Very Simple Ways on How to Create Dynamic Web Content
- By John Lennings
- Published 26th October, 2009
- Internet
- Unrated
John Lennings
Need unique and dynamic web content for your website? We have the best rates and quality online - come see why internet marketers voted us the #1 article writing and submission service online. Go to http://www.99centarticles.com now!
View all articles by John Lennings1. Repurpose some of your earlier web content. Naturally enough, you can not really do this without first posting a couple of articles on your websites. However, once you have done so, repurposing your articles can give your web contents better mileage. Basically, you are taking your earlier articles and "rewriting" them again as new material. There are two ways of doing this. One: You can literally rewrite your old posts using the same thread of thought but making sure that you are not plagiarizing whole sentences or paragraphs in the new article. (You can also ask someone else to rewrite the articles for you, but that will cost you money.) Affix a new title for this page and post it on a separate web page with links to the previous or related posts.
Two: you can make a copy of your previous articles and paste it on Microsoft Word. In the tool bar, click on the auto summarize function. You will immediately see certain parts of the texts highlighted. Remove all the non-highlighted texts and try to build up on the remaining portions of the articles. You can add new details or simply expound on the definitions of some of the words, until you reach a respectable word count of 350 to 500. Affix a new title to the repurposed article, and post it. With these methods, you can create as much dynamic web content from one or two well-written articles.
2. Affixing a different title to the repurposed article is one thing, but then you need to make sure that you also change the meta description and tags of the web page where you have posted the new article. The meta descriptions and tags could be seen in the HTML code of your website. Try to ensure that these are not named exactly like the name you have given your website, that these do not share the same set of descriptions and tags as the other pages, and that these have apt descriptions in relation to the page content. However, the most common mistake that novice web content managers make is simply disregarding meta descriptions and tags all together.
You do have to remember that search engine bots spider or crawl through web page titles, URL addresses and meta information in order to gauge what they think your site's ranking in their results page ought to be. The simple expedient of renaming some of the meta descriptions is by far one of the easiest ways of creating dynamic web content.


