Good info but you have to be careful about mini sites
Using "mini sites" as a stand alone marketing effort for information and products related to a niche is a good tactic, but you have to take care that your mini sites aren't perceived as "doorway pages" or as "spamdexing" sites or you'll quickly find your site being removed from the search indexes. The key is having good stand alone content that actually delivers some value, not just a page/series of pages full of ads/links to generate commissions. If you're merely attempting to develop a "mini site" to generate links/leads for your larger/main site, consider using creative "landing pages" instead.--Google & yahoo didn't fall off the turnip truck yesterday...More importantly, if you don't take the time to have the "mini site" really be of value by virtue of stand alone content, then it's likely a waste of time because an average searcher will see right through your tactics.
I used to work for a company that used what they called "mini sites" before I came on board. My perception was these so-called mini sites were verging on doorway pages in terms of how they were being used and managed. After I got on board and got engaged with my team, we quickly got these things under control and starting managing them as real content sites (mini sites) so they had some better value as stand alone sites. We certainly linked to our normal landing pages in the appropriate locations, but I'll admit we were walking a thin line. Suffice it to say, that wasn't the only thing going on, but I don't work there anymore.
Not tryin to be preachy, but content is still king and is the hardest part of any site to develop and maintain. It's too easy to fall into the trap of slapping up a domain and trying to monetize it without taking the proper precautions and investing the right level of effort in a professional manner.
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