Quuu Promote is a powerful content promotion platform that helps businesses and individuals drive more traffic, engagement, and social backlinks to their online content. The platform works by connecting your blog posts, articles, or other content with a network of real people who are interested in your niche. These subscribers manually opt-in to receive and share content that aligns with their interests, ensuring your content reaches a highly targeted and engaged audience. With Quuu Promote, you can sit back and watch as your content is shared across major social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. This not only boosts your visibility and drives more referral traffic, but also helps improve your search engine rankings through the accumulation of valuable social backlinks. The platform is designed to be easy to use, with a simple content submission process and detailed analytics to track your performance. Whether you're a small business, content creator, or marketing professional, Quuu Promote can help you amplify your reach and achieve your content marketing goals.
Quuu Promote allows you to automatically share your blog content on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn to gain more visibility and social backlinks.
Quuu Promote generates thousands of social backlinks over time, which can help improve your website's domain authority and search engine rankings.
Quuu Promote shares your content with a targeted audience of real people and businesses who have manually subscribed to categories that interest them, leading to increased engagement opportunities.
Quuu Promote automatically shares your content on social media, saving you time and effort in promoting your content.
Quuu Promote's social signals from platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn can help improve your website's search engine rankings on Google.
Love this tool - an incredible way to get great social media shares - an old Appsumo deal that is still rocking for us after many years!!
If I could give zero tacos I would.
This is a scam company. They refuse evey article you submit. I had newspaper jouranlists write my articles and they refused them all. So I still have the MAX stack credits I started with,. I also took their updsell at $15 a month and there is NO WAY to cancel it...oh and they dont answer customer supprt emails.
Worst ever
Lots of fake clicks and shares and they cannot provide a response about this. that's why 2 starts. Testing one more time before deciding keep or refund.
This platform is a fantastic idea, but my experience early on not so much.
Everyone seems to have the same problems with Quuu:
-The share counts are misleading, as in the reports generated by Quuu are measuring numbers within their own platform. How does that make sense..?
-Extended review time for content submission (Resulting in a fairly ineffective promotion tool)
-I've been left hanging by Quuu support a couple of times, and they literally just stopped responding to user questions/reviews on AppSumo. From my experience, any company with questionable support usually correlates with a questionable product as well.
Gave them 3 stars because this actually is a really cool concept, and could be extremely valuable. So even though it's been pretty lousy so far, I'm keeping my codes in hopes that they can figure it out.
If you need vanity metrics to impress a client, do this. If you ACTUALLY are wanting your content to pick up steam on social, this isn't it.
tl;dr preview -- Quuu isn't very good right now, but you should still stack this.
If you're thinking whether to invest in Quuu Promote during last call, read on. First, I've been using Quuu Promote for a few months. Here's the top level highlights.
✅Friendly and responsive support
✅Easy to use interface
✅Unique concept -- nothing else like it on the market
✅ Great value, in theory
⛔️Lack of verifiable metrics
⛔️No true reporting and analysis
⛔️No ability to export data
⛔️LOOONNNNG wait times to get approved or disapproved
Essentially, you submit articles that meet their criteria. 4-8ish days later, you'll get an email that says it's approved, denied or needs editing. If it's approved, your article essentially gets aggregated into a system where social users can pick up and share your content. In theory, this is a great, win-win service with a sustainable revenue model -- users on both sides are paying, and probably happy with the service. Annndd.... you'll see the numbers. Whoa.... hundreds of shares. Dozens of clicks.
❓Must be working, right ❓
Not necessarily. This is where Quuu kinda falls flat on its face. I've promoted about 20 articles on Quuu so far, and I've manually checked analytics on all of them. That's because, Quuu's current way of tracking leads a lot to be desired. Most of this is out of Quuu's control, but I think there's more than could be done.
Here's a great recent example -- I promoted a piece of content that says it has 100+ shares and 30+ clicks. I also use a third-party link tracker so I can double-verify these stats through Poplink AND through Google Analytics.
