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Posted: 12 Aug 2008 03:06 AM PDT This morning I got on the phone with internet marketer Jack Humphrey as part of his webside chats series of interviews. It was an enjoyable 45 minutes which you can listen into here: Jack also has some other great interviews in his series - check them out here. |
How to Craft a Blog Post - 10 Crucial Points to Pause Posted: 11 Aug 2008 07:06 AM PDT It hits you like a TON of BRICKS! It’s an idea for that KILLER blog post that is just bound to bring you all the traffic that you’ve ever dreamed of. With the idea fresh in your mind you sit down at your keyboard and BANG it out - desperate to hit publish as quickly as you can for fear that someone else will beat you to the PUNCH! Image by pallotron As SMOKE rises from your keyboard you complete your post, quickly add a title to it and proudly hit PUBLISH! Visions of an avalanche of visitors, incoming links and comments swirl before you. But then… Reality hits you like a SLAP in the face. There are few visitors, no comments and no links. It’s not a KILLER post - it’s DEAD. Ever had that experience?I have - many many times over. Today I want to start a series of posts that will walk you through an alternative workflow for constructing a blog post - one that takes…. time. If there’s one lesson that I’ve learnt about writing for the web it’s that a key element to writing successful blog posts is that in most cases they take time to CREATE. I emphasize ‘create’ because I think too often as bloggers we ‘PUNCH’ out content as though we’re in a race or under some kind of deadline. It’s almost like we’re on a production line at times - unfortunately the posts we write often reflect this. In this series I want to suggest an alternative approach - the crafting (or creation) of content. This process is a more thoughtful process that is about crafting words and ideas - shaping posts into content that take readers on a journey. To kick off this series I want to suggest 10 points to pause at when writing a post on your blog. Instead of rushing through a post - I find that if I pause at these key moments my post rises to a new level of quality and posts tend to get more traction with readers. They don’t guarantee the perfect post - but they certainly take you a step closer to a good one.
Taking extra time at each of these 10 points looks different for me in every post that I do - but I believe that every extra moment spent of these tasks pays off. Some times the pause I take in one step will be momentary while in others it could take hours or even days to get it just right. Sometimes the above process happens quite automatically and other times I need to force myself to stop and ponder something like a title or the timing of a post. Each of the 10 points above have much more that could be said about them so over the weeks I’ll be tackling each in turn in the hope that we can have some good discussion and sharing of ideas around the. For each point I hope to give some insight into how I tackle them and will share a few practical tips and examples of what I’ve done that has worked (and not worked). Don’t expect posts each day on this series - like all good things - this will take us some time! |
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