Category Archives: Content Writing

How to use subheadings to make your writing more effective

When you are writing a blog post, a web page, a landing page, or even an email, you use a headline. Then you use headings. Then you use subheadings.

In terms of HTML, your main headline should be <H1>, headings should be <H2> and subheadings should be <H3>, or at least this is a format that I follow when I’m writing content for myself and my clients.

The headline grabs your reader’s attention and headings, and subheadings keep them reading. When they are getting distracted, your subheadings bring them back to your writing. The subheadings tell them why they should read further.

In this Copyblogger post Sonia Simone explains how to use subheadings to break a long piece of content into manageable pieces, separated by many headlines or subheadings. She compares subheadings to the steps in a staircase. Every step takes a person up or down the staircase of your blog post or your web page.

In the subheadings you can capture

  • Some irresistible facts you don’t want your readers to miss.
  • Phrases and expressions that spark interest
  • Underscoring what lies ahead so that the reader is prepared and excited.

Not just for readers, subheadings make even writing easier for you. In fact, as suggested by the author above, before writing the main body text, it is important to organize your thoughts under headings and subheadings and then you can expand them.

Search engine crawlers too find subheadings easier to read and process. If there is a hierarchy of processing the text then the title, the headings and subheadings are processed before the remaining text and hence, if you can capture the entire essence of your web pages and blog posts using subheadings, it also improves your search engine rankings.

How to approach effective article writing?

How to approach effective article writing?

How to approach effective article writing?

First of all, what’s the difference between writing blog posts and writing articles? Aren’t they the same thing?

In terms of writing for the web, they are more or less the same, but articles are written for mostly news and opinion publications. When you write for traditional media such as print media, you write articles or opinion pieces. Blog posts, by their very nature, are informal, casual and conversational. Articles are much more formal, professional and factual. I’m not saying blogs shouldn’t be professional and factual, but this is an underlying difference between blog posts and articles.

For example, if you are writing for an online magazine or an online newspaper like Washington Post or New York Times, most probably you are writing an article and not a blog post although they have dedicated blog sections.

It is always beneficial to know how to write articles – the articles that can be published in professional publications.

Even if you yourself cannot write, getting some article published about your business and then getting an incoming link from the magazine or the newspaper can do wonders to your search engine rankings.

How does article writing and publishing help your business?

As mentioned above, articles are much more factual and formal. They are a good way to show your authority on a topic. Articles are more authoritative in the sense that people trust them more just because they are published in formal publications. You can publish a blog anywhere. But when you get an article published in a traditional newspaper or magazine it goes through an elaborate vetting process. Your writing is scrutinized by people who are less interested in you and more interested in the reputation of their publication. Hence, they will publish your article only if they find it worth publishing. That in itself increases your authority if you get to publish your article.

How should you approach writing an article?

Personally, since I get paid for every piece of content that I write, whenever I write, I give it my best shot, and I would do the same when writing an article. An article being approved by an editor of a magazine or newspaper is slightly same as a blog post or a web page being approved by a client, especially when the client knows exactly what he or she wants.

Here is what I would suggest for writing effective and profitable articles for your business:

Write on topics you have authority on

This is very important. If you have an authority on your topic you will be able to write in-depth. You will be able to find the right data. You will be linking to the right references.

That is why among journalists you come across “foreign-policy experts” or “economists” or “business correspondents” or “sports reporters”. Normally, if someone writes on entertainment, he or she mostly writes on entertainment. If someone writes on science, he or she mostly writes on science.

Do extensive research

When there was no Internet doing research was quite difficult. You had to visit libraries. I remember people used to maintain clippings from newspapers and magazines so that they could use them as references when writing their own articles. In the times of the Internet, doing research is simply laboring in front of your PC or laptop (some people even prefer their mobile phones).

Make sure what you want to research. If you don’t ask the right questions, you don’t get the right answers. Make a list of all the references and data sets you want to include in your article. Please remember that the more data you use, more authoritative your article sounds. Just make sure that you obtain your data from trusted and renowned sources.

