Saturday 10 November 2012

Internet Article Marketing Requires Different Abilities Of Authors

By Conrad Oconnorton


Internet article marketing demands new skills of writers. This is characteristic of life in a new world. As old industries slide rapidly into obsolescence many job opportunities follow them. As has always been the case evolution involves adaptation and that is as true now as it always has been. With book publishing and journalism in a melting pot writers must look around to adapt and thrive.

English has been a dominant language on the World Wide Web so writers in English have had many advantages when compared with writers who use other languages. However, they have been slow to respond and in many cases have persisted in old attitudes. Rather than embracing concepts such as internet article marketing they have adopted condescending attitudes and talked in superior tones about the fascinating smell of real books.

Instead of seizing new opportunities authors have stood back, expecting technicians, mathematicians and scientists to be quicker on the uptake. In some cases they have even insisted on writing whole books in pencil rather than learning how to use keyboards. The notion of metaphor, imagery, rhythm and such rhetorical devices being inimical to writing on keyboards is indefensible when it is considered that literature has been recorded in print for centuries anyway.

Paper texts have been fundamental to the development of intellectual and academic life for hundreds of years and it is difficult for people who have been well established in the world of paper texts to recognize and accept that their time is over. Screens have largely replaced paper pages . There can be little doubt that more people now read documents on screens than on paper.

Electronic readers are making it possible to read lengthy books on screens. Books can also be written with the aid of technology that can facilitate the process materially. For example, metaphor can be sustained effectively with search and find tools. Self publishing is a practical and economic possibility.

Faced with declining demand for their traditional products, professional writers might turn to internet article marketing. Articles written to certain specifications are in great demand from website owners who need original content on their sites in order to render them relevant to search engines. They can also be packaged into e book anthologies and sold under private label rights.

Twenty-first century writers are engaged in a new genre. Novels and print newspapers are giving way to websites. These require new batteries of skills and expertise in a wide range of previously unknown areas. As films require teams of creative people so websites demand a great deal of time and expertise in various areas. The aim is to attract visitors who buy, or return frequently to buy. There is still a great deal to learn it seems to be emerging that a steady supply of original content is the grist that a website needs.

Often stated needs in article marketing are for 'informative' writing. Ideally this will be reliably factual but the fine line between fact and opinion, as real journalists know, can be a matter of conjecture especially when phrases such as 'some people think' are used. Insistence on a 'positive tone' can also be problematic since it can distort the truth. Search engine crawlers seeking relevance are having far reaching consequences for what writers are producing and it appears that the jury is still out on whether this is a good or bad thing. Whatever happens, it appears that internet article marketing will be significant in the way that knowledge is stored and purveyed in the future.




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