Article Marketing – 3 Crucial Components of Successful Ezine Articles for Small Business Marketing
Do you write articles? Do you post them to your own web sites and to article directories? If you answered ‘no’ to any of these questions, all I can say is Do it now!
Nowadays, the importance of having your own articles is huge. As a small business owner or solopreneur, to publish your own articles is going to be a sure-fire way to promote your business, today, tomorrow and for years to come – on auto-pilot and for free.
Your own articles will create links to your web site, lift your search engine ranking higher, which in turn builds traffic of highly-targeted visitors to your site, who sign up for your ezine, and then, down the road, when they get to know, like and trust you, become your clients or customers. Do you see the simple beauty in this?
Although the main reason you would write an article is to give away useful information to your audience, your own primary interest is to use articles as a vehicle to promote yourself. Therefore, EzineArticles have a somewhat different structure and requirements than articles written for magazines or other printed media.
Ideally you will write the articles yourself, so that each article will have your authentic voice; or you can have them written by a hired copywriter – either way, there are certain elements that must be present in the articles to make them successful marketing vehicles.
1. Keywords, Keyword Phrases and Keyword Density
Millions use the internet daily to find information. They will find your article if you use relevant keywords in your copy. For example, if you are a wine maker, write articles about wine: how to select wine, how to make it yourself, or how to pick a good winemaker, how to store it, etc. If you are a computer safety expert, you will write about protecting your PC, how to pick the right tools, how to practice safe web surfing, etc.
Once you find the right keywords and keyword phrases, use them throughout the article, and also use related keywords and phrases. This will give the article sufficient keyword density. Please note that search engines, as well as people, may ignore your article if its keyword density is too high, in other words, if you keep repeating a keyword just for the sake of building density (this is called keyword spamming). A balance is what’s needed here, and with some practice you’ll get it right.
There are many on line tools that can help in finding the right keywords and phrases related to your area of expertise. Find the right keywords and half of your work will be done.
Tools
– Google Suggest – You start typing a keyword, Google will suggest other words to complete a keyword phrase, based on its database of searches people used in the past.
– WordTracker.com – This subscription service is probably the best commercially available tool out there. For serious publishers, web masters, and SEO specialists.
– GoodKeywords.com – Free downloadable software for Win/PC that lets you research keywords.
2. Quality Content
Always keep in mind that you’re writing for the human audience first, robot audience second. Don’t just throw a bunch of keywords plus some filler copy together and call it an article! You need to write in such a way that your audience will be educated, and hopefully entertained. Write in a conversational manner, but be professional – think “business casual” in written form.
Your written piece is not a thesis, so don’t write long sentences and paragraphs. Convoluted sentence structure or obscure words don’t make for a good read. You don’t write to impress your peers (or competition), but to provide information to your target audience.
Do I need to say you must use correct spelling and good grammar? If you want people to regard you as an authority in your field, your writing style should reflect that authority.
A quality article will boost your expert status. With expert status comes trust, and the more people trust you, the more likely they will be to hire you or buy your products.
3. Links in Articles
Finally, one last crucial component of your article is links. As part of your general SEO strategy, you can create links to your own web site, especially if you’re posting to article directories. These incoming links contribute to your site’s page ranking with search engines.
Depending on where you post your article – only on your site, or to article directories – your latitude in creating links will vary. Let me explain.
Some article directories limit the number and/or type of links you can use. For example, you may not be permitted to link to other web sites using your affiliate link, but it may be OK to link to the same site, indirectly, via your own custom domain name.
Let’s say you are an e-commerce consultant and you offer shopping cart solutions. You may sign up as an affiliate, and then register a domain such as http://www.EzineCart.com, and set up a one-page web site that redirects using your affiliate link.
At the very least, article directories will allow you to place links in your resource box, which is usually a single paragraph that goes at the end of your article, where you can freely advertise your business.
If you are posting the article to your own site, or broadcasting it via your ezine, you have complete freedom in hyper-linking.
A very important note: search engines prefer links that contain keywords (I think people do, too). For example, this link to a versatile shopping cart solution is better than saying: If you need a versatile shopping cart solution, click here. By the way, this technique applies to any web page, not just your articles.
Conclusion
We are all hungry for information, and the Internet is where we find it. You are there to provide it in the form of articles. Start your own article collection today.