies are just not prepared for (rules, deadlines, etc., because knowing how to write, edit, and post on a concrete deadline where others are relying on you to know what you’re doing without needing an undue amount of help from the mods isn’t something you want to learn on the fly in a high-pressure situation like that… there’s an assumption when signing up for something like the DCBB or the Pinefest that in doing so, a writer is CERTAIN that their skills– including TIME MANAGEMENT and the ability to collaborate with an artist and follow all the rules (YES, ALL OF THE RULES) and meet every deadline– are up to the task.
So, that said, I’d highly recommend some of the other smaller, more laid-back fandom challenges. There’s new ones popping up all the time, and a lot of them are geared toward specific types of fic (canon fic, certain tropes, etc.), so there’s a built-in audience for their work. Not to mention that in smaller challenges there’s actually more room for exposure, and not having your work drowned in a flood of hundreds of other long works, potentially many of them by already established authors, coming out in the same time period. Readers are literally spoiled for choice in those situations, and an “untested” author posting a 20k+ fic might fall by the wayside while “guaranteed thing” authors works get more attention, you know? Readers have a limited amount of time they can commit to reading, and with SO many choices available, are actually more likely go for the “tried and true” author they’re already familiar with before investing in an unknown author. Profound Bond is just starting the @casdeanflipfest, for example, with a smaller wordcount minimum, and therefore a more reasonable length work for readers to take a risk on an author they’re not familiar with. I might not have time, as a reader, to invest in every 60k fic that crosses my dash, but I will drop everything to read a 5k fic for half an hour, you know?
There’s also event-specific tags that offer opportunities to be seen by a wider audience. For example, for the last few days, the DCBB folks have been encouraging folks to tag Valentine’s Day themed works #dcvday. This is a very laid-back and casual way to put your works out to an audience who’s looking for exactly that type of thing, you know? Other situation-specific tags like this happen frequently (like Dean’s birthday fic, or the Destiel Anniversary fic, or holiday fic, for example).
There’s also fic collections. For example, right now the @destieltropecollection is collecting fics for this year’s lists: http://destieltropecollection.tumblr.com/post/182800717844/destieltropecollection-destiel-trope-collection. If you have fic that fits into any of these tropes, fill out the form and submit them to be added to the masterpost. They’ll be posted in May, a different trope’s list each day. People looking for that specific trope will have a handy list, and you can reach a whole new audience that way. :)
Take writing prompts, if that’s something you’re comfortable doing. People with cute lil fic ideas will LOVE you for fleshing out their ideas and turning them into something beautiful. Or GIVE writing prompts to other authors who accept them. You never know what sort of creative collaboration that might spark. If you have a fic idea based on someone’s post, by all means TALK TO THAT PERSON! Express your excitement about their idea, ask if it’s okay to turn their little headcanon or writing prompt into a longer fic, and I can almost guarantee that the original poster will be THRILLED.
Take fan art as writing prompts, as well! As much as authors Die Of Squee if an artist is inspired to draw something from one of our fics, ARTISTS ARE EQUALLY FILLED WITH SQUEE if you’re inspired to write fic based on their art. Just, if you do this, please please PLEASE actually communicate privately with the author or artist in question before you do anything with it. Make it clear you’re writing out of love for their thing, and not in a selfish grab for attention, you know? Otherwise it feels a little too much like stealing. It’s a fine line, but it’s all a matter of perception to everyone involved. That communication and collaboration is key.
That said, I think 99% of it all is pure luck. But because of that first challenge I did, the next fic I posted was (miraculously!) reviewed by destielfanfic, which I don’t think is the sort of exposure most authors get on their first long fic… This was also early 2015, when there was a sort of Boom Market for fic, and I don’t even think the atmosphere for fandom is still exactly the same, you know? It feels a lot more decentralized, and a lot of the “big writers” from back then have left the fandom entirely, or else don’t write much at all anymore.
But fandom is a cyclical thing like that. People come and go, popularity rises and falls. I think my best advice is to develop friendships with people who are in that same general region of that arc as you are, you know? Build a community, support each other.
I see bitter posts all the time about how “popular” people don’t want to support newcomers, and “elite cliques” of folks are conspiring to hold on to their popularity by keeping others down, and that’s just bullshit. The little group of people I generally hang in tumblr circles with have been my friends for years, at this point. Most of us are kinda stunned that we’re all still around, you know? We all showed up around the same time, and went through these sorts of struggles together. We’re still here, and most of us recognize that we’re only considered “popular” at all by attrition. We survived while other folks rage-quit the show or the fandom. I know that’s not a particularly encouraging-sounding bit of advice, but that’s literally how the vast majority of us got recognized. We just… didn’t quit.
I was blogging on this dumb site for four years before anyone really started to notice me. (and I still know that the perception of my personal popularity FAR outweighs my actual popularity, you know? I’m not one of the elite 1% of writers around here, and I know it, and I’m perfectly fine with that. I don’t post long fic serially, and that shows in my total hit counts on AO3. Serial posting artificially inflates hit counts, and keeps works at the top of the results page week after week, and I’d personally just rather post a complete fic to stand on its own. But that’s a dilemma for another post.) Then again, I started out mostly reading meta and squealing about the show, occasionally commenting, asking questions, or adding my thoughts to posts. I learned the lay of the land, so to speak (who was receptive to these sorts of additions and conversations starting on their posts and who wasn’t, and the social conventions surrounding it all), while lurking and not even really trying to get noticed. I made friends with people before I ever started writing fic.
(but I also have a background in original fiction writing, so I already knew quite a lot about author culture in general, and had a lot of experience writing myself before I started to write fic, which likely helped me personally quite a bit. I was able to jump into writing chat groups and had a bit of writing cred even before I published a single fic, because I’d been writing original novels and had already cultivated a group of “Professional Author Friends,” participated in writing critique groups (which comprise Alpha and Beta Reading in fanfic writing circles), and therefore knew how those social circles functioned, you know? I mean, some of the authors from my “Professional Author Friends” circle, who I’ve been friendly with for more than a decade now, have gone on to Big Things in Publishing. And clearly I never did… aah health crises that knocked me off that train. But I realized I’m happier writing fic, without all the pressures that come from professional publishing, so I still consider it a personal win. But I was able to take a lot of that knowledge and experience with networking and building communities with me and transfer it to fandom, so I know my experience is not everyone’s experience.)
I think the main key thing is to create that sort of community. A lot of new writers go directly to the perceived “most popular” authors in fandom, as if they somehow held the key to understanding how to become more popular, or expecting the “popular” bloggers to “pay it forward” and give them a hand up (whether it be through asking questions or reblogging their fic posts, beta reading for them or whatever it may be). But even there, there’s a limit to pretty much everyone’s time, in a real-life sort of fashion. The more popular or widespread an author’s works become, the more up and coming writers will also see their work, and I get how people want to hitch themselves to that, you know?
Not to mention, most of us are entirely baffled by being thought of as popular writers. And again, I’m still sort of on the fringe of that kind of Big Fandom Popularity myself, and still kinda baffled as to how I got here.
But we’re all just people, with limited amounts of time to engage with other people, and a limited number of spoons in our respective drawers for social engagement. I do TRY to do what I can, but between beta reading for my already-established writing buddies (which I still only have limited time for, I AM SO SORRY ELMIE I SEE THE THINGS AND WANT TO READ THE THINGS BUT I CAAAAAAAN’T AND I’M MAD ABOUT IT OKAY?!), and still want to engage with current canon and write and read meta about it, and still want to actually write my own fic, not to mention helping to run the Pinefest (even though Cass does the bulk of the behind the scenes work, I take on a lot of the day to day general upkeep of it all) and still have to engage with reality and my human family that I live with and like… pay my bills and cook dinner and all that boring shit, not to mention coping with those chronic illnesses that knocked me off the Professional Paid Writer train in the first place… it’s not easy to balance out, you know?
It’s not so much a function of “I got mine, so screw you.” I just needed to make that clear, since I’ve seen that sentiment bandied about recently (again), and it’s just insulting. I think the main takeaway here is that Fandom is a Baffling Ordeal, and the key to winning in any way is to build up a community around yourself. If you want to achieve success as a writer, push yourself to write better. Find people you trust to beta read for you. And maybe most importantly, never “promote” your own work with negativity.
