What's New with Article-Writing on the Internet?
Susan Dunn, MA Clinical Psychology, Marketing
Coach
http://www.susandunn.cc
sdunn@susandunn.cc
My marketing clients are always amazed at what happens
when they write articles for the Internet. Their articles start turning
up on websites, and their URLs start turning up on the search engines.
It's a formula that really works and it's a win-win
formula: they enjoy writing and helping others, they increase their
knowledge as they write, the readers benefit, and the writers gain recognition.
Almost overnight you can become #1, 3 and 8 on google
in a category, and pop up also under amazing keywords. In time you can
establish your expertise, drawing clients and customers to your website
for the right reasons, building your practice or business on a solid
foundation.
You can also avoid the "link farms" the spiders don't
like, because you'll be racking up so many "real" links from the article
sites. You'll also get more requests for link trades and other alliances
than you can handle.
Clients write me all the time that articles I've written
about them have helped them place. For instance for Sandy Gooding, CEO
of Gooding Accountability System©, two of the top ten references
on google are from articles I've written about her services, and my
article citations got there before her own website started showing.
So what's new these days?
After what appeared to me heavy saturation from MLM
writers of thinly disguised advertisements, I'm seeing more quality,
and also more new names entering the field all the time. As the competition
increases, the quality will matter more. Hopefully you were there to
begin with. If not, sharpen your pencil!
We quickly learn who produces good material, and I'm
sure it's the same way for the website and ezine publishers.
Photos requests are starting to happen. Lately when
one of my articles has been accepted, the webmaster has asked me for
a photo, so now I include on the list-serve submissions under my URL
and Mailto:, "Photo available here: http://www.myphoto.com/me.jpg."
You might want to give it a try. As one syndicator wrote me, "so the
reader can see you and imagine having a relationship with you."
Once you're established, consider not requiring the
courtesy copy. It could slow down a busy editor just enough to pass
over you and choose someone else's article.
©Susan Dunn, Marketing Coach, http://www.webstrategies.cc
.
Web strategies for coaches and entrepreneurs; web design, article and
top-ten writing service, individualized marketing plan. mailto:sdunn@susandunn.cc
for free ezine, put "checklist" for subject line.