James Dooley: Also known as the Link Daddy, so pleased to meet you. It's been a while since we last spoke but obviously we've worked together for a long time now. So how you doing?
Tony Peacock: Okay, so feeling good, doing well. Yeah, thanks for asking.
James Dooley: Whereabouts in the world are you at present?
Tony Peacock: I'm actually in Johannesburg. I was living in Russia for about ten years but decided to come here and love it here, because you know, the company's in the US so I earn US dollars and of course the exchange rate to South African rand is pretty good. But you know, the food here is really good. I mean, I've got a four bedroom house with a pool, double lockup garage, pool table, you know, huge bedrooms, two grand a month. You know, if I was in Australia or Dubai or something I'd be paying way more than that.
James Dooley: Yeah, yeah, sure. Yeah, do you have any staff then in South Africa? Any staff?
Tony Peacock: Yeah, do you have any staff while you're there in South Africa? Because we've got quite a few virtual assistants based in South Africa. They're good because speaking to them, it's quite good for VAs.
James Dooley: Yeah, yeah. Now all my... I've got one Russian guy who lives in Georgia and then I've got my partner who's South African and then all the other staff in the Philippines.
Tony Peacock: All right, okay. Yeah, yeah. We've got in the Philippines as well. So the we try to have them all over the world if we can.
James Dooley: Yeah, we finally... I was just going to say that's the good thing about having an online business, you know? You can really be anywhere in the world. You're not location dependent, you know? Like I build fences, you know, and I was only as good as my next fence, you know, and I was stuck there. If I went somewhere else I didn't make any money, you know?
Tony Peacock: Yeah, yeah, for sure. I mean, like you said, you can be anywhere in the world. You can be based anywhere in the world as long as you've got a laptop and an internet connection. It's the staff as well, so you can charge Western rates but then be paying third world type country staff wages. As long as you still need to make certain you've got the right systems and processes and SOPs in place, but once they're in place it makes it very easy to do and scale out.
James Dooley: That's true. So anyway, let me dive deep into Link Daddy and let's start going through some of the services. So to start with, for anyone who's going to be going through to your website, obviously you've got an array of different link building services. Can these be used for tier one backlinks or are they only for tier two backlinks?
Tony Peacock: Well, actually both. Most people that order are using them as tier one backlinks because we have different types of services. I think, you know, as you know, I've been doing this for quite a while, 2015 I started. And so now with the help of AI and various other things we've really got our content dialled in and so even though we automate the whole process we can create unique niche relevant blog posts and as a result we've got a better than 70% indexing rate on the tier one. Like you know, when we create a tiered backlinking campaign, typically we have three tiers and the tier one is linking to the person's homepage or their inner page or service page or product page or whatever.
James Dooley: Yeah, yeah. I mean some of these questions I'm asking you obviously I know the answer to because I've used your services for many years. I'm just... it's just for the users to know whether they can use it direct to the money site or is it just for tier two purposes. We use a lot of your services for different purposes, so some directly to money site, some for, let's say, image ranking, video ranking, GMB rankings and stuff like that. So there's many different reasons and different services of what we're ordering, but I just wanted the viewers to know that this can be used to power up your existing, let's say, homepage or your website, but also can be used to power up guest posts and other platforms for like parasite SEO reasons and stuff like that. But going into it for a few different reasons of why someone might want to use some of your services, have you got a specific service that helps rank images in Google Image tab?
Tony Peacock: Well, I haven't designed a service to you know and called it you know Image ranking. I mean, what I've noticed is I do a lot of press releases. So when you do a press release and you're getting a press release into like Business Insider or Yahoo or something like that, they're quite powerful websites and those images will tend to rank actually quite high in image search. I can't say that you would just order one of our backlinking campaigns and you know your image is going to rank. I don't really know. But you know, with all of our backlinking services, if there's a URL that can be linked to, then we can link to it. What we don't know is, okay, how many campaigns would you need to do to actually rank an image? Because it kind of depends on the niche, how competitive that niche is, how popular that keyword is, you know what I mean? Like, for example, you know, a not well-known keyword, an image could rank really easily, but if you're trying to rank an image for SEO Services, you know, that's going to take some doing. And so then the person has to evaluate, well, you know, is it really worth spending the amount of money that would be required to try and rank an image for that keyword? Is it really worth it? Like, what would be the return on the investment?
