Writing SEO and Click Friendly Articles
I thought it would be a good idea to write an article based on some of the ideas I’ve published. Specifically the ‘Psychology of the Click’ series, and the ‘Keyword Tools Guides’
I just published an article about buying a new PC Power Supply. By the way, the bold title is an SEO thingy
Speaking of SEO, I placed keywords at the beginning of the description where they’ll be read by the spiders, avoiding keywords near the end. The photos also have keywords in the caption as well as the file name.
Anyway, I chose ‘pc power supply’, ‘pc power supplies’ and ‘power supply units’ based on traffic and payout. I also looked at the potential competition and I feel confident i’ll rank high.
You can check my keyword density using the SEO analytics tool I recently posted about. As you’ll see I hit 1.99% on PC power supply which is near perfect.
Now, lets go through the text for a bit and look at what I did.
Right in the first paragraph I include a line designed to tweak the gamers interest, ‘Hmm, what am I not considering??’
In steps 2, 3 and 4 I say things designed to get the readers trust, and again in the warnings section.
I go through the steps, nothing amazing here, didn’t really give that much technical information, I make the reader want to learn more, but not from me, he has to click.
Here’s where it gets interesting…
In step 7, I begin to hint about reading power supply reviews.
In step 8 I do it again and also mention ‘reputable online merchants’ I also tell the advantage of using an online merchant.
In the tips I once again hint at using a review site.
Now, I mentiond power supply review 3 times, and did manage to get one ad based on that. I did this AFTER I published the article, tweaking my use of the phrase until I got an ad, I may go back and add one more, just to see what happens…
I also provided two safe ‘out’ clicks, Amazon, which I claimed was a reputable retailer AND has reviews, and CompUSA, a trusted retailer which most PC gamers know about.
I also have a new Amazon strategy. I decided putting as many as 5 Amazon links makes it look too much like a sales pitch, so from now on I only will put one. If I get someone to Amazon and they buy something, even if it wasn’t from my link i’ll get 4%, so it’s a win-win for me.
I’ll post up stats on how this article performs, it should be interesting to see….
Possibly Related Posts:
- A reader needs some help…
- Alexa Rank or Keyword Selection – What matters the most?
- Article Writing Tips | Avoidable InfoBarrel Blunders – Part 1
- Article Writing Tips | Adding Photos to your InfoBarrel Articles
- Use Adsense Channels to Track your Articles




