Posts Tagged ‘good writing’

The Blogger’s Guide To Effective Writing

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

The Blogger's Guide to Effective Writing

What’s the difference between bloggers who grab and hold readers’ attention, and those who don’t? It often comes down to whether the blogger has studied the art of effective writing.

New bloggers consistently make false assumptions about what works. They learned many rules of formal writing in English class, and they understandably think that they apply to blogging as well. Very often, they don’t. The blogger puts in lots of effort, only to be frustrated and confused when their readers don’t react the way they expected.

Ali Hale has a new ebook out, called The Blogger’s Guide to Effective Writing. It’s focused purely on the actual writing aspect of blogging, aimed at getting you writing with ease, enjoyment, and results.

Its 82 pages are shockingly comprehensive, and it comes with a whopping six month guarantee, so you have plenty of time to try out all the ideas. If you’re a new blogger, it’s very simple – you should buy it. That’s really all I have to say, so click the link and check it out.

Now, what if you’re a more experienced blogger? Well, as with any ebook about blogging, parts of it will surely cover things you already know. These parts will be a good read anyway, but that alone might not be enough of a reason to buy it.

Why might it be worthwhile then? Because experienced bloggers often get stuck in a rut without knowing it. You might have settled on certain ways early on, and perhaps never revisited them to see if they were working for you.

Maybe your style isn’t quite right for your content, or maybe your headlines aren’t grabbing all the attention they could, or maybe readers are having a hard time following the structure of your posts. These kinds of problems aren’t quick to resolve themselves.

It’s much easier when you learn about what makes writing effective or not. Then you can throw away your assumptions and take a fresh look at where you’re doing things right, and where you can improve.

Even for an experienced blogger, predicting what will work is sometimes difficult. But instead of blindly guessing, it’s better to make decisions based on a solid understanding of the foundations of effectiveness. Give The Blogger’s Guide to Effective Writing a try, and see what it can do for your blogging results.

Deos Splnielg Rlaley Mteatr?

Friday, December 5th, 2008


Photo by elginwx

Tehy say taht you can sbmarlce the ltreets in a wrod, and it wlil slitl be pfltceery utslbadnrnadee as lnog as you keep the fsrit and lsat lrtetes in the rhgit pcale. So tehn why do we feel all tihs pusersre to ccehk our snileplg?

Jim Gdeuat petiond out to me a tpyo in Gntseares Wutohit Gienes. I’m gald he chguat it elray, but I htae tpoys. Waht was I sspopeud to do? Did I hvae to gvie eynorevn tiehr menoy bcak and be ozecarstid form the ctmnimouy?

But wehn I rbreemmeed taht silneplg d’nseot acefft cpsihrenooemn vrey mcuh, I flet a lot bteetr. In fcat, I mhgit tnihk auobt ornfefig sblmearcd vsnireos of my eokobs at a dcnusoit.

Scnie the fsrit and lsat lrteets hvae to be in the rghit pacle, a wrod has to hvae at lsaet fuor ltretes in oedrr to srbalmce it. And eevn tehn, it wn’ot cgnahe if the mdldie of the wrod is a pdmorinlae, lkie “keep.”

I hvae to wdenor if smelbarcd wdros are awyals rblazoigcene, lkie suoicoiudlaipxecitslgaflacepiirris or asnairatnemilbatsesiditnishm. And mbyae tihs wnd’luot wrok on a rmusee, lkie “dreeisd srlaay: 17,93$5.”

But waht do you tnihk? Can we ralex our sdradnats for sniplelg and not wrroy auobt it so mcuh?

Automatic Blog Post Rehasher

Sunday, March 16th, 2008

Does good content matter in the blogosphere? Recently there has been quite a bit of discussion suggesting that perhaps it doesn’t.

James at Men with Pens wrote about Getting Creative With Your Content, or rather, how people are not getting creative with their content:

“I scroll through my feed reader, my attention dulled by the similar headlines. They’re carbon-copy titles that make a desperate attempt to grasp my attention. Some – very few – do. But I’m often quickly disappointed. The headline may be mildly intriguing, but the content of the first paragraph is just the same old stuff. Nothing new, nothing entertaining, nothing interesting.”

Skellie wrote about Why Great Writing Doesn’t Matter Online. Considering how many people admire her writing, it surprised me a bit to see her say this:

“Good writing, clever writing, beautiful writing — all of these things are unnecessary in the creation of great web content…clever turns of phrase, immaculate grammar, flawless spelling and crisp sentences are relatively insignificant.”

(Her point was that “all great web writing must do is communicate great ideas without getting in their way,” but I’d contend that even great ideas don’t necessarily matter, as evidenced by the success of certain blogs).

These posts received a flood of comments from people on both sides of the issue. I felt that a lot of people were doing their best to resist admitting what deep down they know is true: maybe great content really doesn’t matter that much.

It occurred to me that perhaps we’re looking at this the wrong way. Instead of lamenting the sad state of the blogosphere, maybe we should just give the people what they want: rehashed content. And I have a tool that will save you a lot of time in creating it: the Automatic Blog Post Rehasher.

Now you can easily rehash content from these blogs:

(I chose these blogs because they’re some of the well-known blogs I read. I’m not saying that they consist of rehashed content.)

Just fire up the Automatic Blog Post Rehasher and pick a blog. Adjust some parameters to fit your writing style, click “Rehash it,” and it spits out a brand new post for you, using word choice similar to the selected blog. It even gives you an image to use.

Some of you English majors may quibble with the grammar of what it spits out, but it really doesn’t matter. As you may know, people don’t read every word, they just scan. As long as your post contains a few buzzwords, it’s golden.

If you write (or read) content online or anywhere else good writing doesn’t matter, I’ve just saved you thousands of hours and given you a practically infinite number of free posts. I may have even improved the quality of your content. :)

Me Hunter. You read.