Articles
Online Writing – Is This The Perfect Title?
With online writing your title has to accomplish several things. It has to make it possible for the reader to find the article. It has to tell the reader what the article is about. It has to entice the reader to read the article. Finally, it has to be acceptable for submission to article directories. How do you accomplish all this in one title?
Sometimes you can’t. Still, you try to include as many elements of a good title as you can. The “best” or “perfect” title will be a different combination of factors for each unique article. Let’s look at what makes the title of this article work.
Online Writing Is About Keywords
They won’t read your article if they can’t find it. How do they find it? Most often now, readers use search engines. If you don’t have the keywords they are searching for in the title, it is less likely it will show up in their search results. In this case, there is good traffic for the keyword “online writing.” That is why it is in the title and will be repeated in this article a few times as well.
Don’t Fool The Reader
You can get cute with article titles, but if you don’t also let the reader know what the article is about in the title or description, you’ll have problems. A searcher may just pass on your article because he doesn’t know what it is about. He may click-through to read the article, then get annoyed when he finds that he was mislead. He won’t be likely to click over to your website then, will he? This article, by the way, is clearly about online writing.
Titles That Grab Attention
Questions involve the reader, and make it more likely they will go beyond the title to the article. They want the answer, of course. That’s why I use a question for this article. The fact that you are reading this article hopefully shows that this was a good strategy. There is more than one way to grab someone’s attention though. Other good titles include words like “How To,” “Top Ten,” and “Easy Ways To,” as well as “You,” “Your,” “Free,” “New,” and “Best.”
Formatting Issues
Titles for online article writing need to be acceptable to the owners of the directories, websites, and newsletters where you hope your article will be published. Good keyword optimization helps – you’re not the only one hoping to get traffic from that article. They also need to be a reasonable length, so they don’t look awkward on a page, or take too much room in a newsletter. Three to seven words is ideal although more words are okay if they are shorter, and perhaps fewer is better if they are longer.
Finally, you should always deliver on the promise of the title. You want the reader to not only read the article, but to feel like they got what they were looking for, and so can trust you. After all, the whole point of online writing is to get that reader to read right through the article to the resource box, where they can click-through to your website.
The Title That Hooked The Most Readers
Online article titles have to do more than those in the print world. In a print magazine, you just need to catch the attention of the reader. The title doesn’t really even have to tell the reader what the article is about, since the magazine it is in will be on a specific subject area. Readers know that if it is in a fishing magazine it about a fishing-related topic.
In an online article, on the other hand, the title has to tell the potential reader what the article is about. He may see nothing but the title in the search engine results, and if he doesn’t know what it’s about, he’s likely to just click on the next link. Online article titles have to be found in the search engines as well, meaning they have to have keywords in them that people are looking for. Of course, just like print articles, they should also catch the reader’s attention.
My Best Article Titles
Sometimes you can do all three of these things pretty well in one article. An example is my article titled “Cheap Homes In Nice Towns.” You know what the article is about, it is okay as an attention grabber (not great), and “cheap homes” is a keyword that many people search for each month. At one of the article directories I have submitted it to, it has been read over 17,000 times – more than double the traffic of any of the other hundreds of articles I have there (many have been read only a couple hundred times).
However, in checking the number of times my various articles have been viewed at this directory, I have often been surprised – enough so to remind me that “rules” are only guidelines. For example, two of the most-read articles I have there are “Remove Permanent Marker From Carpet,” and “How To Get Candle Wax Out Of Carpet” (about 6,000 times each).
These are not attention-grabbing titles, but they are also not topics covered well on the internet. Obviously there is something to be said for utilitarian articles with good keywords that are not too competitive. Add easy-to-compete-for keywords to the list of things to try for in an article title.
In the top five for visits are the article titles, “Really Cheap Plane Tickets,” (6,400) and “Cheap International Plane Tickets” (10,050). A promise of a way to save money seems to always be a good bet. My article “Worry – Five Ways To Eliminate It,” has been viewed 3,300 times, but it is fairly new, making it the most views per month by far. I suppose worry is a common enough problem that people need a solution to.
Article titles that promise to help with a problem work, then. So do those that promise to teach the reader something new, and those that are directly targeting the keywords they are searching. What else can make for a good article title? Here are some suggestions:
- Ask a question: “Do You Make This Writing Mistake?”
- Tell them they can do something: “You Can Write A Better Title Today”
- Promise some value: “Ten Ways You Can Make More Money”
- Use the words “how to”: “How To Overcome Writer’s Block”
- Involve them with a story: “You Quit Your Job – Now What?”