James Dooley: So if I'm going to move on to like video and GMB and other types of reasons why you'd use some of your services, but just specifically on the image ranking side of things, if you were to do, let's say, a press release, are you looking to link to the dot JPG URL link? Are you just using the image and hoping via link inversion that your website is stronger, that your image will rank on your own website? Are you embedding and putting the image via an iFrame when you're putting it onto like the press release or the Web 2.0 backlinks? Is there any difference to do on that?
Tony Peacock: Yeah, I mean, we could do some testing with this because you've brought up some pretty interesting ideas as far as iframing the image. Typically when we're doing a press release we're just uploading up to three images and depending on the site will depend on how many images get used. Usually when you're doing a press release there's no linking from the image back to your website. It's more really for branding, like getting your logo up there in image search, you know what I mean? But if the person clicks on the image it's then going to take them to Yahoo or Business Insider and of course from there there'd be a link back to your website.
James Dooley: Because I know quite a few that they'll do... the only issue with that is the conversion rate optimisation. If they're going clicking through to, let's say, Yahoo Finance or Business Insider, and it's that page that's ranking, that page isn't really built for conversion. Whereas if it's on your site and on your page, there's something in there. Obviously the stronger the page on your website is, it's whichever, generally speaking, if the same image is being used across the internet, whatever page is the strongest normally the page that ranks for that image, even if it's not the original source. So there's times where you could end up using one of your images that might be doing okay, use it on Yahoo Finance, and even if you were ranking for that image, Yahoo Finance might take your rankings for that image now. So sometimes iframing and embedding the image is better than natively uploading it. If that makes sense?
Tony Peacock: Yeah, yeah. Well, you know, when you're working with press releases, there's no way... well, I don't know. I mean, I haven't actually tested this, but I need to actually have a look to see if there was a way to put in an iFrame, but I don't think so. But with the system that I use, we can put in a GMB embed and it'd be interesting to test that.
James Dooley: Yeah, so let's move on to video rankings then. So on these press releases, are any of these do-follow backlinks and stuff that you're providing? Is anyone using any of your services specifically for video rankings? That's either in YouTube or also in Google? Like, there's times where I've personally... so I've used many of your services over the years for video rankings where I've been ranking well in YouTube and I know I want to try and get it in Google Video Carousel. But I just want you to try to explain, is there anyone doing anything doing well for specifically for video rankings?
Tony Peacock: I can't say that I get a lot of orders for that. I was providing a video ranking service which is really more for YouTube and that was using logged in YouTube channels and 4G mobile proxies and that would you know rank videos really really well. But that whole system became cost prohibitive. And so really, if you want to rank a video in YouTube, you need views from logged in YouTube channels. That's how you rank a video on YouTube. In Google, it really depends on the keyword. Because, like, for example, let's say you've created a video for, you know, Joe's dental clinic in Miami, and you're trying to rank a video for, you know, dental clinic or dentist Miami, it's just impossible because Google doesn't see that keyword, you know, dentist Miami, as a keyword relevant for video. Where videos can rank with backlinks is, you know, searches or keywords that aren't quite well known or aren't, you know, general terms, you know, like day terms. You know, for example, Chris Palmer does quite well in ranking videos, like CTR manipulation service. Well, that's not a typical term that most people would know, so it's not very competitive, but he's got quite a few videos ranking for that. But if it's like a market level keyword, like, you know, dentist Miami or something like that or roofing company Austin, there's no way you're going to get a video on page one.
James Dooley: Yeah, yeah, no, that yeah, that makes sense. But the you so just onto your service that you stopped... the logged in YouTubes, was that just getting them to watch all the video, like, and comment and stuff like that? Is that what they were doing?
Tony Peacock: This was a special system that was actually set up using 4G mobile proxies, yeah, and we had thousands of YouTube channels with stored history. The whole thing, so YouTube actually saw... like, so basically a keyword would get typed into YouTube. Your video would then get found, it would then get clicked on, and you know, 90% of the video... it varied every time so that there wasn't a kind of like a footprint, but at least 90% of the video was actually watched from a logged in YouTube channel. Yeah, and I mean, these were real views. I even did a test where I monetised my channel and because I was getting views I had advertising and I was getting paid money, you know? But you know, I had videos ranking all over the place. But you know, using 4G mobile proxies, the price was just going up and up and up because when you're watching, you know, a two, three or five minute video using a proxy, 4G mobile proxy, the prices just go through the roof.
