Archive for January, 2006
Article marketing is the latest buzzword for marketers looking to promote their sites and products online. But how do you define article performance? One way to measure article performance is by checking how many times your article has been picked up and reproduced on various sites.
Copyright © 2005 Priya Shah
Article marketing is the latest buzzword for marketers looking to promote their sites and products online. But how do you measure the success of your article marketing campaign?
It probably depends on what you expect your article to achieve for you - better branding, more sales, or more publicity.
One way to measure article performance is to check how many times your article has been picked up and reproduced on various sites.
To do that, just copy and paste the article title in quotes into a search engine like Google, and you’ll see how many sites it’s been reprinted on.
My article “How To Get To The Top Of The Marketing Food Chain” shows 1061 links in Google.
That means Google has indexed 1061 sites on which this article appears.
This gives me about 1061 quality links to each of the sites I included in my resource box.
As you can see, this makes article marketing a very powerful way of building quality links.
So how do you ensure that your article gets picked up and reprinted by as many publishers as possible?
1. Pick A Topic That’s Hot Or Always Fresh
For instance, my article on Neuromarketing got picked up pretty quickly because it was a hot topic.
The problem with hot topics is that they also tend to cool off quickly. So while they may get a lot of reprints over a short time, they may get very few reprints once the craze is over.
There are some articles that are slow starters but eternally fresh, like the one I wrote here.
To Be A Champion, Become A Child (591 links in Google)
These are the ones that will give you reprints over a longer period of time. I think in the long run, these are more valuable.
2. Target A Large Audience
Another way to get a lot of coverage is write an article for a large target audience or one that is very active online - like bloggers.
This article gave me 164 links back, mostly from other blogs, even some for which I had to use a translation service
This shows 248 links back
316 links for this one
But again, it’s the quality of links back that matters - not the quantity.
Another large target audience is the health market. I get a lot of links back from my health articles.
3. Craft A Catchy, Relevant Title
A catchy title ensures that your article gets the attention of publishers - the first step to getting your article published.
Follow the basic rules of copywriting to make your article interesting and readable.
Publishers are more likely to pick up an article if its title includes the keywords that they (and you) want to target.
Use your main keywords in your title, preferable in the first half (like I did in the title of this article), to ensure better rankings for those who reprint it.
4. Offer Publishers A Monetary Incentive
Give people an incentive to publish your article. I have an affiliate program and I allow publishers to use their affiliate link for my ezine in the resource box.
Allow publishers to earn by publishing your article and they will gladly reprint it.
5. Write An Article Series
Break up a long article or report into a series of articles like I did with my “Marketing With Blogs” series here.
Marketing With Blogs - Part 1, 2, 3 and 4
These gave me 5270 links back in all. As you can see, a series of articles can be a very powerful link-building technique.
6. Distribute Your Article Widely
Ensure that your article is distributed to the best and most appropriate article directories and announcement lists online.
Feel free to browse through my own collection of article directories and announcement lists
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Priya Shah is the CEO of eBrand360. She writes the Marketing Slave blog and publishes an internet marketing newsletter . Subscribe to her free Marketing With Blogs eCourse.
This article may be reprinted as long as the resource box is left intact and all links are hyperlinked.
Local Business Advertising & Google Adwords - How local businesses can effectively use Google Adwords to maximise their advertising spend.
“I don’t need the Internet to advertise - I’m a local business!”
Okay…
If you could spend £0.04 (or $0.05 in the US) and have a new customer - what would you do with your local business advertising budget?
I hope you would spend that money again and again! Granted this is the ideal example and you are likely to pay much more then £0.04 per customer you acquire, BUT - herein lies the rub for local businesses: An internet presence announces your business to the world.
When you are online, you have little control about where traffic is coming to you from (if you are not actively driving traffic that is), but what if you could make sure that people who lived in your area, who buy your goods and would make ideal customers could be targeted! Google Adwords can help you target local people, not people from New Zealand if you live in the UK - but people close to you. Pinpoint geographic targeting of prospects is an optimum use of your local business advertising budget.
Is it 100% foolproof?
Alas no, but it’s a good start.
How do I do it?
Well the easiest way to do this is as follows:
Create a national campaign with your search terms and your location terms - eg:
If you’re a plumber in Poole then “plumber poole” would be a good keyword.
Create a geo-targeted campaign (this can be done in a couple of ways - I’ll leave the nitty gritty details out for now) which means your ads are served to local people when they search for your keywords.
So in the plumber example if a local person types in “plumber” and doesn’t mention anything else, your advert will be shown.
So goes the theory anyway.
Does it work all the time?
Like I said - Not always very well. This is because Google uses IP addresses to determine location and this method is somewhat of a cleaver when a scalpel is required.
It all depends how diligent ISP’s are when allocating IP addresses to their customers, the only way you can know is through empirical means.
What if the regional targeting is producing no results?
