Just recently we were left a comment from a reader wanting to know a little more about how to write product reviews when you don’t actually own the product. We thought that this was a really good question and impossible to answer in just a few sentences.
We’ve written hundreds (and maybe even thousands) of product reviews over the years and since we aren’t multi-millionaires…yet, we couldn’t possibly buy each of those products to review. What we’ve done however is learned how to write them in a way where we don’t need to own the product.
We don’t have to lie and say we have actually personally reviewed the product or make things up but we can still end up with a top quality review that is helpful to the reader. Always remember however, that you should never promote a product that you wouldn’t purchase yourself. Is it worth buying? Is it a top quality product? If yes, then go ahead and write a review. If not, forget it. You don’t want to promote poor quality products to anyone ever.
So for starters, let’s take a look at the actual question that was asked:
I just like to know how you would write a review of a product which you haven’t owned or used. I have been wondering about it for quite some time now. Rather than just saying… “Most customers who bought this product find it…” how would you structure it.
In another of your post, you mentioned adding your own story as the introduction to make your review more interesting. But that will be quite difficult if you haven’t used the product yourself. Any advice would be most helpful.
Essentially there are two questions being asked here but we will start with the first. The key to writing product reviews when you don’t own the product is to do your research.
Now I can just see some of your switching off already thinking that this is going to mean a bit of work. I won’t lie to you, this will require you to get in there and learn as much as you can about the product. But stay with me here because you need to remember that you only need a handful of pages to make a full time income. Spending a day researching a product and writing a good product review can result in years of recurring income.
So for those that still work full time think about a days work in your current job. What do you get from that one day of work in terms of income? Yep that’s right, you get one day of pay…that’s it! You are never going to get any more than that. Which means you have to head back to work the next day to get that same amount of money. With a product review, you only need to spend one day working on it and then if all goes to plan you can potentially receive a recurring income for years to come.
Researching means reading everything you can about the product – read the Amazon product page and the reviews, find the manufacturers website and read about the product there, find any other website that refers to that product and keep reading. This shouldn’t take any more than a couple of hours. While you are researching you should be taking down as many notes as possible.
Once you have this information it becomes a lot easier to write about the product when you don’t own it….it’s almost as if you do own it when you have this level of detail. But that still doesn’t answer the question on how to actually structure the review. Well it’s actually a lot simpler than you might thing. It really comes down to how you word your sentences.
Let’s just go with an example to see how this works. I’ll use the iPad as an example. Now we both own one of these and just love them so we could easily write a review about it. However our review would sound a lot different to what it would sound like if we didn’t own one. Here’s how they might differ:
Version 1: I Own the Product
What I really love about my iPad is that I no longer need to lug a big heavy laptop with all its heavy cords and cables with me when I am traveling. The iPad measures approximately 10in by 8in and it literally fits into my handbag so I have done away with my laptop bag. It’s small but not too small that I have to squint to see the screen and is light enough and compact enough that it makes traveling a breeze.
Version 2: I Don’t Own the Product
You will no longer need to lug a big heavy laptop with all its heavy cords and cables when traveling. The iPad measures approximately 10in by 8in and will literally fit into your handbag or briefcase. You can finally do away with having to carry around that extra laptop bag. It’s small but not too small that you have to squint to see the screen and is light enough and compact enough that it makes traveling a breeze.
Notice how I am saying pretty much the same thing but in a very different way. Let’s try another example:
Version 1: I Own the Product
I’ve downloaded a multitude of applications since purchasing my iPad. This is what makes the iPad so great – without the apps, the iPad would just be a glorified laptop. I’ve downloaded games, magazines, recipe apps, books, weather apps, to do lists, project planners, office apps, utilities and so much more.
Version 2: I Don’t Own the Product
You can download a multitude of applications for your iPad. This is what makes the iPad so great – without the apps, the iPad would just be a glorified laptop. You can download games, magazines, recipe apps, books, weather apps, to do lists, project planners, office apps, utilities and so much more.
You can see how you don’t need to say you own the product to write a good review. It’s simply how you word those sentences. It basically means using ‘You’ instead of ‘I’. But don’t overdo it. You don’t want to have a review full of sentences that start with ‘You’. So also include the word ‘It’ or the product name itself or other similar words. For example:
- “It has a load of features including…”
- “One of the best features is…”
- “The iPad has a load of features including…”
Just keep wording your sentences using this sort of style and you should find it a lot easier to write reviews even if you don’t own the product.
