Author:Wayne Hurlbert
One proven way to increase your visitor traffic to your site, and gain additional new backlinks at the same time is to write articles in your area of expertise. Learn how to write an article and publish it to your own site and to article directories.
Getting more traffic to a website or blog at little or no cost is something
everyone wants. Adding natural incoming links without having to reciprocate
provides a major boost to your site’s Google PageRank and search engine
rankings. I'm sure those are goals of yours. It is also a fact that people surf
the Internet looking for information.
By combining those two ideas, you can increase your visitor traffic to your
site, and gain additional new backlinks at the same time. One proven way to
achieve that traffic is to write articles in your area of expertise. You not
only gain potential new visitor traffic, to convert into paying customers, but
you also become recognized as an expert in your field. Through archiving, the
articles can also serve as added valuable content, on your own website.
There are literally hundreds of Internet magazines, called "e-zines" and
Internet newsletters, who would love your article. They have literally millions
of information hungry subscribers, waiting to read about your ideas. There are
also many webmasters seeking fresh, keyword rich content to add to their
websites. It's not as hard as you think.
How to Write an Internet Article
The first step is to think of a useful piece of information, that you know
people would want to read. Think "5 mistakes to avoid when buying cars," "10
great ways to make money from home," or "How to find a great real estate agent."
You can come up with many more that fit your area of business.
Simply find a problem, and prepare a short essay that helps the reader to solve
it. The typical Internet article is from 500 to 800 words. There is a great
amount flexibility on those guidelines, however, as shorter and longer articles
are also in demand.
Once you have your idea, it is surprisingly easy to prepare your research
materials, write some notes, and prepare a first draft. Often, you can draw on
your own business experience to give the article some real world authenticity.
Writing on what you know best is usually the best way to begin producing
articles.
After the Rough Copy
Once that first rough copy is written, set it aside and don't look at it any
more that day. After a day or two have passed, pick it up again, and read it
over. You'll find a lot of sentences to add or subtract, change around, or
rewrite completely. Great new ideas will pop into your head, making your article
much more powerful and useful to the reader than before.
After you finish polishing it up, your shiny new feature story is almost ready
for submission. Two things the completed article needs are a signature line and
blurb. Write a short factual sentence or two (called a blurb) about yourself and
your business or product. Include a live link back (called a signature line) to
your own web site or blog URL.
It is a good idea to provide a "copy and paste" HTML link, to make it easy for
the editor to include it. An HTML link is important to receiving passed along
Google PageRank from the many web pages where your article appears. You will
want to avoid being published with a link that search engine spiders can't
follow, or one that fails to pass along Google PageRank. Without a useful link
back to your website, part of the benefit of the article is completely lost.
You may also want to provide an extra line, giving permission to freely reprint
the article anywhere; provided full credit and a link back are provided to you
and your site, respectively. That is optional, of course. You might want to
maintain tighter control over where your articles appear. In that case, you
would not provide the reprint permission.
Sending Articles to E-zines and Newsletters
Many Internet magazines, commonly called e-zines and newsletters are hungry for
free content. You can really help them out by offering to submit guest articles.
Lists of e-zines can be found at:
http://www.site-city.com/members/e-zine-master/
http://www.list-city.com/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Free_Content/ (free membership required)
Look for e-zines in your field of interest. Check the list of Internet
newsletters to which you subscribe. There are probably many other Internet
newsletters published about your business area. There are also many general
business newsletters available.
Guest Articles
Examine a few current and back issues of the e-zines and newsletters to see if
they accept guest articles. Many editors produce all of their own editorial
copy, so careful reading is important. Don't embarrass yourself by sending
articles to editors who don't want or need them. Check out the types and length
of articles they publish.
Be sure to find out the name and proper title of the editor or publisher, and
show them you have actually read their e-zine. You would be amazed how many
people don't check first. Professionalism on your part is important, as it helps
you to stand out from the crowd. Once you have found some likely candidates, you
are ready for the next step.
Write to your selected e-zine and newsletter publishers with your story idea.
Include a brief summary of the main points your article will cover. This is
especially helpful if the article is not yet written. In freelance writing, this
step is called a query. It means sending out a story idea, without the article,
that may or may not have been written.
Should the editor decide to accept your offer, send them a copy of your article,
as part of the body of an e-mail. Because of potential viruses, many editors and
publishers will not open an article sent as an attachment. Don't send
attachments. Within your introductory e-mail, provide the one time rights to
publish the article, provided your informational signature line is printed in
full.
You'll be surprised how many editors and publishers will want to print your
masterpiece. Your site will receive fresh new visitor traffic and your site will
receive a valuable theme related incoming link. Seeing your name and URL as part
of the e-zine is a thrill as well.
Sending Your Articles to Webmasters
You can use a similar process to send your articles to other webmasters. In this
case, you are looking for sites that complement your site. If you don't want to
have your articles posted on your competition's sites, don't offer then your
writing services. You probably don't want to provide them with informative and
keyword rich content anyway.
Fresh Content
On the other hand, many non-competing but related websites need fresh content.
For example, if you are in the wedding gown business, florists and limousine
services could be considered related, but non-competing sites. Those site owners
might recognize, they need additional pages and information, to attract visitors
and to achieve higher rankings in the various search engines.
You can help them and yourself as well. As you develop content relationships
with other business site owners, other avenues of business will open up as well.
Perhaps some joint ventures and cross promotions could result. The potential for
working together is unlimited, of course.
The next pleasant surprise is finding many of the people who read your article,
will click on the link to your website, to read more of your work. Many of them
will stay, and become regular readers of your site's content. A lot of them will
be long term customers for your products and services.
Putting Your Articles to Work on Your Own Site
Be certain to place all of your articles on your own website. The same benefits
that accrue to the other webmasters who printed your articles will apply to your
site too. Archive your articles with a link from your home page. The link will
pass PageRank to the archived articles. One good solution is to give each
article a separate web page with title tags targeting the main keywords of the
article.
By individually optimizing each article page, your site will have many more
keywords to attract search engine traffic. The addition of the keyword rich
articles not only provides a boost in your search engine visitor traffic, but
provides reasons for visitors to return to your site over and over to read fresh
content. Many website owners will link to your archived articles, providing your
website with valuable themed natural incoming links.
Adding an RSS feed to your site will help you to syndicate your articles to many
websites. RSS (meaning both Really Simple Syndication or Rich Site Summary)
requires a bit of simple XML code added to your site, to enable your content to
be read by RSS reading software. Easily downloaded and installed, an RSS reader
will accept the title, a link, and a summary of your article for reading, by
those who subscribe to your RSS feed channel. A complete discussion of RSS feeds
is beyond the scope of this article.
Conclusion
Writing Internet e-zine articles is a great free method to get new visitors to
your site.
You will receive valuable theme related incoming links. With search engines like
Google adding theming and Teoma using clustering, your articles become even more
valuable than ever. Your rankings on the search engines get a double boost. You
receive one lift from the article appearing on another website.
You receive even more benefit by archiving your articles as additional content
on your own website. Other website owners may link to your archived articles as
a service to their own readers, multiplying your benefits.
Published articles also establish you as a leader in your industry. That
translates into new customers, as people like to do business with folks they
know and trust. What could be better than that?
Get those keyboards clicking. Your reading public awaits!
Wayne Hurlbert provides information about marketing, promotions, and public
relations for websites and business blogs on
Blog Business World.
Article Source:
http://www.bloggertalk.net