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Six Steps to Internet Age Free
Publicity
by Marcia Yudkin
Getting lucrative
media coverage
for the cost of a stamp or a phone call
is a process I described in my 1994 book, Six Steps to Free
Publicity.
Gradually I've also learned numerous ways to get the word out
online for
no cost at all. But nothing has made me as excited as the
potential of
a new online publicity method I've been studying for the last
several
months. Search engines increasingly charge for inclusion, and
press
release distribution networks charge hundreds of dollars to
distribute
your news. But I've come up with a way to legitimately let other
people
shoulder the time or effort for your news to show up in search
engines.
The lightbulb went off for me when I was searching for very
specialized
software and came upon a press release for such a product posted
at
another site, not that of the company producing the software. Of
course
that release led me to the company's Web site, which was itself
nowhere
in the search engine listings.
I therefore went looking for sites that welcome free posting of
press
releases and found more than 100 of them. I posted my own press
release
at more than 20 of them and now, two months later, a Yahoo search
on the
phrase "free syndicated business content," which was the theme in
the
headline and the body of my release, turns up three of these in
the
first 20 listings, including in position #1. If I type in
"attract
repeat business visitors," which is an exact quote from the
headline,
eight of eight items that come up are instances of the press
release.
Search Engine Optimization and Free Press Release Distribution
Here's how to profit from this strategy, in six steps.
1. Decide on a keyword phrase that ties in to the product or
service
you are promoting and that people actually search for. You can
research
this conveniently at Wordtracker.com.
2. Place this phrase into your press release headline and
repeat it
around three times within the body of your press release.
3. Unless the proper name of your product or service is
already
well-known, emphasize its generic description rather than
its name.
For
instance, write "proposal writing software" rather than
"PropWritePro."
4. Likewise, substitute keyword phrases for pronouns like
"it" or "its"
to increase their overall frequency in the release.
5. Post your completed press release at sites that allow
free posting,
such as prweb.com, pressbox.co.uk and dozens of others that turn
up in
searches on phrases like "free press release submission."
6. Wait a few weeks and check your standing in search
engines for the
phrases in your release. Positionagent.com works well for this.
Then
repeat the whole process for another message, another keyword
phrase or
another product or service.
Assuming you've chosen your keyword phrases wisely, enjoy the
increased
visibility and traffic that the free press release posting sites
have
worked hard to obtain for you!
Marcia Yudkin is the author of a new special report, PR For the
Internet
Age, as well as of Six Steps to Free Publicity, Persuading on
Paper and
eight other books. For more information, visit
http:/
/www.yudkin
.com/printernet.htm or contact marcia@yudkin.com.
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