PLR Articles are the Crispy Oats to Your Cheerios

  1. In case you needed a comparison. Look, I finally thought in a meme! This is not typical for my writer brain. It may never happen again!

For those not familiar with PLR, those three letters stand for private label rights. This describes the content that we sell in product form at wordfeeder.com.

Sometimes people have a hard time understanding PLR. I definitely did, and I thought low of the practice of selling content as a product.

However, private label products are nothing new.

We went food shopping in Aldi today and my son could not get over the labeling on all of the off-brand knock off products like the fake Heinz ketchup, no name brand mayonnaise and basically everything they have in the store.

Are Crispy Oats and Cheerios one and the same? They could be. I don’t know the full supply chain backstory of how food gets from one place to another and ends up on your supermarket shelf.

But this just as easily applies to eLearning material that we sell at Wordfeeder. First the content spills from the writer’s brain to the page. 

Then a buyer picks it up, and decides they would like to make a product out of it. The changes they make, and how well they do this I could not say.

Ideally though you would hope that the end user would be pleased with the presentation, whatever it ends up to be.

One thing I will say. You cannot put your ego into a PLR product. This is the exact opposite type of writing. We literally tell our buyers to take the name of the originator off the content and replace it with your own.

Want to try a sample of done-for-you content from Wordfeeder?

Sign up here. Log in and look under free PLR in the top menu for some articles that you can download immediately.