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10 free resources for a happy healthier Internet marketer
Marketing on the Internet can be tedious not to mention expensive. While it may be awhile before you can get away from the 18 hr days many of us experience in the beginning we do not always have to spend as much money as we think we do. There are...

How Effective Are Your Ads?
Do you read classifieds ads? I do because I run an advertising ezine and I can tell you it's an education at times. Ads are the first impression the unsuspecting public gets of you and your business. They are "make or break", so do yours shape up?...

Make an Impact - Make a Difference!
It was moving day, twenty some years ago. The trucks had long since pulled away from our new home and we were left in that "what a mess limbo" that you are probably all too familiar with. We were also hungry and this was no time to hook up the...

The very basics of design
© 2005, Marsha Maung Email : marshamaung@yahoo.com Site : http://www.marshamaung.com Feel free to reprint or publish this article on your website, ezine, magazine, newsletter…etc. Please include the bio, links and credit intact. ~~~~ Design is a...

Virtually Necessary Domain Names
Hey, everyone on the block may know and trust you, but that is not true when it comes to selling and promoting your wares and services online. You must have a virtual domain name in order to do business online. I know, I know, you can get free...

 
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3 Steps To Quickly Writing Ezine Articles

Come on, admit it: Whether you're a professional writer or not we all draw a blank when we want to write an ezine article.

I've found an answer to that dilemma that will get you writing in no time so that you can publish your ezine article and begin to receive that new wave of subscribers you've been hoping for. Here's how to get the lead out if you draw a blank:

1. Write your action steps first. Forget about the catchy headline and attractive lead paragraph for now. There's no use in cleverly leading a reader into an article that has no real value to them. So start where you build your credibility, right in the action steps. Of course you want to identify your subject and then tell them how to make their lives easier. For instance, plumbers are always going to have to fix pipes, it's the nature of their business. If you have an ezine to others in the plumbing industry, write about a new technique in the industry on sealing pipes or preparing them for the winter, etc.

2. Save the best for last. There's something called takeaway or take-home that should be in every one of your articles. It's your last chance to tell your audience, "I know my stuff." Try to put that key piece of information in the last paragraph of your article and you'll want it to be something your reader can do as soon as he or she finishes reading your article. If you're writing to accounts payable clerks, you'd tell them ways to get each department to get approvals on all purchase orders before submitting them. A/P clerks would just eat that up. It's their number one gripe. Bottom line: Give your audience something they can do immediately at the very end of your article.


They'll remember your name and become devotees for life- hanging from your every word.

3. Get excited about the benefits. After you've taken care of the credibility building portion of your article, you have to draw the reader in and whet their appetite for all this great information. By the way, if you write the action steps and take-home first, this part will be easier because you'll be so excited about the information you'll see the benefits of it. And that's what writing lead paragraphs and headlines is all about: benefits to your readers.

Your final take-home advice No matter what you do, when you're writing to an ezine audience, always include an "About the Author" blurb (some call this a sig file, short for signature file) and a plug for anything new you're into. To do this, determine what you want the reader to do after he or she is finished reading. Do you want the to subscribe to your ezine? Buy your new ebook? Or just visit or site? Whatever the benefit to you is, identify it before you write your "About the Author" section. And you can write this at any time because it's separate from the article and you can use the same "About the Author" blurb for multiple articles. As a matter of fact, you could write one right now. Check out the one I'm using at the bottom of this article.

(c) 2003-2005 Lisa Sparks
About the Author

Lisa Sparks, author of 'Power Words: How to Write ezines that Increase Your Sales,' has more than 15 years of experience in journalism, copywriting and marketing. Sign up for her ezine, a $197 per year value, at no cost by visiting http://www.integritywriting.com.