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auteur: Glenn Murray
A great headline can be the difference between having your free reprint article published once (on your own websiteÃâ¦) and having it published hundreds, if not thousands, of times all over the
Internet.
Sure, the content has to be worthwhile; it has to be helpful, informative, and not just a sales spiel. And thereÃâs no denying that a well written article can be very compelling. But if your
headline doesnÃât cut it, the article wonÃât stand a chance. The best article in the world will never see the light of day without an effective headline.
Now, more than ever, article submissions need a good headline. But itÃâs not just the reader you have to worry about. In fact, the reader is secondary! When it comes to reprint article
headlines, your main focus should be the publisher.
You may think the requirements of a good headline havenÃât changed over the years, but they have. Unlike headlines for traditional newspapers, magazines, etc., which target only the reader,
online article submission headlines target first the publisher, then the reader.
So how do you write a headline for an online publisher? HereÃâs a few tipsÃâ¦
1) State your domain
No matter what your business, you can be sure that potential publishers of your article are inundated with information every day. Imagine hypothetical ÃâPublisher PeteÃâ. HeÃâs the
webmaster of a high PR site. He receives hundreds of article submissions every day. Additionally, he farms article submission sites (aka Ãâarticle banksÃâ, Ãâarticle submit sitesÃâ,
Ãâfree-reprint sitesÃâ) for articles on a regular basis. Because so many of the article submissions he sees are spam or unrelated, Publisher Pete is quick to dismiss anything that isnÃât
obviously Ãâ and immediately Ãâ relevant to his website. So make sure your headline signals the general subject area of the article submission, not just the exact topic.
2) State your argument
Every website has an agenda. Whether itÃâs to sell, persuade, or inform, thereÃâs always an angle. When our friend Publisher Pete looks for free reprint content for his website, he wants
something that complements his agenda. If heÃâs selling chemical garden fertilizers, he doesnÃât want an article about the evils of chemical fertilizer. Nor does he want an article espousing
the virtues of organic fertilizer. He wants an article promoting the value of chemical garden fertilizer. If thatÃâs what your article is about, make sure the headline lets him know.
3) DonÃât make empty promises
Sensationalized headlines may work in traditional media, but theyÃâre not so effective in online article submissions. Few things frustrate an online publisher more than being lured in by a
promising headline which turns out to be nothing more than hot air. For publishers who take the time to carefully filter content before publishing, empty headlines are nothing more than
time-wasters. For publishers who are a little less meticulous, empty headlines result in a site which is characterized by disjointed, contradictory, low-quality content. Either way, the publisher
isnÃât impressed, so make sure the headline of your article is relevant to (and validated by) the body of your article.
4) Put yourself in the publisherÃâs shoes
Always think about ways to make the publisherÃâs job easier. ItÃâs as simple as that. Brainstorm 5, 10, 20 headlines, then put yourself in the publisherÃâs position and ask which one
youÃâd choose. ThatÃâs the best headline for your article submission.
5) Think about your publisherÃâs readers
Publishers want articles that readers will open. But remember, your publisherÃâs website may cater to an entirely different type of reader to your website. Whenever you find yourself thinking
about your secondary audience (the reader), make sure youÃâre thinking about the publisherÃâs readers Ãâ not your own. That settled, you can go on to focus on regular audience-headline
considerations such as making the headline attention-getting, targeted, and benefit driven.
Conclusion
With the emergence of article submission as a great way to generate a high search engine ranking, and the associated proliferation of article submission spam, the right headline is more important
than ever. The important thing to remember is that youÃâre faced with a gatekeeper, and you need to address their needs first.
By following all the publisher-focused tips above, youÃâll not only see your article published many more times, youÃâll also see it published on more relevant websites. This will help both
your ranking (because links from relevant sites are always the best) and your click-thru traffic (because the audience will be more relevant).
Happy headlining!
Article Source: http://www.articledashboard.com
* Glenn Murray is a website copywriter, SEO copywriter, and article submission and article PR specialist. He is a director of article PR company Article PR and also of copywriting studio Divine
Write. He can be contacted on Sydney +612 4334 6222 or at glenn@divinewrite.com. Visit www.DivineWrite.com or www.ArticlePR.com for further details, more FREE articles, or to download his FREE
SEO e-book.