So now to the second question…. Writing a story to go with your review is a great way to get readers to keep reading so it’s a tip you should all try to learn if you are going to write good product reviews. Unfortunately however we’ve run out of time and this post is already getting way too long. But stay tuned as we will answer it in our next post.
Good advice as always, I was struggling to write a review yesterday, got to 600 words describing the item and got stuck. Then I found the manufacturers user instructions online, and described in detail how to use it, changing batteries etc.
The manufacturers site can be a great resource for information. I particularly look for their pdf user manuals because these usually have more detailed information that you won’t find anywhere else on the net.
Hi Paula, When you say a handful of pages, how many is a handful, 4-5? How many OBL do you add if any? Do you just add one affiliate link? When I am writing on websites, I tend to only put any links on the first page, affiliate on first par, and OBL towards the bottom. Sometimes I add one or 2 OBL in the other pages. But since readers don’t generally stay that long I don’t invest the time. Thoughts?
You actually only need one page to make a full time income but we like to diversify a bit – putting all your eggs in the one basket isn’t really a good thing.
So when we say a handful normally we mean around 5 to 10 pages.
We add more than one affiliate link on a review page – usually from 4 to 8 links.
And I don’t know what an OBL is so can’t answer those questions.
Paula, thanks! OBL are outbound links and you would link out to another site within your review or post referring to the topic of choice and that keyword. For example if your post is about marketing, you would highlight that word and link out to another authority site, preferably one with good ranking which gives you juice and google loves to see you share with others. Hope that helps.
Oh okay, I know what an outbound link is…just didn’t know what OBL stood for. I’ve never seen it referred to as an acronym before.
Sorry, in the course I took they used OBL, and IBL among others. So, do you use them?
Sometimes we use outbound links but generally for our product reviews we tend to stick with affiliate links only. We don’t want the reader to get sidetracked.
Great tutorial, ladies, thanks! I’ve found that when I’m stuck for sub-heads and topics to write about, I go to forums and find out what questions people are asking about the product. Then I answer those questions in the review. It helps get the creative juices flowing.
That’s a brilliant idea Julie Anne. It not only gives you ideas to write about but you can also delve into the mind of the consumer to see what aspects of the product are important to them.
Yahoo answers is also a great place to find what questions people have about the product.
Then you go back to those forums ASAP with the link to your review in your signature line, right? ;)
Good advice guys. I too head into the forums for background. Sometimes I can even answer a question (including an affiliate link to the product of course!) that someone has posted about the product.
Not all forums allow you to post links, esp affiliate ones but luckily the forum (provided by the store) that covers my main interest area does!
I guess that they dont mind as you are ‘helping’ a potential customer to decide to buy (from them).
Stay well
It’s almost almost impossible to add affiliate thinks anywhere these days so to be able to add one to a forum in your niche is a nice bonus.
I know! It’s only a few pounds here and there, but maybe I’ll find out that I am not supposed to when they kick me out!
I had emailed a supplier of one product asking some questions not answered at Amazon. So I also asked if they could ship a product just for me to test. To my surprise they said yes if I pay for shipping – since the product is not heavy, shipping should not be a problem. The product itself is expensive and has no comments from customers, so I really want to give the product a try for myself for review material.
Excellent Liz! That’s a great way of getting products to review.
Hey Paula,
Thanks for the post.
Simple and yet brilliant. Just substitute the ‘you’ for the ‘I’.
Deep and thorough research here is key.
Indeed, when the research is thorough enough, the review could be so masterfully written, the reader probably assumes that you own the product, without you having to say anything about it.
Part of the problem is that we approach writing a review just like any article. Just head over to EZA and get some ideas for your article and you can cobble one out in 20 minutes. No wonder then that such reviews rarely convert.
But there is also a caveat to writing too detailed a review.
Recently, as I was writing a review, when it came to the part on relating the instructions on how to use the product, it daunted upon me that I should not make the product sound too complicated or too much of a hassle to use by its detailed instructions. So, I had to somewhat tone that part down.
Anyway, I will always bear in mind to go that extra mile in doing research for a particular product review.
Can’t wait for Part 2. That’s where it get creative.
Thanks again.
Gregory
It can be a bit of a balance trying to not focus too much on the negatives whilst still providing an accurate review. This is why we choose products that get rave reviews to begin with so we don’t have to write about the negatives.
All top reviewers say the best way is the good/bad/and even ugly, as it provides a lot more credibility to the reviewer…agreed, or no?
