Article marketing has been an effective method of website promotion
that has literally been used since the inception of the public
Internet. I have been online since November of 1995, and even in those
early days, I would read people's articles and click the link in their
resource box to learn more about their website.
The Early Days of Article Marketing
In those early days, there were a few players who recognized the value
of article marketing. The two writers who were most influential to my
use of article marketing, as a promotion method, were:
* Dr. Nunley (
http://www.DrNunley.com)
has been online since 1996, and this website was registered in Oct. of
1997. Dr. Nunley was influential in that he taught me the power of
syndicated article content. * Wild Bill Montgomery (
http://www.MakingProfit.com)
started his website in Nov. of 1998. Wild Bill offered one of the very
first article distribution websites. I received his daily mailings for
nearly a year, until he shut his article system down. I subscribed to
Wild Bill's mailings, so that I could locate articles for my own
publication and website, and later to distribute my own articles.
It was in the aftermath of the demise of Montgomery's article
distribution system that I wrote my first script to enable me to make
better use of this promotional method for my own articles. That
original script was adapted later to became the foundation for my
article distribution service a couple years later.
How Article Marketing Came To Be Regarded As A Powerful Tool
For several years, article marketing remained a promotion technique
utilized only by a few hundred people who fancied themselves as decent
to good writers. These individuals were able to generate quite a buzz
for their own websites. The buzz in turn created streams of traffic to
their websites, and more importantly, sales.
Their articles were picked up regularly by ezines, which need good
content to retain the attention of their readers. Publication of the
articles in ezines resulted in thousands of website visitors in just a
few days. My biggest ezine publication event resulted in 16,000
visitors in the first 96 hours after publication. I regularly see
thousands of visitors in three-to-four days, due to publication in
individual ezines.
Articles that I had written in 1999 still reside on websites where they
were originally published those many years ago. And, I still see
regular traffic from the placement of those articles. Yes, and I still
retain link popularity and good search engine rankings, as the result
of the placement of those articles on third-party websites.
Many writers were seeing the same results as I had seen, and they told
others about their great success. People began to pay attention and
take advantage of the technique for their own promotion.
A New Breed Of Article Marketers
In late 2004, the market changed when people decided that the only goal
of article marketing was for the purpose of link building for link
popularity purposes.
A few new distribution systems popped up only targeting placement of
articles on third-party websites. With these new systems, the article
writers had to put their own articles into the distribution services
database, and they had to select a general category for the placement
of their articles.
Suddenly, with these new fully automated systems, computers were left
to answer the most important question of category placement. These new
systems left this important question to the computers to solve.
People were being removed from the article placement process, because
people cost more money to employ, leaving a lot of results to chance.
But, the new breed of article marketers did not care. They liked the
lower cost of human-free article placement.
The Four Primary Players in of a Successful Article Marketing Campaign
There are four primary players in the article marketing game. First of
course is the writer. Then there is the distribution person or service.
Third is the website owner or ezine publisher. And the final element is
the person who will read the article and act upon what they read in the
article.
Sometimes the writer is the same person as the distribution person.
That is fine. The website owner or ezine publisher is actually the most
important person in the link building process, because he or she wants
to be sure that the fourth person, the reader, will be happy with what
they are publishing.
Believe it or not, the website owners and the ezine publishers are
frequently very selective about what articles they are willing to
accept from a writer or distribution service. After all, if the readers
are not happy with what is published on the website or ezine, then the
reader will not feel a need to return to either one. Webmasters and
ezine publishers, who are committed to success, will be even more
selective in their article choices.
To see what website owners really think of many of the automated
article distribution systems, read this:
http://www.articledashboard.com/forum/viewtopic.php?id=4679
Any writer or article marketer, who does not pay attention or consider
the needs or desires of webmasters or publishers in the process, is
condemning their article marketing campaigns to failure.
Twisted Logic
When this new breed of article marketer began showing up at my article
distribution service, I found myself in many strangely na?ve
conversations.
People would enquire about the value of our service. Naturally, I would
mention publication in ezines as a method of driving thousands of
targeted visitors to their website. Then I would mention the value of
links on third-party websites, which results in the double benefit of
targeted traffic from the third-party website and link popularity for
search engine rankings.