Use simple language

By simple language I don’t mean write like a third grader. I prefer to write simple sentences unless there is a compelling reason to capture multiple ideas in a single sentence. Express one thought in one sentence. Don’t use unnecessarily complicated words and expressions. Remember that common folks will be reading your articles who may not be experts and may not be familiar with the words and expressions that you are familiar with. The purpose of your writing is not to impress people, but to inform and educate them, or change their opinion about something. Language is your tool. Use it appropriately.

Write an outline before writing the complete article

This will help you capture all the ideas that you want to include. Writing can be a laborious task and when writing, you may forget important points that you want to talk about. Hence, create a notebook or a Word document and in bulleted points make a list of everything that you want to cover. All the important points. Pros and cons of your main agenda. Some authoritative reference links. Some important quotes from other authority figures.

Write shorter sentences

Shorter sentences may create lots of white space, but they also make it easier to read your article. Preferably have 3-4 sentences in a paragraph and not more. Writing shorter sentences and paragraphs also makes it easier for search engine algorithms to analyze your text and then rank your content appropriately. It will be also easier for the editor to go through your article.

Edit and proofread your article after writing

This is what the editor of the magazine or newspaper does before publishing. Editing allows you to refine your sentences. There may be some typos that you may have typed in a hurry. There may be some hanging sentences. There may be some complicated or confusing sentences you may want to simplify. Maybe there are certain words you want to change? Editing helps you fine-tune your article and also gives you an opportunity to do a final reading before you submit it. How about using too many adverbs and adjectives? Don’t over obsess, though.

You may be tempted to use keywords more than necessary so, avoid that. When you publish an article, for example on LinkedIn, or any other publication, you would want the article to be found on Google and other search engines but keep in mind that content-intensive websites like LinkedIn are already ranking well for their content. Search engine algorithms can easily analyze content and decide on their own for what keywords to showcase individual links. Nonetheless, if the keywords are important, strategically use them within your title and the body text.

5 Tips for Writing Engaging Blog Posts

5 Tips for Writing Engaging Blog Posts.

5 Tips for Writing Engaging Blog Posts.

Writing an engaging blog post isn’t very easy.

Online readers have really short attention spans. Grabbing their attention, and holding on to it throughout the post is very difficult.

In this post, we are going to be looking at 5 tips that you can keep in mind when writing a blog post to make sure that it is interesting and engaging.

5 Tips for Writing Engaging Blog Posts

1.    Do Proper Research

You can’t attract readers if you don’t know what you are talking about.

Take an example.

If someone was to say:

“The world probably has a lot of countries. There may be more than 180 but I’m not sure.”

It would sound horrible. No one would trust it. No one would rely on it and no one would quote it.

On the other hand, if someone was to say:

The world has 197 countries. From these, 193 are members of the UN.

It would sound way better. Even if it’s not true, it sounds like it because it’s said with determination and confidence.

And if you want to sound confident and determined, you have to have a proper command on the subject matter. You need to be so learned in your topic that you should be able to state facts and figures related to it without any hesitation.

When you want to write on something, take some time out beforehand and dedicate a session solely to research. Look at reliable articles, research papers and books on your topic.

Always remember to mention statistics and figures, and to link them back to their original source.

2.    Focus on Making the Beginning Engaging

In writing, the old adage ‘First impression is the last impression’ holds a very accurate application.

If you manage to create an engaging and interesting introduction, you will be able to hook your readers and get them to read till the end of the post.

This will mean that if you’ve placed any links or sponsored elements in your blog, they will be more likely to appear in front of your readers.

Similarly, you will also increase the chances of your readers to click on any internal links that you may have left in between your content.

Here are some points that you can keep in mind to come up with an engaging introduction:

  • Discuss the main concept or topic of your content
  • Don’t dillydally. Get to the point without putting in a lot of fluff
  • Start with a relatable question
  • Keep it short and sweet

3.    Break Your Content Down in Headings and Sub-Headings

By breaking your content down in headings and sub-headings, you will be able to make it easier to navigate and skip through.