Definitely agree. There are also ways of focusing on the negatives and turning them into positives.
I still prefer to find products that have very few negatives to begin with. They are so much easier to promote.
Perhaps. I do know though, I am certainly not alone in not fully trusting reviews that are all sunshine and puppies.
Love the tutorial. The examples are awesome and the “to be continued’ is classic! :)
Question – do you tell readers upfront, you do not own/have never used the product, or wait until someone asks in comments (I always do.) ;)
Generally we don’t say outright that we haven’t used the product. What we normally do is say we did loads of research to find out why this product is so great so people realize from how we word it that we don’t own it. It’s kind of saying we don’t own it but in a round about way. The reason for that, is if you say straight up that you don’t own the product your are reviewing, then people are just going to turn of straight away. We want them to stay with us and read the review.
Your site is a different story Dennis. You have a following whereas these type of product sites generally don’t get a regular following. You can say “I don’t own the product” and people will keep reading because they trust that you will have something thoughtful to say. On a product site, most people are new to the site, have no idea who we are, and so have no trust value to begin with. If we start off by saying “we don’t own the product” then they are likely to click away to find someone who does.
Ah yes, very good point. Gotcha.
Always excellent tips. Thanks for the advise.
Paula,
Do you recommend including customers’ testimonies about the product in your product review? Thanks.
Yep, we often add customer reviews from Amazon.
Hello both, great information, can I add that if you do the review in video you can upload to YouTube as well as have it on your site and get loads of social proof backlinks not to mention the viral effect.
Good point. It can definitely be worth the time to get a video together.
I know I only watch videos that the person doing the review shows how the product works, or don’t work. So if you don’t own the product and can’t show me the product because you can’t show what you DON’T have, how would you get me to watch your video to the end. I ask this cause I know I can’t be the only one like this. Plus if I don’t watch why would I do a video and expect you to watch when I wouldn’t watch it myself. It is like selling a diet. Please this is not spamming it is the only thing I can think of. I do not use Jenny Craig I did at one time but as soon as I got off it bam the weight came right back, I could not ever write a good review on this. Cause I would be ling to you all. But I do use another product and I can tell you all about the Formula 1, 2, and 3. I used it from 1985 to 1987, and then got back on it 2012 and use it today. But I could never tell you about Herbalife 24, I have never used it, but I know folks who have and I can tell you their story and put you in touch with them.
If I did a video and not show the product , or my before and after pic, it would be like watching every other diet video. But when I show my before pic and they now see Me, and I show them how to make my shake my way ((You understand what I’m saying) A PICTURE is worth 1000 words) they know I use the product and will listen to the end.
Again I ask: “HOW will you get me and others like me to watch your video, when you can not show me the product”? And how could I ever do a video review in a positive light, knowing that I’m ling out of my teeth? Think I know the answer to the last question, Don’t!!!
Yep, you would definitely need to own the product if you are doing a video review.
This is GREAT information and one that i will start using. I do have a question though. If i have a diamond ring site for example… would you look for a generic keyword to promote or are you promoting specific models from Amazon and using the amazon name as your main keyword on the site? So would you use the term “Womens Black Diamond Ring” or something like “2.00ct Fancy-Black Diamond Ring Antique Style” (pulled from AMZ)?
You could use either option – either way will work.
What we normally do is pick the product first before looking for keywords. We might find a list of 5 or 10 products from Amazon that meet our criteria. Then we start doing a bit of keyword research on each of those products to see if there will be enough keywords that we can rank for and to see if they will generate enough traffic.
Then when we write up the review we will use a variety of keyword phrases that we found during our keyword research. And for the main keyword we might focus on either a generic keyword like “Womens Black Diamond Ring” or the product keyword “2.00ct Fancy-Black Diamond Ring Antique Style”. It will all depend on how our keyword research went.
Hi Paula & Wanda,
I came across your site today via the Warrior Forum. I was looking for info on Amazon product review sites because I am getting thousands of page clicks but no conversions on my own. I stress between adding more products and doing articles/backlinking/press reviews and all the rest. I keep thinking I must have more products on my site.
Anyway, after reading through some of your posts here I am going to go back and improve my existing reviews. I do mostly use my own words, but not to the extent you recommend.
One of the things I think is happening – and I am not good at interpreting stats – is that I am in Portugal and picking up lots of hits from here, rather than the US which is my target audience. People in Portugal will just not want to be paying shipping. I thought about using links from Amazon.co.uk, however, their offerings are very different and I don’t want to re-do my site, nor do I wish to try and combine the products. It would be confusing for me never mind the customer.
