Back in 2008, I bought a membership to Matt Callen's SimplyPLR on a whim. It was a membership site that delivered 225 private label rights articles each month across 15 topics, in both standard and spin-ready formats. At $47 per month, that worked out to about $0.21 per article. I was genuinely impressed with the quality of the content and the slick interface of the membership site.
But the internet marketing landscape has changed dramatically since then. The real question today is not whether SimplyPLR is still a good deal. It is whether PLR content makes sense at all in 2026.
What Is PLR Content?
PLR stands for Private Label Rights. When you purchase PLR content, you buy the right to use, edit, and publish articles, ebooks, or other content as if you wrote it yourself. You can put your name on it, modify it to fit your voice, and use it on your websites, in your email marketing, or as lead magnets.
The appeal was obvious: instead of spending hours writing content from scratch, you could buy ready-made articles for pennies and use them to populate blogs, build email sequences, or create info products. PLR was a cornerstone of many internet marketing strategies in the late 2000s and early 2010s.
My Experience With SimplyPLR
SimplyPLR was one of the better PLR providers I encountered. The articles were well-written compared to most PLR content on the market. The spin-ready versions used sentence-level spinning rather than word-level spinning, which produced much more readable output. The membership site itself was well-designed with an automatic blog posting feature that could publish content directly to WordPress blogs.
The main limitation was that you did not get to choose the topics. Matt's team selected 15 topics each month, and you worked with whatever they provided. If the topics aligned with your niches, it was excellent value. If they did not, you were out of luck for that month.
Is PLR Content Still Relevant in 2026?
This is where things get interesting. The PLR industry still exists, but AI has fundamentally changed the calculus.
AI can generate content faster and cheaper. Tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Jasper can produce a first draft of an article in seconds. You can specify the exact topic, tone, length, and format you want. This is more flexible and often more cost-effective than buying pre-written PLR packs on topics someone else chose for you.
Google's quality standards have risen dramatically. Publishing PLR content without substantial modification was always risky from an SEO perspective. In 2026, Google's helpful content system specifically targets content that does not add original value. Unmodified PLR articles will not rank and may hurt your site's overall performance.
PLR still has niche uses. Despite the AI revolution, PLR content has not disappeared entirely. It still serves specific purposes that AI does not always handle well.
- Templates and frameworks. PLR templates for email sequences, social media calendars, and content plans save time because the structure is already done. You customize the specifics.
- Lead magnets and opt-in incentives. A well-produced PLR ebook or checklist can serve as a starting point for a lead magnet. You rebrand it, add your own insights, and use it to build your email list.
- Training and course material. PLR slide decks, worksheets, and course outlines can accelerate the process of creating educational content, especially for coaches and consultants who need materials quickly.
- Inspiration and research. Some marketers use PLR content as a starting point for their own original articles, pulling out ideas and data points to develop further.
Modern Alternatives to PLR
If you are considering PLR content, weigh it against these alternatives.
AI writing assistants. For raw content generation, AI tools are more flexible and often more affordable than PLR subscriptions. You get content tailored to your exact needs rather than pre-written generic articles.
Content creation services. If you want human-written content, platforms like Verblio, ContentFly, and nDash connect you with freelance writers who create original content for your specific topics and audience.
Repurposing your own content. If you already create podcasts, videos, or social media content, tools like Descript, Opus Clip, and Castmagic can help you repurpose that content into blog posts, email sequences, and social media updates.
The Bottom Line
SimplyPLR was a quality product for its time, and Matt Callen delivered real value to his members. The PLR model is not dead, but its role has shrunk significantly. In a world where AI can generate custom content on any topic in seconds, the value proposition of pre-written PLR articles is much harder to justify.
If you do use PLR in 2026, treat it as raw material, not finished product. Add your own experience, voice, and original insights. The days of publishing PLR content as-is and expecting results are long gone.




Hmm, altough the spinning software, isn’t there the risk – with all that peolpe subscribing to SimplyPLR – that the same posts and the same type of niche blogs explode and that the offer content is far more then the demand (the interest of the readers) ?
Does SimplyPLR have a money back garanty ? I wasn’t able to see mention on the sales page…
ciao
alex
Thanks for the answers Mark.
I’m less concerned about duplicate content, rather than high competiotion due to the overload of the single niches.
What I wanted also to say is: let’s say that SimplyPLR gives you 10 packages per month. That means that nearly every member tries to make (let’s assume) at least 8 niche sites per month.
Let’s assume that the SimplyPLR customers in the whole world are 1000, that means that in each of the 10 niches of the packages there will arise around 800 niche blogs. That could change completely that niche. The competition would be instantanously much much harder.
This in theory. Only practice can tell…
so I’m waiting for your results 😉
ciao
alex
P.S. Please do me a favor and install the Subscribe to comments plugin, so i get notified when somebody replies to a comment. Thanks
What thing is not pleasant to me here: You wrote, that they give every month articles on new subjects. It turns out, I should build new sites on other subjects each month, and for old I will not receive any more a content.
You tried to check spinned article on duplication by programs of type Dupe free pro? If many participants will in club and if in addition independently not to modify article, the probability that there will be exactly identical versions is great.
Hey Alex — depends on what you mean by Risk. Risk of a duplicate content penalty from Google is very low IMHO (I do not even believe such a penality exists). Even so, articles are heavily spun so many combinations are possible. The one that I spun passed copyscape, although as you point out, if 70000 people join SimplyPLR, that could possibly change.