Watch the reports (at the article directories and on your web sites) and try to learn from them. Of course those statistics for “views” I mention above only tell me how many times people started to read my articles. Did they finish the articles? Did they then click through to my web sites? Obviously there is more to good online writing, but good article titles are a crucial part of the process.
About The Author – What To Say
That little “about the author” or author’s resource box at the bottom of your article is the most important part. You can write a great article, get lots of people to read it, and still get nothing out of it. Those readers have to come to your website for the article to be of value to you. That resource box is where the link to your site is, and also where the “sales pitch” is that gets the reader to click on it.
What To Say About The Author
What about what you shouldn’t say? The ‘about the author’ box is not a place to brag about yourself. I once saw a resource box that listed eight different degrees and awards the author had received. I didn’t click on the link to his website. All those degrees, awards and personal virtues just weren’t good reasons for me to visit his website.
What should you say? Start with your name and possibly something about yourself, to let readers know you’re a real human. Keep it to one or two sentences, and try to make what you say “about the author” relevant to the topic of the article. This gives you more credibility.
Now let the readers know why they should visit your website. Getting them to click on that link and come to your website is the real purpose of the author’s resource box and of the whole article. How do you do that? Try the following:
1. Let readers know what they’ll find on your website.
2. Give them a reason(s) to visit.
3. Make sure the link works.
The Resource Box Tease
Try to arouse the reader’s curiosity. My real estate articles with the best click-through rates are the ones that mention the photo of our $17,500 house. Are you curious about what kind of house we could buy for that? A lot of other readers are too! This is a “tease.”
After your name and a sentence or two “about the author,” include a tease like the example above. Isn’t there something they would like to see on your site? It is even better if the tease directly relates to the topic of the article. For example, if your article was on “Six Ways To Make Money With Your Phone,” you might say something like, “For more information, including another four ways to make money with your phone, visit …”
There are other ways to get the reader to click on that link, and you should experiment. Whatever you try, though, once you have written it, try to objectively look at your about-the-author box and ask yourself, “If I had just read this article and this blurb about the author and his website, would I feel compelled to click on that link and visit the site?”
Article Submission – How Fast Are You?
Is it really important how fast you do the article submission process? It may not be if you are just going to submit an article or two and leave it at that. However, if you plan to use articles as a regular part of your marketing plan for your website, it becomes very important.
When I wrote an article to promote one of my web sites for the first time, it took me hours. The article submission process took another hour – for just one article directory! Most articles now take me less than an hour to write. Almost every morning myself or my wife submits an article to a dozen directories, and this takes just fifteen minutes.
Does speed matter? Consider that in the last twelve months I’ve written and submitted 300 articles to directories (don’t worry - you don’t need to write this much to effectively promote your sites). Now suppose I took twelve minutes for each directory submission, instead of the 75 seconds I average now. That’s 525 hours extra in the last year, or 17 of my 30-hour work weeks!
Efficient Article Submission
It’s not about rushing or typing fast. Just develop a simple process or system for anything that you repeatedly do. A simple process makes article submission more relaxing, not less so.
Write your articles in a Windows Notepad file or any simple word processing program. Have a systematic way to format everything – one that works for you – and stick with it. In my files, I have the author’s resource boxes prepared and copied many times, waiting for the addition of the articles. Of course they can be modified for an article, but this is quicker than writing a new one each time.
When I write an article, I copy and paste it into the file again, adding bold tags or italics or heading tags as necessary to the first version. This way I have a version ready for the directories that accept HTML and those that don’t. Each article also has a two sentence description and a list of keywords, ready to copy and paste into the submission forms.
I keep a numbered list of directories I submit to. I keep the URL of the submission pages ready in my browsers “favorites” list to speed things along. I write the article titles on a list, and as I submit them I jot down the number of the article directory. Sometimes directories have technical problems for a day or a month. With my simple tracking list, I can go back later to submit the article to those that were missed.
You have to open and close (expand and minimize) files repeatedly as you fill in the submission forms. To save time on forms that require my name, I copy the title and name together, paste it into the “title” box on the form, then cut the name and paste it into the appropriate box. This will make more sense once you try it – it means opening and closing the file one less time. Use any little tricks that work for you to speed things up.
You may have an auto-fill feature on your browser, or you can get one. Use it. When forms asking for name, email, or anything else are highlighted yellow, you can usually fill them in with these tools. At directories requiring my name and email address, I just click my auto-fill button, and those fields are filled in for me. I use this tool dozens of times daily, saving me a lot of typing.
