George Brown’s Google Sniper Review

by Eric Transue on November 16, 2009

I have received quite a few emails over the past month asking if I have tried out George Brown’s Google Sniper program.

The answer is yes.

I paid for a copy for myself and put it through it’s paces.

If you are an experienced Internet Marketer you are not going to find much new information in this program. Much of the information you will find is stuff you already know and most likely are already using.

However, if you are new to Internet Marketing or are just looking for a plan that takes you by the hand and walks you through getting a successful site online, this may be the program you are looking for.

The idea behind Google Sniper is to create sites that target long tail keywords. You want to target terms that have a decent amount of searchers each month. At the same time you want to target phrases that have very little competition so that you can get your site ranked higher in a shorter period of time…and start making money.

George’s program walks you through the process step by step. Although some of his videos moved a little slow for me, it might be because a lot of this stuff wasn’t new to me. For a beginner though, the pace of the videos makes it easy to follow along with George as he shows you how to create your site.

George walks you though doing keyword research, picking your niche and setting up your blog.

George also let’s you take a peak at one of his most successful sniper blogs. I think being able to see a site he actually did is pretty cool. I often feel that many of these guys selling their products have never really done the steps they are trying to sell, so seeing one of George’s blogs ranked highly for the keywords he is targeting adds some more credibility to his Sniper system.

There is one thing I must warn you about. Although I do like George’s Google Sniper program and recommend it to anyone that needs step by step instructions on how to start making money online, there is something about the program I don’t like.

There is $37.00 a month membership you are automatically enrolled in at the time of purchase. This is supposed to be some sort of insider’s club with extra tips, Q&A, etc.. I found this portion of the program lacking. It could have been a really nice addition, but due to the lack of updates, I really don’t think it is much help to new Snipers.

You aren’t charged for 2 weeks, so if you do buy the Google Sniper program, be sure to check out the membership area and if it isn’t much help to you, be sure to cancel it before your 2 week trial is up.

Hopefully the membership area will be gettingĀ  a much needed update in the near future.

Feel free to leave any comments or questions you may have.

Check Out The Google Sniper Program Here

  • This sounds a good product. But this line, "The idea behind Google Sniper is to create sites that target long tail keywords," catches me the most above all of those you've said. Not that it's kinda common, but it's actually the key behind the successful on most of the blogs I've worked.

    As an SEO part-timer, part of my strategy to divert attention to products or services is to get those suffers who are searching for the right product/service but using wrong combination of keyword phrases. As you can see, getting your products or services to where the seekers lost their way, is a winning situation. It's like being the magical Fairy Godmother who's appearing when somebody wants to make a wish.

    And by targeting long tail keywords doesn't always mean creating microsites which point to the main site. A blog on your site is enough to make this work. You just have to think outside the box and focus attention to some keyword phrases which you think people may thought of searching that is not particularly competitive. Give them good reviews around these less competitive keywords and let your effective pitches do the conversion for a sale.

    And if you want huge traffic from it, you can do the math. 100 long tail keywords reviewed on your blog which each serve 10 unique searches daily, could make you 1000 unique hits a month. Can't elaborate much the idea but this is how my team and I do it for our clients from where we got our above satisfaction ratings.
    .-= Female Celebrities´s last blog ..Miley Cyrus Lauded She's a 'Model', Not a 'Parent' =-.
  • Thanks for the great post. 100% agree with you!

    George's Sniper program is great for those starting out and really gets the wheels spinning on how to fine tune his techniques and take them to the next level.

    I have several blogs very similar to what you mentioned above. That being, many posts that target the long tail in hopes of capturing traffic that is really probably interested in the main topic my blog is about. I find it much easier and effective to have multiple posts bringing in a trickle of traffic (they add up), than to try to compete against many others for the monster traffic generating keywords. That's not to say I don't go after the Monster's as well. :)
  • I'm in the same boat as both of you guys. I used to sign up for everything for fear of missing that once in a lifetime opportunity. The result was that I would always try to do multiple things at the same time... the result of that would be that I did nothing well!

    I have since unsubscribed from a number of lists and learned to focus.

    I'm much more successful now... :-)
    .-= Darvin @ Organic Food Coupons´s last blog ..Do Follow Blog, Comment, Keyword Luv and Top Commenter =-.
  • Congrats! Getting off all the "lists" has helped me focus as well. If you don't see the 10 emails a day promoting the "latest and greatest" it's much easier to stay focused.
  • Linda
    Eric, thanks for this review. The problem I have with internet marketing programs is that most reviews are by affiliates who just copy a huge page full of junk about how much money the creator has made, and you get no facts to help you decide whether the programs you've already bought cover the same ground. My mailbox is choked full of stuff that all looks exactly the same!
  • You're welcome Linda. I used to subscribe to every list I could in order to see what others were doing. I know exactly what you are talking about when you say your mailbox is full of the exact same stuff. :)

    I finally had to unsubscribe from all the lists I was on and it was one of the best productivity decisions I have ever made!

    I am going to start reviewing more products I have tried. Hopefully my input can help my readers decide whether or not the product will work for them.
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