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Fire Your Dud Titles For Sizzlers That Get Your Articles Read, P1
Theres nothing worse to a marketer than clicking over and seeing the same 10-20 clicks you saw last week. You posted your short article in hopes you could generate a fresh stream of traffic to your site. O.k. so you got a few more views this week than last. But the truth is few of your articles pull very many readers even after months. The reader/view count rarely rises above 30-40 views. You know you have good solid information that would be helpful to people if you could just get them read.
You might share the problem hundreds of article writers shareDud Titles. You must develop a sizzling title to pull your audience in by the collar. You know like the newspapers and magazine headlines. They cant afford to publish dud titles that dont capture the interest of their readers.
Yet among other marketers of books, products and services few seem to put much effort into crafting a magnetic title. It doesnt have to be that way with you. Now is where you fire your Dud Titles and hire only Sizzlers. Here are a few tips to help you sizzle your title like a professional.
1. The Command.
Write Your Best Book Now!
Most will say they dont like being told what to do. But our human psyche seems to respond in spite of what we like. The command has an immediate effect. Why? It connects with the Yes, I want that spot within us all. Commands reassure you that helpful advice will follow that help you get what you want from the advice. It tells the readers its possible to achieve the benefit the author is claiming.
2. The How to.
How to Make Your Article Go the Extra Mile
People love to learn with simple steps and fast. Combine it with a powerful benefit and you will reel your reader in every time. You decide. Does the title above, How to Make Your Articles Go the Extra Mile or 8 Ways to Format Your Article
3. The Provocative Statement.
5 Mistakes to Avoid That Drive Your Web Visitors Away In Less Than 2 Minutes
You mean my site could be driving my visitors away that fast. Especially, if you have been working hard to get site visitors you would want to know what would drive them away fast. Provocative statements pull at our attention like an electric shock. They make us curious. They sometimes make us mad. They make us feel a lot of different things but most of all they make us read.
4. The Question.
Do You Want More Traffic, More Free Publicity, More Sales?
Most times people unconsciously answer the question you pose in their minds. The key is to provide the answers in your copy including statistics. For example, Have you ever felt afraid to buy online? Like it or not, many are still cautious of buying on the web. A Boston Consulting Group Consumer Survey found that 70% of respondents worry about making purchases online.
Without an interesting title that stirs emotion, evokes interest or arouses curiosity your articles may go unread another year. Implement the title templates above to capture the interest of your visitors and get all of your articles read. Sizzle your titles; watch your reader counts rise and prosper!
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BONUS : First Time Novelist Faux Pau
Those who venture into fiction writing often fall prey to certain avoidable, yet highly normal faux pau's with their first book.
Many of these novels are grand experiments. Often chapters unfold without advance direction or character notebook, sometimes there is a multitude of point of view shifts and there is often a desire to try to pack as much into the story as possible.
One of the key difficulties for new novelists is to track down inconsistencies in their work. For instance if you mention that your character grew up in Ohio it is bad form to mention Chicago as their hometown later in the novel. This can be a somewhat innocuous detail in the book and most people will probably missed it, but the inconsistency is there nonetheless and may detract from the flow of the story is the reader questions the veracity of the claim.
Most authors believe that because the work is fictional the details are less important, but as an author you are creating an entire world for your readers and that world has to become as real as the world in which they live. Since novels have a unique escapist quality to them the last thing you want is to shut down your reader's link to the book because they are stumbling over inconsistencies.
Another point where first time novelists get into trouble is the addition of gratuitous violence or other points of gratuity. The author often wrongly believes that if they can shock the reader it will cause the book to be more memorable for the reader.
Many readers simply see this as a means to mask a weak storyline. This is not to say that there is no place for violence in a novel, but it must be in context of a superior storyline - not as a means of increasing the chances that your reader will recommend the book to their friends.
Most readers see gratuitous elements in a novel for what they really are and this knowledge provides an instant turn-off factor. If you have someone who is willing to read through your manuscript ask him or her to check for anything they consider gratuitous and any inconsistencies they may encounter.
Avoiding a couple of significant potholes on the road to publishing your first novel will provide an advantage with both publisher and reader alike.