Have you found any problems in this regard given you are in Australia?
I will probably buy some of the tools you recommend – once I start bringing in money to buy them. The old story is so true, you have to have money to make money.
So, hello, and you will be seeing more of me know I know you are hear.
We haven’t found any problems with being in Australia. Our sites are purely promoted to the US market and that’s where most of our traffic comes from. Our domains are .com’s.
Are there any affiliate programs in your country that you can use? It seems a shame to waste that traffic.
If you still want to promote to the US then I would find 5 pages on your site that get the most traffic from the US. Choose products that are over $150 so you can get a decent commission. Then just rework those 5 pages so the reviews are long and detailed. Then just spend 80% of your time on getting traffic and backlinks to those 5 pages.
Just try and focus a little more rather than add more pages.
Also, because you probably have a lot of pages already, take advantage of that and try and add as many links as possible to those 5 pages from other pages on your site. Internal links help to boost pages. You can actually do this really quickly with a free WordPress plugin called Internal Link Building. You can download it here: http://seoroi.com/specialty-services/new-seo-plugin-for-wordpress-internal-link-building
Thanks! I will install the plug in and rework my reviews.
Ruth
Great blog, loads of good advice on here.
Hopefully you can help me out with a quick question :)
Do you ever put links to Amazon products in seperate countries, (ie if a product is searched for in roughly equal numbers in the US & UK would you consider putting a link to both sites on your website)?
thanks
We mostly receive traffic from the US so have never thought of doing it. But I don’t see why you couldn’t. If you are getting enough buyers from both countries then that would be a good way to go.
Thank you for this posting that I reached via an email I received from you. I was so pleased to read that someone had success who focused on helping a customer rather than on the seo keywords in the email. I then clicked through to this informative article.
I am now going to look carefully through your BLOG which is incredibly informative.
Kindest regards to you both.
Glad you enjoyed the email Marilyn. It’s always good to hear success stories.
Paula,
Thank you so much for the examples. These make all the difference, and I was able to see quickly how you made changes in your reviews based on your own personal experience with the product. They seem pretty simple now that you show us exactly how to do it, but isn’t that how most useful advice is? It just takes someone willing to stop and go that extra step to share their knowledge.
Thanks for your willingness to share with us.
Brad
Thanks for your kind thoughts Brad. It’s always nice to get a visit from you.
I guess that we have wandered off topic here but hey ho!
I have just mailed amazon to ask if cookies can cross their sites. For example, if someone in the UK reads your review and clicks on the affiliate links, ends up at amazon.com, realises that they need amazon.co.uk, migrates using amazons country links at the bottom of the site and buys the item.
Does the cookie (and commission!) follow? I can let you know what they say, unless you already know!
Cheers
Definitely let us know Ian.
Hi Paula,
Got a quick reply from Amazon! It was as I feared, we need separate links if we are to make sales across the amazon network.
Shame as there are so many ‘global’ products for sale across the amazon stores.
HERE is what AMAZON had to say……(cheers Ian)
If you belong to either, all, or some of Amazon’s Associates programs, Amazon.com in the US, Amazon.co.uk in the UK, Amazon.de in Germany, Amazon.fr in France, Amazon.ca in Canada, or the Amazon.co.jp in Associates Program, you would need to create Affiliate links to each item out of each program’s associates Central for your site to gain referral fees.
Example,
Say you want to link to the item “Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows” for Amazon.com (United Sates) and Amazon.ca (Canada). You would need to create a Link out of Amazon.com (United Sates) Associates https://affiliate-program.amazon.com and the same link out of https://associates.amazon.ca (Canada) and add both links to your site to be paid for sales placed through those links.
Associate members in Amazon.com will not receive a referral fee if a customer clicks from Amazon.com (US) and then goes to Amazon.ca (Canada) to make a purchase. The only way an Associate member will receive a referral fee through Amazon.ca (Canada) is if your customer clicks on an Amazon.ca (Canada) Affiliate link from your site and makes a purchase on Amazon.ca (Canada).
This scenario goes with all Affiliate programs within Amazon.
Interesting. I think all of us should be checking our sites to see if we get a lot of traffic from any other countries coming through to specific pages and start adding some international links.
I think I will be adding that to my list of things to do. Thanks for getting this info Ian.
