In previous pieces we showed you how to artfully embed affiliate links into your Mooker articles. In this piece we are going to show you how to embed product links. A product link is a link that takes your reader to an outside page where you are offering your own product for sale.
The product could be something from your own warehouse inventory, or it could be something that you are in the business of drop shipping.
These days home based businesses are an extremely hot topic. If you have something to sell, you want to promote it on Mooker.com.
Assuming that you are already set up in business and have a product to sell, then you will need a web page that provides a description of the item and a shopping cart application or "buy button" to capture the transaction and complete the sale. Having a web page means that you also need access to web hosting. You can obtain inexpensive hosting from many sources. You can also take advantage of free hosting services if you want because there is no reason not to.
If you are somebody that possesses basic web page authorship skills then the process should be easy for you and goes as follows:
Gather together your product images, descriptions and any other multi-media tools that you want to use to build out your product sales page.
When you know what price you want to charge your customer you are now ready to build the page. Using tables within your HTML document will help you organize your information and make for you an appealing point of purchase interface. Construct your page so that it looks something like this <<click here>>.
All you need now is a shopping cart application or what we call a "buy button" if you are selling a single item. If you have a PayPal account, you can use their shopping cart products found within the developer's section of the PayPal site. Amazon.com also offers their own version of a free buy button. You can also sign up for a free service from Google called "Google Checkout". Google Checkout helps you quickly create buy buttons that you can use to sell single item physical goods on your page. In the example that we are using Google Checkout is employed. When you use one of these buy button tools all of the administrative functions including credit card authorization and processing is handled by Amazon, Google or PayPal.
Once you have created your item sales page and completed integrating the buy button into it, you are ready to embed the link to your sales page into your Mooker article. Reading all of the Mooker.Com tutorials provided by us can help you with tips and tricks to make your article linking more effective. Placing your product link in your article is all about continuity and blending. What you want to do is provide compelling content for your reader, and then within the language of that content find a sentence or two which you think will inspire the reader to want to OWN the very thing that you are currently writing about. Make that section of text a hyperlink which of course leads to your sales page. That is how the pros do it.
Below we have placed copy consisting of a section from a mock up of a fictional article that could have been written for Mooker which includes a well-placed product link:
"Skirmish"
" 'Skirmishing' is the most common type of mock military play in which participants eliminate opponents by hitting each other with spherical non-metallic rounds fired from a compressed-air gun (or airsoft gun) powered by gas, manual spring-load, or electrically powered gearbox. Players may wear a full battle dress uniform (BDU), some type of scaled down BDU, or ordinary street clothes. Player's guns' velocities can range between 200 ft/s (for low-end/beginner guns) to 600 ft/s. These battles typically take place in abandoned buildings, in a wooded area, or on a farm. However due to its international popularity, skirmish can be played on almost any type of terrain... "
Study this example and try to recreate the same effect within your own articles. You can find it to be very profitable indeed.
About The Author:
This artice was written by Mark Soveign who owns and writes for Wertheim Communications LLC
