Free Articles For Your Web Site
Do you subscribe to a few ezines? Or are you like me and you
subscribe to an obscene number of ezines? More ezines that you
can possibly read even if that's all you did twenty-four hours a
day? If so, have you noticed that some articles appear in more
than one ezine?
Or perhaps you've surfed the web and noticed a really great
article which has an author different from the webmaster. Some
sites even seem to have whole collections of these articles by
many different articles.
What's going on? Well, there are some not-so-secret stashes on
the web which actually contain hundreds if not thousands of
articles that you can reprint on your web site or in your ezine
(and even in an ebook if you want). The only cost is to also
include the "resource box" of the author.
A resource box is a few lines of text, similar in concept to an
email signature. This box contains a short advertisement or
biography, a link to a web site and perhaps a link to join a
newsletter. Usually they are four to six lines long, although
eight or nine lines is also common.
How do you take advantage of this phenomenon? You simply
subscribe to one or more mailing lists set up for precisely this
purpose. Once you do so, you will get several articles per day
(usually) in your inbox which are available for reprint.
If you find an article which is useful, you simply add it to
your publication along with the resource box. Don't change
anything at all unless you get written permission from the
author, and be sure to send a quick email to him letting him
know you've used his work.
Viola! Instant, useful content for your publication! That's
literally all there is to it.
Okay, so what does the author get out of this? He gets a small
amount of advertising and a link to his website. That's what the
resource box is all about. The hope is that occasionally someone
will read the article, find it interesting, and click the link
to go to the authors website.
By the way, I personally consider it a little tacky to ask the
author to exchange links if you publish his article. You see,
you are already getting value by obtaining free content for your
publication or web site. The author is getting a link and a
small ad. That's the exchange.
So where do you get these articles? There are a number of
sources:
Lists with specific topics:
http://www.egroups.com/group/aahome - Home and family articles
http://www.egroups.com/group/aahealth - Health related articles
http://www.egroups.com/group/aageneral - General articles
http://www.egroups.com/group/aainet - Internet articles
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/littlewebsitethatcould - Web
articles
General article lists:
http://www.egroups.com/group/article_announce
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/articles_archives
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ArticlePublish
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Free-Content
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/publisher_network
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PublishInYours
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/SubPortal
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/The-Article-Depot
There are also some web sites which offer the same services.
http://certificate.net/wwio/ http://ezinearticles.com/
http://web-source.net/articles/ http://www.connectionteam.com/
http://www.ideamarketers.com/ http://www.marketing-seek.com/
http://www.womans-net.com/
Simply visit these sites and follow the directions to receive
your articles.
I must say that I really like this form of exchange, as I
believe it is much better than your standard link exchange. The
author gets to provide something of value to other webmasters
all over the internet, and in return gets a link. To me, this
type of sharing is what makes the internet such a great place to
be involved with.
I would like to thank two authors who wrote articles on this
subject. By reading their works I discovered these lists and
began my own contributions, which I hope are of benefit to
others. Lynne Schlumpf, whose website
http://www.littlewebsitethatcould.net/ is one of the best
around, and Sheryl Ellis, who is the webmaster of
http://get-me.to/TrueCrime, and has written a few very good and
humorous articles on the subject.