A Sure-Fire Structure For Writing Articles For Your Website
Author: Kevin Sinclair
With a little effort and a sound, reusable structure, you can write articles
to draw traffic to your website, ad copy to sell your products, and generally
enhance your presence on the Internet. With these methods, you will gain the
attention of those all-important search engines and get your products and ideas
seen.
There is no mystery about the basic structure for writing website
articles. Each article should have a beginning, or lead, middle, or content
section, and an ending, or conclusion. Not that difficult, is it?
The
extra ingredient you want for website articles or ad copy that will draw traffic
is this: targeted keywords or phrases. Don't be frightened by the idea of
writing an article structured around keywords. It is much easier than it sounds.
If you have researched a keyword(s) you want to get traffic for in the search
engines, a good rule of thumb would be this: Use your keyword(s) once in the
title, once in the beginning or lead, once in each paragraph of the article
content, and once in the conclusion.
If you can use this basic structure
-- keyword(s) rich title, lead, content, and conclusion -- you will find it easy
to write content that will draw search engines to your website.
Take this
sure-fire structure and combine it with a bit of research on the Internet or
better yet in a nearby library.
Libraries are your "secret weapon" to
find material for your sure-fire article structure. Here is the "offline"
advantage -- if people are writing articles targeting the keywords "electronic
dog fences," for example, by researching the Internet, they are bound to be
seeing similar articles. This may not lead you to duplicate their content, but
it certainly won't help. If you go to a local library and find some magazines or
newspaper articles about "electronic dog fences," you'll be ahead of the
competition.
Use that research material with your keyword(s) and write
something in the range of 300-500 words and you have your article. Don't be
frightened at the idea of writing 300-500 words. Think of it this way: One
double-spaced page printed out with one-inch margins all around holds about
200-250 words. If you've read a few articles and taken notes, you probably have
more than enough ideas and information for two double-spaced printed
pages.
Using the above example "electronic dog fences," you might try the
title: "Four Ways Electronic Dog Fences Enhance Your Pet's Life." That isn't the
snappiest title you could find, but it does tell someone and the search engines
what the article is about -- while using the keywords "electronic dog
fences."
Then take the research you have done and come up with four major
benefits for dogs and their owners related to electronic dog fences. Your lead
might be something like: "Electronic dog fences not only make happy neighbors,
they can make life better for your pet, too."
Use each of the "four ways"
you mentioned in the title as a section for your article. If you want a short
article, make a paragraph for each of the "four ways," a longer article may
require two or three paragraphs about each of the "four ways."
When you
reach the conclusion, you want to do two things: Try to summarize the lead or
title in the conclusion by using the "electronic dog fences" keyword(s) again,
and quit.
Use this sure-fire structure and you'll find you can build
successful, keyword-rich articles for your website -- even if you don't think of
yourself as a writer!
About the Author:
Kevin Sinclair is the publisher and editor of besuccessfulnews.com, a site that provides information and articles on how to succeed in your own home or small business.