Quick and Easy Ways to Get Articles For Your Site
Saturday, 09.01.2007, 08:35am (GMT)
If you are new to Internet marketing, one of the best approaches you
can take is to set up a blog. A blog is quick to set up, costs next to
nothing, and is easy to maintain. So for most starters, this is the
type of website they set up first.
But immediately after that, the instructions tell you to "Publish an
article every day for the first month." And while this is a good idea
to get the notice of the search engines and to start to build some
readership, most people panic at the idea of writing 30 articles.
Here are four approaches you can use.
Idea #1: Use other peoples' articles. Go to an ezine directory site and
choose up to the maximum number of articles or 30 articles, whichever
is less.
For example, my favorite article directory is ezinearticles.com They
have a limit of 25 articles published on a single site. (Check the
publishers' guidelines for the latest information.) But they also have
an easy-to-use Publisher's interface that makes it easy to grab
articles with minimal formatting required.
There are hundreds of article directory sites. Just search for "your keyword articles" in Google (no quotes).
For each article, write a short introductory paragraph and publish it
on your site. Be sure to link to the author's site from the resource
box at the end of the article. That's their "payment" for providing you
with complimentary content.
Schedule the articles to go out once a day and you have 25-30 days of content - quickly and easily.
Idea #2: Use PLR (Private Label Rights) content. These are articles and
ebooks that you have the right to claim as your own. In all instances
you want to rewrite these into your style. But they give you a lot of
content to start.
To find PLR content, look for "yourkeywords + PLR" in Google. They are
generally offered in "packs" of articles, so you will get 10-50
articles at once. That's more than enough to get you started!
Idea #3: Use Wikipedia. Wikipedia provides content that is free to use, so you can create your own articles from it.
Look up your topic in wikipedia then start chopping the content into
short articles. Remember, an online article is typically 400-700 words.
So you can grab pieces of this content, rewrite as needed, and post it.
When you're using Wikipedia, remember to get related articles. For
example, if there are famous people associated with your content, then
include short biographies and articles about them.
Idea #4: Use News Items. Set up a subscription to your topic in Google
News. You specify the keyword phrase on the topic on which you want to
stay current. You'll receive a daily email with all of the headlines on
that topic. You can click on any of them to read the full story.
You can then write a short article on any given news item - or in some cases, post the news release in its entirety.
Remember that using a combination of these approaches provides a good
content mix for your site. So start with one method, perfect that, then
go to the next one. Don't fall into the trap of trying to do all four
from the start. Master one, then move on.
And remember, enjoy the process. You'll be learning more as you go - and you'll be providing a valuable service to your readers.
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