Content Usage Guidelines

We’re surprised that you think our content is worth sharing in your own blog or with your fans and followers! All we ask is that you follow a few ground rules, which are defined below.


What content can you use?

Please read carefully to know the Do’s and Don’t.

Do’s

If all you want to do is email your friends and followers, or share our content through social media, that’s fine. We do appreciate the help getting my content in front of more people!

You may also republish any of my original images or infographics, as long as you honor the content attribution policy below.

You may quote up to 100 words of any of my text content in your own content (articles, presentations, reports, etc.) as long as you honor the content attribution policy below.

Don’t

You may NOT republish in full any of our text-based content (articles, PDFs, etc.) on the web without express written permission from us.

Why?

That would be considered as duplicate content, and Google has made it clear as it is bad for SEO.

  • If you want to reprint an article, please contact us and let us know who, what, where, when and how the content will be used.
  • If we approve your request, then please follow the content attribution policy below.

You may NOT repackage and/or resell our content, or use it in any way to make money. We provide it for free, and we want to keep it that way as I believe in sharing my knowledge with others for free.

You may NOT claim my content as your original ideas. We get annoyed when I see our content on your channels, as if it was yours, especially since it’s so easy to contact us to ask for permission… and to follow the content attribution policy below.


Content Attribution Policy

Understand how you can attribute your content.

Name: “From TrendyKnow’s articles” as your source.

Link to the original source you’re referencing:

  • If it’s an article, link to the permalink of the specific original article you’re referencing.
  • If it’s any other form of content, please link to the landing page where that content is presented.

If you’re reprinting an article in full (with permission), you need to add this rel=canonical link referencing to the original content in the <head> section of your page:

<link rel="canonical" href="URL of the original content where it is published"/>

That’s it!

See how easy it is?

Thanks for sharing. I appreciate the link love!