Use the tools below to copy the article in plain text form, or you can copy it as HTML, ready to copy and paste directly into a web page.
HTML What Article Publishers REALLY Want What Article Publishers REALLY Want Author: Heather ReimerIf you write articles to promote your business, you've probably wondered how to get publishers to gobble them up. It seems so hit and miss at times, doesn't it? I've been writing articles to plug my content writing services for three years... a few of them bombed, a few were picked up by major publishers and distributed to hundreds of thousands of readers, and the vast majority landed somewhere in between. So what separates the flops from the faves? Here are a few of my findings: =>Short tips articles aren't hot tamales. The majority of publishers still want articles in the 400 - 800 word range. =>The REALLY big, influential publishers seem to be looking for how-to articles that explain and/or clarify a process and that offer lots of links to resources, especially free ones. If you can fit all that into one article, along with a pinch of personality, you've got yourself a winner. =>Don't be shy about including a little of yourself in your article. Notice I said "a little". Whenever I've strayed into rant and rave mode about some pet peeve, my articles have suffered. But when I offer observations and useful advice gained from my own experience and good research, publishers and readers respond. =>Metaphors aren't just for poetry. Your writing becomes more colorful and accessible if you draw parallels. For example, I once compared the aggravation caused by poor website navigation to a bully teasing little kids on the playground. Readers remembered that one because they could relate to the image. =>Keep an eye on trends. Noticing more pop-ups lately? A decline in spam? (I wish!) An increase in hype on the web? Whatever it is, chances are good other people have noticed it too - or will soon - and your article on the subject will make you appear like a sage visionary... or just a clever person. =>Recycle ideas. I constantly have to remind myself that just because I wrote an article on search engines a year ago doesn't mean that topic is forever off limits to me. The most prolific article writers often regurgitate the same ideas over and over, altering them slightly for new audiences. And the audience is always being renewed so plagiarizing yourself is not a crime. (Unless you send the same article twice to lists that prohibit it... that IS a crime!) =>Make the most of your bio tag. Those six to eight lines at the end of your article are the reason for writing all the lines above them. Don't just talk about yourself - use the space to craftily plug your product, service or free offer. This is your ad! Treat it like one. =>Don't spend a lot of time distributing your article to the smaller ezines unless their audience is your ideal target market. Article announcement lists and syndicators will get your article in front of more publishers with less time and effort on your part. =>Obey the rules. Each list has its own submission guidelines. Run afoul of them and your efforts will hit the round file and you'll become known as the first writer who couldn't read. =>I've stressed the importance of proofreading in so many previous articles that I'm not even going to mention it here. Oops. =>Don't bother blitzing the lists with articles during holiday periods, as I did, thinking all the other writers will be snoozing and there'll be a shortage of good articles out there. The publishers are snoozing too. The fact is that article writing, like any other form of writing, is an imprecise art not a science... there are no guarantees. You could knock off an award-winning item in ten minutes. Or you could expend gallons of blood, sweat and tears writing the most insightful, entertaining, pertinent and timely treatise ever conceived and have it land, thud, like an overripe coconut on a deserted beach. Keep writing, keep submitting, keep shaking that tree and eventually good things will shake loose. Article Source: http://www.articlealley.com/http://heatherreimer.articlealley.com/what-article-publishers-really-want-640.html ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Suspect your web copy isn't working hard enough for you? Get a FREE website content analysis on your site, with tips to make your site more selling, compelling, and search engine friendly. Visit TheWriteContent.com for your free content analysis. (Link to: http://www.thewritecontent.com< ) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ http://www.thewritecontent.com Text What Article Publishers REALLY Want Author: Heather Reimer If you write articles to promote your business, you've probably wondered how to get publishers to gobble them up. It seems so hit and miss at times, doesn't it? I've been writing articles to plug my content writing services for three years... a few of them bombed, a few were picked up by major publishers and distributed to hundreds of thousands of readers, and the vast majority landed somewhere in between. So what separates the flops from the faves? Here are a few of my findings: =>Short tips articles aren't hot tamales. The majority of publishers still want articles in the 400 - 