Your welcome :-)
It’s obvious no one is capable to buy each and every product and then review it. So this post will definitely help bloggers for writing review without telling lie or being a fake buyer.
Hi Paula,
I especially like this part of your reply,
“Generally we don’t say outright that we haven’t used the product. What we normally do is say we did loads of research to find out why this product is so great so people realize from how we word it that we don’t own it.”
Such a review with loads of research is definitely value-added and the customer will find that it is worth his while to continue reading. And probably he wouldn’t mind purchasing through your link because he thinks that you have earned it.
One related question. For the purpose of the FTC regulations, I was wondering if I should state outright in the disclaimer that though not a bona fide user, the reviews are the compilations of the objective views of actual customers, both positives and negatives. The customer may not necessarily see my disclaimer page. This way I am writing a review on a product which I haven’t used and at the same time satisfying the FTC requirement to some extent. So, there is transparency. How do you normally do it, Paula?
Thanks
Greg
I would add that wording in your footer or sidebar so it appears on every page rather than state it in the review. Of course, I’m not a lawyer so don’t quote me on it. You are better off contacting the FTC if you want an accurate answer to that.
Hi Paula & Wanda, I just wanted to give you an update.
I took your advice and have started reworking some pages…what an immediate impact it had. As this is a new site I was still way down in the global rankings, in the 4 million + to be exact, and in the 177,000+ for the UK. I wasn’t even showing any US rank even though that is my target market.
Within two days my global went up to 2,896 242 – over a million places higher, my UK was at 122,000+ and for the very fist time I was showing a US rank of 850,000+
THANK YOU!
I still don’t have any conversions but I know that will come. I am reworking all of my pages rather than just a few, and, I am not going to add anything more to the site until I have done this. Since I am only in Portugal for the summer, and then back to North America, I don’t want to put any work into targeting this audience.
What I am going to do when I have done the above is to split up my posts. My ‘doing something different’ was to compare two products on each page. I am feeling that I will be better off keeping one product to a page and putting in more detail.
What do you think about a ‘call to action’? I don’t actually tell my visitors to buy, I don’t even mention Amazon, but all the page links take them to Amazon.
Anyway, thanks for your help, it has made a big difference.
I also wanted to thank Ian for posting his communication with Amazon……it was information very useful to me.
Keep up your great work.
Ruth
That’s fantastic Ruth. It’s good to see that it is working for you.
And as for the ‘call to action’ you don’t need to do anything special. You are doing the right thing by just including links to Amazon throughout the review. All you need to do at the end of the review is just add a sub-heading that says something like: “Where can I buy it” or something similar and then under that state that you think Amazon is the best place to buy it and send them off there with a link.
Dear Paula and Wanda………
My very first product sale!!!!!!!!!!!! I woke up this morning to find that I sold a grill table for $70+. I know that is very little commission but at least I know that what I am doing is working. Thanks for the tips, obviously I will keep following them. My Alexa rankings are increasing like crazy and I am still slowly applying the tweaks you mentioned.
I haven’t loaded the link building plug in you suggested because I had to learn what RSS feeds were about. Another post of yours showed me that.
Thanks again.
Ruth
Excellent!!! I’m so pleased for you Ruth.
There’s nothing better than that first sale to get you motivated. You’re on a roll now so just keep up the momentum.
I am from Indonesia, i found this blog from google (keyword affiliate amazon from picture). I cannot speak english so i use google translator for understand your post. But no problem, because i want study from blog. Thanks.
thanks for this! very re-assuring and to the point.
I myself made the mistake to actually stick to very few niches where I knew and owned the products, or at least had them in my hands for some time.
NObody values that. The consumer looking for reviews online only needs a certain amount of facts and knowledge, most of them do not want to read highly technical in-depth reviews. They are more in pursuit of the final little bit of “comfort” to make their decision. Back up your reviews with that certain amount of facts (easy to get from other sources of information, as your article perfectly illustrates) and give them the warmth and comfort that they need to press that purchase button. Since I learned that lesson, things are ramping up…
That’s a good way of putiing it – just give them that ‘final bit of comfort’… I like that.
Hi Paula,
Just seeking some advice. I posted a product view only to find a week later that this product is not currently available and uncertain if there will be stock anytime soon. Do you recommend posting this information to my site or allowing visitors to discover for themselves the status? The review does have useful information. Thanks.
We don’t normally post an update on our reviews for products that are showing as ‘Currently Unavailable’ because they can come back at any time so I would rather not have to update every review on our website to ensure we have the latest info.
