Blogging has come a long way in the past 5 years or so. I was pleasently surprised when one of links returned by google news on a particular news item was infact a blog! Blogging has become so ubiquitous that google is testing out a new search service dedicate to blogs alone. Almost every other person I know has a blog, or has friends who have blogs. It has never been easier to produce and consume (mis?)information. I think I speak for a vast majority of bloggers when I say that their sacred objective to attract as many readers as possible to their blogs. I know of people who send instant messages to everyone on their buddy list for every new post they write. I have received emails from bloggers asking me to visit their blog and comment on a new post they have written. The competition is pretty intense. Each one of us has only so much time to spare and we have countless bloggers trying to get our attention and get us to read their blogs. The natural question to ask is, “What can be done to get more people to read your blog?”. (Please bear in mind that this is different from asking how one can increase the traffic to his/her blog. Increased readership is one of the causes for increased traffic, and not the other way ’round.)
I scoured theblogs to see if people have written about this already, and I found a few interesting links; ProBlogger.net has an invited people to participate in a group writing project titled “X habits of highly effective bloggers“, successful-blog.com talks about “6+1 Traits of Effective Blog Writing“, the Webby Awards have a handful of categories dedicated to bloggers, Booksquare talks about their entry to the ProBlogger invite here, there is another entry about the same from Retrospector. I read all of them, and they are all nice and dandy except for a major omission. None of them talk about the importance of writing itself. Successful-blog.com comes the closest; the author has devoted three bullet points and three sentences to the actual writing skill involved, but thats just about it. I think its time someone wrote about the the actual ‘writing’ bit, and here’s my 2 cents’ worth.
If you are not inclined to read this long post, click here for the highlights :)
Audience:
The most important aspect of effective writing is identifying the target audience. For instance, in case of this blog post, the target audience is the community of bloggers. More specifically this post is tailored for the bloggers who maintain blogs for the purpose of dissemination of information and opinions and views. Bloggers who use their blog as a literary outlet, or practice sessions of creative writing are less likely to find this post useful. The importance of identifying the audience cannot be understated because it will determine both your style of writing, and the kind of readers you are likely to attract. Let us consider a blog that is dedicated to providing its readers with quick and simple scripts and html hacks to cool all the ‘cool’ stuff. The suggested target audience would all the casual users of the internet who have an interest in developing and maintaining their website/blog but are not a html or web wiz. So it doesnt matter how much you know about javescript or about the minute specific technical details of how different web browsers render different html codes. You are going to keep it simple. If you cannot keep your readers’ attention past the first 50 words, then you have lost them. They are not coming back.
Objective:
This may seem obvious enough, but still requires to be stressed upon. Be clear about the objective of your blog/blogpost. If you do not know why you are writing something, then your audience will not know what you are talking about, or will not find anything useful in what you have to say.
Consider the following example taken from a blog:
If A bears a relation to B, and B bears the same relation to C, then A bears it to C.
For e.g. If A is smarter than B, and B is smarter than C, then A is smarter than C.
That’s the law of transitivity for you. Simple? So how does this seemingly simple law apply to the complicated vagaries of office life? Let’s take a very common instance in which many of us might have had the misfortune of being involved.
A’s life depends on a particular project ==> For this, his junior colleague B needs to get him some info right away ==> B can’t get this info until C compliles it all first ==> C needs data from D before he can compile it all ==> D depends on E ==> E on F ==> and so on and so forth ====>
The point is, our friend A remains stuck until the final link in the chain has done his bit. Like a jailbird awaiting his final verdict, each hapless link sits and waits for fate to decide whether he gets the axe or not!
If any one link in the chain doesn’t do his bit, all the links before him start to weaken and collapse.
F gets axed by E ==> E by D ==> D by C ==> C by B ==> B gets axed by A ==> who in turn gets axed by the guy above him ==> and it goes on and on and on ====>
The longer this chain, the higher the chances are of it breaking somewhere in the middle. = = = = //~ ~ ~ ~>
This post makes an interesting point, but it also illustrates a lack of objective. Why is the author talking about it? The only means at the author’s disposal is the post itself, but the post fails to deliver.
K.I.S.S.:
Keep It Simple Stupid; I know you have heard this a million times before, but it helps in reiterating it here. Always, be simple direct and concise. Remember, you are not here to impress anyone with your vocabulary skills, or the ability to write insanely long compound sentences.