I see way too many writers who add notes to their work like, “ugh this is probably terrible.” Just… never do that. Have confidence in yourself, love your own writing, or at least present it with enthusiasm, if you ever expect anyone else to take that risk and read your words, you know?
So really? It boils down to perseverance, networking, and putting in the work to become the best writer you can, with no small portion of sheer luck. There’s no secret magical formula to success, aside from building a community that makes you happy. I’ve discovered that people are really attracted to happiness and positive energy, you know?
Heck I’m worn out just from spending five hours on this post now, in between Real Life Adulting I needed to take care of for an hour. I hope it all makes sense, but I’m gonna go surf my dash for a while and hopefully recover enough brain power to do the rest of the stuff I need to today D:
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thank-your-lucky-stars · 7 years ago
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The Roles of Fandom
Here is a little large guide to some of the roles people play within fandom.
[Note: I actually had the outline of this essay written for about a year, including most of the ‘roles’ listed in this post, but I have only now gotten around to writing this properly!]
I’ve been involved in several different fandoms since I first joined the World Wide Web back in 2002, with my first major fandom coming a few years later. As a result, this post is mainly based on my own experiences within fandom, although over the years I have had numerous conversations with numerous people who share my views about the mentality of fandom and the clear hierarchies, cliques and statuses, which have helped me broaden my mind and open my eyes to the reality of it all. It’s something I have always found fascinating, which is why I often analyse the goings on within fandoms to assess the clear roles most people often fall into.
I also feel I have the ability to see things from many different points of view, as I myself have been in several different roles in different fandoms over the years; I have been the new girl, I have been a popular blog with praise heaped upon me, I have been sucked into an unhealthy group (the Mean Girls - more later), I have entered an already established fandom and managed to climb up the ladder, I have watched a fandom fall apart due to trolls and bullies (which I also happened to be a victim of), and I have also been the lurker - the outsider looking in.  
As a result of this, I came to the conclusion a long time ago that the whole concept of fandom - any fandom - is a game. Everyone is playing, it’s just they may not realise it until they....stop playing. Hindsight can really open your eyes to your own behaviour - good or bad - and others’ behaviour too, and it can also teach you a lot about yourself. It has definitely taught me a lot about myself, and in order to write this post, I have had to look back at the certain roles that I myself have played since my first key fandom back in 2006. I have absolutely made mistakes and interacted with the wrong crowds, and there is a lot of stuff in my fandom history that makes me cringe on recollection, but it’s these experiences that have taught me what I know and are part of the reason why I find it all so fascinating; the mentality of it all, and what it can say about you and all of your peers who are generally just trying to bond over this thing you all love.
This post is looking at the specific roles you will find being played in each and every single fandom. It doesn’t matter if it’s a band’s fandom, a TV show, a film, a book - whatever it is, it is my belief that you will find these people (to varying degrees) in every single fandom.
Before I start, I want to clarify a few of things. First, (and I delve into this deeper at the end of the post), I know things aren’t always as black and white or as clear cut as they may appear when I’m talking about certain roles. For the purpose of this post, I’m not really discussing the grey-areas, as that would make this post about a million words longer and it’s long enough already!!
Secondly, there are absolutely “ranks” within each role I mention. There is definitely a scale from about 1-5 in each role, although I generally talk about the most “extreme” cases. 
Finally, I want to clarify what I mean when I talk about “damaging behaviour”, as this will come up several times in this post and I want it to be clear exactly what I’m talking about.
Disrespectful/Inappropriate fandom behaviour:
Stealing content - I have seen this in every fandom, where people will save/repost someone else’s work (gifs mainly, but also scans, edits, art or sometimes even text) without crediting the creator. Usually this can be resolved; newer fandom members might not understand general fandom etiquette and I have personally spoken to people who’ve done this who have been horrified to realise what they have done. Other’s, meanwhile, do not care, and will continue to steal and take credit for other people’s work. This is something that is definitely unacceptable (I have experienced this also!!).
Disrespecting other fandom members - this can come in many different forms.
Debate and having a difference of opinion is fine until Person A runs off and starts writing indirect, catty little posts about everyone who doesn’t share the same views as them, often without having an adult discussion/debate with these people first.
These posts generally only serve to make certain corners of the fandom feel bad or even shamed about feeling how they feel or thinking what they think and it is a form of disrespect that can often get overlooked by a lot of fandom members as the content is not always explicit (ie. they’re not always calling people names, and it’s generally about groups of people instead of just one person, so it doesn’t feel as “personal”). As is often the case with posts like those, it’s not what is actually said but it’s how it is said that can be damaging to fandom morale, and while everyone can snap and write something catty now and then, when it becomes a consistent thing that certain blogs keep doing, regardless of how people react, I know for a fact that this sort of behaviour has made people scared to speak their minds and has even made people leave fandoms all together. Whether the author of these catty indirect posts means to be as damaging as they often are is usually a mystery, depending on what “role” this blog fits into (more later). 
However, this can often escalate into more direct, personal and explicit disrespect which can later evolve into full-on trolling/bullying. For example, in a previous fandom I was involved in, Person A and Person B were having a discussion about a band member’s solo work. When Person B compared this band member’s solo work with some later tunes by the band he was once in, Person A called Person B a “dickhead” and blocked them before proceeding to write nasty bitch posts about how Person B was “fucking stupid” and “dumb” for comparing one piece of music to another.
These are just a few examples, so please bare that in mind or refer back to that when I mention “damaging behaviour*” during this post. 
Now that’s out of the way, let’s start!
The Popular Blogs
This is a pretty clear one, although there are several different kinds of popular blog. Generally, to be popular, these blogs tend to have at least a couple of the following;
They have been around a long time - often longer than most. 
They create a lot of quality content (art, fic, meta, in-depth text posts/analysis about the music/show/characters etc., memes, funny little text posts - you know the drill)
They have “connections” with the thing you love (ie. have met the band members/actors several times, have friends who work for or have connections to the people involved with the thing you love, etc etc.)
They use their voice and aren’t afraid to speak their mind.
The popular blogs tend to have quite big personalities, create content that gets widely spread, and are outspoken about anything and everything related to the thing you all love.
Climbing to the top of the fandom ladder isn’t always easy and can sometimes take a very long time to achieve depending on the size of the fandom. There are several different kinds of popular blogs, although the two most dominant seem to be those that are very approachable and express their views in a reasonable/respectful way, and those that don’t.
Certain blogs who rise through the fandom ranks quite quickly will get carried away with their new-found popularity. With the confidence their status gives them, they can often become a little careless with the way they put themselves across while their ego takes hold of them; confidence can swiftly turn into arrogance and this can sometimes make them an intimidating presence within the fandom and even a little unapproachable, although some fandom members will find this interesting or edgy - it becomes their USP (Unique Selling Point) that can differentiate them from other more down-to-earth popular blogs. You can generally spot these blogs by the way they engage and respond to people, and they often don’t bat an eyelid to praise or compliments. A lot of these people can slip into the “I am Better Than You” category.
For the most part though, popular blogs are generally pretty nice. As well as creating quality content or ticking any of the other boxes in the list above, a lot of popular blogs will be friendly and likeable. People may get intimidated by their status, which can be awkward for a friendly Popular Blog, as more often than not it’s other people that put them on such a high pedestal - even if they’re aware of their rank/popularity themselves.
This moves us onto the next category...
The “I Am Better Than You” Blogs
You know who they are. You may not know you know, but deep down....you know. The reasons people may think they are above you;
They have liked the thing longer than you
They’re already a well established/popular blog, and you may be a newbie
They have seen/met the band loads of times/have more merch than you
They have stalked met the actors/people connected with the show/movie
They create a lot of content which maybe you don’t. Or they believe their content is superior to yours/others.
There are also sub-categories within this as well;
“I am better than you because I have [insert one or more of the reasons above] and I won’t really associate with you because you’re not cool enough.”