You should also get a keyboard with “cut,” “copy” and “paste” buttons. These are much faster than navigating up to “edit,” finding “copy,” then opening it again to use the “paste” function. This little feature probably saved me twenty hours of work in the last year alone – well worth the small price.
I speed up the process in may other ways too, but there is no reason you have to do it the way I do. The important point is to spend more time writing good articles than submitting them. That is why it’s important to develop some system for efficient article submission.
Do You Write Articles For The Reader?
Why do you write articles for distribution online? If it is just so you can be an “author,” you can skip this article. If it is to generate traffic to your website, you need to be writing for the reader. Here are some ways to do that.
1. Write articles on topics that interest you. This may seem contrary to the idea of writing for the reader, but it isn’t. It is safe to assume that you are not the only one interested in a given topic. Writing about your own interests keeps you motivated, and you’ll usually do a better job. You’ll also normally have more knowledge to share in an area of interest than in an area you just chose because it is popular.
2. Write a title that catches the reader’s attention. There are many ways to do this, and this is a topic worthy of it’s own article. The short lesson? Use words like “how to,” “easy ways to,” ten ways to,” “secrets,” and “try this.” Titles that are questions can be effective too.
3. Make your writing easy on the eyes. Don’t have sentences that go on and on endlessly, with more words than are necessary to make the point and without enough commas to break them up into digestible parts and with no good reason to be that long and which easily could have been cut into two or more shorter easier-to-read sentences that would have been more relaxing to read – in other words, avoid sentences like this one. Oh, and try to have concise paragraphs of two to six sentences.
4. You should, of course, write articles that are truly useful, interesting or entertaining. If you can do all three in one article, that’s great. At the very least, though, try to include something in your article that will be new to the average reader. Second best is describing things they already know, but in new ways. You often have to cover the same points as similar articles, but do more than that as well.
5. Keep the language simple. After scrutinizing many articles, I consider the evidence to be incontrovertible that pretentiousness in the elucidation of your information makes the loss of the reader ineluctable. In other words, use too many big words and you’ll scare away many readers. You can say what you like using simple words like the ones in this sentence. No reader will stop reading a good article because the language is too simple.
6. Write a resource box that make it easy for the reader to see where he can go for more information. A list of your dozen degrees and awards will not impress him or be helpful. Say something about yourself perhaps, then have a clear link and a description of what the reader will find at your web site.
This is a short lesson on how to write articles for readers. You should also use the right keywords, so readers can find the article, and write an article description that makes them want to read it. If you also want your articles to be used by others, you have to write articles not only for readers, but for newsletter and web site owners. That, however, is a topic for another article.
What Makes A Good Article Directory?
Which is the best article directory for you? That partly depends on what you are writing about. Buzzle.com, for example is one of the few article directories that really gets the readers for poetry and articles about poetry, but my business-related articles seem to be ignored when I submit them there. They do cover many categories, but they have developed an audience that is inclined towards certain types of articles.
Other article directories are not just oriented towards certain areas, but are actually meant for a specific niche. If you write articles on self improvement, for example, a great place to submit them is selfgrowth.com, although they limit your submissions-per-month. Other directories take only articles about the internet, or only about outdoor topics. These niche directories may have fewer visitors, but they are visitors that are more likely to be readers of your articles.
The best general article directory, in my experience (I have submitted over one thousand articles to 50 or more directories), is Ezinearticles.com. I could get all the traffic I need by submitting just to this one directory. There are good reasons to submit to more than one directory, however. Here are some of the things to look for in those other directories.
1. Direct traffic from the directory. Submit your articles to several directories, and several weeks later check your web site reports to see if the URLs for any of the directories are showing up as “referrers.” Some directories are better than others at delivering direct traffic. Of course, if none of them show up in your reports, you may need to do a better job writing the resource box to get the reader to click through to your site (but that is a topic for another article).
2. The site is popular. Specifically, you want directory sites that have high Google PageRank. This is a proprietary measure of page importance that Google uses – you can find out what the ranking is if you install a Google toolbar. Regardless of whether they deliver direct traffic, I’ll submit to a directory with a PageRank of 5 or 6. The incoming links created help boost the popularity of the web site.
3. Automatic home page placement. Some directories automatically put your article on the home page once it is approved. It appears under the “new articles” section or something similar, for a day or two. This means good exposure, at least until it is bumped off the list by newer articles.