What did I find over the last few months?
Well.... there appears to be a huge discrepancy between what Quuu reports and what actually happens. My Poplink and Google Analytics stats are much lower than what Quuu reports. (Also, I've done this with older articles that haven't received any traffic in months as ANOTHER layer of A/B testing)
I understand that there's a certain level of analytics that Quuu can't give because of social media privacy settings. Essentially, you'll be able to manually search Twitter and find some of those shares, but you likely won't find anything on Facebook or LinkedIn, except in the rare case that someone has their privacy set to public, or if someone in your extended network shares it.
Now.... more bad news -- the content that does get shared seems to be junky bot traffic. Granted, I've only verified this is on Twitter, as that's the only "traffic" you can verify. But, out of the few thousands (few hundred on Twitter) of shares my content has gathered, it's only gotten engagement past that TWICE. That means, I've manually checked those hundreds of Twitter shares, and there's literally been only two pieces of content that have gotten a retweet or like from those hundred-plus.
I submitted a number of articles to QuuuPromote (25).
Firstly, there is no way to edit an article once submitted. If you realise you made a mistake before it is reviewed, tough.
I found that my articles were generally reviewed on time or just after, so that was good.
I do question whether they really read everything thoroughly, as most of my articles are 2000-3000 words, and I was getting "approval" e-mails roughly 4 minutes apart, which would be an extremely fast reading speed. I would imagine it's more of a skim read.
My real issue with QuuuPromote is there is exactly 0 transparency.
Once you have an article accepted, you are told how many "shares" it has, and how many "clicks". One would think this means the article had that many shares out on social media by their various users, and clicks on those links. But it doesn't. I believe shares means shares to their users, i.e., the number of their users who have seen it and MIGHT put it on their socials (I could be wrong, here).
Clicks, I can say with certainty, are definitely NOT clicks to the post you promoted. I find this grossly poor wording at best. For example, I had 12 posts which had a total share count of 1850. The total click count from those shares added up to 284. But I can see in Google Analytics that I only had 50 visitors to these articles, not 284. That is a huge difference.
I believe (again, could be wrong), that QuuuPromote "clicks" mean number of their users who clicked on your article info... but they may never had opened it.
I just find this to be a really poor decision on QuuuPromote's part, to make people think their content is being shared and clicked more than it is.
Further, there is no way to actually find out who is sharing your content. I could find out via Twitter, because my posts had my @username, but other social networks? No. There is also no way to see who is part of Quuu that might even be promoting your content, which means it could be people with no followers up to people with thousands. There is just no way to know. And you have no idea if those people post relevant content to their followers or just spam everything. Not a great way to run a social media strategy.
Lastly, I find the advertising from QuuuPromote - AS SOON AS YOU SIGN UP - to upgrade so that you get your posts repromoted, for a "one time only discount/this offer will expire when you close this dialogue" type of fee, to be really cynical. As well as then asking if you want to speed up your review for another $20.
This service might suit people who work within very niche subjects where customers come to their site with an intent to buy, and have a high purchasing power, but I really don't think this suits bloggers.
I get that there are different plans and pricing and that Sumolings might not get all of the bells and whistles. That said, I kept hitting gated featured or system limits that made this tool not particularly valuable to me.
1. Can't re-promote with the AppSumo deal
2. Can't publish a new campaign using a link that is already in their system
3. Can't have multiple campaigns of the same category
All of my campaigns would be in one category, so very limited in how I can use the tool. Basically, once a month. I have a few core pieces of content that I position in different ways and promote it as such, but alas not possible.
In addition to the limitations, the analytics didn't add up. There was a sizable gap between what Quuu said that I had and what my other analytics tools said.
I reached out to support to ask if I could access the text that I used in the one campaign that I ran, and the support rep kept not answering my question. After three or four rounds of answering related questions, I was frustrated. She eventually answered my question directly, but it took an act of God.
Now, the review times are quite long , said 4-5 days but it is 7 days now. That is still fine with me as we know things can be delayed in new product/startup but they also ask extra money to get it quickly reviewed. That doesn't seem right.