“I am better than you because [insert reason] but I’m still a friendly person and I won’t talk down to you even though I am above you in the Fandom Ranks.”
Basically, there are people who sort of put themselves on a pedestal, or are indeed put on a pedestal by other people, but they can still be nice with it. I have personally encountered this many times. There are also those that are sort of unabashed with their “status”, and won’t really hide the fact that they think they’re above you. You can usually tell by seeing who else they interact with (people with equal or higher ranks), or by the way they respond to asks.
A lot of younger or maybe newer people in the fandom can often lavish praise onto these people. And note, not all of these people who feel this way also slip into the Popular Blog category (although a lot of them do) - some of these “I am Better Than You” blogs will actually isolate themselves to a small corner of the fandom in a way that makes them appear untouchable - people will come to them, but they will not go to anyone else. Because, you know, they’re too good for that.
I have also found that with a lot of these people, they will mainly receive anon’s instead of actually having people reveal themselves to them. I have strong reason to believe that many of the “anon” messages these people receive is actually them sending messages to themselves in order to boast about their most recent meeting with band member/actor/whoever, or their most recent purchase of expensive, hard-to-find merch. In one particular case in one fandom, there was a man who created multiple social media accounts to boost his own status/fan-page (which was a page mainly to show off his collection of [insert old 60s band] memorabilia), and I believe that this sort of thing happens to varying degrees across all social media. As this post is mainly focusing on fandom on tumblr, the anon option is definitely a tool a lot of these blogs use to help boost their status, by asking certain questions or heaping praise (or indeed hate, for attention) onto themselves to make them appear more popular than they actually are (if someone is constantly receiving hate and yet refuses to block/turn off anon, that is often a big red light).
Ultimately, there are the people that will never give much back to you even if you try really, really hard and praise them left right and centre, and there are those who will actually engage with you, be perfectly nice to you, and may even be friends with you - even though, ultimately, you know they do rank above you in the Fandom Hierarchy. Depending on how you view things, this can be totally fine. It’s just up the individual if they’re okay and comfortable with this. As I said at the start, Fandom is a game. If you can view it as such, then it can be easier to accept your lower “rank”. You’ve all seen the “I can’t believe [insert blog] follows me!” / “I still can’t believe [insert blog] knows who I am/talks to me!” posts. This speaks volumes and proves that it’s two-way street, and these posts help reinforce the Rank/Status mentality amongst fandom members - even if they don’t realise it. 
The “I’m just here to have a good time” Blogs
These people can often be a blessing. They can even be pretty damn popular, if not the most popular blog in fandom, because they just go about their business, being funny or charming, posting memes, making people smile, regardless of whatever drama or intense discussion is happening within fandom at the time. They’re not as clueless as they may appear; they know what’s what and who’s who, they know who’s trouble and will probably avoid the Mean Girls, but they also Don’t Get Involved™ in any major discussion/debate that is happening. (at least not publicly!)
Then there are those who maybe aren’t aware of the current drama; they’re in their own little bubble just doing their thing, living in ignorant bliss. They can often be the light within the darkness, the sun peaking through the clouds. A blessing!!!
The Fence Sitters
There are several different degrees of Fence Sitter. For the most part, the Fence Sitter is against drama and will not engage in any major debate, even if they have strong opinions on the subject. Some more confident Fence Sitters will sometimes add their two-pennies worth as long as there isn’t a major divide between views, but they generally keep quiet if things get particularly heated.
Many Fence Sitters will also turn a blind eye to damaging behaviour* within fandom and continue to support these blogs - mainly because they have a need to be friends with everyone. Some Fence Sitters might be fully aware that someone is trouble; a Mean Girl, for example, and may even tell people privately they think such-and-such is horrible, but will still heap praise onto them publicly - even if this person has been unpleasant to the Fence Sitter too!
This is a prime example of the game playing that can go on within fandom, and shows just how fake a lot of it can be. For the most part, the Fence Sitters are generally middle-of-the-road blogs who don’t say anything too outrageous themselves, appear to be sweeter-than-sweet and create decent to really good content. They want to rank higher, they’re insecure, they want that praise and validation; not just from the more likeable people within fandom, but from everyone. But being friends with everyone isn’t always possible, and as a result they can often end up finding themselves alienated from both “sides” of the fandom.
A lot of the time though, many of the Fence Sitters are just too nice for their own good - whether calculated or not - and generally have good intentions. Even if they could do with toughening up a little.
This brings me on to the next category:
The “I don’t think this is that deep” Blogs
These are probably in the best position. They don’t read into fandom politics, they ignore the hierarchy, they don’t care about status or who’s right or wrong. They don’t pay attention, because they don’t give a fuck, and god-damn I envy them. They just go about their business, not really interacting with many people, staying in their lane....they just take everything for what it is on the surface and each post as it comes. They don’t keep mental notes of who has said what or who is cool and who isn’t. They just....don’t give a shit. It’s shallow and it’s awesome. They don’t care if Person A has been a bitch (as long as it’s not like....mega bitch...for the most part anyway....) - if this person creates decent content, the “I don’t think this is that deep” blog will reblog it. They probably haven’t even realised Person A was nasty one time, because they Don’t Give a Fuck. It’s all about the content, not the people behind it, and to be fair that can be a pretty good mentality to have as long as you’re not getting in too deep with anyone in the fandom - which these people generally don’t. These people don’t tend to rank very high, but they don’t even know that because, as their title suggests, they really don’t think things are this deep. The don’t see fandom as a game. Or, if they do, it’s just a fun game with no rules and no positions. It’s just all about reblogging groovy gifs or cute pictures. Nothing else matters beneath that, because, well, it’s really not that deep. These people can be annoying but they’re also so, so enviable.
The Reasonable Blogs
These people can be wordy, they like a good discussion/debate, but whatever their view, they are absolutely always reasonable, mature and polite with the way they express themselves. Even when dealing with more difficult fandom members who maybe aren’t being as friendly during the discussion as the Reasonable Blog, Reasonable Blog will still keep a level head, they won’t stoop down to the Troublemaker’s level, and they won’t resort to name calling or cheap tactics in order to get their point across - even if they’re being antagonised/provoked, the Reasonable Blog will rarely snap. They’re not afraid to speak their mind, and they’re generally not afraid to defend their friends, but they always do it with their head held high. They can be a rare breed, but they’re a blessing.
The Troublemakers
You know who they are. The shit stirrers. The ones who say things with a teeny tiny sting to it, voicing their opinion in a way that is provocative and will get people a little fired up. At the end of the day, it’s all about the wording; it’s not what you say, it’s how you say it that’s important. 
The Troublemakers can also be split into two categories; generally, a lot of them just like firey debate about the thing you all love, and sometimes their honesty/brutality can be funny or admirable as it’s not usually about attacking or having a pop at anyone in the actual fandom. But there are also those that do want to antagonise people on a personal level, to varying degrees, and the more extreme of these Troublemakers fit into the next category...
The “Mean Girls”
There are mean guys too obviously, but generally they don’t seem to be as smart, or as bitchy, and they tend to roam alone. The Mean Girls on the other hand are all about their little clique. That’s not to say some of them don’t ride solo, but generally you’ll find a little group with the same kind of vibe, just spewing shit, causing trouble, and generally not being too pleasant.
Of course there are various levels of “bitchery”. Sometimes it can be quite subtle, just the odd catty post now and then that is obviously created to make certain corners of the fandom feel insecure. Sometimes it’s a case of once you see it, it becomes obvious. In other cases, it is extreme, it is blatant, and it is gross. That’s when it develops into something far, far worse....which I will get onto in just a sec.
The Mean Girls, in the more obvious cases, know what they are, and they strive to be it. They don’t give a fuck, and they love it. They know people don’t like them, but they also know a lot of people sort of envy them; being in a clique can be fun, at the end of the day, and usually when people act like they’re super cool, some people will be fooled into thinking that’s what they actually are. 
This leads me onto the...
Queen Bitch™ Role.
In every single fandom I have ever been a part of, going right back to my forum days on the Newsround website from 2002(!!)-2004, there has always, always been a Queen Bitch. I even remember the screen name of the first Queen Bitch I encountered - it was DetroitDiva on the Newsround forums. It’s literally been about 14 years and I still remember her name. 
