Posts Tagged ‘Article Marketing’

Link Building for Website Traffic

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008
website trafficIn addition to its other marketing benefits, link building offers ways to directly and indirectly increase website traffic.
 

Link building is just one part of an effective online marketing strategy, but it is a very important part, as it typically accomplishes several goals at once. The first goal is: Link building is a powerful tool for improving and generating higher search engine rankings. The average web surfer putting key words into search engines will not search past page two of the findings.
 
Although this is often the main goal of a link building campaign, it should not be your only goal. Link building is also great for website traffic generation. The more customers you get to your website the better! Your sales will soon increase, your product/service will be branded, and you will expand your business tenfold.
 
Here are several ways in which your link building campaign can, and should, generate more traffic to your website.
 
Press Releases
 
Search engine optimized press releases are usually written when a new product is being announced, a new service is offered by your company, you have received an award, or anything you feel should be shared with the general public about your business. The writer is able to embed keywords purposefully linked back to your website. Embedded links are organic backlinks to your website, thereby growing SEO importance. Also, of great importance, is where the press releases are published. You could receive national attention just simply by posting a press release of interest to the media.
 
The great thing with press releases is that any business, large or small, is able to utilize this strategy to build links and increase web traffic. There is interactivity within the optimized press release by offering not only embedded links, but RSS feeds, video, images, and more. More interactivity in your press release could increase the attention your press release receives by the media.
 
Click Through Traffic
 
Another way to use link building for website traffic generation is by placing your links in places frequented by your customers. This is one of the ideas behind article marketing: When publications reprint your articles, with the backlinks intact of course, they usually choose articles their readers will be interested in. You are also able to control the areas where this information is posted. This allows you to gear your traffic to customers who are actually interested in your specific product.
 
The same holds true in other approaches to link building, such as blog comments and discussion forum posting. If you contribute something relevant and useful to the niche community, readers will be likely to check out your website to see what it has to offer.
 
Think of your links as road maps back to your site. If readers like your article, blog comment, or forum posting, they will be likely to follow the link and check out your site. So while these approaches increase your perceived link popularity with the search engines, each link also brings you additional website traffic from the readers of that website, publication, blog, or forum.
 
Many Reasons for Link Building
 
Link building is a strategy for online marketing that offers many benefits simultaneously. Link building offers benefits to your business’s online traffic, focusing on interested customers, and getting the word out there to media outlets about your business.  From whichever angle you look at it, link building is a valuable method of online marketing!

[tags] link building, higher pagerank, increase website traffic, higher search engine rankings, article marketing, online marketing [/tags] 

 

3 Ways to Make Article Marketing Work

Monday, March 17th, 2008
Article directories are losing their value right? Then why are we bothering to add it to a “best practices” site? Writing interesting, informative articles that will educate readers and introduce them to your website can still be an excellent way to improve your business’s success. 
 
Surf Board MaintenanceJust how successful your articles are depends on a number of factors. The articles have to be interesting, well written and contain enough helpful information to have real value to readers, but they also have to be marketed properly. All of the articles in the world won’t help you if you post them in places where they won’t be found by the right audience. A fascinating, informative article about proper surfboard maintenance isn’t going to help you if it’s lost in a general article directory or posted on a website where most readers are avid mid-west gardeners.
 
How do you find really solid places to market those great articles you’ve written? This week we have three suggestions on how to match your articles to the right publications and at the right times
 

1) Find the right editorial calendars. Look for the editorial calendars of online publications. Most online publications provide an editorial calendar that outlines what the main topics will be several months in advance. Reviewing these can not only give you an idea of when to submit articles you already have, but give you some great ideas for future articles. For instance, www.eweekmedia.com, an IT publication, is focusing on Mobile and Wireless in early May of 2008. In April 2008, there’s a feature titled “Security Focus: Email Security Challenge.” 

 

Whatever your business’s niche, check the magazines and review editorial calendars and make sure you match your articles to their focus – and be sure to pay attention to their submission deadlines! Editors love to run articles that dovetail with a particular focus.

 

2) Find niche publications. After you’ve checked out the editorial calendars of the magazines you’re already familiar with, look for publications you aren’t familiar with. For example, if you have an ecommerce website, search for “ecommerce magazines” and you might just find this: www.world-newspapers.com/e-commerce.html.

 

When you search for Surfing magazines, you can find magazines that include online magazines focusing on female surfers, North Carolina surfers, New England surfing, Australian surfing, competitive surfing, long board surfing…well, you get the idea! Even a niche like surfing can be narrowed even further, so be sure you look for any potential niche magazines that you can really tailor your articles toward that will love you for sending them some high quality content.

 

3) Find niche article directories. There are good niche article directories out there that either supply niche businesses with quality content or can point you in the direction of respected online publications that are looking for content. Lets say your site is about human resources, here is an example of article dedicated to HR http://www.businessknowhow.com/bkhmanage.htm.