We will only update the review if the product is no longer being manufactured – in other words, it’s never coming back.
great post!!
Has anybody tried outsorcing the reviews to some pro?
It may only cost a few bucks and would save you time and add the writers’ expertise.
If so, what has been you experience so far?
Thanks in advance
We have a really good writer that does some of our reviews and I know my brother has found a good writer as well for his sites. So it’s definitely doable.
Great post, I will email my writers this link. Though I prefer to write product reviews as I don’t own the products, also when you are in many niches its hard to keep a tab on the way reviews get written for each of the products.
It can be hard when you have a lot of niches. We were in the same boat. We have over 20 websites and working on all of them and trying to write reviews is hard work. We eventually stopped doing that and only focus on a handful of reviews at a time until we start seeing them make sales. It’s much easier and works really well.
An beautifully written narticle ad the examples really bring it home how easy it can be. I wish had 1000”s of reviews out there… maybe soon
Cheers for the itps I think that I will certainly have to check you 2 ladys out :)
You don’t need thousands of reviews Tony. You only need 1 to make a good income online. We have thousands of reviews but only around 20 of them actually bring in a regular income. Focus, focus, focus!
I examined your post and have gain more insight into making reviews for different products. I appreciate your post and have book marked your blog, so I can get more information about product reviews. Mark at backlink bully sent me a email about your blog. I’m getting ready to start making some product blogs for the coming Christmas holiday. Your insight into product review are outstanding. Thank you again for the great post.
Glad you like the post William.
And yes, nows the time to be ramping up for Christmas. We can already see an increase in sales.
I understand writing good review require good command in English especially in writing. What happen if English is not our 1st language or least to said spoken. This is essentially hard for people who don’t have a good background to master the language. I wonder that your system can provide a method that will help those group of them. And if so what is the best way out. Sincerely hope that you could provide valuable suggestion and advise pertaining to this question. Thanks
There are a couple of things that you can do Jimmy. Write up the review with all the information that you have found out about the product. Then ask someone in Elance (http://www.elance.com) to check the review to make sure its understandable in English and that all the grammar is correct.
Or, you could have the review written entirely by someone in Elance by simply giving them the details and a link to the product.
This won’t be free but it shouldn’t cost very much.
Maybe some of our readers will have other suggestions that are free or inexpensive.
Hi Paula I was wondering if you can refer that writer to me also? since you sometimes outsource to do the product reviews
What is his/her rate?
Our writer has gone back to work so no longer writes for us. So disappointing. She was such a good writer. We just write them ourselves now. Because we only focus on a few reviews at a time until they start making money, the workload is not that great.
But there are plenty of other really good writers in Elance.com. You just have to make sure you pick the right people. Look for ones with lots of positive feedback and make sure they can show you examples of reviews you have done in the past.
And I was wondering also on what you say for an opening sentence or some sort. I’d like read one of your product reviews to get an idea a bit
Have a read of this post Min…it should help.
http://www.affiliateblogonline.com/2009/12/17/how-to-write-product-reviews-that-convert/
Good post. telling a story while write a review is probably the best way to write one. It’s also the best way I know of when you are trying to get someone to buy the product you are writing about. Great post again, and I will definitely be back.
Thanks,
Brad C.
You might want to read this post as well Brad as it goes into it in more detail:
http://www.affiliateblogonline.com/2010/07/10/how-to-weave-a-story-into-your-product-reviews/
Thanks for the advice. I really appreciate your tips and will put them into practice. I’m not an expert product reviewer but I do write them and keep striving to improve. I’ll check out your other posts on this subject which I’m sure are helpful as well.
Product reviews do take practice. We struggled with them at the beginning but now I can write a complete review (1000 words) in under an hour. They just seem to flow for me now so I guess practice is the key.
Hope I can do that well Paula.
I’m a new blog enthusiast but I haven’t started creating my own blog site. I’m still gathering insights on how to do it better. I’m currently writing reviews or reports online to further develop my writing skills.
If I finally have my own blog site, I’ll make sure to remember these tips.
Just found your site.. Some top advice here. You guys really know your stuff.
Thanks for visiting. Hope we can help.
I think your Amazon Profit Plan link is broken…
Thanks for letting us know Gordon. It’s fixed now.
Thanks for your post. It’s great.
I will try your advice later.
Yes. One great product review will bring years of income.
So, let’s do the resarch.
[…] on from our last blog post, today we are going to go through how to include a story in your product reviews. The reason we add […]