These people strive to be a bitch. They wear their hideousness like a badge of honour. It becomes their brand. They will mix it up by being nice now and then to certain people, generally people who have bowed down to them first, just to make them seem more human. But by god....they love it. They love being disliked. And they will have their followers who love it too. It can almost be funny, unless you’re one of their victims. DetroitDiva used to attack people for liking the band Busted. I was a massive Busted fan (still am tbh lmao) and it used to hurt me to my very core when she’d go on and on and on about them, talking directly to their fans and mocking us for liking this band. And you know, she was smart with it - this was a kids forum after all, we were all in our early teens, and it was a moderated forum so no offensive language could be used. But it just made her smarter with her dialogue, and that way it hurt more. And god, she fucking loved it.
I still see people like this today. Actual adults. I have seen people like this, to various degrees, in every fandom since. They may not directly come at people (although they’re not afraid to), but they will still make damn sure they’re making someone somewhere feel crap about something or someone they like, or a certain opinion they have.
The Trolls
Ugh. There will always be one or two. On tumblr, people will always get anon hate from time to time. But sometimes, and this doesn’t necessarily happen in every fandom, but it can happen....you get full on, unabashed trolls who don’t hide behind anon, who use their main blogs to terrorise and bully the fandom.
I have only experienced this on an extreme level once, in a previous fandom. I watched a small group of girls who started off as the Mean Girls, led by the Queen Bitch™, escalate into full on trolls. I’m talking about writing call-out posts, calling people really gross names, telling people to block/unfollow certain blogs in the fandom (I was one of the targets) and telling people to steal our work - all because we were a little popular, and all because when they first started showing their damaging behaviour*, we tried to (politely) talk them out of it. 
They used people’s real names, they stalked our blogs for months and months on end, they continuously wrote nasty posts about us for months after we blocked them and stopped interacting with them. 
This is probably kinda rare, but it’s something that can escalate if people don’t react a certain way to certain behaviour. More often than not, trying to reason with these people by politely telling them the way they word things isn’t cool or whatever, isn’t going to help. They don’t care, and they don’t want to listen. Of course, not everyone who puts themselves across in a bad way is a bad person; some people can change, can check themselves, can stop and think “oh shit, I should probably be more careful how I say things”. But unfortunately, in most cases, reasoning doesn’t work.
In that particular case, we tried calling them out. A couple of people tried writing reasonable, rational posts warning others in the fandom about certain blogs and how they had started bullying people. This only spurred the Trolls on even more, they lapped up the attention, and that’s when their behaviour got even more extreme.
If you see a troll in your fandom, or you see negative behaviour which you realise is inappropriate, you are not obliged to confront these people or call them out. More often than not, the very best thing you can do is unfollow and/or block them, and don’t interact with their posts. Maybe warn your mates about them privately, but don’t make a song and dance about it. Let these people become invisible to you. Stop and look at who else might be associating themselves with these people. Protect yourself and other’s as much as you can by not giving these Trolls the validation they crave.
‘The Trolls’ is a rank. It goes Troublemakers > Mean Girls > Queen Bitch > Troll. I have literally watched people climb this ladder (or....slip down it, depending on which way you look at it). It is the perfect example of the negative ranking system within fandom. 
The Peacekeepers
These are the ones that avoid drama, but at the same time they’re not afraid to acknowledge drama without getting directly involved. They will write a separate post telling people to cool it, to love and respect each other, when they see things may be getting a little heated. They just want an easy life and they want everyone to be friends. They generally turn away from the Mean Girls, or the Troublemakers, but at the same time they try to keep an open mind and will interact with those people if the Troublemaker/Mean Girl happens to reach out to them first (the less extreme levels of Mean Girl/Troublemaker, that is). These people tend to be relatively popular as they’re generally pretty nice people, even if they can maybe be a little too sensitive now and then.
The Others
There are more, of course. Not everyone can be fit into a box, or a role, or a rank - although generally most people will have traits from certain categories. This post isn’t about defining every single person that enters fandom, it’s just looking at some of the more prolific and dominating groups you tend to see.
----
After thoughts and some clarification;
A lot of people can fall into multiple categories, or switch from role to role as they establish themselves in the fandom, gain confidence and find their footing. Gaining confidence can be both a good and a bad thing, depending on how you use it. 
I’m generally talking about the most extreme or at least the most common cases in each of these Roles. As I said at the start of this post, there are definitely ranks within each category. 
For example, not everyone in the Mean Girls category is a total bitch. I should know; I was one (a Mean Girl, not a total bitch!). I was in that group once, in a small clique of girls who weren’t overly pleasant. They weren’t technically mean (at least....not to too many people), they just weren’t overly nice. 
As I said at the start of this post, in order to write this in the first place I’ve had to look back and reflect on my own fandom behaviour/experiences, and to prove that I’m not a hypocrite I have written a separate post talking about the roles I myself have played within various fandoms in the past. You can read it here.
So I’m fully aware that things aren’t always as black and white as they may appear on the surface, and they’re not as black and white as I may have made them appear in this post when describing the roles of fandom. I know good people do bad things, say bad things, and get mixed up with bad people. This isn’t actually about shaming anyone or making anyone feel bad.
Ultimately, this post is just an assessment. There are grey areas of absolutely everything. I personally find this stuff fascinating, to take a step back and look at yourself, at your peers, and see if you can figure things out. You’ll be surprised by what you see when you look hard enough.
At the end of the day, you can learn a lot from fandom. It’s actually a fascinating social experiment, putting a bunch of people together from different walks of life, different ages, with one common interest. As I said, it has taught me so much about myself - and trust me, not all of it is good (which again, you can read in my separate post about my own personal experiences).
I have 100% made mistakes in every fandom I have been in, pretty much. I have been too harsh and I have been too nice but ultimately I will always give people three bits of advice when entering a fandom:
Be nice and respectful to others
Trust your instincts
Be honest
I’d also say “look out for your friends”, but I actually think you should look out for yourself first. Fandom can mess with your brain. It can give you a massive sense of validation one minute and make you feel like crap the next. Fandom is a revolving door, and most people are ultimately disposable. This stuff can be easy to forget if you’re having a good time, but when you’ve been around a while and have experienced some of the more unpleasant aspects, those things become frightfully clear. It’s the nature of fandom and it’s important to not take that stuff too personally, even if it can be really hard not to.
This post is actually just a bit of fun, it’s something I have discussed with many long-running members of various fandoms, and I’m certainly not alone in my assessment of fandom politics and hierarchies. At the same time though, people can take this as seriously as they want, and if it can open anyone’s eyes to the fascinating goings on of fandom politics then I hope you find it as interesting as I do!
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evilveined · 7 years ago
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all you did was acknowledge the blogs that have been around since descendants came out. it's not rubbing it in at all, and anon must be salty they joined the fandom when it was getting popular maybe? and the last thing they need to whine about. especially with the community blowing up so fast, i'm glad you made the promo. i'm not one of the originals, but i support all of you. as many promo cliques and name calling and accusing of stealing ocs as there are from the newbies, im glad you made it.
Honestly I love this fandom so much??? And I just want to love everyone in it? I don’t think I have ever expressed anything other than that? I try to welcome as many new people as I can in general? I literally follow every single blog back. I purposely made my blogs non-selective, so people wouldn’t be afraid to approach me or talk to me ( I understand why people make their blogs selective ofc ).  I don’t believe in cliques in general because growing up I was excluded from basically everything. I was the pariah of my hometown. If I could literally make a promo of every single descendants rp blog I would?  I never want to make other people feel excluded? If I did make anyone feel excluded I do apologize. as that wasn’t my intention, and I’m not that kind of person.  The funniest part is, some of the new blogs in the fandom? ARE MINE??? I literally just created a character this morning. I have a Harry Hook blog ffs. If I was hating on new blogs, I’d also be hating on myself? Some of these new blogs GIVE ME LIFE. They are so great I can’t even put it into words?
In General Things You Won’t Find On My Blogs Are: Exclusivity, Call-Out Posts, Cliquey stuff, and Hatred/Anger. 
