Writing For Publicity Part 2
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Internet
Marketing and Promotion - Writing Articles
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The next thing we'll discuss is your article
itself. It has to be informative and useful to the ezine
publishers audience. Your article should be original and
unique and not just the same as the last article you read
on your chosen article topic.
What bothers me a lot about some article writers is the
fact they think that writing articles is just about
plugging their products. They don't seem to realize that
the ezine publisher is looking for real quality content
that'll make him or her look better in the eyes of his or
her subscribers and not just a sales letter.
What I'm trying to say here is that articles sent to
ezine publishers which were written to sell won't
increase your chances of being published in fact very few
editors will accept any articles like this. The ones that
do have probably used your product in the past and liked
it. Articles designed to inform and educate people will
increase your chances of being published and also of
making sales from people who have read your article, so
stay away from sales letter based articles.
I shouldn't have to say this but make sure your articles
are grammatically correct and watch out for those
spellings mistakes.
Lots of online content groups and directories stipulate
that you must include your publishing guidelines at the
top of your article. A good one I like to use is this:
"You have permission to publish this article
electronically or in print, free of charge, as long as
the bylines are included and all links remain active. A
courtesy copy of your publication would be
appreciated."
Let's continue onto bylines (aka resource boxes).
These are the couple of lines included at the end of your
article, this is what you get in return for allowing
people to use your work. Pretty much the same as an email
signature, the idea is to attract people to visit your
site or email you to find out more about your product. I
usually use something like:
"Article
by David Callan - admin@akamarketing.com
David is the webmaster of http://www.akamarketing.com.
Visit his site for free articles and tutorials focusing
on Internet marketing and website development
issues."
My resource box is quite small, you can get away with
another line or two in most cases. Try however to stick
to four or five lines if you can.
After your articles are written and before you go
searching for places to submit them to you can do certain
things on your website to help them spread. Basically you
just tell people they can use your article if the like,
do this by including a little note at the end of your
articles similar to the publishing guidelines given
above. You could even tell your visitors that your
articles can be reproduced on your home page. If your
site is busy and in an industry with lots of ezine
publishers around like Internet marketing then this could
help spread your articles very quickly indeed.
Finding places to submit your articles on the web is not
hard, it does however take time. The best places to start
are likely to be the free content directories and
articles.
I however like to start by simply searching for sites
which are looking for your articles. This is a much
slower process and the visitors you get will be few
compared to being published in a popular ezine. I prefer
submitting to sites over directories first because this
helps my search engine rankings. I know this because most
of the ezine directories use CGI generated pages when
fetching articles from their databases, Google and the
other engines can't read these pages so I might as well
submit to individual websites first to give Google the
chance to spider my articles and register another few
inbound links for me.
When searching for sites that are looking for articles on
your industry use the following URLs:
http://www.google.com/search?q=%22add+your+article%
22+Internet+marketing
http://www.google.com/search?q=%22submit+your+article%22+fishing
http://www.google.com/search?q=%22write+for+us%22+promotion
The
text in red is your keyword(S), change this to match the
type of articles you write. You should also try any other
keywords you think people looking for articles would use.
You'll find however that the above URL's will turn up
loads of places that are interested in your articles
either for websites, ezines or both.
Go to these sites and confirm that they're looking for
articles on your industry. Send your articles into them,
two or three at a time at most. Don't send more than this
as your emails might be considered as spam which nobody
likes.
Make sure you've both your publishing guidelines and
resource box included with all your article submissions.
The sites you submit
to should go into a mailing list. The mailing list should
contain the article submit email address, the address of
the site and the name of the webmaster if known. The next
time you've articles to submit you can use a mailing
program. You can use this along with your mailing list to
send emails with your articles in them to multiple
webmasters, this will save hours of time.
You'll find that most webmasters will email you informing
you that they're using your article but some won't so
it's a good idea to check back with the more popular
sites you've submitted to now and again.
After a couple of months you should find your backward
links filled with sites from your mailing list.
Continue with Part 3
Back to Part 1
Article by David Callan - admin@akamarketing.com
David is the webmaster of http://www.akamarketing.com.
Visit his site for free articles and tutorials focusing
on Internet marketing and website development issues.
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