James Dooley: Yeah, yeah, that makes sense. And also then the other problem was the channels. Like YouTube was going crazy on just closing down. Like they kept improving their security and so channels, you know, were just getting wiped out.
Tony Peacock: Yeah, so you know, there was constant battle of trying to create you know real looking channels, develop some kind of history with the channel and then it would get muted.
James Dooley: Yeah, we obviously we've touched upon there with regards to the video rankings and you were using like 4G proxies for YouTube and stuff like that. Do you ever do anything with regards to backlinks and embeds to try and help rankings for ranking the video in Google?
Tony Peacock: Yes, I mean, that's how I actually started, back in the day I was creating YouTube channels and ranking the videos on page one of Google and of course to do that you needed backlinks and you needed to embed the videos. Yeah, you can definitely do it but it really does depend on the keyword. You know, if you're trying to rank a video for, you know, dentist Miami or roofing company Austin or something like that, I would say it's impossible. Maybe if there's already a video carousel there, how do you beat out the existing videos that are already there? There's already a video carousel in Google. How did you beat those ones out? Is that to do with CTR manipulation or is that to do with...
James Dooley: Yeah, say in my opinion it's a combination of backlinks, embeds and CTR manipulation, right?
Tony Peacock: Okay, yeah, and this, and if the CTR is coming from real YouTube channels, like actual logged in YouTube channels, that would be even better, yeah? Because Google would get, you know, YouTube's going to give... or Google, because Google owns YouTube, is going to give more weight to a view coming from a logged in YouTube channel that's got history, yeah, that's actually a real account. So if you had a way of creating a lot of YouTube channels using, you know, Session Splitter or something like that, Ghost Browser or whatever, and you built up a really big history with that channel and you didn't do anything with those channels, maybe for six months, and now you started to use those channels for CTR manipulation, then you could really do some damage, yeah?
James Dooley: For sure, yeah. What about GMB or Google Business Profile rankings? Is many people using your services for Google Business Profiles?
Tony Peacock: Yeah, yeah, I get a lot of orders. I came up with a strategy and it's a combination of press releases and CTR. So where most people go wrong with press releases is they do one and usually they do one for the main city. So if you take any major city, you know, within the major city there's smaller cities, okay? And of course Google knows well, this smaller city is part of the bigger city. So what I advise people to do is you do a press release for your particular service in small city A, right? The press release, we can add three images, we can embed the YouTube video, we can embed the Google Map, and we can link out to three places on the website. And what I recommend is you do a press release every twenty-five days. The reason being is because a press release is duplicate content, so Google really doesn't have any interest in indexing, you know, five hundred news sites all with the same content. So the news sites understand this and so after thirty days or sixty days they will archive that content. So before they start to do that, you bring out another press release for location B, small city B, and then before that gets archived you do it for small city C. What you end up with is permanent referring root domains from the news sites which are trusted by Google. And of course, the number one ranking factor in Google is the number of unique referring domains linking back to a website. So that's your SEO strategy. The press releases will help with the branding and authority. And typically I recommend you link out to the homepage with naked URL anchor text. You link out to a service page with a keyword, link out to the contact page or quote page or book an appointment page. And then you have CTR. And where what I recommend is that you must use a combination of brand, mainly branded keywords. And I always ask clients this question, you know? If you're in Miami looking for a roofing company or someone's in Miami... beg a pardon. If someone was in Miami looking for a roofing company and they go to Google Maps and they type in roofing company, what are they telling Google? And people always say well, they're looking for a roofing company, and I say yes, that's true, but what they're really telling Google is I don't know anyone. So when they go to Google Maps and they type in Joe's Roofing Service, that's a branded search. So Google, with particularly with the algorithm updates, is very focused on brands. So when someone's typing in a brand in Google Maps, you know, someone was referred to them, they got a business card somehow, they found out about this business name to be able to type in the brand name. Now of course, this is location specific because when we're doing CTR, you know, we're picking this smaller city, we're taking a central location, we're creating random latitudes and longitudes from different points of that location, and we're using 4G mobile proxies. So we go to the browser and we type in, you know, Joe's Roofing Services, Bel Air, for example. So that's, you know, brand plus location. So now it would make sense that people are searching for Joe's roofing services in that location because they were just mentioned in the news, yeah?
