Recently, in an interview, I was asked “Is it ethical to use private label rights and
ghostwritten articles?”
Let me step back a moment and explain… Private label rights (or PLR) articles and
ghostwritten articles are used by web owners as a method of outsourcing some of their content.
* PLR articles are packages of articles that are pre-written and sold to more than one person.
* Ghostwritten articles are articles that are written by someone else just for you that you can put
your name on and are not sold to anyone else.
In both cases, you are allowed to edit the content as much or as little as you’d like and use
the articles on your website, blog, or in your newsletter.
So, back to the question. Is it ethical? My answer was, “usually, yes”.
If you’re using the articles and saying “written by me” without changing anything
at all, it may bite you in the butt later, when someone else does the same thing. Does that make it
unethical? Not really. It’s just not smart. Can you use the article as it is or edited
slightly, without saying it was written by you? Of course!
Most PLR packs are written by ghostwriters. Ghostwriters are professional researchers and writers.
If you purchase well-written, informative PLR or ghostwritten articles and share them with your
readers, don’t you all benefit? Your readers benefit by getting great information. You benefit
by saving time. Is it any different than hiring a graphic designer or webmaster? Not in my opinion.
Heck, most politicians don’t write their own speeches. They leave that to people who are
professional speech writers. And, anyone who watches Jon Stewart knows that his show suffered during
the writers' strike... so he's obviously got a great team of writers.
Of course, you’d want to only use top-notch articles and not “sell-out” just to
pump out blog posts or web pages quicker. I recommend you research thoroughly before choosing any
ghostwriter or PLR service.
Here’s what to look for in a PLR service so you don’t waste your money:
1. Make sure the articles are well-written. If they are also edited by a separate staff member, all
the better.
2. Make sure that you know which topics you’ll receive (instead of some grab-bag of
articles).
3. Be sure that the people running the program have some experience in article writing themselves,
so they know what they’re doing.
There’s no point in doing everything on your own, especially if you dislike writing. All
successful business people outsource the tasks they are not good at or dislike. Check it out. It
might take some pressure off you and allow you to spend more time with your kids. And, that’s
definitely ethical.