All it does is obfuscate the quintessential desideratum of the post .
It makes the purpose of the post unclear.
The above two sentences carry the same meaning; the choice of the sentence as the preferred one is left as an excercise to the reader.
Sentence Style:
Here are a few tips on how to compose sentences that readers will appreciate
- Watch sentence length.
- Keep subjects and verbs close together.
- Omit verbiage; use concrete verbs.
- Write squeaky clean prose.
- Avoid ponderous language.
- Avoid excessive use of is/are verb forms
- Use active voice for clarity.
Blogposts with long sentences are difficult to read. Keep the length of sentences to less than 20 words as much as possible. See the following example:
Before
My manager handed me a report the other day that contained a brief discussion of certain technical and non-technical aspects of my project, but did not talk about individual responsibilities at all and in fact parts of it were factually incorrect. The report was written by people who I believe are qualified, although their expertise in the technical area is questionable.
After
My manager handed me a report that contained a brief discussion of certain technical and non-technical aspects of my project. The report did not talk about individual responsibilities at all. In fact, parts of it were factually incorrect. The report seems to be prepared by qualified people. However, their expertise in the technical area is questionable.
Here is an open secret for sentence clarity: Keep the subject of the sentence and the verbs together. The more verbs in a sentence, the sharper and more direct the sentence.
Example :
John loves Mary because she inherited money
verses
Mary’s inheritence of money was one of the reasons for John’s interest in Mary
Avoid verbiage; avoid use of more words when fewer can do the job. Example:
| have a tendency to | tend to |
| at the present time | now |
| due to the fact that | since or because |
Here is a list of two-word phrases where just one one word will do: Absolutely Free, Complete Absence, Exactly Identical etc. When you can do with fewer words, use fewer words. The smaller a blogpost is, the lesser time it takes a reader to read it, less uninterested the reader will be.
Oh yeah, for cryin’ out loud! DONT USE WORDS THAT DO NOT ADD TO THE MEANING OF THE POST. It is annoying to see ridiculous ‘buzz words’ or jargon ladden blogposts. It makes it difficult to glean the meaning of the sentence. It probably works well with the paper you are sumbitting as a part of your project or assignment. That is beacuse the professor or teacher is paid to read what you write. It will NOT work with blogs. Very few people have the time to spend 30 minutes or more on a single post. Be mindful of that.
Please use active sentences to the extent possible. Here is an example of passive voice:
The legal process of filing charges against the plaintiff has been initiated.
The same sentence in active voice reads:
Lawyers have started fiing charges against the plaintiff.
It is always advisable to use active voice (notice the irony ;) ). Active voice sentences are more readable than passive voice.
Also choose active, precise verbs to invigorate your blogs posts. It will help you avoid passive voice and excessive use of ‘is’, ‘are’, ‘was’ etc. The list of active verbs are available here. Although it is targetted at scientific and technical writing, I think it applies for blogging as well.
To paraphrase, a good blog/blogpost
- Makes a good impression when read
- Has been written for a specific audience
- Reads coherently from beginging to end
- Provides information without jargon, or padding
- Has simple sentence structure
- Most of the sentences are in active voice
- Can be understood by readers who were not a part of the inital readership
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I just wanted to point out that on the Problogger group project, over 25% of the submissions listed good writing/communication skills as an effective habit. (A table with all the habits listed in order of popularity can be found here.) However, I don’t think any of them went into as much detail as you did on what is involved with effective writing. Nice addition to the topic.
I think I have to respectfully disagree with you. Over at Successful Blog we talk a lot about what makes good writing. We have checks for editing for quality as well as content editing and word usage and the piece you discuss “6 1 Traits of Effective Writing” is the first in the Series.
I do agree that writing is important which is why I started the entire power writing series which goes through all of the steps of the writing process and how each step contributes to making the piece stronger. Pieces on voice and audience are in lncluded. I’ve seen plenty of articles on grammar.
Perhaps your phrasing and word choice “scour the blogs” was just unfortunate. I’d love to have a conversation with you about this.
Also you might try Google Blog Search.
