Stop Undermining Your Article Submissions!
Your web site plays an
integral role in your article submission
strategy. If it isn't up to par, your article
submission projects
won't produce much in the way of results.
To support your efforts in writing and submitting
articles, you need a
solid workhorse, which is the job of your web site.
It's not just for
looks, but rather serves the purpose of offering
something of value to
your target audience and converting browsers to
faithful readers,
loyal newsletter subscribers and committed buyers!
On the Internet, just like with bricks–n–mortar
businesses, appearance
is critical. Use these strategies to elevate your web
site giving it
literal curb appeal and improving your business,
which translates to
more article acceptances and more exposure in your
target market!
* Cut the Pomp and Circumstance
As with so many elements of the Internet, the use of
a Splash Page
featuring fancy graphics and an Enter button is
obsolete. Most people
find them irritating and won't even venture past this
point to see the
rest of your web site, so delete your splash page
now!
* Professionalism
If your web site looks the Internet Amateur Hour,
you're probably
turning off prospects. Quality clients/customers
won't do business
with you if your image is unprofessional. Make sure
that pages are
neat and organized featuring content that's easily
readable. Be
consistent in formatting from page–to–page to prevent
a
thrown–together look.
* Focus
Just like your articles, your web site needs focus.
No business fills
every need for every consumer, so direct your web
site to the
prospective clients/customers in your target market.
Be clear about
the products/services you offer and engage prospects
in your specific
market by catering to their needs exclusively and
better than your
competition.
* Presence
Online businesses have to overcome the hurdle of not
having
face–to–face contact with prospects. Make interaction
with you a
simple process by providing a contact form, listing a
phone number and
including an e–mail address on every page.
* Stick to Business
Does your web site look reflect you as a business
professional or does
it blast prospects with a variety of hard–to–read
fonts and excessive
graphics? Limit the number of fonts and colors used
throughout your
site. Use graphics judiciously avoiding slow–loading
designs that
frustrate prospects.
* Content
They call it king for a reason, so don't dethrone
your efforts by
featuring the same old content. Give prospects and
search engines,
plus your regular clients/customers, fresh content
that fits your
theme and offers value to your target audience.
* Accentuate
Pay special attention to your Articles Page. Include
reprint details
with your required guidelines above your articles.
Use inviting
language in your guidelines encouraging publishers to
take advantage
of your material. Make it convenient for publishers
by listing
articles alphabetically by title and include a three–
line description.
Link titles to the actual article page with offer
versions in html,
pdf and text files.
* Courting Publishers
Publishers are very busy people, so make it easy for
them to publish
your articles. Offer a separate publisher's only
subscription
notifying them when you have a new article available.
* Show Your Smile
Potential clients want to know who you are. Include a
photo on your
Article Page for publishers/editors to use when they
reprint your
articles. Prospects also appreciate being able to
actually see a
person because it makes doing business online much
more personal.
* Call–to–Action
You're wasting time, effort and valuable space with
web pages that
don't give clients/customers the opportunity to do
business with you!
Each page, even your individual article pages, should
always include a
call–to–action. Strut your stuff by offering
prospects your newsletter
and/or subscriptions to your exclusive members–only
offerings.
Streamline the process and gain more clients.
* Testimonials
Share client/customer testimonials with prospects
instead of keeping
them to yourself. Add at least one testimonial per
page including
article pages letting prospects know just how
valuable others find
your products/services.
* Respect Clients/Customers
More than ever, people are concerned with the
security of their
private information. Establish a clear privacy policy
and publish it
on your web site and linking to it from each page.
* Guarantee It In Writing
Decide your return/refund policy before your web site
goes live! No
matter how good your product or service is, at some
point, you're
going to have an unsatisfied customer. Create a
consistent refund
policy up front and update it immediately on your web
site if you
change it.
* Polish The Final Product
Grammatical mistakes like misspellings, improper
punctuation, and
capitalization errors signal prospects that you're
not attentive to
detail. Have someone proofread your entire site
including your
articles to make sure all text is error–free.
So, what's your curb appeal? Your web site is your
online office and
showroom. Does it make you look like a professional
or more like an
amateur with a sideline hobby?
Remember, marketing with articles is about generating
exposure.
Although publishers need articles they may not accept
them if your
site is poorly designed, disorganized or filled with
grammatical
errors and outdated content. Put your best foot
forward to prospective
publishers and clients who come to you through your
article
submissions. If, despite your best efforts, your web
site still needs
work consider hiring a professional. You'll quickly
recoup the cost of
hiring an expert with more sales and increased
exposure!
(c) 2005, Davis Virtual Assistance. This article may
be reproduced in
all venues so long as the content and by–line are
reprinted intact and
all links are set live.
Bonnie Jo Davis is an expert writer and article
submission guru with
over ten years of submission success. Her web site is
located at
http://www.ArticleSubmissionSites.com and she
recommends the new
ArticleAnnouncer Article Marketing System by Jason Potash for do–it–yourself submitters.
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