Frequently, people would tell me that they literally "do not care about
placement of their articles in ezines." They continued to explain that
they were only interested in placement on third-party websites for the
purpose of influencing their search engine rankings.
Wow! Every time I heard someone make this claim, I would think to
myself about the shortsightedness of this approach. In my experience,
link popularity and search rankings were a long-term benefit, and the
publication of an article in an ezine is what was generating the most
immediate and largest amount of click-through traffic to my websites.
But, who am I? I am just some guy who had been using this marketing
technique for five years at that time, and I was a person who had been
providing distribution services to other writers for several years. Why
would anyone want to hear my thoughts on the subject?
The Proclaimed Death of Article Marketing as an Effective Promotion
Tool
I have been hearing rumors for years of the death of article marketing
as an effective marketing tool. Here are a couple samples:
* Dmitri Davydov proclaimed in June of 2007 that "'article marketing'
has been long dead." (
http://www.nichegeek.com/article_marketing_is_it_dead_yet)
* In May of 2007, a few people in this forum thread declared that
article marketing does not work, one of them just a little more
vehemently than the rest (
http://forums.digitalpoint.com/showthread.php?t=338394).
What I find somewhat funny and disconcerting at the same time is that
most of the people making this proclamation actually admit that they
have only tried article marketing with "one or two articles". In their
wisdom, you should ignore people like me who have seen success with
this promotion method, and you should follow their advice to abandon
all hope for article marketing as a method for website promotion.
I have asked a few people to better define the status of article
marketing:
1. Does article marketing not work? Or, 2. Did article marketing just
not work for them?
The Nail in the Paid Links Coffin
On April 14th, 2007, the Google Guy (Matt Cutts) spoke out against paid
links. A firestorm of complaints from webmasters followed Cutts'
initial comments.
On June 12th, 2007, Cutts' original comments became official Google
policy as shown here (
http://googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/2007/06/more-ways-for-you-to-give-us-input.html)
Vanessa Fox of Google summed up the issue very succinctly, "Links that
are purchased are great for advertising and traffic purposes, but
aren't useful for PageRank calculations. Buying or selling links to
manipulate results and deceive search engines violates (Google's)
guidelines."
Confusion Ensues Over Paid Links
With Google officially stomping on "paid links," a lot of confusion
entered into the marketplace. The confusion really hinges on one simple
question: What kinds of links does Google consider to be paid links?
Many people have extrapolated Google's campaign against "paid links" to
suggest that anytime someone pays money for a link building activity,
then the links created during that activity will be construed by Google
as a paid link, and that link will be discounted or ignored by Google.
But, that simply is not the case.
Some have even chosen to lump "article marketing" as a "paid link",
thereby decreeing that article marketing is truly and finally dead.
But all one has to do to gain a different point of view is to listen to
Matt Cutts' comments from the SMX Search Marketing Expo in Seattle on
June 4th, 2007 (
http://videos.webpronews.com/2007/06/04/smx-seattle-matt-cutts-on-duplicate-and-paid-search/).
Within this video, Matt Cutts said, "If you are going to syndicate your
content, try to make sure people know that you are the master or source
of it. You can do it with a link from the article or link from the
video, or stuff like that..."
The End of Article Marketing As We Knew It...
I don't know about you, but I read Cutts' last comment above as an
indication that Google still considers article marketing to be a valid
and Google-approved method of building links to one's website.
But, no matter how we cut it, we have in fact passed "the end of
article marketing as we once knew it." Here is why:
* Some people will never have the chance to read this article and make
their own mind about whether what I say has merit, or not. * Some
people will simply trust the fear mongers who have been trying to
declare article marketing dead for years. * And, some people will
decide that they are not willing to take the chance that I might be
right.
Going forward, we will see a fewer people using article marketing as a
promotion technique.
The fact is that many people have quit using article marketing as a
promotion technique. This outcome will only strengthen the hand of
those of us who continue to utilize article marketing to promote our
websites. After all, with fewer people using articles to market their
websites, we will have fewer writers to compete with, in order to get
attention for our own articles.