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Quote of the Day

"The construction of Europe is an art. It is the art of the possible."

Jacques Chirac



 

 
Featured Articles Articles

8 Ways to Make Your Articles Go the Extra Mile
Your audience is hungry for information. But they want it in the right format. The format must be easy to read, easy to digest and easy to apply. If you deliver your articles the way your audience likes it, they will reward you by reading every article ...

Getting Your Articles Accepted Using The "I'll Wash Your Back, You Wash Mine" Principle.
By Mike Merz Writing articles has long been a great way to promote your wares. You provide the content, satisfying the user forum's needs, while at the same time establishing yourself as an "expert" on the topic, making it that much easier to ...

Top Seven Tips for Writing Articles on the Internet
Top Seven Tips for Writing Articles on the InternetJudy Cullins © 2003 All Rights Reserved.Online readers love information, but be sure your information iscrisp, clean, clear and concise.1. Keep your paragraphs short, even a line or two. Onlinereaders ...





How To Write Web Articles
 
Since online articles can be an additional source of contract leads, it is important that you write them in such a way that they are "web friendly"-and thus more accessible to your readers. This is especially important for articles you published previously in magazines, journals or other print media. While long paragraphs are visually acceptable in print magazines, they are a bane to Web users.
Web users don't read; they scan.
When you write for the web, you must first consider how people read on the web. A study by Jakob Nielsen, deemed the "guru of webpage usability" by The New York Times, found that only 16 percent of his test users actually read the copy they found online; 79 percent of them simply scanned it.
Given those numbers, web-content providers who truly want to get their information across to their readers must follow what has become the cardinal rule of web writing: Make it "scannable." Web users, notorious for their impatience, don't want to get bogged down in long blocks of text as they search for the information they need; instead, they want that information to jump out at them.
Keep it short and scannable.
There are a number of ways you can make your text easier to scan:
Use bulleted or numbered lists. Keep sentences and paragraphs short. Make sure all your writing has substance. Say it straight. Use subheadings. Use typeface variations.
Start with the conclusion.
Use your keywords.
To get visibility on the major search engines, your site must be able to be "indexed" by their robotic software. To do this, they must be able to compare the code, keywords & other Meta tags, and the actual written content of the site and reach a consistent conclusion regarding the context of your site. Other factors are important as well, but that is the most basic requirement. Use these guidelines for other online copy.
These guidelines hold true for all kinds of web copy, not just your online articles. Keep them in mind when creating content for your own websites or when contributing articles to other electronic media. The same things that encourage users to read your online articles will encourage them to read your other web copy.

About The Author

Dale DeHart is the President and founder of SOHO Prospecting, a Camarillo-based marketing


company that provides owners of small- and medium-sized independent businesses with the strategy and services they need to compete.
Dale received a B. S. in Electronics Engineering from California State Polytechnic University, and a Masters in Electronics Engineering from Stanford University. Dale also earned a Masters Degree in Business Administration from UCLA. Dale’s technical and business background led him to excel in senior management positions with several leading high-tech corporations, including Hewlett Packard, TRW, and Motorola.
In 1997, Dale established his own management consultant company, DeHart Consulting, LLC, providing companies — including California Amplifier, Harmonic, Fujitsu, and XILINX — with business strategy and development support. As an independent management consultant, Dale saw firsthand the challenge companies face in marketing their products and services to new prospects while focusing on the needs of existing clients.
Dale launched SOHO Prospecting as a division of DeHart Consulting, LLC in 2001 to provide comprehensive marketing solutions to companies at the smaller end of the business spectrum. In 2002 SOHO moved into their offices in Camarillo, where six staff members and a number of subcontractors serve the needs of their clients.
"Our clients appreciate our ability to execute a complete marketing campaign, from concept to completion, without needing to oversee every step of the process or allocate valuable internal resources to the marketing effort," says Dale. "While marketing has been defined as the presentation of a company’s products and capabilities to a target audience, here must be a measurable return on your business marketing investment."
Dale is active in the Ventura County community and in several professional and community service organizations. A member of the Camarillo Chamber of Commerce Ambassadors, Dale was a founding member of the chamber’s SOHO Connection program, providing educational seminars for small office and home office businesses. Dale also serves as an officer for the Camarillo Breakfast Rotary, and as Vice President, Marketing for the Institute of Management Consultants (IMC).
sohoprospecting.com
dale.dehart@sohoprospecting.com


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