The Fifth Step to Increase Internet Traffic through Writing
Articles Requires the Personal Touch
by: Leanne Hoagland-Smith
Growing
Internet traffic can be a time-consuming and expensive proposition.
Writing articles is a proven path toward increasing visitors to
your web site, who are already pre-qualified by having read your
article. --Editor
Each day
hundreds of articles make their way to the Internet from article
submission sites to blogs. Yet, if the purpose of article
distribution is a marketing mechanism to increase web site traffic,
what creates the loyal readers who look to find your articles on
the web? Simply, what makes one article viewed and consequently
distributed many more times than another?
In reviewing my own articles, I realized that the more that I
could connect my personal or professional experiences to the
content of the article, the greater the increase in views. People
want more than the purely technical information. They want to know
from your experiences what worked, what didn’t work and by sharing
your experiences how the article can help them.
Writing from a personal viewpoint is a challenge because you as
the writer do not want to overload the effort with a lot of “I’s.”
However, by not including some personal perspective, the reader
cannot make a connection with you. If the reader cannot connect
with you as the writer, there is a greater likelihood that the
reader will not read your complete article. If they don’t finish
the article, they probably won’t forward the article, review the
article nor include the article for future distribution. HINT #5:
People will buy who you are first and then what you do second.
When writing using personal experiences, you are beginning the
development of a relationship. As more articles are submitted,
readers have the opportunity to see you as a giving, sharing
individual who truly wants to help them overcome a current
challenge or prepare them for a future one.
Since I have changed my writing style to be more personal, I
have experienced dramatic feedback in both the articles and the
monthly newsletter than I co-publish at
www.processspecialist.com/newsletters.htm. Will ever reader relate
to your article? Absolutely not! However, I believe that if the
goal is to increase traffic to your website and to have your
article widely distributed, you must make yourself unique. Given
all the information out there, one of the simplest ways to achieve
that goal is to write from a more personal viewpoint.
Asking yourself the following three questions may help you write
with a personal viewpoint while sharing what you do or know.
1. What excites me as a reader?
2. From my own experiences, what can I share to help others?
3. Am I truly sharing or editorializing?
Copyright 2005(c) Leanne Hoagland-Smith, www.processspecialist.com
This article may be freely published. Permission to publish this
article, electronically or in print, as long as the bylines are
included, with a live link, and the article is not changed in any
way (grammatical corrections accepted).
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About The Author
Leanne Hoagland-Smith helps individuals and organizations to
double results usually within 2 to 12 weeks. She secures lifelong
change through proven processes. If at least doubling your revenue,
improving your organizational culture or finding balance interests
you, visit www.processspecialist.com or ask to subscribe to
complimentary copy of Power Choices a monthly newsletter at
www.processspecialist.com/newsletters.htm. |
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