4. The directory is easy to use. There is a simple reason why this is important: Time. There are too many easy (and good) article directories out there to waste time on those that want to complicate the process.
5. It is easy for webmasters. You don’t just want your article to sit there. You want other site owners to take it and use it too. See if that is easy for them to do. If so, they are more likely to get articles at this directory.
6. Has clear rules. Article directories need to have clear “terms of use” or rules for both those who submit articles and those who take and use them. In particular, be sure that potential publishers are clearly informed that the articles must be unchanged and the links must be active.
The above guidelines are not all equally important. If a directory is strong in one or two areas (plus item number six), this is enough. Article directories that are good in all these areas are a blessing.
Online Articles Should Have Seven Words Or Less In The Title
Online articles are different from print articles in many important respects. They need to be keyword optimized to be found by readers, for example. They need to be shorter, to fit the space requirements and short attention spans of the internet world. They need to not only satisfy the reader, but to get the reader to click through to the web sites they are written to promote.
There are “rules,” then, that you need to follow to maximize the effectiveness of your online articles. Break them, and you reduce the odds of turning your articles into streams of traffic and income. But not always. Here are some instances when breaking the rules is the smart thing to do.
Online Articles – Breaking The Rules
The Rule: 3 to 7 words in the title.
Short titles format better, and are often “punchier.” That is, they grab attention better. The fact that you are reading this article tells us that an eleven-word title can also grab attention. A title should have a decent keyword in it, indicate what the article is about, and be catchy. If it takes more than seven words to do this effectively, break the rule! Shorter words may help if you’re going have ten of them, though.
The Rule: Primary keyword in the title.
This makes it easier for people to find the article in the search engines. When should you break this rule? When you have already targeted the primary keywords for a topic in other articles, and you have more to write. In other words, if you have already written articles using the keywords “skydiving,” and “skydiving safety,” and any other good related keywords, you can go for a purely “catchy” title on the next article.
For example, “My Parachute Didn’t Open” may not contain good keywords, but it will certainly catch the attention of anyone browsing the directories where you have posted the article. This can mean more traffic to your web site, in addition to that which comes from your optimized articles.
The Rule: Keyword in the “anchor text.”
The idea here is to link to your site using keywords you want to optimize the site for. This is generally a good idea, but there are two reasons to break this rule. First, if you don’t have the full URL (starting with http://) of the site there, it is likely that some publishers will screw up your link. An article without a link to your web site won’t help you much. Second, if the keyword is already in the URL, you are all set. For example, 999ideas.com is already optimizing for “ideas” just by making a link of the URL.
The Rule: Short articles.
Short articles (300 to 800 words) are more likely to be published by others. They are also more suited to the short attention spans online. If your article really needs 1300 words to reasonably cover the topic – break the rule! Know that it will be less likely to be published on other sites, but it will be there for readers in the article directories that you submit it to – at least those that allow longer articles.
Another way to approach this problem, is to split the article into two parts. Post the first part in directories, noting that the article continues on your web site (link to that page in the resource box). This will almost guarantee that it won’t be published much, but on the other hand, if it a good article, finishing it is a very compelling reason for readers to click through to your web site.
There are other article-writing rules that can be profitably broken at times. For example, you normally want an article to generate as much traffic as possible for your site, but the nature of that traffic matters too, right? Perhaps getting less traffic – if that traffic is full of buyers – is better. You can see that knowing the reasons for the rules helps you know when to break them. The bottom line when writing online articles? Do what works. If it helps you get more income – break those rules.
Article Ideas – Six Ways To Find Them
Article ideas can be easy to generate when you first start writing to promote you web site – at least if your site is on a subject you are passionate about. There are things you have been sharing with people for a long time, and now you just start doing that in articles. At some point, though, you’ll find yourself thinking, “What should I write about now?” Here are six ways to answer that question.
1. Use your web site pages. When I first started to write to promote my web sites, I just came up with article ideas as I went along. At some point, though, I realized that I had hundreds of pages on my sites that could be made into articles. This was a way to really crank out the articles fast too. If you use this strategy, be sure to sufficiently rewrite the content, so it will be “unique.” Search engines don’t value “duplicate content” as highly. If you have long pages, you can also use the content of a page for two or more articles.
2. Use your own experiences. Think about any experience that you have had that is related to the theme of your web site. There is undoubtedly a lesson in that experience. Use the story and the lesson as a basis for an article. For example, if you have a site on dogs, you could tell the story of your first dog destroying the furniture, and have that as the lead-in for an article on dog training. This is a great way to come up with article ideas, because stories really “hook” the reader.