I pride myself on being a positive and accepting person. Even in the rare occasion someone does me wrong, I don’t block them. Why? Because I always want to have the chance for reconciliation. That we can move past the bad vibes and create something awesome. 
So the fact that someone sent me that proves that had no idea of who I am as a person. Because I will literally go out of my way to welcome and love people in this fandom. Which is why I’m not really bothered.
Thank you so much for sending me this though. So many kisses and so much love your way.
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torinomonty · 8 years ago
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Hi, I'm new to the doll community and don't have my own BJD yet. But I wanted to ask, what's a recast??? And also what are some good websites to get BJDs from???
Hello, welcome to the community! I hope you can get a good doll soon.
Whew, apologies in advance but this post is gonna be long. In explaining what a recast is, it’s also important to explain the harm they do to this hobby and why so many people are against them, and why it’s as big a deal as it is. Especially to people who are new, because they unfortunately regularly get tricked into buying recasts.A recast is an illegal copy of a doll. A recaster takes a mold of an existing doll and makes copies of it to sell for cheaper, and none of that money will go to the original the artist/company.Imagine you sell posters of your art, and someone buys one, photocopies it and sells them as their own for cheaper. Now imagine a bunch of people buy the copies and say it’s ok and that you don’t deserve to be compensated, but they deserve to own your art as cheap as possible. That’s the ‘pro recast’ people.What a lot of people don’t understand is that BJDs are different to many commercial products, ie as mass-produced fashion dolls. The reason they’re so expensive is because of the sheer volume of time and work that goes into making them. They’re artists who deserve to be compensated for their work, but recasters take all that away.Their main excuse is that ‘legit’ dolls are too expensive and that pro-artist/anti-recast people are terrible gatekeeping bullies who don’t want 'poor’ people to have dolls. But there’s actually a good number of cheaper legit companies available to them, they just think they’re too good for those. It all boils down to 'I want this, but I don’t think I should have to pay that much for it’, and it’s not a good argument, especially because this is a luxury hobby. They have this weird mythology where people who can afford legit dolls are all big evil millionaires who wipe their butts with thousand dollar Volks sculpts, when the reality is that the vast majority of BJD fans aren’t rich, we just save up. For months and even years. Most companies also have layaway plans. We just have this radical idea that if we like something, we should pay the people who created it.The other argument they like is that big companies like Volks, Fairyland and Soom are popular enough that any loss in sale won’t be noticed, but this is also a bad argument and doesn’t excuse stealing from them. The thing is, someone who makes recasts of dolls doesn’t exclusively make them of the 'big’ brands. They go after small companies too. People really overestimate the size of BJD companies –  but most others outside Volks are much smaller than expected and only have a dozen or so employees, and outside those big ones they get even smaller. Some are literally just families operating out of their living room, some are just single artists on their own, but recasters don’t care. So even if you pay for a copy of a Volks or Fairyland doll, you’re paying someone who is going to use your money to copy dolls from someone who WILL feel the hit. And these companies are literally begging people to stop supporting recasts because of the harm it does to their business - their livelihood - and it’s heartbreaking. Some companies have had to close up altogether, or result to extreme measures to lessen the chance of one of their dolls being recasted such as releasing incredibly limited quantities. And for artists in both the east and west who are wanting to start sculpting and selling their own dolls, recasts are enough of a threat that it discourages them from trying entirely. This is why recasts aren’t allowed in nearly all the most prominent BJD communities - why would there be a place for something that is literally destroying something we love?? And of course the pro-recast crowd milk this for all it’s worth, painting themselves as poor downtrodden victims and outcasts who just wanted a cheap doll, going on about 'bullying’ and ‘gatekeeping’. (don’t get me wrong, bullying is shit. I don’t think a prorecasters deserves to be bullied or sent death threats, no one does、but most prorecasters interpret anything other than glowing acceptance of recasts as bullying, hell, their recent ‘evil anti recast bullies’ shitlist shows that all you gotta do is have ‘anti-recast’ or ‘pro-artist’ on your profile to be a bully.) They also insist that all pro-artists are elitists and that even if they bought a cheap legit they’d be judged for not having an expensive doll, which simply isn’t true. Pro-artists love cheap companies; most of us own and love dolls from cheap companies (many of us its all we can afford and that’s completely fine) and will recommend them with gusto, so the narrative about us being classist assholes who don’t want poor people stinking up the hobby is hilariously false and just a multitude of the tactics the prorecasts use to present themselves as victims and us as some elite. It’s gotten to the frankly absurd point where recast-supporters are comparing their ‘discrimination’ in this hobby to racism and homophobia, and have so multiple times. Mind-boggling. That’s the basics of it, there’s a lot of other silly excuses in the pro-recast debate that have all been debunked, but I wont go into those as this post is long enough as it is. But at the end of the day, recasts aren’t the same thing as knockoff handbags, they are NOT comparable to ‘off-brands’ or a ‘cheaper option’, they are literally art theft, a copy of someone’s hard, and often quite personal work, and buying them lines the pockets of art thieves. If you respect artists at all and think the people who bring us these dolls deserve compensation, don’t support recasts.If you’re looking to buy a BJD, I did make a rough guide on my doll blog a while back about basics that I hope is helpful to you! It has some info about good places to buy from.
https://torinodollcrew.tumblr.com/post/149744721829/super-duper-bjd-newbie-guide
 Please let me know if you have any other questions, you can ask here or on my doll blog.
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jvzooproductsclub · 7 years ago
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Fully search engine optimized and ready to get ranked high on Google almost immediately.
​The plugin finds all the related video title, description and tags, and categories and adds them to your posts. The best part is that you can change anything you want in minutes.
​Optimizing content is hard work. Most people don’t even know how to do it right. So, their posts or pages never get ranked.
​However, as AutoVid Profit will be doing the hard parts for you, your sites will rank on Google much higher than sites of your competitors who didn’t want to or hadn’t optimized their sites properly.
Built-in Theme…No additional theme or plugin needed
A powerful, high converting and super easy to use theme installs automatically with the plugin installation. You don’t need to waste time and money for additional themes. But in case you want to use a different theme, you can do it anytime with a click of a button.​
Built-in FREE Traffic
Traffic is the life blood of internet marketing. But it’s neither free nor easy. AutoVid Profit drives traffic from top-3 traffic tycoon Facebook, Twitter, and Tumblr and search engine Google.
Built in Search Engine Optimization
All that Google loves are built in with the plugin. Just install and use them with clicks.
Built in Monetization Through Amazon​
If you don’t monetize your site, you don’t make money. This plugin monetizes your site 100% hands-free. It shows high converting banners of Amazon products with every post.
Mobile-Responsive Video Player
80%+ of internet users use smartphones. And Google loves mobile-friendly sites. But don’t worry about it.
​AutoVid Profit is fully mobile responsive. All of the videos will appear in a fully mobile player. It doesn’t even matter if your WordPress theme is mobile-ready or not!!
​This means that your visitors will be able to enjoy the video content, no matter if they are watching it from their computer, laptop, tablet or their cellphone.
​In fact, they will think more highly of your site, and want to stay on it longer and buy more, as it provides value!
Best for Grandma and For Geeks
Grandmas can simply click and make money with it. And geeks who want more can play with the options anytime they want. But everyone gets results from this easy and simple tool.
Built in Training
All the training you need is how to install the plugin in 1 click. Then all other training modules are inside the plugin. They have given the plugin to beta testers of different countries. Everyone is super stoked with the build in training part.
How It Works:
Autovid Profit is a newbie friendly method that anyone can easily use it by following three steps below:
Step 1: Put your credentials and preferences. You do it only once per site (They will show you how)
Step 2: Add keywords to set campaigns
Step 3: Hit “GO” and your site will be ready! Automatically ready for traffic and sales.
Who Should Use Autovid Profit?
Autovid Profit is an ideal method for all website owners, bloggers and affiliate marketers who aren’t making enough money in their online business.
Why Should You Get Autovid Profit Now?