James Dooley: See, so the press release is a logical reason why someone would now be typing in the brand in that location. And so with the way we do it, it's between ten to twenty clicks. So because we're putting in the brand, it will populate the Google Map straight away. Then the map gets clicked on and we click through to the website and scroll up and down on the website for up to two minutes. You know, that looks a lot more natural than if you know a keyword was typed in, you know, roofing company, Bel Air. I'm just making up a city here. And now you know, you scroll through, you know, three pages of Google Maps and go, oh, wow, I really like this company, you know? Like I'm sure Google has stats on that and that would look totally fake. But when it's a branded search, it's going to populate the map, the map then gets clicked on. And so it's the combination of press releases and the CTR is what helps with ranking in the map. And because you know, brand is going to help increase the authority, yeah, because there's so many people gaming the system, Google is rewarding brands, you know? Because that's harder to fake, you know? It's either a real brand or it isn't, you know?
Tony Peacock: So yeah, and we have another... with regards to the CTR, are you able to say like what type of tool? Obviously using 4G proxies, are you able to say what tool that you're using? Like what CTR tool?
James Dooley: Yeah, I use CTR Booster, yeah?
Tony Peacock: Yeah, yeah, that was that was, or Allie, created by Abbas Rajji and then Garrett actually bought that out and sort of made some improvements, yeah? And so I you know, bought a lot of licenses so I've got I don't know, forty something Vps with that installed on, yeah? And yeah, so we do a lot of those orders. And the only difference is there's like the press release on the CTR was kind of like the basic service that I recommend to local businesses to do every twenty-five days. It's less than two hundred bucks a month, yeah? And the only difference to that is Google Maps ranking, where we then actually create tier one blogs and we link out to three URLs. Typically the page, or the location page, the share link, and the CID link. So the C link is the machine address in Google for the map. So we'll link out to those three. And we'll create like a tier, tier one campaign. Niche relevant blogs with the map embedded. And we'll have those ten branded keywords. One link will be on a blog post, so there's four hundred blog posts. There'll be one link on each blog post. And we'll be linking out to randomly one of those URLs using up to ten variations of the brand: brand plus service, brand plus service plus location, brand plus location, near me, these these types of keywords as anchor text, yeah?
James Dooley: And then once that tier one's created, we're then creating five additional campaigns to backlink those tier ones. And of course, the GMB is embedded in all of those blogs. So the Google Maps ranking is you know, backlinks and embeds which include CTR. So some people order the Google Maps ranking and the press release every month. And then they've got the location pages. They would then use the Google Maps ranking to backlink each location page as well as doing the press release. So yeah, some people do that. And so they just go for the press release and CTR.
Tony Peacock: With regards to the press release, and obviously the syndication that that press release does do, do you try to force index any of the URLs? And if so, what indexing tool you using?
James Dooley: I don't use indexing tools. We've got our own system, yeah, and typically we don't index the press release links, yeah? But I am, I do a lot of press releases for Link Daddy and so I'm testing you know, backlinking press releases at the moment just to see if it helps move the needle. Typically press releases are no-follow. So I'm doing some tests. But you know, with our indexing system, it's a proprietary system. So when we, whatever campaign we're doing, whether it's do-follow SEO backlinks or keyword backlinks or Google Maps ranking, we only index the tier one and we have a better than 70% indexing rate, yeah? And this is you know, the reason why we can say that is because we've done a case study of over a thousand orders. So we've got an ongoing case study with you know, across multiple niches, yeah? Yeah, and where it's you know, we're testing, okay, this is how many tier one links were created, we put them through the indexing system, this is how many we got indexed. We're using special proxies, you know, Google-tested proxies, to make sure that they're indexed in Google. But in regards to the press release links, I don't try and index those. They will naturally index. Some of them will naturally index anyway. Google has no interest in indexing them all because it's duplicate content, so it will randomly choose different sites to display in the index, different press releases, yeah?
Tony Peacock: Yeah, but the SEO side of it, the SEO side is where the payoff is. So, you know, before they archive the content, you know, the URL structure is going to change because the subject of the press release might change or the location of where you're doing the press release for is going to change. But you end up with the permanent referring root domain, yeah? And that's the important thing. And of course the press releases do help with branding and authority, yeah.