800 word range. =>The REALLY big, influential publishers seem to be looking for how-to articles that explain and/or clarify a process and that offer lots of links to resources, especially free ones. If you can fit all that into one article, along with a pinch of personality, you've got yourself a winner. =>Don't be shy about including a little of yourself in your article. Notice I said "a little". Whenever I've strayed into rant and rave mode about some pet peeve, my articles have suffered. But when I offer observations and useful advice gained from my own experience and good research, publishers and readers respond. =>Metaphors aren't just for poetry. Your writing becomes more colorful and accessible if you draw parallels. For example, I once compared the aggravation caused by poor website navigation to a bully teasing little kids on the playground. Readers remembered that one because they could relate to the image. =>Keep an eye on trends. Noticing more pop-ups lately? A decline in spam? (I wish!) An increase in hype on the web? Whatever it is, chances are good other people have noticed it too - or will soon - and your article on the subject will make you appear like a sage visionary... or just a clever person. =>Recycle ideas. I constantly have to remind myself that just because I wrote an article on search engines a year ago doesn't mean that topic is forever off limits to me. The most prolific article writers often regurgitate the same ideas over and over, altering them slightly for new audiences. And the audience is always being renewed so plagiarizing yourself is not a crime. (Unless you send the same article twice to lists that prohibit it... that IS a crime!) =>Make the most of your bio tag. Those six to eight lines at the end of your article are the reason for writing all the lines above them. Don't just talk about yourself - use the space to craftily plug your product, service or free offer. This is your ad! Treat it like one. =>Don't spend a lot of time distributing your article to the smaller ezines unless their audience is your ideal target market. Article announcement lists and syndicators will get your article in front of more publishers with less time and effort on your part. =>Obey the rules. Each list has its own submission guidelines. Run afoul of them and your efforts will hit the round file and you'll become known as the first writer who couldn't read. =>I've stressed the importance of proofreading in so many previous articles that I'm not even going to mention it here. Oops. =>Don't bother blitzing the lists with articles during holiday periods, as I did, thinking all the other writers will be snoozing and there'll be a shortage of good articles out there. The publishers are snoozing too. The fact is that article writing, like any other form of writing, is an imprecise art not a science... there are no guarantees. You could knock off an award-winning item in ten minutes. Or you could expend gallons of blood, sweat and tears writing the most insightful, entertaining, pertinent and timely treatise ever conceived and have it land, thud, like an overripe coconut on a deserted beach. Keep writing, keep submitting, keep shaking that tree and eventually good things will shake loose. Article Source: http://www.articlealley.com/http://heatherreimer.articlealley.com/what-article-publishers-really-want-640.html About the Author: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Suspect your web copy isn't working hard enough for you? Get a FREE website content analysis on your site, with tips to make your site more selling, compelling, and search engine friendly. Visit TheWriteContent.com for your free content analysis. (Link to: http://www.thewritecontent.com< ) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ http://www.thewritecontent.com Article Title: Article Keywords: return to article Author by Heather Reimer ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Suspect your web copy isn't working hard enough for you? Get a FREE website content analysis on your site, with tips to make your site more selling, compelling, and search engine friendly. Visit TheWriteContent.com for your free content analysis. (Link to: http://www.thewritecontent.com < ) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ URL: http://www.thewritecontent.com ads similar articles Article Marketing Article; a brief explanationFor a long time there was a lot of buzz and debate in the online business about article marketing, but we still often been asked what it is and how it works. Here is a brief explanation. Like all major media, the Internet is hungry for content. Unlike oth......Writing And Submitting Articles To Article DirectoriesWriting articles for web content and site promotion has become a full blown internet industry. The secret is out. If you want to build credibility and good targeted traffic to your web site you need to submit articles to directories. The more articles you......How to Set Your Freelance Writing RatesAs a freelance writer, you will compete against many writers who are just as talented as you are. You will also compete against writers who write poorly and who offer their writing services at ridiculously low fees. These writers can and do get jobs. Many......How Can an Article Submitter Be A Benefit To Your Online Business?There are differing opinions about the effectiveness of article submitters. Some internet marketers find them to be very helpful for their online businesses; others think they're merely a waste of money. Here are 5 ways article submitters can be advantage......The NightshiftSleepless in Seattle brings on new meaning when staying up all night has nothing to do with another person but rather the shameless addiction of the written word. I would love to be a day person at some point, maybe when I grow up because I do miss that l...... Tags E-Marketingsearch enginespop upsupshundreds of thousandswebsite navigationhypefree onespet peeveaggravationlittle kidswriting servicesmetaphorsparallelsbullyvisionaryrant socialize ads