With AutoVid Profit, you can create video and text posts from YouTube and drive passionate buyer traffic from Google, Facebook, Twitter, and Tumblr. ​Automatically creates video and text posts from YouTube.
You don’t need to purchase additional themes once using this software. Besides, you will have the ability to steal trending contents from YouTube legally and make a profit.
Having AutoVid Profit by your side, you will:
Be able to build new, complete money making sites on any niche, anytime in a matter of seconds.
Have not just one, but 10, 20 or even 100 affiliate sites earning you commissions.
Be able to drive targeted buyer traffic on complete autopilot.
Get your posts going viral and drive social traffic on autopilot.
Wake up in the morning with your affiliate accounts filled with hundreds of sales and profits.
Spend seconds setting up your new sites every single time.
Finally be able to quit 9-5 job your hate the most and have more free time to do what you love.
With AutoVid Profit, take the stress and frustration out of the mix and let this software do what it is good at…. making your money with a few clicks.
You can now easily build sites with awesome captivating content, drive targeted visitors from search engines and social media while generating affiliate commissions from Amazon. No other platform or software does that. Not one.
The main strength of AutoVid Profit is the ability to use a ton of filters when searching for videos, get your video pages blasted right away via our social booster, and monetize the videos using ads, banners via your own links or Amazon.
The plugin doesn’t just find videos – it finds the BEST videos on YouTube. This is how you can monetize them by targeting the best!
Another great difference is the visual templates that allow someone to monetize the generated posts super easily, promote different products based on the keyword the videos were generated with, as well as change the promoted offer in seconds and have the changes apply to all the existing posts automatically.
With Autovid Profit, you will:
No more waste your time building a website manually
​No more hiring content writers or bloggers
​ Not need to have any tech skills or experience
​No more deal with complicated software.
No spending money for content that nobody reads or watches
​No more spending money on VAs to post contents on social media months after months
Conclusion
In short, Autovid Profit will drive traffic and make money for you completely on autopilot.
Overall, I do hope that you can get more understanding about this product to make a sound decision prior to purchasing it. In case you require any further information or some helps, do not hesitate to get in touch with me. Finally, thank you very much for reading my Autovid Profit review.
If you are on the fence about getting this product or not, please notice that the product has 100% Risk-FREE along with 30 Day Money Back Guarantee that worth the try of everybody.
If you are interested in the product, please click the link below. In case it is not working, it means we are updating it, and we will make it function as soon as possible for you, so please, check it constantly in your most convenient time.
By checking and purchasing the product through our link, you don’t have to spend any extra fee or anything, and we will have some commission to build our review site to provide you more and more honest reviews. Moreover, we will be glad to give you a huge bonus package (free of charge) with every product buying from our link.
BUY NOW
If you buy through my affiliate link (just click on any link on this page) you get these bonuses below: 
СНЕСK ІТ NОW
Please Note: I only promote products I use or have used myself. All have great reviews, significant sales and low refund rates. I try to promote offers from reliable and trustworthy sellers with excellent track record about customer support and are in business for a while.
#Affiliate_Marketers, #Affiliate_Marketing, #Apps, #Blog, #Bloggers, #Marketing, #Online_MArketing, #Software, #Software_Tools, #Training, #Training_Courses, #Video, #Video_Marketing, #Website_Owners
0 notes
wayneooverton · 8 years ago
Text
How to win friends and influence people on Instagram
Oh man, Instagram. That old thing. That photo app we love to hate. I wonder how sorry I would feel for myself if I knew the exact amount of times I opened Instagram and hit refresh per day. Shivers.
If I had to hanker a guess, I’d say around 20,000. You know, just to err on the side of caution.
Like most things in life, I go through phases on Instagram, of being so in love with it I have to be on for 24/7 and then other times where I consider deleting it. “Man, my latest sunset mountain photo only got 2,500 likes, what’s wrong with me? This is shit. I’m shit. Everyone hates me. I give up.”
Somehow, often my self-worth is tied to how successful I am on Instagram, or even worse, how successful OTHER people are. What. The. Fuck. How did it come to this?
My goodness, what is the world coming to when you feel like you are no longer validated because only 2,500 people you’ve never met before liked a picture you took. Then you upload a shot that gets 4,000 likes, and hot damn you’re back in business.
It’s a vicious cycle guys.
I’m the first to admit, I’ve been a dedicated slave to the Instagram for years. I mean, we go way back. Like iPhone 3 way back. Almost 5 years we’ve been together.
You see me and Instagram, we’ve had a tough relationship. You know, love hate. Hot and then cold, yes and then no. Or something like that. It’s the same with McDonald’s. You don’t people to know you actually like it, but then you end up drunkenly taking a taxi through the drive-through at 4 am. Nobody wants to admit that actually, on the inside, they really want those chicken nuggets. Badly.
*Crickets*
Wow, I’ve come a loooooong way since my first Instagram post!
  But I digress. Over the years I have really loved Instagram – I still do, deep down. I learned to become a better photographer through the app, to try and become more of a visual storyteller. At the end of the day I’ve met so many incredible people through Instagram, shared so many unique moments and built my own community of followers of thousands of people, and that makes me smile. That’s what it’s for right?
Through Instagram I’ve become a keen photographer, and through it I’ve learned to challenge myself creatively.
But I’m also part of that small percentage of people who also use Instagram for business. I was New Zealand’s first professional Instagrammer, and I’ve built Instagram into my overall business strategy. In addition to my blog, it’s a large part of my work.
And when I see other people directly effecting my work, I get pissed. Guys, I’M SO PISSED
So here we go, the rant you all have been waiting for. It’s been a while, I’ve been letting you down, let me make it up to you. Are you ready?
There are two ways to be successful on Instagram; one is doing it the honest way – building up your brand, sharing high quality shots, being really active and engaged in the community, being creative and original in what you’re doing, and above all, actually be passionate about the photos and stories you’re sharing. You know, actually adhering to Instagram’s T’s and C’s, being ethical and honest, and authentic and genuine. What’s that word everyone forgets? Ah yes, having integrity.
Hell, I even co-launched my own conference called the Travel Bootcamp teaching people how to build a career in this industry.
The Do’s and Don’ts of Instagram
And then there is option B. Cheating and manipulating your way to the top, which has somehow become the popular choice these days amongst the youths and Instagram newbies. Why work hard when you can pay to get it done instead?
Cheating is rampant on Instagram these days. Rampant I say! It’s everywhere. I ignored it for the longest time, wanting to believe the best in people, many of whom are colleagues and friends of mine. But it’s getting so ridiculous now I can’t keep quiet.
So many people are exceptionally lazy. They want the success that comes with having a huge Instagram following but don’t want to put in the hours of hard work yourself. Don’t worry, I’ll make it easy . So check it out, how to fake being authentic 101. A step by step guide. Here are my best tips for cheating and manipulating your way to the top on Instagram. Good luck!
1. Go out and buy some followers
For less than $70, you can get 10,000 Instagram followers! That’s enough to start elbowing your way into this industry. But seriously, buying followers for your Instagram is so 2014. I mean come on, at least try to be more creative than that. There are far sneakier and better ways to get more followers fast than just straight up buying them. Jeez.
2. Get automatic likes on your photos
SO over the years most of us have really felt the drop on Instagram engagement, right? The number of likes and comments you get on your photos often matter more than the follower number. I’ve never worked harder on Instagram than I have been, and I follow all of their rules and suggestions to a tee for five years, and I’ve been suffering from it while watching other people cheat their way to the top without a second thought.
My engagement for my follower count actually isn’t that great, and no matter how hard I try, I can barely keep it steady let alone grow it with the way the algorithms are working. And as soon as I experiment with my shots, it plummets. And my numbers are so skewed because my followers keep growing, mostly from my blog I reckon. I’ve never been more proud of my feed and my photos than I am now, and I’m so bummed that so few of my followers or new people even see it. And I’m not alone.
But don’t worry, there are ways around it. Did you know that you can pay for a monthly service that dumps fake likes on your photos when you upload them? How great is that? You don’t have to do anything and if you get enough of them quickly, you might even show up on the Explore Page! And would you believe me if I told you dozens if not hundreds of people who might even be one of your favorite Instagrammers are doing that too! What’s a little casual fraud in between Instagram posts, right? It’s not like it inflates the entire platform and makes people who aren’t cheating look bad or anything. It’s also faking your own influence.
