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While basic writing talent is innate, many of the skills for writing compelling blog posts and and salient comments can be learned. The basic guidelines: keep your copy lively, factual, tight, clear and short and search engine optimized. Here are basic blog style guidelines to follow: Tips for Writing Better Blog Posts Web readers demand them. One thing that distinguishes blog posts from dead-tree journalism is that bloggers link prodigiously. Link to any other blog or website you mention. link to articles, books, products, bios, explanatory materials on other sites that you mention in your blog. Always link to information that clarifies or gives background on information and opinions in your post. Omit all unnecessary words. The best advice I ever got about writing was from my first boss, the late "press agent" Leo Miller, who taught me a game to play with sentences. He'd keep taking out words until removing one more word destroyed the meaning of the sentence. For example: He'd take out words until removing another destroyed the sentence meaning. Most people use a news feeders like Feed Demon to scan blog headlines. They decide after seeing the headline to click into the post. Tell as much of the story as you can in the headline. Before: Pakistan: NA body on S&T meets
After: Pakistan National Assembly Calls Water Resource Problems the Nation's Major Issue Before: The B. B. King Book After: I'm Writing The B.B. King Biography Blogging isn't brain surgery. Don't get pompous or dictatorial. "No matter what your audience size, you ought to write as if your readership consisted of paid subscribers whose subscriptions were perpetually about to expire. There's no need to pander. Compel them to re-subscribe." said Dennis Mahoney on A List Apart It makes reading from the screen easier. Nothing is harder to read than a solid block of copy on a computer screen. If you trip on a word the midst of reading a sentence aloud, re-write the sentence. Go ahead! Start sentences with "and"or "but." Don't be afraid to break archaic rules. But, jeez, follow all grammatical rules that provide clarity to your content. Cardinal Sin: Say "This is about me," never "This is about myself." Same with "you" and "yourself." Stiff, formal writing is only for lawyers. And you know what Shakespeare said about them. Questions to ask yourself before you hit "Publish": __ Is the topic clear to someone who only reads the headline? __Does the lead paragraph tell who and what the story is about and why the reader should care about it? __ Is the angle you've used likely to seem newsworthy? __Would someone who knows absolutely nothing about this topic understand this post? __ Is the post free of jargon? __ Is it written in journalistic style and does it make an effort to be objective? __ Have you peppered the headline and the post with keywords and phrases that will be attractive to search engines? HOW TO WRITE COMMENTS ON BLOGS Commenting intelligently on blogs, even if you don't have a blog of your own, can be a very good way to build a reputation as an expert in a field. Some blogs are more influential than others and many are trolled by journalists and your potential clients who are seeking ideas, trends and sources. The key is to provide useful, factual information so that, over time, it becomes clear to other readers of the blogs to which you post that you know what you are talking about. In general, it is a good idea to keep your posts short and on point. Since blogs are archived online, anything you write in a comment will be there until forever. So think before you write and edit, edit, edit before you hit "submit." Blog Comment Guidelines A signature that looks like an ad will simply be cut. Stick to the facts about what you do. The quality of your comments will prove your expertise. Because of comment spam, many bloggers ask you to register or to have a Typepad key B.L. Ochman, internet strategist, business blog consultant and "Blogeuse Professionale" is president of whatsnextonline.com, publisher of What's Next Blog, What's Next Online Newsletter and author of What Could Your Business Do With a Blog? |
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