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    Top 6 Free Ways to Increase Web Site Traffic
    After you've determined how your web site will be produced, you have to make sure that people visit and return. Work with both your web designer and hosting provider for information on how to drive traffic to your site. Many designers will work with you to optimize your web pages for search engines. This is called Search Engine Optimization or SEO for short.There are other things you can do to promote repeat visitations. Below are 6 easy ways to get you started on building a site that en
    e, fax and cell numbers; address and primary email address.

    5. Draw attention to your letter by using your article title, centered, in bold type and underlined as a head (after your "Dear…" greeting.) 6. Hook the editor immediately by using your attention-grabbing introduction that you've planned for your actual article. In fact, start your letter off with your article's first paragraph.

    7. With your second paragraph give an informal outline of what you'll include. Follow up with your list of recipes (if they will be included) and a brief description of each one.

    8. Write a paragraph bragging on you

    6 Key Ways to Advance in Article Marketing
    Productive article marketing is more than just writing articles and posting them in as many places as possible to increase exposure for your business. It’s a strategy, and here are six key ways to make it work for you.Key 1: Be Clear and Be Popular When you write your article, appeal to as many people as possible. Don’t use esoteric words, a lot of acronyms, or other things the average person won’t understand. If you are writing for a specific audience you may be able to use a little more than
    In my weekly yoga class we begin by moving through some positions and stretches. Balancing poses follow. As I am longing for Yoga Nidra, our relaxation time, my instructor returns to the series of stretches and lunges that opened the class.

    "Isn't it easier the second time we do this?" she asked. "The body, the muscles remember, making it possible to stretch further."

    I couldn't deny it, I was able to stretch further and it felt great. It is easier the second (and third, fourth, twentieth) time.

    This applies to writing as well. The first query letter you work on and submit may take you three days to research and two days to write. I remember spending an entire week on some queries pitching articles to national magazines a few years ago. I researched recipes, wrote outlines, lined up experts to interview and finally felt satisfied with my fourth rewrite of the letters. I sent them out and after they were accepted and the final article sent off, I wanted to keep up the momentum. It was hard. Just thinking about the time I had invested in those query letters wore me out. Even if I wrote one letter per week resulting in a 50 percent acceptance rate, I'd never be able to support myself with my writing.

    Yet, each time I sat down to work on a query letter it took less time. It was as if the original queries were the warm-up stretching and every time after became easier to work through.

    Here are ten steps to stretching your way through that first (or fiftieth) query letter:

    1. Make sure your article topic and magazine choice are a perfect fit. Read one year of back issues of the magazine you're querying plus six months of back issues of competitive magazines to see what has already been published and what type of articles your dream publication accepts.

    2. Find editorial staff names on the magazine's masthead. Worried that someone has changed jobs? Sign up for Media Bistro's newsletter with publishing updates and new hires. You can also call the magazine's office. Ask for the editorial office and do a quick phone information interview. Ask to whom you should address your query.

    3. Write your query in a business letter format. Don't say "Dear Editor." Instead use the individual's name that you've culled from your research.

    4. E-queries should also be formally written. One difference: don't put your contact info at the top. Put it at the bottom of your email under your signature and make sure you include your name; phone, fax and cell numbers; address and primary email address.

    5. Draw attention to your letter by using your article title, centered, in bold type and underlined as a head (after your "Dear…" greeting.) 6. Hook the editor immediately by using your attention-grabbing introduction that you've planned for your actual article. In fact, start your letter off with your article's first paragraph.

    7. With your second paragraph give an informal outline of what you'll include. Follow up with your list of recipes (if they will be included) and a brief description of each one.

    8. Write a paragraph bragging on you

    Marketing Your Website with Google Adwords
    Why would you choose Google for marketing your website, unless for good reasons? Not only is using Google a good reason, but it’s an excellent one. Google generates more than a third of the searches all the search engines combined make. It also has a say in the results listed on AOL and Netscape and others thus increasing your websites exposure from the Google ad network. Google helps you market your website better through its AdWords. Even if you are already listed on Google and appear on its search re
    search and two days to write. I remember spending an entire week on some queries pitching articles to national magazines a few years ago. I researched recipes, wrote outlines, lined up experts to interview and finally felt satisfied with my fourth rewrite of the letters. I sent them out and after they were accepted and the final article sent off, I wanted to keep up the momentum. It was hard. Just thinking about the time I had invested in those query letters wore me out. Even if I wrote one letter per week resulting in a 50 percent acceptance rate, I'd never be able to support myself with my writing.

    Yet, each time I sat down to work on a query letter it took less time. It was as if the original queries were the warm-up stretching and every time after became easier to work through.

    Here are ten steps to stretching your way through that first (or fiftieth) query letter:

    1. Make sure your article topic and magazine choice are a perfect fit. Read one year of back issues of the magazine you're querying plus six months of back issues of competitive magazines to see what has already been published and what type of articles your dream publication accepts.

    2. Find editorial staff names on the magazine's masthead. Worried that someone has changed jobs? Sign up for Media Bistro's newsletter with publishing updates and new hires. You can also call the magazine's office. Ask for the editorial office and do a quick phone information interview. Ask to whom you should address your query.

    3. Write your query in a business letter format. Don't say "Dear Editor." Instead use the individual's name that you've culled from your research.