Thanks for noticing what I’m doing. :)
Smiles,
Liz Strauss
Successful Blog
Nice writeup! Although people never admit it, they always wish more people read their blog; this might help them get a few more readers.
BTW, use the tag for long posts.
I recently convinced a friend that she wants to get a blog, and we started one for her. And the main thing I told her was that…well, just write. Don’t worry about grammer, spelling, corrections, properness, what your audience wants. A blog rewards you for writing. It’s very simple, the more you write the more hits you get. If that’s what you are going for. If my blog was like some newspaper article/opinion piece I wrote, then it really wouldn’t be fun or very interesting to me.
@paavni: Like I said, the most important thing is targeting your audience correctly. If you would like to maintain a blog as a creative writing practice, then by all means use the most difficult words you know. But if you are trying to get a point across, if you are trying to communicate a view point, and you would like your reader to read them and understand them. Then you will have to write clearly, understandably, using the guidelines that I have outlined. These guidelines are not very difficult to follow. If you notice, the points I have made can be put to practice by a high school kid. So far as using lingos go.. well, if your audience uses a lot of lingo and can follow what you are trying to say, then go for it. If you would like the whole world to read ur blog, then using lingos is probably not the best way to go about :)
What you wrote is right. But again it depend on individual, age, education etc
like a teenagers would like to follow own style, he might use lots of lingo, mix of hindi –engligh.
Might be an eng hons graduate use lots of difficult words. But a person who english is not good hardly able to make sense.
If we mistake ‘good’ writing to mean only ‘correct’ writing as in readability where we concentrate on grammar, sentence structure, and the rest, leaving out the importance of content as in its quality, then we’re treading shaky ground.
I’ve read lot many blogs that are big on polish but low on substance. Of course, there are many who’ll say that substance is subjective. Fair enough. But then no content, however well written from a language point of view, can afford to mirror the structure, nature, and tenor of blog-content that proliferate on the web, mind numbing in their repetitive nature, almost identical in their crib-a-thons, and inability to offer different personal perspectives. Though it is another matter that most such blogs do acquire medium to large readership who keep coming back for more.
I would say that language matters, but content matters more, though the latter cannot do without the former. Having said that, it might help to not agonize over ‘lack of numbers’ who read your blog for, if you believe in your content for the value you’ve built into it, then even if you get few committed readers you’ll have succeeded.
To write so that you cater to the taste of maximum readers will mean you will orient your writing, and content similar to most blogs out there that offer a bit of spice, and ‘cool talk’. Retain your voice even if it rings out frail in the jungle, for, there might just be a Mynah or two around who’ll heed your call and wing down to sit on your shoulder to hear what you have to say. Then maybe they’ll fly off and pass the word around for more of their kind. Until then, believe in your voice.
For starters, it’ll do.
Avoid ponderous language. Hm.
Blog name: Chronosynclastic Infundibulum
Tag line: My Pensieve for all to see
Hm.
And by the way, “infact?” There is no such word.
And “I think I speak for a vast majority of bloggers when I say that their sacred objective to attract as many readers as possible to their blogs.”
Perhaps you mean “I think I speak for a vast majority of bloggers when I say that their sacred objective is to attract as many readers as possible to their blogs.”
And
The natural question to ask is, “What can be done to get more people to read your blog?”.
You don’t need that full stop.
“I scoured theblogs”
Perhaps you meant you scoured the blog world, or the blogosphere, if you prefer neologisms. Or perhaps “theblogs” is the name of a source I don’t recognise? In which case, my apologies.
The suggested target audience would all the casual users of the internet who have an interest in developing and maintaining their website/blog but are not a html or web wiz.
Should be
The suggested target audience would be all the casual users of the internet who have an interest in developing and maintaining their websites/blogs but are not a html or web wizzes.
Actually, considering your advice later about brevity and simplicity, perhaps this would be better:
The suggested target audience: casual web users interested in developing and maintaining their websites or blogs, but without too much tech wizardry.
And I’m sure you meant “jargon-ladden”
And this post could have been written in about half the length if it had used its own suggestions.
Physician, heal thyself.
Thanks a ton! those are really helpful tips for potential bloggers. Btw i wanted to link my blogs with http://www.desipundit.com. is that possible ?
The comment section was as interesting as the post itself, and this is one enviable feature of a blog. Kudos!
:-)