A Publisher's Rant - Why I Hate Your Byline
I'm a publisher for numerous sites. I HATE many of your
articles. Here's why I hate the byline of your article and what
you can do about it.
Bylines
The byline of an article is your chance to pimp your site and
yourself. I don't really care what you write. There only time I
would forgo using an article because of the byline would be if
you're one of those people that writes seven or eight lines of
text. Please try to keep it to three lines or less.
Something To Consider
If you're writing articles, you undoubtedly know it is a great
way to build the link count for a site. Assume you put two links
in the byline of an article. Assume further that 60 sites
publish your article. You have effectively generated 120 links
for your site, a number that would take forever if you were
pursuing reciprocal link trades.
Article links are also valued highly by search engines because
they are inbound only links. In the "minds" of a search engine,
inbound links are far more valuable than reciprocal links.
Inbound links are interpreted as an indication the site in
question has highly relevant information and should be ranked
high in search engine results. If you don't believe me, give
some thought to the IRS.
The IRS has an excellent site covering every tax topic you could
possible imagine. The IRS doesn't link to anyone, yet it ranks
at or near the top of the search rankings for practically every
tax keyword phrase. Why? Roughly 971,000 sites link to the IRS.
These sites include CPA firms, newspapers and so on. All of the
links are inbound. Get it?
Keywords and Bylines
When writing your byline, don't just blabber on about how great
you are and so on. You are wasting the links when you do so. If
you need an ego boost, go talk to yourself in front of a mirror.
Instead, the byline should contain the keywords you emphasize on
your site. If you do this, the search engines will associate the
links with the keywords and move the appropriate pages of your
site up in the rankings.
Assume you've written an e-book on how to lose weight and have a
site. Assume further that your primary keyword phrase on the
home page of your site is "how to lose weight". Your byline
should read something like:
"Halstatt is with http://www.domainname... - teaching people how
to lose weight permanently. Dropping pounds is easy to do once
you learn how to lose weight."
You've now correlated your inbound link increases to the keyword
phrase you are trying to get ranked under. Rankings are sure to
follow if you keep pounding articles.
Unfortunately, most people write bylines such as:
"Halstatt was a fat slob until he had a moment of enlightenment
after eating bad sushi. While spending a miserable night in the
bathroom, he found that food poising was an effective way to
regain his self-respect and get washboard abs. Visit
http:www.domainname to read more."
Do you see the difference? The first byline is going to move you
up the search engine rankings quickly. The sushi byline isn't
going to help nearly as much. It doesn't even include the
correct keyword phrase!
Again, I rarely discard an article because of a byline unless it
is over four lines. Many of you, however, could get better
mileage out of yours.