Posts tagged web content
Article Writing Basics – Defining Your Article's Purpose
Article Directories are a form of Search Engine Optimization (SEO) where companies and professional writers submit articles based on a specific niche. Article directories are also sometimes called Ezines, or Online Magazines, for their depository methods – sometimes hosting hundreds or thousands of documents related to a given subject.
What is the benefit of submitting to an article directory? When search engines scan the Internet for content, it “spiders” the web pages and harvests links from each page. The crawler then searches other pages for links and indexes pages that link back and forth with each other.
Article directories use this technology by allowing website owners the ability to link back to their own site using keyword articles, which trigger search engines to rank pages higher. Article standards developed by SEO experts typically call for a word count of 400-500+ words and a keyword density of approximately 2%or 3%.
They also demand that an article be different enough from any other piece of existing web copy that it is viewed as being “unique” by the search engines. But although common SEO methods specify that duplicate content penalizes a website ranking, Google has denied it. Regardless, article directories often require unique content themselves, and use specific editorial guidelines and rules to help deter the manipulation of search results, such as keyword stuffing.
Once you have written a good article, now you need to create an Article Title, one that will grab a potential reader’s attention and get them to read your piece. But when writing your article, you need to ask yourself: Is the primary purpose of my article an attempt to sell something other than information? The answer should never be “Yes.”
First, your Article Title should never be a blatant pitch for your website, your products or services, your company, or even you. Your job as an article author is to educate, entertain, inform. Not sell!
If you’ve created good content, presented it in a logical and interesting way, and used some best practices to disseminate that content, such as one of the top article directories as ranked by traffic and PageRank – and then spreading the word to your own social networks, either manually or with the help of various WordPress Plugins or stand-alone Social Media Management System (SMMS) tools.
And you must trust that your expertise in the delivery of valuable information on your chosen topic will do the “selling” to the reader. So save the big sales pitch for your Author’s Resource Box only.
And when discussing the Resource Box, think of the Article Body as being the place where you GIVE to the reader; and the Resource Box is where you TAKE something back, hopefully some readers who are interested in utilizing your products or services. Don’t break the Golden Rule of article marketing – Thou shall not TAKE in the Article Title or Body!
Your objective is to create a relationship of credibility and trust with your online readership. And you’ll never get the opportunity to sell to your readers until they know you, like you, and trust you.
In your Article Title, you’re simply trying to sell your reader on the benefits they will receive when they take a bit of their valuable online attention and spend it by reading your article. Put your creative marketing thoughts and ideas to use by selling your reader on the benefits of the information in your article – and not your business – and you will see greater conversions and sales results in the future.
WordPress Is Perfect For Content Managed Websites
We can assist you with web graphic layout and design, website development, SEO, content creation and distribution/management, and more! We are industry leaders in the creation and hosting of Content Managed Websites for business.
WordPress Is So Effective For Content Managed Websites
At HTA we have grown accustomed to being asked lots and lots of questions about our new Content Managed Website Package and system, developed utilizing the powerful WordPress Blogging Platform. The concept behind the Content Managed Website is fairly simple – your online content has never been more vital to your online presence and overall success, and having a method to quickly, and easily, add or modify your website’s content has become of utmost importance.
So with that in mind, we thought it would be a valuable education resource to provide our readership with the top 10 reasons why WordPress is so effective in creating and managing your own Content Managed Website.
WordPress Can Be Customized In Any Way
The most important attribute of WordPress is that it’s 100% Open Source. This means WordPress can be modified and adapted by anyone with a working knowledge of its code and structure, written in an industry standard web-programming language.
Or perhaps there is a WordPress Plugin application or widget that you want to utilize on your site, but it lacks a specific option that you’d really like to have. No problem, your Studio 2108 developer can adapt it for you to any specification. With WordPress, anything is possible!
The Look And Feel Of Your Website Can Be Easily Modified
This Open Source basis for WordPress also means that you can easily craft whatever online experience that you would like for your website visitors. To start with, there are already thousands of themes and website templates that have been created, which you can use as an easy starting point for your design.
Get The Balance Right
Which is more important for content, the ability to communicate directly with visitors… or the search engine rankings it creates?
On the one extreme, imagine a website (or blog post, etc.) that is complete nonsense gibberish. Maybe envision something written in Chinese characters, assuming that’s a language you don’t understand. Now let’s say these random bits of code or symbols somehow rank quite well with the search engines, the very first organic result in fact.
What have you accomplished as a business or organization in this case?
Sure, loads of people may stumble upon your website, but once they get there what do you think will happen? Do you think they will “convert” to customers?
On the other end of the spectrum, imagine a block of written text that is so eloquent, so persuasive… that once a visitor reads it, they instantly want to become a customer, or donor, volunteer, etc.
However, because of the way it is written, it actually has zero SEO value. As such, it is invisible to the search engines, and no one who doesn’t already know your website exists will ever find it.
What has your business accomplished here? This example is marginally better than the first one; at least you could tell folks about your site!
Now yes, both scenarios are on the extremes, and unlikely. But they illustrate an important point. A typical business should NEVER just design or write solely for SEO, because the whole purpose of (most) sites is NOT to simply get visitors, but to have them DO something once they are there.
And the reverse is also true, you should never completely forget about SEO, either. This means following some basic guidelines in your web design and structure, and making sure to include the right keywords within your content, among other things.
Get the balance between SEO and readability/functionality correct, and you have a website that can help you accomplish your organization’s goals now, and in the future.