However, sadly, most people will join and not do anything with the content. It will just sit on their hard drive. Most people fail to act.
In any case, a small amount of rewriting would solve this.
If you are talking about risk submitting PLR to an article directory, that is another issue, and means that you definately need to do a little rewriting. If you do this rewriting prior to spinning, then you can post hundreds of unique articles using something like Article Post Robot.
SimplyPLR has a 60 day money back guarantee.
Hope that helps — Mark
@Alex — Regarding competition — you are right. Basically, you get 15 topics per month. That means you are spending about $3 per site on content. Plus a domain name for $10. Let’s say you do some other promotion for $7. So the questions is for $20 per site can you do things to beat the competition so that you can get the site to a buck or so per day?
I think I can — we’ll see.
Basically, I am working on a “formula” for creating niche sites where I do as many automated things as possible and leave the site alone. So, this could fit well into my strategy for that.
I don’t think you would be happy if this was the only content that you used.
Sub to comments — Yikes. I was playing around with a new comments pluging and I killed subscribe. It should be working now. thanks for the heads up.
Regards,
Mark
@Yurium — Yes, I think that is right. I think this is targeted at people who want to build one site per topic. This is similar to what I have talked about before ($5 Formula). You build a small site with AdSense or whatever and do some promotion and let it it there.
This is not a good service if you are looking to have a handful of authority blogs on topics that you choose.
Still, if you want to have a niche site empire like Garry Conn but you are not a writing machine like Garry (that guy is insane) this is an interesting approach. I plan to try an build out the 15 sites from this and see what happens this month. It is a pretty inexpensive experiment, especially considering the fact that I can always sell the blogs for cheap in Sitepoint Marketplace if things don’t work out.
Thanks,
Mark
Mark – here’s my two cents. It seems to me these types of PLR memberships tend to run so generic – I don’t see how you truly monetize the material.
For example – let’s take the rental car. You’ve found a good micro niche for “renting SUV’s in Minnesota”. You’ve built an attractive Firepow site and you’re going to add content now. How does Matt’s content help that blog? I don’t see how it could. The flip side is you build a generic site on “weight loss” and you’re competing with 2 million other blogs, many of which are using bland, generic content.
I’m sure I’m missing your game plan, but it seems to me the “set it and forget it” sites are more micro in nature. Thanks!
Right — in the case where you are working on a niche that you found on your own, the content is of little help (unless you are lucky).
What I am thinking about is creating sites dictated by the content that they provide. So, they provided “rental car content” — 15 orig PLR articles that can be spun into infinite combinations.
A quick look at “rental cars” shows some promising long tails like — Charleston airport rental cars. So, you publish spun versions of the PLR content to a new site. This get’s you some good general content and creates lots of tag pages. The you can create a unique landing page for each of your unique long tail keywords (Charleston airport rental cars) with specific content. Then use other spun versions of the article for article marketing, etc.
Add in a couple of other sources of republished content (republished article directory articles with a unique intro, youtube videos and news feeds) and all of the sudden you have a 100 page site with a few carefully targeted money pages.
Backlinks should target those optimized money pages.
At least that is my thinking.
I am not suggesting that you can just “publish” the PLR content and retire. 🙂
Do you own also the payed versin of ArticleApps ?
ciao
alex
P.S. thanks for adding the subscribe to comments plugin
No I don’t — I use my own code for spinning and I use Article Post Robot for posting.
Hey Marco, do you really wrote your own spinning program ?
What were you missing in the spinning softwares out there, that you coded by yourself ?
ciao
alex
Hm, seems that you want to rob the title of Mr Automated to Cybercoder…
Would be interesting to know more on how your system looks like
ciao
alex
@Alex — the only reason I wrote my own spinning code is so that I could integrate that code into automation scripts that I have for posting to and maintaining niche blogs. Existing spinners are fine, but they are all point and click applications. I needed something that could be run as a script.
Nope — just trying to create and maintain lots of AdSense sites (and possibly sell some). You can see what I have in mind here. NicheSitenow.com — it is a work in progress.
Basically, given a blog title, a keyword list and a domain name, my automation will (or does) install and configure wordpress, automatically gather content and get a “starter blog” up and running complete with eBay and amazon affiliate pages. The “publish” dates can be set in the future to “drip” so that it looks natural to google.
Note that I said “my automation” but I am working with a friend who is a “real programmer” but not in the Internet Marketing niche.
Once that is created, a blogger can just start adding more original content on top.
Basically, once the keyword research is done, it should take 10 minutes to start up a blog with 50-200 pages of “semi-unique” content that is ready to have additional unique content added to it.
It is a work in progress — but that is why I am interested in SimplyPLR.
Thanks,
Mark
Very interesting.
Apart your own spinner, do you have a commercial one to suggest ?
The software if used resourcefully can do a lot of good to you. Help you earn a lot.
Hey Mark,
What are some you are sites that I may take a look at?
Bryan, I don’t usually disclose URLs for sites that I make like that. If you would like to see the formula that I follow for AdSense mini-sites. It’s a free video that describes the process.
Hi Mason,
any updates on SimplyPLR? How did the Adsense sites worked out and how are/were they performing with the the SimplyPLR articles?
Jack — to be honest I built a couple but never really promoted them. Just too many things to do.