Article Marketing - How to Make It Work For You - Part Two
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This is the second part of an article series on article marketing. You can read part one here.
Mistake #5 - Trying to Make One Article Do Too Much
An article just can’t do the same job as a short PDF report, an entire web site, your book, or DVD series. And it wasn’t meant to either. Stick within suggested word counts, and keep your resource box as simple as you can. Also, only about a third of your articles need to have the motive of enhancing your SEO efforts.
Remember, you can get penalized for over-optimization as well, particularly in the case of uniform anchor text.
It’s not always a great idea to pepper your article with links either. When all the links are to your own site, they probably won’t get hyperlinked anyway. Even if they do, the more your article appears to be purely about promoting your site, as opposed to providing information, the less likely that your links will be clicked.
If the links are to other sites that you’re reviewing as resources, this can work, but in the case of more than a handful of sites, it’s often a better idea to offer a free ebook from your site containing the full reviews.
Yes, your article should be as informative as you can make it, but if you find yourself near your word limit, save the rest of the tips for next time, or continue at your own site.
Mistake #6 - Leaving Them Wanting Less
What’s the point of submitting every day if your objective is to get your article picked up by a publisher? In a way, you have to think of your potential ezine publisher as a prospect as well - a confused prospect just goes away. Shoving 20 articles under their noses gives them 20 times the amount of work to do.
The issue of confusing your prospect can also be an issue if you’re only submitting to article directories as well. Think of what happens when you see a commercial for a show you’d like to see on television too often. What happens when your favorite song gets played on the radio a bit too much?
No matter how much you may love that TV show or your favorite song, there’s a point of over-saturation that causes you either to begin to ignore it - or worse yet - actually hate the very mention of it. You don’t want this to happen to your content.
There’s also the issue of pacing yourself. Every writer eventually runs into one of two problems - a lack of ideas for new material, or a lack of time to write them up. You could derail much of your efforts of increasing exposure to your site if you aren’t able to keep up the supply of content you produce.
The most common advice is to submit an article a week. Through a distribution service, or to publications that are geared towards ezine publishers who want content, this is probably best. If you’re submitting directly to article directories, more often than that may be okay if the site’s guidelines allow it - but more than that is overkill.
If you really want to send out content on a daily basis, you’re better off syndicating yourself through a blog or RSS feed at your own site and generating your own group of subscribers.
Mistake #7 - Stopping Half Way Through the Promotional Process
This has got to be the top mistake of marketers who say “This just doesn’t work for me.†True, you may start to see links or even traffic within 24 hours of your article being submitted, however, if you don’t promote your articles deeply and widely enough, you’re probably not going to see your desired results.
First of all, particularly when you’re just establishing yourself as an expert, you need to submit to as many places as you can.
Most people only submit to ten or fifteen high traffic article banks with high Google PR, not realizing that there may be up to 100 sites that will take their articles that get most of their readers via RSS , ezine publications, or even through distribution offline. My short list of places that have brought me publicity contains over 400 sites, most of which take articles on just about any topic.
So not only should you be submitting your article to more places, doing this for two weeks and then stopping is not going to bring you any long-term effects. Your first four weeks as an article marketer should see you submitting at least one article a week.
If you don’t have it in your schedule to write and submit that often, then get a ghostwriter and hire a distribution service. (Just be aware that even a distribution service won’t be able to send your articles to every single place you want to submit to.)
You could also write many articles in advance, and get someone else to do the submissions for you.
Mistake #8 - Improper Use of Past Content
One trick that some article marketers use is to attempt to recycle an article they’ve already written. That’s not to say that this technique doesn’t have potential. But you also can’t possibly expect publishers to accept content that is simply a re-hash of what they’ve already seen before.
So don’t just change the title and re-submit. Change your content as well. You can do this by re-targeting to another audience. Maybe your business tips for work at home moms could be geared towards small business if you add, remove and change a few things.
Article marketing is one of the simplest and easiest ways to increase visitors to your site if done correctly, and has inherent search engine benefits as well.
It’s not just cheaper than regular methods of advertising - proper article marketing provides you with a type of publicity that money can’t buy.
Resources : Sign up to the free article secrets course to find out more ways that you can use this promotional technique to your advantage, get free resources to help you write better articles and increase your readership.















This is really articulate. Thanks.