Have you been writing and submitting your free
reprint articles for quite sometime now?
If so, how is your reprint rate doing? Is it doing
well or is it a bit below 50%? Are webmasters approving your articles?
Here are some tips on how to write effective free
reprint articles that would guarantee great interest from ezine
publishers and webmasters.
1. Choose a good keyword
A good keyword is your "key" to getting high
reprint rates for even just a single article. Try using the keywords
found in this page http://random9.com/Googlest-site/index.htm
2. Keyword density
Keyword density is the number of "keywords" found
in an article or content which is then divided by the total number of
words. Try to keep your keyword density at 5% to 7% maximum especially
if you choose common keywords for your article. Keyword density is
important because this is one of the things search engines look into
when they rank the search results.
Do not try to make your article an article for
search engines, make them full of quality, informative but still search
engine optimized.
3. Shorter word count
Publishers or webmasters often love articles that
are less than 1000 words, but it totally depends on the topic and how
informative is your article. Try not to go around the bush and result
to making your article at 1800 words. In other words, do not make it
like a short story. A good article may only have at least 250 words,
but could still capture the reader's attention and have the attributes
mentioned in numbers 1 and 2 above.
4. Good content
You wrote a 700-word article with good keywords
and keyword density, but does it contain good content? Well, only you
can answer that truthfully and if your answer is yes, then great! But
for some few inviduals this isn't the fact, many are still writing
articles that editors label as an "indirect" advert. If you really want
a good reprint rate then make your article body 100% of quality
information, tips, how-tos and tricks. Keep the 100% advert in your
bylines and keep them short.
Good luck and enjoy writing!
This article was posted on April 13, 2005