| -> | | | | 2. Separate you content into readable, and |
| Getting in to article writing is a highly lucrative | | | | scan-able chunks. If you write a 400 word article |
| venture to be involved with. You can either write | | | | with no breaks or space, it'll probably look just like |
| for yourself, or for other marketers. You'll get | | | | a big patch of computer code to your readers, |
| better the more you write, and begin to flourish | | | | confuse them, and send them away. Similarly with |
| as an expert writer. There are a few pitfalls along | | | | sentences, don't make them too long; use correct |
| the way though, and you should be aware of | | | | punctuation. |
| these. Meet them before they meet you. | | | | 3. Keep an eye on your keyword count. You'll get |
| Here are x things you should be aware of when | | | | rejected if you write it too many times; it will be |
| writing your articles: | | | | seen as a blatant attempt at promotion. A |
| 1. Don't write too many words. It's all about | | | | keyword density of between 2 and 5 percent is |
| quality. If you get to the point where your article | | | | ideal. If you search Google for "keyword analysis |
| is over a thousand words, long, it'll probably bore | | | | tools" you should be able to find some free |
| readers. Readers have short attention spans and | | | | downloadable software that can run a check for |
| cannot concentrate for more than a few minutes | | | | you. |
| at a time. Therefore, you should break your | | | | 4. Grammar is important so if you're not good |
| content down to say 250 to 400 words for each | | | | with it, use a spell checker. |
| article - as a rough rule-of-thumb. | | | | |