Text What Article Publishers REALLY Want Author: Heather Reimer If you write articles to promote your business, you've probably wondered how to get publishers to gobble them up. It seems so hit and miss at times, doesn't it? I've been writing articles to plug my content writing services for three years... a few of them bombed, a few were picked up by major publishers and distributed to hundreds of thousands of readers, and the vast majority landed somewhere in between. So what separates the flops from the faves? Here are a few of my findings: =>Short tips articles aren't hot tamales. The majority of publishers still want articles in the 400 - 800 word range. =>The REALLY big, influential publishers seem to be looking for how-to articles that explain and/or clarify a process and that offer lots of links to resources, especially free ones. If you can fit all that into one article, along with a pinch of personality, you've got yourself a winner. =>Don't be shy about including a little of yourself in your article. Notice I said "a little". Whenever I've strayed into rant and rave mode about some pet peeve, my articles have suffered. But when I offer observations and useful advice gained from my own experience and good research, publishers and readers respond. =>Metaphors aren't just for poetry. Your writing becomes more colorful and accessible if you draw parallels. For example, I once compared the aggravation caused by poor website navigation to a bully teasing little kids on the playground. Readers remembered that one because they could relate to the image. =>Keep an eye on trends. Noticing more pop-ups lately? A decline in spam? (I wish!) An increase in hype on the web? Whatever it is, chances are good other people have noticed it too - or will soon - and your article on the subject will make you appear like a sage visionary... or just a clever person. =>Recycle ideas. I constantly have to remind myself that just because I wrote an article on search engines a year ago doesn't mean that topic is forever off limits to me. The most prolific article writers often regurgitate the same ideas over and over, altering them slightly for new audiences. And the audience is always being renewed so plagiarizing yourself is not a crime. (Unless you send the same article twice to lists that prohibit it... that IS a crime!) =>Make the most of your bio tag. Those six to eight lines at the end of your article are the reason for writing all the lines above them. Don't just talk about yourself - use the space to craftily plug your product, service or free offer. This is your ad! Treat it like one. =>Don't spend a lot of time distributing your article to the smaller ezines unless their audience is your ideal target market. Article announcement lists and syndicators will get your article in front of more publishers with less time and effort on your part. =>Obey the rules. Each list has its own submission guidelines. Run afoul of them and your efforts will hit the round file and you'll become known as the first writer who couldn't read. =>I've stressed the importance of proofreading in so many previous articles that I'm not even going to mention it here. Oops. =>Don't bother blitzing the lists with articles during holiday periods, as I did, thinking all the other writers will be snoozing and there'll be a shortage of good articles out there. The publishers are snoozing too. The fact is that article writing, like any other form of writing, is an imprecise art not a science... there are no guarantees. You could knock off an award-winning item in ten minutes. Or you could expend gallons of blood, sweat and tears writing the most insightful, entertaining, pertinent and timely treatise ever conceived and have it land, thud, like an overripe coconut on a deserted beach. Keep writing, keep submitting, keep shaking that tree and eventually good things will shake loose. Article Source: http://www.articlealley.com/http://heatherreimer.articlealley.com/what-article-publishers-really-want-640.html About the Author: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Suspect your web copy isn't working hard enough for you? Get a FREE website content analysis on your site, with tips to make your site more selling, compelling, and search engine friendly. Visit TheWriteContent.com for your free content analysis. (Link to: http://www.thewritecontent.com< ) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ http://www.thewritecontent.com
return to article