5 Simple Ways to Fail at Article Marketing
Content is king. There's no question that good content delivers
qualified traffic. Traffic is the first step to getting new
customers. New customers are the first step to more income.
It's true, article marketing is very difficult to get wrong or
to screw up - but there are some folks who really need failure
in their lives. So, for those poor souls who simply can't abide
success, I have put together this list of five simple rules to
ruin your article marketing campaigns.
1) Write an ad and call it an article This is the biggest one,
so it's first in the list. Write a 500 word benefit statement
about your product, service, or website. Don't put any of that
pesky "interesting content" that readers want to read - and
editors want to publish. Just talk about the wonderful things
that happen when a reader becomes your customer.
Make sure you include several self-serving links within the body
of your article, because how else will someone be able to find
your site? Don't limit yourself to simply putting your links in
the resource box (where they belong) instead, make sure to
litter your article with self-serving links. Oh, and be sure to
do it in the most distracting manner possible.
By submitting advertising and calling it an "article", you can
be certain that editors and publishers will reject your
submissions. That will keep readers from getting to your
article, and it will prevent you from getting links back to your
sites. It's a terrific way to destroy your campaign.
2) Use your keyword *AS* the title This one is related to the
above, so it comes next. Don't bother writing an eye-catching
headline that will engage a reader - instead use your preferred
keyword as your headline. For instance, use "Fish Tanks" as the
headline, instead of "How to Keep your Fish Tanks Clean Without
Harsh Chemicals"
You see, that second title might actually get someone to publish
your article, resulting in links to your site. Who needs that?
The second title might also get a reader to click into your
article, resulting in a qualified visitor to your site. Oh the
HORROR!
To ensure that your campaign is as ineffective as possible, use
a single keyword term as your title.
3) Write for a spiderbot and not for a person Moving right
along, as long as we're talking about keywords, make sure that
your article repeats your keyword phrase at least once in each
paragraph. Better yet - to really make your campaign fail, put
it in every sentence.
Keyword stuffing is one of several "Black Hat SEO" techniques
that have been known to get sites banned from Google and the
other search engines.
No publisher of a content site wants their site to get banned by
the search engines, so by stuffing your keyword into the article
in as many ways as possible, you can rest assured that the
publisher will skip your article. That way, you'll get neither
links nor visitors to your website. It's the very picture of
failure. Nice work!
Also, since the article is written for spiderbots and not for
humans, even the article sites that publish everything without
review won't be able to save the campaign. This is great news
for those who need failure.
An article that isn't interesting won't convert readers (who
have very short attention spans) into visitors to your site.
Click click, they're away from the article and onto a more
interesting page.
So that your campaign will fail as impressively as possible,
write a boring, monotonous article and incorporate as many black
hat SEO techniques into your articles as possible. You won't get
any traffic at all. And customers? Of course not! Exactly the
ticket for those who need to fail.
4) Use pre-written, canned, re-brandable content That's right,
we mustn't forget the lazy marketer's method. Imagine this - pay
someone to give you a bunch of bland articles that they've
already sold to hundreds, if not thousands of other Internet
marketers. Then, put your name on it, and try to submit it to
article sites as an original article.
Do you remember when you'd open your email and all of your
friends had sent you the same Internet joke? Each of your
friends thought they had discovered it and that it was new. You
knew better.
That's how content publishers feel when they get the latest
canned article pretending to be original content. By the time
they've seen that article for the zillionth time, they won't
even look at it again.
If you want to go broke online, use public domain or rebrandable
articles that have already made the rounds of the article sites
and submit it as your own. That way you keep from getting the
free links and visitors to your website that might cause you to
become successful in spite of yourself.
5) Tease instead of teach Now this one is only for the truly
savvy failures out there. Teasing readers instead of providing
good content is one of the most advanced article marketing
techniques for those who want to destroy their businesses.
With this one, you can completely avoid all four of the other
techniques and still manage to ruin your article marketing
campaigns.
A tease is one of those articles that says "I can tell you how
to..." but then never gets around to telling the reader how. The
only way to find out how is to visit the author's website, buy
the author's product, download the author's ebook, join the
author's affiliate program, etc. There isn't any actionable
information in the article itself.
Since articles are meant to inform readers, skipping the
teaching part and simply teasing them is a great way to decrease
your readership, quash your publishing ratio, and fail on a
grand scale.
Conclusion So there you have it, five simple ways to ruin an
otherwise foolproof article marketing campaign. If you
absolutely need your business to fail, make sure you write ads,
use a keyword instead of an interesting title, repeat your
keywords monotonously in your article, don't bother creating
interesting original content, and tease your readers instead of
teaching them.
That will guarantee that your articles aren't picked up by the
directories, can't be found by Google, don't provide links to
their sites and don't convert readers to visitors.
About the author:
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Written By: Chris Ellington