Five Tips
to Write Winning Web Articles!
Looking for another no cost promotional tool? Your fee will
simply be an investment of a small block of your time and
writing what you know most about. But there are a few things
to keep in mind when writing for the web. Long paragraphs
are usually acceptable for print media; they are not for the
web.
If you want to write articles that web users will love to
read and put to use follow these 5 simple tips:
1. Make your article scan ready. A study
by Jakob Nielson publicized as guru of web page usability
by the New York Times published that only 16 per cent of his
test users actually read the copy they found online; 79 per
cent of them simply scanned it. Your impatient web readers
will want important information to jump out at them. Some
practical ways to make your text scannable are: headings,
sub-headings, bulleted list, numbered lists, easy steps and/or
typeface variation. For example, compelling headlines are
considered an art. Are you drawn to the author’s article
as “How to Write Web Articles” or “5 Tips
to Write Winning Web Articles?”
2. Keep it short. Get and keep the attention
of web readers by delivering short messages. You put effort
into gaining your web reader’s attention; now make their
click worthwhile with brief compelling copy in bite sizes.
Start with the conclusion. Your readers may not make it to
the end of your piece to get it. Web readers don’t want
to get bogged down in long blocks of text. So get to the point
early and use the rest of your article to support that main
point.
3. Add substance. Resist fluffing your articles.
Include practical valuable information in your copy. Everyone
loses when you don’t take the time to impart substance.
It increases the reputation of the web being an unreliable
source of knowledge. Additionally, lack of substance will
block your road to profitable referrals. Do the research and/or
draw from your knowledge and experience to illustrate. Your
stories and real life examples will meet your reader’s
need for practical information and connect with their emotion.
It’s a known fact emotions will move people to action.
Whether you desire them to act by signing up or making a purchase,
add substance and improve your reader responses.
4. Make it web professional. Create a more
web professional look by using short sentences then format
your page to approximately 65 characters per line. Long stringed
sentences that stream from side to side of the web page look
visually unprofessional. Select a layout for your article
from several short article formats that include the how-to,
tips list, question-answer, problem-solutions and interview.
Make your introduction and summary short but do add one. Your
web readers don’t want just a list of boring facts and
information. They want to connect with you by reading your
personable introduction and practical tips with a definite
ending or summary. Remember excited readers become enthusiastic
buyers and enthusiastic buyers will refer your product or
service to all their friends.
5. Use your keywords. Thread your keywords
throughout your short article as naturally as possible. Otherwise
your copy will sound stiff and dull. To gain visibility on
the search engines, your site must be “indexed”
by their robotic software. In its most basic form, they must
be able to compare the code, keywords and other Meta tags
with the actual content of the site. From this they reach
a conclusion regarding the context of the site. This and other
factors will affect how well your copy or website places in
the search engines.
You may use these guidelines for all kinds of web copy. The
same elements of using keywords, making your article professional,
adding substance, keeping it short and making your copy scannable
will improve the quality of your articles. Practice the above
simple principles and write winning articles to distribute
on the web everywhere.
© Earma Brown, 13 year author and business owner
helps small business owners and writers who want to write their
best book now! Author of “Write
Your Best Book Now”, she mentors other writers and business
professionals through her monthly ezine “iScribe” at
http://www.writetowin.org
Subscribe now at
iscribe@writetowin.org
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