James Dooley: Yeah, for sure. So back onto the away from the press release and onto like the Web twos and the do-follow backlinks and stuff like that, of what you do, what software are you using? I know previously you'd use like MoneyRobot, but are you using like RankerX or SEO Autopilot or SEO Neo? Like, is there any specific tool you're using to manage all of these different platforms?
Tony Peacock: Well, I have, I mainly use MoneyRobot. I've got you know, I think I've got thirteen servers with, you know, two hundred and sixty VPS or something, yeah? So I've got a lot of licenses of MoneyRobot. But I don't use MoneyRobot for content. I only use MoneyRobot to create the blog and to submit the content to and to manage all of the tiered linking. I don't use their content. I've created a content system. And of course I've been doing this for so long I've got you know, massive networks. And they're all niched. So like, I'm you know, if if you come to me as a roofing company I don't do a campaign for you and then I take a dentist and do the dentist on the same blog. I have you know, blogs themed for roofing, blogs themed for dentist, and so on, yeah?
James Dooley: And of course, you know, back in the day we had a lot of trouble getting the content indexed because I was using MoneyRobot content because I was a bit green. I didn't know what I was doing. But now with the help of AI and other tools, we're able to create nested spin texts where we have readable titles, readable content. We're embedding up to one hundred images, one hundred videos, the Google Map. And then where they get positioned on the page changes every time. So then Google sees this as unique content. It's this is the problem that most people have, that most service providers have, and the customers of those service providers, is they'll typically create one piece of content, maybe they'll change the location or something like that or change a keyword. Maybe they change the image. Carry on. Expand on where you were at... got to the backlinks now. There have been tests done where if Google crawls it, it knows the links are there. They might not index it, but they at least know what's there. So you know, of course, other guys will say well, if it's not indexed, it's absolutely useless. So you know what I've noticed is you know, a lot of companies, even really big companies, link building companies, they will typically use the same content on different platforms. Maybe they change the image or something like that. But most of the posts are orphaned and because it's duplicate content it just doesn't get indexed. And of course, MoneyRobot links all of the blogs together in a category like roofing or dentist or whatever. But as far as the content is concerned, we don't use it. We're using AI. We've got unique titles and where we place the images and videos and the Google Map, every page is different. So that's why we have a very successful indexing rate, which is more than 70%. But you know, most of these other guys creating blogs or whatever, their content just doesn't get indexed. And then people go out and spend money trying to index it and it won't index because it's not unique content, yeah?
Tony Peacock: Yeah, yeah, I know. I mean, that's great. So with regards to your different services then within Link Daddy, I'm going to explain to the people viewing this a few things of where I personally enjoy acquiring some backlinks from yourself. Not just for obviously they do-follow, the page rank distribution, and the higher rankings of what it gets, gives our money sites, but obviously as well, what there's certain tricks and tips that you can do. So when you're doing and you're ordering a press release from Tony Peacock or if you're ordering any of his do-follow backlinks, the fact that you can include images and videos and a GMB embed and you get do-follow backlinks, there's so many different reasons of why this is worth doing. It's part of your search engine optimisation strategy, right? But also on top of that, the content that you can get written right, can also if you've got to win some awards, a lot of people don't take what they've got offline and put it online. If you've won some awards, you could be using a gig like with Link Daddy that shout and scream about this award that you've won, right? You can connect that award that you've won with an author on your website or the owner or a team member on your website. Well, what's that doing now? That's ticking the box for E-A-T signals literally via using Tony Peacock signals, including the author and including the awards that they've won. Now you're ticking the box for E-A-T. There's other many reasons of why you can be using obviously Link Daddy services with regards to brand and reputation management or crisis management, so trying to get position number two, position number four, position number six, and stuff like that, all the way down and cover that. So do you do you find anyone uses it for reputation management, though?
James Dooley: The honest answer is I don't know because we have you know, thousands of orders coming in and I'm not checking every single order just to see what people are doing, yeah? One of the reasons why people use us is because we have different services at different price points. But the services are also designed to control the different types of anchor texts, whether it be you know, generic anchor texts, naked URL, branded, longtails, this type of thing. That's that's one of the good things about Link Daddy is, you know, working out your anchor text, you know, back to a specific page. Now would that help with reputation management? Well, of course, press releases do. You've got to keep putting out press releases to keep promoting your brand. You could use our services. I mean, with reputation management, all you can really do is power up positive assets to move negative assets off page one. So you know, you could use our business listing backlinks and put together a list of all of your positive assets and we take all of those links and we spin them throughout the content. We do two campaigns and then there would be backlinks coming from tier three, tier two, tier one back to those positive assets. It would just be a matter of how many campaigns you needed to do to move them up to push the others off. And then there you know, there would be some other accounts like Crunchbase and Facebook. There are specific platforms that will rank really well. And they could be powered up even further to put push off the negative stuff. So yeah, I mean, you could use our services for that. It's just a matter of having a strategy and understanding what you're trying to do, yeah?
