5 Keys To Article Writing Milwaukee WI

Writing and submitting articles can take you from a relative unknown marketer to an expert in your field literally overnight.

Local Companies

Thom Pharmakis
414-270-9821
1041 E. Knapp Street #809
Milwaukee, WI
New Frontier Communications
708-302-5269
3408 S. 1st Street
Milwaukee, WI
Mike's My Copywriter
414-791-6457
2129 W. Kendall Ave.
Milwaukee, WI
Abrazo Multicultural Marketing
(414) 220-9800
316 N Milwaukee St
Milwaukee, WI
Omni Marketing Group
(414) 535-1520
10535 W Rohr Ave
Milwaukee, WI
Advertising Associates
(414) 271-1067
Milwaukee, WI
Tmp Directional Marketing
(414) 918-6000
7800 W Brown Deer Rd
Milwaukee, WI
Red Brown Kle
(414) 272-2600
840 N Old World 3rd St Ste 401
Milwaukee, WI
Kohnke Hanneken Inc
(414) 271-1314
233 N Water St Fl 5
Milwaukee, WI
Third Person
(414) 221-9810
205 W Highland Ave Ste 308
Milwaukee, WI

Writing and submitting articles can take you from a relative unknown marketer to an expert in your field literally overnight.

A quality article is the ultimate viral marketing and branding tool in your promotional arsenal.

If that's true, why don't more marketers write and submit articles?

They don't know where to start.

There's a simple 5 step formula for writing a powerful article and with a little practice you can make it second nature.


Step #1 Your Title

Why is the title so important?

Your title is your introduction. A powerful title will attract the attention of publishers and their readers.

The average publisher gets a lot of submissions and unless he already knows your name and the quality of your writing, he's likely to ignore your submission in favor of one whose title gets his attention.


Step #2 The Opening

Your title got you in the door. Your first paragraph must keep them reading.

Readers have a short attention span and if you're first few lines don't compel them to keep reading, you're dead in the water.

Grab their attention with strong title and keep it with a powerful opening.


Step#3 The Body Of Your Article

The body of your article is where you deliver on the promises you made with your title and opening.

This is where you offer your reader practical solutions for solving their problems.

As an article writer, you're in the problem solving business. Become an expert problem solver and you'll always b in demand.


Step #4 Your Close

Your closing lines of your article are where you reinforce the ideas you've covered in your article. Don't leave your reader hanging.

Close your article with a definitive statement.


Step#5 Your Resource Box or Bio.

Your resource box is a little min-ad. If you've done your job and written a quality, helpful article, a good percentage of readers will click the link in your resource box.

Keep your resource box to 4 or 5 lines. If you make your resource box too long, many publishers will pass on your article.

So what should you put in the resource box. Many marketers use it to promote a program or product.

I prefer to offer a complimentary informational product to compel readers to sign up for my list.

Both types of resource boxes have their advantages. Test them both ways and see what works best for you.

Now that you know the secret to writing articles that will get published and read. It's time for you to get out of your comfort zone and take the net by storm.


Wishing You Success,

John Colanzi

Copyright: Copyright c 2006-2008 John Colanzi

About the Author:
Copyright (c) John Colanzi


Article Source: thePhantomWriters Article Submission Service

Featured Local Company

Thom Pharmakis

Interactive, email marketing, Web site content creation. Clients: Kelloggs, UBS, Lands' End, Peet's Coffee.

414-270-9821
1041 E. Knapp Street #809
Milwaukee, WI
http://www.thompharmakis.com/

The long-running email marketing campaign I created for landsend.com earned the admiration of NEWSWEEK magazine for turning customers into "virtual penpals." (It also produced some of the highest open rates and click-thru rates in the industry.)

As a writer, my passion is narrative marketing — deep branding through storytelling. Ideas, not just words.

When a person buys a product, they are really buying a story about themselves. Are you the savvy sort who knows the value of a dollar? A committed citizen concerned with the environment? Or that discerning person of taste who embraces all the finest things in life?

My particular specialty is developing compelling features and editorials (mainly for interactive media) as a means of projecting a brand's personality and values while drawing readers into the world of the brand by simple dint of being just plain entertaining.

Learn more and see samples at http://www.thompharmakis.com


Learn more and see samples at my Web site