3. Pick apart your previous articles for new article ideas. I used to write a lot of “ten ways” articles. These are easy to write, but the information for each of the ten items is often very limited. I found that I can often go back and pick out one of these items and make it into an article all on its own. For example, if you have an article on ways to relieve stress, you might have a three-sentence item on deep breathing. Perhaps this could be made into an article. There is certainly more to be said about deep breathing than can be put into three-sentences.
4. Listen to yourself. You know things that most people don’t know, and hopefully your web site is based on this knowledge. Suppose you have a website on frugal living. On occasion, your friends would probably ask you how to save money on this or that, and you would find yourself explaining something to them. Write about it! This is a great way to come up with ideas for articles that people really want to read. Any time you explain something to someone, and it’s related to your web site theme, you have new article.
5. Ask your visitors. If you have a newsletter, ask your readers what topics they would like to see covered in your pages and articles. If you have a contact form on your web site, you can do the same there. You know there will be demand for a given topic if several visitors ask for it.
6. Use keyword research tools. Using keyword research tools is a great way to generate article ideas. Suppose you have a site on hiking and backpacking. Type in a phrase like “backpacking,” and you get a list of a hundred related terms, from “backpacking food” to “ultralight backpacking.” Not only will these trigger ideas for articles, but you are also sure that there is search traffic for these topics when you get your ideas in this way.
How Does Newspapers Get News From All Over The World
It is a day written in gold for all Indians. An Indian shooter has reached the finals of an Olympic. Every Indian is eagerly awaiting the finals to begin, to encourage, to share, the joy of watching an Indian winning Olympic gold medal for the first time in history. His success will be the headline news in India. It will probably make the front-page of all Indian new papers both regional and national. The editors have a choice on how to cover the match. They can rely on various new-agencies and/or they can send their own sports reporter and a staff photographer to cover the event live. The editors decide to fly out their own team. The reporters and photographers arrive in Beijing well ahead of the event. This enables them to prepare reports on the finalists to build-up interest in the competition. The match is due to start. The results will be out soon. The reporters and photographers have to send their reports and photographs within the deadline prescribed. The press box is busy. The reporters can type their copy into their portable word processor. Their laptop is a remote terminal of their papers main computer. When their stories are complete, the reporters simply attaches the audio coupler or adapter to the telephones, key the number of their newspaper, and the text is sent along the wires directly into their computers thousands of kilometers away. A 2000-word article is sent in less than a minute. The final of the shooting competition ends in a brilliant and sensational victory for the Indian. In addition to their reports already sent, the reporters will now interview the winner. The photographers request other international news agencies for picture-transmission equipment. The photographers processes their films and then feeds the best negative into a transmitter. This dispatches the image along a telephone line which emerges as high-quality duplicate negatives back in their respective newspaper computers. After interviewing the shooter, the reporters prepare their final copy, rearranging and correcting the text on the laptop VDU (visual display unit) screen and transmits their follow-up article. This gives more details and visuals than is found in the news-breaking television, radio, and print reports. This final report contains additional information on the champion’s future prospects, his family background, his other interests, and an account of his lifestyle. Front-page Article The respective sports editors at various newspaper offices access the report on their desktop screen. As per their discussions earlier at an editorial meeting, the report will be the sports page lead. There will also be a front-page news item adapted from the main article which also the editor can access on his own screen. The subeditor then checks, corrects, and adjusts it to fit the space allocated on the page by the sports editor. The subeditor can access on his screen an image of the whole page showing all the other stories, headlines, and pictures plus advertisements that have already been set. The subeditor knows exactly what space there is, as the editor has already chosen the picture that will illustrate the article. The draft is now finally edited on screen to fit the space and an apt headline written to fit the picture and article. If needed, a picture caption is also written by the subeditor. Now all copy for the first edition must be set in type to meet the deadline. This is done up with all the other copy for conversion into type by a high-speed phototypesetting machine. A 2000-word article is typeset in less than a minute. The typesetter produces a ‘bromide’ (a print of the type on photographic paper) for positioning on the page according to the approved layout. This can be done by using the computer. There are many newspapers that still prefer to physically cut up the bromides and paste them into position on a page-size card. The subeditor rechecks the article and picture and makes sure that no mistakes have happened before or during typesetting. When all is set and ready (text, headlines, pictures, layout, and design) the complete page is photographed and a film negative (a large black and white film) generated from which the printing plates (plastic-coated zinc or aluminium printing plates) for the presses are made. The drafts are circulated by the sports editor and the editor. Once the pages have been approved, and checked by the proofreaders, they are taken to the printing department. Now, the final reports are ready to be photographically transferred to plastic-coated zinc or aluminium printing plates. The plates pickup the images in ink and transfer them to the paper. The papers are now ready for distribution. The papers should reach the customers well in time. The success here is determined by the speed at which the newspapers distribute their copies to their readers. To help them achieve this, they first distribute the first edition to the far-flung areas and then to the nearer areas. These latter editions may look a bit different from the earlier editions as a result of fresh news breaking out which may in turn claim space on the front page. All the newspapers in India are sold out the next morning. As Indians are enjoying and discussing their country’s first Olympic gold medal, quoting from various newspaper articles and pictures, the sports reporters and photographers are awaiting their next assignment from their editors. For these reporters and photographers their day is yet to begin.