Tony Peacock: For sure. I mean, another great way that we've been doing, I'm giving a bit of a knowledge bomb here, is the minute we do a Google news article, right, the minute we send that Google news article out there and we go and do one of your virality campaigns, so we're going to get two hundred do-follow backlinks through to that article. Google sees like that this is going viral and it ends up getting into top stories and also into Google Discovery. Now we do social signals and CTR with it as well, but getting the social signals, the CTR, and your do-follow backlinks, get, once you get one of those Google news articles in Google Discovery, wow, the traffic that you can get and pick up from there is incredible. So I'm just trying to show a few different ways of, instead of it just being you get do-follow backlinks, if you, it's it's with your own imagination, with what you can do. You can tick the boxes for E-A-T, yes, you can do branding, get the page rank from the do-follows, you can rank images, you can rank videos, you can rank GMBs, there's so many different ways of how you can rank the Google news articles, of how you can be maximising and making the most out of the backlinks that they're doing, because sometimes people might look at it and go, oh, I don't know if I can afford link building this month, but it's the most important factor, and if anything, it's become more important. The fact that AI now has grown, what's the main differentiator factor between your AI content and their AI content? It's those votes with regards to backlinks. So if anyone's willing to purchase any of your services, where can they go to find you?
James Dooley: Well, you can visit linkdaddy.com. You know, you can see all of our services, backlink services and then other services. We also do advanced schema markup and that kind of thing, CTR manipulation, press release distribution. But there's also our backlink services. You can book a call with me. You can email me, Tony at linkdaddy.com. Hey, Tony, can you have a look at my site and make a recommendation as to what I need to order? I'll get back to you with some suggestions. I typically use Ahrefs as the tool to check a website and to look at its backlink profile and that kind of thing. Or if you're on Trustpilot, you can go to Trustpilot, search for Link Daddy, check out our reviews. And either way, you'll there'll be a way to get back to me or you know, to our services. If someone's uncertain, let's say they're ranking middle of page one and they're uncertain what's needed, do you recommend that they just start buying the different services or do you recommend that they book a call and you can put some sort of strategy together to say I would recommend a press release followed by this, et cetera, followed by doing some, let's say, citations or do-follow backlinks or whatever else that it is, the services that you do? Would you recommend for them to book the call with you so you can set up a strategy for them?
Tony Peacock: Yep, many people do do that. They book a call like on my Calendly. And then I show them and we talk about you know, what the plan is. We also provide a done-for-you service because a lot of people just don't have time. So we provide a free service. The only commitment is it's done for three months. It's a minimum of five hundred a month. So the guy could come to our website and order himself, but he's got to work out what to order, when, and fill out the forms. But a lot of people say, you know what, here's the five hundred dollars, do it for me. And or people are emailing me and saying hey, can you check out this website? What do I need to order? And we make a few suggestions. So we're here to provide a service, you know? We're here to help people. We're not here just to make a buck. We actually want to help our customers, you know, or potential customers.
James Dooley: Yeah, yes, sounds good. So anyone who's watching this, I highly recommend the Link Daddy services. Tony Peacock is a great guy. We've worked together for a long time, like you said, for many different reasons on our side, whether it's for rank and rent purposes, local SEO, affiliate websites, helping ranking images, videos, GMBs, actually helping us to get in Google news and many other reasons, to get that anchor text diversity, build up that referring domain count, and just try and get that link type diversity out there. So some people still like obviously buying a lot of like guest posts and link inserts and maybe PBN links and stuff like that, but having this blended mix of all these different referring domains, in my opinion, is what your backlink profile should look like. So Tony, it's been an absolute pleasure. And thanks. Hope to get you on again soon. And for anyone again checking out his service, it's linkdaddy.com. And yeah, peace.
Tony Peacock: Thanks, mate!