3. Originality is dead, guys
As much as Instagram touts the idea of being creative photographers and storytellers, does it actually back it up on the platform? Is creativity really rewarded these days on Instagram? Instagram’s own Instagram feed is all about creative projects, unusual themes and cool people doing cool stuff. But is that the content that is actually rewarded on the platform?
NOPE.
What is rewarded is people copying each other over and over and over again. The same pose, the same locations, the same outfits, even the same filters. How many people have become huge landscape travel Instagrammers because they’ve traveled to Iceland and the Faroe Islands, posed in front of cabins and woodpiles and laid on the VSCO moody PNW filters a little too hard. Cough cough, I can think of tons. I mean, Socality Barbie was popular for a reason.
I mean fads are fads, and trends are trends for a reason; and they are highly effective. Beautiful places are popular for a reason, but what about those spots that people have strategically shot over and over and shared repeatedly just to build an image. You know, wearing a fedora hat and a blanket.
But I’ve worked with people over the years, some of whom are huge btw, who blatantly admit that they look out for trendy places, then go there knowing that their photos will be the best. People who don’t consider going to places that might be under the radar, but actually look for locations to shoot in those spots from people who’ve been there before just so they can take a version that will be more popular. Or peruse Pinterest and rip off other people’s ideas as their own. Jesus Christ, does it get any lazier than that?
So come visit me in Wanaka! You might not have heard, but we have this Insta-famous tree in the lake AND a ridge view called Mt. Roy, both of which have been ruined by trendy Instagrammers! You post photos from here and you’re guaranteed double engagement!
4. Be hot and show your butt off
I’m mostly talking about girls here, just so we are clear. Statistically thinking, you have a 75% chance of growing your Instagram account by 50% if you post photos of yourself in underwear or bikinis with an emphasis on your bum. It jumps up another 10% if you have a thigh gap.* Too bad my thigh gap is limited by my nugget consumption.
2. You may not post violent, nude, partially nude, discriminatory, unlawful, infringing, hateful, pornographic or sexually suggestive photos or other content via the Service. Instagram’s Terms of Use
Um, good one!
*Disclosure, I just made that up.
5. Date someone bigger than you
Need to grow a following really quick? Start dating someone who’s Insta-famous, and be prepared to hang on for the ride! Even better if they are a good photographer. Instagram husbands anyone? And nothing grows a following quite like being a hot power couple on Instagram. Actually, if I’m being totally fair here, I am not quite sure there is anything wrong with this, I’m probably just being petty.
After all nothing is more annoying that oversharing oversexualized happy couples on Instagram, right? God I’m so bitter.
6. Steal other people’s ideas
I learned my lesson a few years ago. I have always been a candid person, and I talk about what I’m working on or goals I have openly. Til I got burned again and again by Instagrammers ripping off my work.
I learned the hard way not to talk about projects I’m in the middle of working on (at the risk of having them outpitched from under me – happened to me more than a few times), to shots I was planning to take, to my favorite locations to local spots to trips I was working on. I hate it, but it’s happened too many times that I’ve mentioned it to someone only to have that person try and pull the rug out from under me.
Not to toot my own horn or anything, but I’m the kind of person that if you tell me something you’re working on, I’ll either try to help you get there or be supportive of it. It wouldn’t even occur to me to steal someone’s idea. As a creative, I find that behavior HORRENDOUS.
There is a big difference between being inspired by someone and ripping off other people’s work, and it’s something that happens all the time on Instagram, shamelessly.
7. Don’t hate the player, hate the game
There are so many games you can play on Instagram that are far from the Candy Crush variety. One of the biggest ways people game Instagram is following and unfollowing people. Back in the day, people used to do this manually. Follow a bunch of people per day, then unfollow the ones who didn’t follow you back or just unfollow again anyways. What trickery!
Then it got sophisticated and there are apps that you can use that will automatically follow and unfollow for you. Bear in mind it violates Instagram’s terms to authorize apps like that, and it’s pretty fun to go stalk people on SocialBlade to see who’s cheating this way. You just enter in the name of any Instagrammer on a desktop, then click on their IG page and then click detailed stats and have fun!
This is a highly effective way to grow your account because it brings real people in the meantime over to your page. The downside of course, besides being highly unethical, means you aren’t in control of your account anymore and god knows who you’re following. “Oh sorry, I didn’t mean to follow that nazi account, oops!”
8. Not who you seem to be
There are a few people, who shall remain nameless, mostly because I’m scared, who were the ultimate Instagram sneaks.
Like, having a feature account, which is to say a big account on Instagram that just reshares other people’s photos. Sometimes crediting the owners, most of the time just straight up ripping it off. Building a huge following only posting the best of the best, which isn’t even yours, then one day deleting all the photos and reposting your own as a personal account on Instagram.
Yes, people have done it, and some very, very successfully, though of course never admitting it.
I have two words for those people – dodgy motherf*ckers!
9. You don’t even have to be on the app
Did you know that you don’t even need to be on Instagram yourself? You can authorize apps that go and like and comment on stuff for you. I mean, I’m sure you’ve all seen it. Random comments on your photos that don’t make sense. I’ve called out bloggers who comment on all my photos but don’t actually follow me. Or better yet, friends of mine of leave comments on porn or other dirty pages. I’m sure you didn’t mean “wow what a great shot” of a teenager in a thong.
No one likes a spammer!
There are so many Instagrammers who are now super famous who got their start doing this one or two years ago. Because it brings real people over to your page, you get real growth and engagement, never mind that you didn’t even do it yourself and it’s super dodgy and straight up violates several of Instagram’s terms. Why you would do this is beyond me, let alone take the risk of losing your account.
10. Don’t be a dick! 
It’s up to you whether or not you want to be a douche. I have to believe that at the end of the day, this kind of behavior will fail. It’s not a long-term solution to this kind of work, and I think that if you build a career on deceit and lies, it will blow up in your face.
Who said that breaking into this industry and being famous on Instagram would be easy? You have to work your ass off at it, often for years before seeing any kind of real success. I have been in this industry for seven years, that’s right seven years of work! It never stops!
Real influence and real success takes real work. 
I’m mad because this terrible behavior is straight fucking up the industry on a big scale. It’s not a little problem, it’s rampant, and nothing is being done about it. It skews the numbers and screws over people who have worked and been ethical.
And here’s a shameless little self-promo: sick of seeing this kind of behavior combined with seeing a real lack of hard, credible advice to help break into the travel industry, my business partners Lauren Bath, Georgia Rickard and I co-launched our own conference, the Travel Bootcamp last year. An intensive one day, no BS workshop, we give you all the tools and facts no one talks about that will help you get paid to travel like us. Between us we’ve traveled to over 100 countries, worked for over a decade in the industry and make six figure salaries from it.
Our next Bootcamp is in a couple of weeks in Melbourne on April 29th if you want to come – we have a few tickets left.
Get your tickets to the Travel Bootcamp Melbourne here!
Have you heard of this stuff before? Can you believe it? What kind of terrible behavior have you seen on Instagram? Spill!
The post How to win friends and influence people on Instagram appeared first on Young Adventuress.
from Young Adventuress http://ift.tt/2o2Btek
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jvzooproductsclub · 7 years ago
Text
AutoVid Profit Review & Bonus
AutoVid Profit Review & Bonus
Learn more here: http://mattmartin.club/index.php/2017/08/23/autovid-profit-review-bonus/
Welcome to, Mattmartin.Club Proud to show you my AutoVid Profit Review hope you will enjoy it !
“Create Completely Video Affiliate Sites To Drive Traffic And Make Money In Just 1 Click”
Autovid Profit ​is a brand new software designed to help you create video affiliate sites that make you money in just one click.
Overview :
Product Creator Mosh Bari Product Name AutoVid Profit Price $17 Sales Page CLICK HERE Niche Software  Bonus Yes, CHECK NOW Refund 30 Day Money Back Guarantee Recommend Highly Recommend
BUY NOW
What Is Autovid Profit?