 

You can do basic searches for “human resource article directory” or whatever your business niche is, and you’ll turn up various directories where you can get your articles published.  Do some homework, however, to make sure that you utilize the best directories for your own articles. A few things to look for in an online article directory are:

 

  • Read several articles in their supply of articles to check the quality. The articles should be well-written, with plenty of information and excellent grammar. If the quality isn’t consistent, then the directory doesn’t set high standards.
  • Does the site indicate how many articles are actually downloaded each month? You want to compare figures from directory to directory to see how much of the traffic to the site is actually downloading articles.
  • How recently has the site been updated? If there hasn’t been new content added in more than a month, then the directory may not get regular visits from publications. It also means there aren’t very many authors. The more authors, the more frequently articles are added. Publications are looking for fresh content – and fresh content means content that’s new and different every time that a visitor logs onto a directory. Look for sites that are changing every day.
  • And of course you might check their pagerank, backlinks, traffic stats, etc. to judge the quality of the link juice or traffic they might send your way.

If you use these three methods of getting your articles out there, you’ll quickly see a difference in your website traffic and inbound links. Any other suggestions from our article experts out there?

 

[tags] article marketing, article directories, niche markets, website traffic, inbound links [/tags]

Link Building Campaigns That Work

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

You may have tried link building campaigns in the past and been disappointed in the results. Perhaps you got barely a blip in the major search engines or you saw your rank rise only to fall a few months later. Whatever the reasons for your disappointment, it’s a good bet that the main reason you were disappointed in the results is that whatever link building tactics you used or paid for lacked two important qualities: balance and consistency.

The Importance of Balance in Link Building

Some people advocate the importance of content-rich websites, others focus on blogs and still others will insist that directories are the most important link building campaign features. The truth is never as simple as some people try to make it. It can seem like blogs are the place to link one month, and then be out of fashion just a few months later, with forums replacing them as the Holy Grail for link building.

The truth is, all of the many places you can link to and from (with the exception of unsavory linking sites that are tantamount to spam) are important to provide you a balance of coverage in your link building campaigns. Search engines are constantly changing, growing and evolving. They become more complex, develop new algorithms and morph so that you can’t ever keep up with how they are weighing the relative importance of any one kind of link, so you shouldn’t even try.

The solution is to balance your link building strategies for the greatest possible coverage over a multitude of formats. If you do this, you’ll find that you are always hitting on multiple cylinders. Although you might not be getting great results from every single link strategy, you’ll be getting pretty good ranking from several of them. It’s like playing a good point spread – coverage is key.

A good link building campaign with optimal coverage will include all of these:
• Directories with real editors. Well-known directories that are always updating and actually review the links are a hot destination for many industries.
• Forums. Links to your site from various forums provide dynamic attention for you – forums are the equivalent of the water cooler – the site where the latest and most interesting topics come up. Be present at the virtual water cooler and you’ll be talked about – and linked to.
• Article directories. Submit relevant, informative articles to directories to easily multiply your links. These article directories are used by others to provide content for everything from newsletters to special reports – if your content is good, you’ll quickly become a recognized expert.
• Reciprocal links. Provide links to sites that compliment what you are offering and ask that they link to you. Similar sites that aren’t direct competitors are powerful link partners.
• Contextual links in blogs and reviews. Another instance of the power of the people – reviewers drive people to sites because they are recognized as experts, so try and get reviewed and be sure a link to your site is included. Some people won’t even know they need you until they read a great blog about you –and then they will hot-foot it to your site for more information.

If you use a good mix of link building techniques, you’ll be balancing your exposure over all of the many kinds of linking that the major search engines use so that you’re always noticed without the risk of falling down in the ranks because one particular link strategy is out of favor.

Why Consistency is Key

Many individuals start out in overdrive when they start a linking campaign. They submit to dozens of industry directories, pack their website and article directories with great content, get noticed on blogs and in reviews, set up links on complimentary sites and enjoy the fruits of their labor – top rankings.

Then something happens; they find that they just don’t have the time to continue writing articles, they stop visiting blogs because they are overwhelmed with new customers….and they stop building links or slow down considerably. Unfortunately, they discover that they are now dropping in the search engine rankings and they can’t understand it. After all, nothing’s changed, right?

Actually, that’s precisely the point – nothing is changing. If you stop actively creating links and building a following, you will fall in the rankings because your competitors are actively building links, adding content and quietly passing you in popularity. The search engines are dynamic, so you can’t afford not being dynamic yourself – you have to consistently build on what you started in order to stay ahead of the pack. It’s a long-term commitment that you have to make if you don’t want to lose in the long run.

The perfect link building campaign is a combination of balance and consistency. If you continue to spread your links out over many venues and keep the content and information flowing every month, you’ll be successful in building a valuable network of links that will send you to the top of the pages.

[tags] link building, link popularity, directories, article marketing, contextual links, forums [/tags]