I've now had this deal for a few months. After purchasing the offer (and stacking) I also purchased the monthly offer they gave to us.
I went into this not necessarily expecting a huge amount of clicks, I thought it would be a good way to increase social proof.
So far, it's been a lot of headaches. Repeatedly, my posts are denied because they say they (the quuu people who are promoting my posts) cannot access my site. They get my wordfence blocking message.
I do not have any countries blocked and I've told them this repeatedly. If you cannot access my site, it's because your server or ISP has been flagged for sketchy activity. That makes me suspect.
Also, customer service and support service all but disappeared as soon as I passed my appsumo refund deadline. I have sent two messages in the past two weeks. I have questions for quuu that were sent to me from the support folks at Wordfence, in an effort to get the blocking issue sorted out. Crickets.
Overall, pretty disappointed and my 3 tacos is being generous. I really wanted this deal to work out, and it's super frustrating to have quuu tell me that their users cannot access my site, when I've lowered my wordfence settings to pretty much as low as they can go while still being a security option. It's also bothersome that every time try to work this out with them, I get a flip "Nope, not us, it's you." They should be concerned that even the most minimal security settings are blocking the people they're paying to promote our stuff.
I see others have been fooled by Quuu and I was too, at first. The Quuu Dashboard says you have so many "Shares" and so many "Clicks" but this is misleading. Those "Shares" are only Quuu internal postings to Quuu members and the "Clicks" are when Quuu members look at the internal postings. None of those measure shares of or clicks to your promoted content.
For example: I promoted four articles on my Web site on Quuu. Quuu's Dashboard says I got 248 "Shares" and 61 "Clicks." But this is only to internal Quuu members. The whole point of promotion is getting people to view your content. The actual real-world shares of my promoted content amounted to 14 Tweets of my articles and only 6 visits to them. I know this because one thing that Quuu does do correctly is tag Tweets and visits with "quuu" as a referrer. So I can see that 4 Quuu members actually visited my articles from the Quuu internal listing and 2 visitors followed links posted on Twitter by Quuu members. So Quuu netted me a total of 6 visits to 4 articles. Google Search alone (which is free) netted me 23 visits to those same 4 articles in that same period. The Quuu ROI is pretty awful.
Oh, and worth mentioning is that of the 14 Twitter accounts that Tweeted the Quuu content linked to my site, 12 of them had fewer than 200 Followers and 6 of them had under 50 Followers. All but three of those accounts Tweet nothing but Quuu content.
So when you see these reviews saying how many "Shares" and "Clicks" they got from Quuu, understand they have been mislead. If you feel getting a few posts from some spammers with almost no Followers is worth paying for, go for it. But my opinion is your promotional budget is better spent elsewhere.
I am just testing this out - I grabbed 3 codes to be safe since I can really use this for clients. What i like is that they really read the blog posts and make helpful suggestions so you know that they don't accept lazy bits of promo.
I just can't give this a good review. I submitted an article for review when it said it would take 2.5 days to review. 6.5 days later I get an email saying it's been rejected because it was an article about New Year's resolutions and wouldn't be of interest after 1st January, which was something like 8 days away at the time.
Ignoring the fact that it would have been 12 days away had the article been processed in a timely manner, the reasoning for rejecting was not sound. Google Trends showed people search for New Year's resolutions in to February and even further. I sent proof to Quuu, who said they would come back to me and never did.
I have since followed up with two more articles that were meant to be reviewed in under 3 days. 4 days later and now at the weekend (so not expecting to get it reviewed in the next 2 days), neither are reviewed.
So I can't give a good rating to this service when there has been no service, for what effectively seems like paid promotion from who knows who with who knows what following (there is no way to determine who actually shares your articles).
Would be 1 taco for the slow, poor service, lack of response to emails and online chat, no way to appeal if they deem your article worthy, and inability to see who might ever share your articles, but I'm holding out hope for something good if these articles ever get accepted.