Building affiliate sites are not as easy as it sounds. You may easily spend hours as well as a lot of efforts to design only one site that converts.
Or you have to waste a lot of money if you hire or outsource someone to do it for you.
But the point is to make money, not spend a lot of money.
This is the reason why today I’m going to reveal a brand new method that will help you stop dealing with all those frustrating things.
Introducing: Autovid Profit
Autovid Profit ​is an all-in-one solution that makes quick and profitable video marketing sites. With this software, you can create a professional video affiliate site that brings passive commissions in less than a minute.
All-in-one money making plugin
100% newbie friendly
Takes one click to do everything for you
Real people got real
How Does Autovid Profit Work?
Special Features of Autovid Profit:
Any Keywords Can Be Used To Fetch Videos From​
AutoVid Profit works for you and fetches Laser Targeted Buyer Keywords for you. Those keywords are used to search offers and spend money.
​You can use a simple keyword like “weight loss diet.” Also, if you want, you can use keyphrase like KEYWORD + “product name” or “product name review.” You can even deduct any particular keyword by using “-” between keywords. Isn’t that cool?
​For example, use the keyword “AutoVid Profit review” and have the AutoVid Profit plugin populate your site with review videos about this product. Now, all you have to do is promote that very product in those posts, using their Traffic Booster!
Choose Channels or Playlists or Usernames To Fetch Videos From
You can fetch videos from any YouTube channel, playlists or users of your choice if you want. Or you can simply put the keywords and let the plugin do the searching for you.
I recommend using only top and most popular places as this will help make your website attractive too.
Multiples Campaigns
If you want a blog with different sub niches, you can set various campaigns. Set each sub niche with a unique campaign so you can have total control over posting.
Scheduling
You have full freedom of posting anytime you want or schedule for posting automatically at a future time.
Automatic Categories
Categories are automatically added if you choose to. No need to manually add categories then come back and add posts there. Besides, it helps search engine optimization and ranks high on Google and other search engines.
Full Control Over What You Are Publishing
Take control of your content, and preview the videos before posting them: You can preset whether they’ll save as draft or publish right away. So, you have full control or your site and results.
​You can also manually choose which social media it’ll publish the posts on. You can also choose the type of text being published with the video. You can choose which products on Amazon to advertise and where to place them.
AutoVid Profit SEO
Fully search engine optimized and ready to get ranked high on Google almost immediately.
​The plugin finds all the related video title, description and tags, and categories and adds them to your posts. The best part is that you can change anything you want in minutes.
​Optimizing content is hard work. Most people don’t even know how to do it right. So, their posts or pages never get ranked.
​However, as AutoVid Profit will be doing the hard parts for you, your sites will rank on Google much higher than sites of your competitors who didn’t want to or hadn’t optimized their sites properly.
Built-in Theme…No additional theme or plugin needed
A powerful, high converting and super easy to use theme installs automatically with the plugin installation. You don’t need to waste time and money for additional themes. But in case you want to use a different theme, you can do it anytime with a click of a button.​
Built-in FREE Traffic
Traffic is the life blood of internet marketing. But it’s neither free nor easy. AutoVid Profit drives traffic from top-3 traffic tycoon Facebook, Twitter, and Tumblr and search engine Google.
Built in Search Engine Optimization
All that Google loves are built in with the plugin. Just install and use them with clicks.
Built in Monetization Through Amazon​
If you don’t monetize your site, you don’t make money. This plugin monetizes your site 100% hands-free. It shows high converting banners of Amazon products with every post.
Mobile-Responsive Video Player
80%+ of internet users use smartphones. And Google loves mobile-friendly sites. But don’t worry about it.
​AutoVid Profit is fully mobile responsive. All of the videos will appear in a fully mobile player. It doesn’t even matter if your WordPress theme is mobile-ready or not!!
​This means that your visitors will be able to enjoy the video content, no matter if they are watching it from their computer, laptop, tablet or their cellphone.
​In fact, they will think more highly of your site, and want to stay on it longer and buy more, as it provides value!
Best for Grandma and For Geeks
Grandmas can simply click and make money with it. And geeks who want more can play with the options anytime they want. But everyone gets results from this easy and simple tool.
Built in Training
All the training you need is how to install the plugin in 1 click. Then all other training modules are inside the plugin. They have given the plugin to beta testers of different countries. Everyone is super stoked with the build in training part.
How It Works:
Autovid Profit is a newbie friendly method that anyone can easily use it by following three steps below:
Step 1: Put your credentials and preferences. You do it only once per site (They will show you how)
Step 2: Add keywords to set campaigns
Step 3: Hit “GO” and your site will be ready! Automatically ready for traffic and sales.
Who Should Use Autovid Profit?
Autovid Profit is an ideal method for all website owners, bloggers and affiliate marketers who aren’t making enough money in their online business.
Why Should You Get Autovid Profit Now?
With AutoVid Profit, you can create video and text posts from YouTube and drive passionate buyer traffic from Google, Facebook, Twitter, and Tumblr. ​Automatically creates video and text posts from YouTube.
You don’t need to purchase additional themes once using this software. Besides, you will have the ability to steal trending contents from YouTube legally and make a profit.
Having AutoVid Profit by your side, you will:
Be able to build new, complete money making sites on any niche, anytime in a matter of seconds.
Have not just one, but 10, 20 or even 100 affiliate sites earning you commissions.
Be able to drive targeted buyer traffic on complete autopilot.
Get your posts going viral and drive social traffic on autopilot.
Wake up in the morning with your affiliate accounts filled with hundreds of sales and profits.
Spend seconds setting up your new sites every single time.
Finally be able to quit 9-5 job your hate the most and have more free time to do what you love.
With AutoVid Profit, take the stress and frustration out of the mix and let this software do what it is good at…. making your money with a few clicks.
You can now easily build sites with awesome captivating content, drive targeted visitors from search engines and social media while generating affiliate commissions from Amazon. No other platform or software does that. Not one.
The main strength of AutoVid Profit is the ability to use a ton of filters when searching for videos, get your video pages blasted right away via our social booster, and monetize the videos using ads, banners via your own links or Amazon.
The plugin doesn’t just find videos – it finds the BEST videos on YouTube. This is how you can monetize them by targeting the best!
Another great difference is the visual templates that allow someone to monetize the generated posts super easily, promote different products based on the keyword the videos were generated with, as well as change the promoted offer in seconds and have the changes apply to all the existing posts automatically.
With Autovid Profit, you will:
No more waste your time building a website manually
​No more hiring content writers or bloggers
​ Not need to have any tech skills or experience
​No more deal with complicated software.
No spending money for content that nobody reads or watches
​No more spending money on VAs to post contents on social media months after months
Conclusion
In short, Autovid Profit will drive traffic and make money for you completely on autopilot.
Overall, I do hope that you can get more understanding about this product to make a sound decision prior to purchasing it. In case you require any further information or some helps, do not hesitate to get in touch with me. Finally, thank you very much for reading my Autovid Profit review.
If you are on the fence about getting this product or not, please notice that the product has 100% Risk-FREE along with 30 Day Money Back Guarantee that worth the try of everybody.
If you are interested in the product, please click the link below. In case it is not working, it means we are updating it, and we will make it function as soon as possible for you, so please, check it constantly in your most convenient time.
By checking and purchasing the product through our link, you don’t have to spend any extra fee or anything, and we will have some commission to build our review site to provide you more and more honest reviews. Moreover, we will be glad to give you a huge bonus package (free of charge) with every product buying from our link.
BUY NOW
If you buy through my affiliate link (just click on any link on this page) you get these bonuses below: 
СНЕСK ІТ NОW
Please Note: I only promote products I use or have used myself. All have great reviews, significant sales and low refund rates. I try to promote offers from reliable and trustworthy sellers with excellent track record about customer support and are in business for a while.
#Affiliate_Marketers, #Affiliate_Marketing, #Apps, #Blog, #Bloggers, #Marketing, #Online_MArketing, #Software, #Software_Tools, #Training, #Training_Courses, #Video, #Video_Marketing, #Website_Owners
0 notes