9 key Reasons of Article Submission to Article Directories
Submitting of articles to article directories is one of the main strategy in article marketing which is part of internet marketing strategy that can determine the success and failure of a website.
Here are some benefits of submitting articles to article directories and how it can help improve your business online.
1. Free Marketing:
Most article directories allow you to include links in the article you submitted that you can direct to your websites. If you write articles with content related to your product offer, you can to advertise your products indirectly and include a back link to your product offer. This result in a Free marketing media for your offers.
2. Boost your personal and business credibility:
Most article directories allow you to have an author bio box at the bottom of every articles you submitted. You can use your author bio box to promote your business or personal brand to build a brand image for yourself. In the author box, remember to advertise your website by including a link back to your web page for more information on the related articles you have submitted.
Moerover, when you have submitted enough “good” articles read by unlimited visitors to the article directories from all over the world, you will soon be seen as an expert in your industry who has a wide knowledge in the field. Being listed as “authors” in article directories helps promote yourself as an expert in your field too!
3. Increase traffic to your website:
With the links that you are allowed to include in your article content and your author bio box, you have created a doorway for readers to click on the links to come to your website. When crafted in an interesting method, these links will increase traffic to your website especially when your articles are being picked up by website owners to post in their own blog and spread all over the internet.
4. Massive exposure to millions of Article Directory visitors:
Your articles may be viewed by the millions of visitors who visit article directories every year.
5. Viral marketing and RSS Syndication:
If your articles were well written and being reposted by webmasters to post in their websites, this automatically create a viral effect for your content. Your content can then be republished virally all over the world wide web with links linking back to your websites as well as your personal promotion in your author bio box.
Most article directories as well as blogs now comes with RSS (Really Simple Syndication) technology which produces RSS feeds for all blog contents. These articles can then be posted easily through RSS feeds and spread even further receiving more views and clicks that can help you can obtain visitors to your website.
6. Generate sales and leads without having a website:
Even if you do not have a website, you can also benefit from your effort in article marketing, since the article directories as well as website owners who reprint your article in their websites can be represented as your website. Since your articles come with an author bio box as discussed above, you can include your contact information such as postal address, contact phone humber or email address instead of linking to your website to allow potential clients to contact you.
As a suggestion, it always advisable to create a simple web presence online even if you do not know how to build a website. You may create a free blogger or wordpress blogs, or even facebook and twitter page that you can link to from the bio box.
7. Reach New Customers:
With a wide readership in article directories all over the world. and the chances of your articles spreading online, submitting articles to Article Directories can help you reach new customers that you have never dreamed of. Your article and your offer can be exposed to millions of potential customers all around the world.
8. Get continuous traffic to your website – for years
Articles submitted to article directories usually stay in the directories forever, meaning that your articles can continue to bring website traffic to your site for years to come. Your articles may be copied anytime and republished years later too.
9. Articles Spread Automatically by Scripts
Recently, there has been some new scripts that pulls articles automatically from article directories. These scripts will further help spread your articles to websites all over the internet providing you with backlinks and traffic to your websites. One of the latest release of such script is Automatic Blog a wordpress plugins that pulls article from articles directories
For more information on article marketing, free tools, softwares and Ebook on Internet Marketing, download at Internet Marketing Solution website www.BOBmarketing.com
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- What is a good online chess gaming site to use?
- Which data recovery software is good and value for money?
- How does the online gaming work for the Nintendo Wii?
- What software do artist use to draw characters on a computer?