If this is the case then a national campaign with location terms included (as mentioned above) is your best bet.
If you were to run a national campaign on the same keywords without the location terms, you will be competing with other players who have a national presence for your particular product/service which could prove very expensive.
Your local business advertising budget spend should at the very least give Adwords and PPC advertising in general a tryout. Remember there are an infinite number of keywords in any target market.
Just because the big boys may have a stranglehold on the ‘obvious’ terms does not mean your market is saturated.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Google Adwords Campaign Management Specialists - PDQProspects.com
Learn about the research that you must do before you build your website to ensure success.
Is your Website Doomed for Failure Before you’ve Built it?
One of the things that many people overlook when building a new website is keywords. I have to admit, I did exactly the same thing myself when I started out. You can build the flashiest, most professional looking website, with lots of great content, but if you don’t think about keywords first your website is most likely to be doomed for failure - at least as far as search engines are concerned.
Visitors from search engines are the most targeted types of visitor that you could hope for. People coming to your site from a search engine are actually looking for the information that is on your website. What you need to do is find out which keywords these people are using when they search in Google, Yahoo or MSN and ensure that your web page(s) are optimized for these keywords.
When researching your keywords you need to make sure that you
1. Choose keywords that people are actually searching for. Don’t optimize your site for keywords that people rarely search on.
2. Choose keywords that are not too highly competitive - unless you’re an SEO whiz that is
If you keep these two goals in mind when choosing keywords you will have the best chance possible of rising to the lofty heights of the search engine results pages.
So, what’s the best way to do keyword research? I’ve tried many different tools, but my favorite by is Wordtracker. You can sign up for a free trial of Wordtracker but if you’re serious about your keyword research consider using the full version as it allows you to select unlimited keywords and includes results from 8 different search engines, 3 different directories and 4 different pay per click engines, compared to 1 search engine and 30 keywords in the trial version.
Once you’re logged into Wordtracker I recommend using the “Keyword Universe” to brainstorm for keywords. You just need to type in any keywords related to your area of interest and then use the built in thesaurus to find related keywords and synonyms. For example if I enter the keywords “internet marketing” Wordtracker returns 300 related keywords including “web site marketing”, “promotion” and “online marketing”.
Wordtracker then allows me to view a list of all the keyword searches that have included my keyword phrase. If I click on “web site marketing” Wordtracker returns 118 rows of keywords that include that phrase, for example “web site marketing”, “web site marketing strategy”, “web site online marketing” and more.
If I like the look of these keywords I can just add them to my basket and continue choosing keywords until I have 100s of keywords. For this example I’ll just add the 118 results to my basket and continue on to Wordtracker’s “Competition Analysis”.
At the competition analysis phase I have a number of search engines, directories and pay per click engines to choose from. I can choose a maximum of two search engines, but for speed I normally tend to just go for Google, since it represents 35% of all searches. I can always go back later and look at other search engines if I have a good set of keywords.
Now the interesting part begins
Wordtracker returns me a table with the first 100 keywords from my earlier keyword selection. The keywords are displayed in order of “KEI”, which means “Keyword Effectiveness Index”. This is a measure to allow you to quickly identify which keywords are likely to give you the best results. Keywords with high KEIs are the best targets as these represent keywords with a combination of a high number of searches and a low amount of competing websites.
Other important statistics provided by Wordtracker are:
24 Hours The predicted amount of traffic for a single day, for this search engine only (Google in this case)
Competing - The number of competing websites for this keyword phrase.
Here’s an example of two of the results returned from my “marketing web site” search:
Example 1
“marketing web site design”
KEI - 54.256
Count - 46
24Hrs - 17
Competing - 39
Example 2
“web site marketing”
KEI - 0.256
Count - 505
24Hrs - 171
Competing - 998000
You can see from these examples that the most popular keyword phrase here is “web site marketing”, with approximately 171 searches in Google every 24 hours. However, this keyword phrase has almost a million competing websites, so if you decided to target this you would have a long hard slog to get on the first page of the search results.
In this example, my preference would be to choose the “Marketing web site design” phrase. Although there are 10 times less searches on Google per day for this keyword phrase, there are only 39 competing websites. So the chances are that I can get onto the first page of search results very quickly. I could also combine this keyword phrase with a few others from my research to build up the number of visitors to my site.
Once you have finished researching and have a good keyword list, ensure that add your keywords to
- the page title
- the h1 and h2 tags
- the image alt tags
- the keyword meta tags
- the copy itself
Also make sure that you include the keywords in the anchor text when you are linking to your site from another site.
Going through this exercise of choosing keywords each time you set up a new website or create a new webpage will ensure that you have the best chance of getting targeted search engine visitors.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Suzanne Morrison is the webmaster of Starting an internet Business. Visit her
Guide to Internet Marketing, promotion and Advertising to learn about more ways to promote your website.






















