
While discussing a client’s project, one of the web copywriters at Webcopyplus suggested breaking up web content does a lot more than promote scanability.
It started a discussion about the additional benefits of segmenting web content into digestible chunks. Here’s what we came up with.
One-topic sentences and paragraphs help web copywriters:
- Deliver scannable web content
- Layer information (small blocks of text can link to other blocks)
- Organize information effectively (easy to arrange and view)
- Join similar topics
- Provide content that’s easier to remember
- Reduce or eliminate scrolling
Concise web content doesn’t just happen. You need to plan your topics and approach. And once you complete the initial draft, keep cutting away all those dead words!
The extra time you spend or invest in your web content will help ensure your online guests enjoy their stay, complete their tasks and keep coming back for more.
The New Yorker recently featured “Out of print: The death and life of the American newspaper.”
Journalist Eric Alterman speaks of the Internet’s rise, and how it’s made newspapers seem “slow and unresponsive.” Plus, the dawn of websites like Craigslist is killing print classified advertising.
The outcome, according to media entrepreneur Alan Mutter, is that independent, publicly traded American newspapers have lost 42 per cent of their market value in the past three years alone.
“Until recently, newspapers were accustomed to operating as high-margin monopolies,” wrote Alterman. “To own the dominant, or only, newspaper in a mid-sized American city was, for many decades, a kind of license to print money.”
Meanwhile, eMarketer reported more than $8.6 billion was spent on search engine advertising in 2007, an amount that could reach $16.6 billion in 2011.
It gives the impression it’s just a matter of a few years before newspapers become obsolete.
Posted on Apr 2 2008 12:09 pm by Web Copywriters
tags: Technology
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category: Web world at large |
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More than 88% of Internet users believe they are served poor content on the Web, according to an online poll conducted by Webcopyplus.
When asked to rate the overall quality of content on the Web, poll respondents selected the following options:
1. Poor 88.5%
2. Satisfactory 9.8%
3. Good 1.5%
4. Excellent 0.2%
A total of 480 Internet users participated in the web writing firm’s online poll during a four-month period that ended in April of 2008.
Subsequent interviews with web users revealed multiple common concerns, including:
A total of 480 Internet users who participated in a recent Webcopyplus poll rated the overall quality of web content, and the marks are less that stellar. In fact, more than 88% of the online poll respondents believe they are served “poor” content on the Web.
Additionally, subsequent interviews with web users revealed numerous common concerns.
Read the full story: Poll: Web Delivers Poor Content.
Posted on Apr 1 2008 10:12 pm by Web Copywriters
tags: Web Content Strategy Web Content Studies
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category: Web world at large |
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