    4. E-queries should also be formally written. One difference: don't put your contact info at the top. Put it at the bottom of your email under your signature and make sure you include your name; phone, fax and cell numbers; address and primary email address.

    5. Draw attention to your letter by using your article title, centered, in bold type and underlined as a head (after your "Dear…" greeting.) 6. Hook the editor immediately by using your attention-grabbing introduction that you've planned for your actual article. In fact, start your letter off with your article's first paragraph.

    7. With your second paragraph give an informal outline of what you'll include. Follow up with your list of recipes (if they will be included) and a brief description of each one.

    8. Write a paragraph bragging on you

    Avoid Formula Approach When Asking Businesses for Gifts With Direct Mail Fundraising Letters
    The one thing to remember when asking businesses for donations is that businesses don’t give donations. People give donations, and sometimes those people work for or own a business, and donate on behalf of that business.Keep this in mind when you sit down to draft a fundraising letter for a business or corporation. You are writing to an individual. Even though you are writing to an institutional donor, your letter is going to an individual person who, like you, has a mind and a heart. Your letter n
    e I sat down to work on a query letter it took less time. It was as if the original queries were the warm-up stretching and every time after became easier to work through.

    Here are ten steps to stretching your way through that first (or fiftieth) query letter:

    1. Make sure your article topic and magazine choice are a perfect fit. Read one year of back issues of the magazine you're querying plus six months of back issues of competitive magazines to see what has already been published and what type of articles your dream publication accepts.

    2. Find editorial staff names on the magazine's masthead. Worried that someone has changed jobs? Sign up for Media Bistro's newsletter with publishing updates and new hires. You can also call the magazine's office. Ask for the editorial office and do a quick phone information interview. Ask to whom you should address your query.

    3. Write your query in a business letter format. Don't say "Dear Editor." Instead use the individual's name that you've culled from your research.

    4. E-queries should also be formally written. One difference: don't put your contact info at the top. Put it at the bottom of your email under your signature and make sure you include your name; phone, fax and cell numbers; address and primary email address.

    5. Draw attention to your letter by using your article title, centered, in bold type and underlined as a head (after your "Dear…" greeting.) 6. Hook the editor immediately by using your attention-grabbing introduction that you've planned for your actual article. In fact, start your letter off with your article's first paragraph.

    7. With your second paragraph give an informal outline of what you'll include. Follow up with your list of recipes (if they will be included) and a brief description of each one.

    8. Write a paragraph bragging on you

    Public Relations for Bars
    Public relations for the local bar is something that they must do in order to keep their bar in business. Too often bars will sell alcohol to people who will then get into their automobiles and drive and when they do they end up causing problems in the community, getting into accidents or perhaps even killing someone.Since people know that people who drink and drive are bad news they often look at the bars for the reasons that these horrific accidents occur. Because of that negative publicity and
    ied that someone has changed jobs? Sign up for Media Bistro's newsletter with publishing updates and new hires. You can also call the magazine's office. Ask for the editorial office and do a quick phone information interview. Ask to whom you should address your query.

    3. Write your query in a business letter format. Don't say "Dear Editor." Instead use the individual's name that you've culled from your research.

    4. E-queries should also be formally written. One difference: don't put your contact info at the top. Put it at the bottom of your email under your signature and make sure you include your name; phone, fax and cell numbers; address and primary email address.

    5. Draw attention to your letter by using your article title, centered, in bold type and underlined as a head (after your "Dear…" greeting.) 6. Hook the editor immediately by using your attention-grabbing introduction that you've planned for your actual article. In fact, start your letter off with your article's first paragraph.

    7. With your second paragraph give an informal outline of what you'll include. Follow up with your list of recipes (if they will be included) and a brief description of each one.

    8. Write a paragraph bragging on you

    Need To Fight Acne? Here's How-
    If you are an acne sufferer, you'll be glad to know that there are quite a few medications that are available to help you win your own personal war with acne.You might want to go to your local drugstore and take a look at the acne medicine displayed there. You'll find lots of choices and it's really hard to know which one you should pick since different medications work differently for different people.When you select a brand of acne medicine, it's important to read the instructions on the
    e, fax and cell numbers; address and primary email address.

    5. Draw attention to your letter by using your article title, centered, in bold type and underlined as a head (after your "Dear…" greeting.) 6. Hook the editor immediately by using your attention-grabbing introduction that you've planned for your actual article. In fact, start your letter off with your article's first paragraph.

    7. With your second paragraph give an informal outline of what you'll include. Follow up with your list of recipes (if they will be included) and a brief description of each one.

    8. Write a paragraph bragging on your accomplishments. "My world travels have taken me to Ukraine many times where I've studied with native cooks. For the last 12 years, I have written a weekly culinary trends article for the local newspaper and hosted a one-hour per week radio show of local restaurants. My cookbook, Ukrainian Celebrations will be in the bookstores in November, and my articles have been published in numerous magazines (feel free to list them one by one).

    9. Include a self-addressed stamped envelope (and include extra postage if you are mailing this close to when postage increases are expected). Conclude with a request for a response to be sent in your enclosed envelope and a heartfelt thank you.

    10. Read, reread, proofread and ask someone else to proofread your letter. Add clean copies of one or two recently published articles. Mail away!

    Next time, it WILL be easier to reach, reach, reach for your publishing goals.

    ************

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