If there is a reader who wants to just read a particular part of your post and not the whole of it, they can easily skip to their desired part and then leave. But, if you don’t add headings and sub-headings, your reader will get annoyed scanning through the content.

Other than that, headings and sub-headings can make your content appear less like a wall of text. And here is something you should know about walls of text.

If someone has written some highly interesting and information content, but without dividing and splitting it properly, it will appear boring to the readers.

But on the other hand, if the content itself is not very informative, but it is properly split up in headings, sub-headings, sections and bullet points, it will look interesting to the readers.

4.    Make Sure Your Content is Unique

Plagiarized and copied content is, to be a little dramatic, the bane of reader-engagement. This problem can occur with writers who just take all their information from a single popular source on the internet without diversifying their research.

Plagiarized content, especially if it is taken from a popular source, can stick out to the readers, and it can easily be spotted.

However, there can be a lot of writers who don’t intentionally copy stuff from other sources. But even these types of writers can have trouble with plagiarism by committing it accidentally.

To make sure that there is no plagiarism, of any kind whatsoever, in your content, you should use a plagiarism checker.

Plagiarism checkers usually work by scanning the given text against online sources to see if there are any matches between them. This can help you easily see if there is any accidental duplication in your content from other sources on the internet.

5.    Add Visuals and Graphics

There are few things that make written content more engaging than some visuals and graphics.

The logic behind adding visuals and graphics is the same as we discussed in the heading dealing with headings and sub-headings: they stop your content from looking like a giant wall of text.

But, here’s the thing.

While it is commendable and good for your content’s engagement to have images in it, some writers can go a little over-board.  They can either start adding images at every other point in the blog post, which can make it impossible to peruse.

Or they can start adding images that have nothing to do with the content at hand.

This sort of excess or irrelevancy in the added visuals can, far from making the content engaging, take away whatever little engagement it may have previously had.

Conclusion

If you are writing for an online audience, you should understand well that your readers will not bother entertaining a dull and boring blog post.

In this post, we looked at some tips and steps that you can follow to make your content look interesting and gripping to your readers.

To sum it up, you should take care to do proper research before sitting down to write your blog post. Having thorough command and knowledge over your subject can make you sound authoritative.

Then, you should work on creating the beginning of the post interesting in order to hook the attention of your readers. You should also break your content up in headings and sub-headings so that it is easier for users to navigate through it.

Uniqueness is also necessary for making your content engaging, so you should be sure to check your final draft for duplication using a plagiarism checker.

And last but not least, you should take care to add visuals and graphics in your content.

5 types of content that I write

5 types of content that I write

5 types of content that I write

Although I have extensively explained on my website that being a writer I can write on a wide choice of topics and realms, many clients often ask me exactly what I do and what sort of writing I provide professionally.

I have spread my net quite wide in the previous years and I think this has been a mistake. There are many writing activities that are time wasting in terms of generating income. For example, email writing. Most of the clients think of email as number of words but sometimes, more effort is needed in writing a business email than writing a blog post. I’m gradually moving towards the payment model that is based on the effort and expertise rather than merely the number of words.

Broadly, I’m writing content for 5 types of requirements these days. I’m explaining below

1. Blog writing

I love writing blogs because it is mostly linear writing without fluff. It is educational. It is informative. It imparts value.

Although blogging requires research, in most of the cases clients these days send their own outline and sometimes even research material because I charge extra for that. As long as they are paying for my time, I don’t even mind extensive researching.

Although many clients hire me to write “SEO blog posts” I focus more on quality and relevance rather than simply stuffing keywords. This is primarily the reason why I charge slightly more than other content writers who don’t mind simply writing for SEO.

2. Web page writing

This involves writing for the homepage and other pages on the website such as the services page, the company profile, the about us page, or the product descriptions.

Web page writing is quite important, and I charge more than I charge for blog writing. This is where conversion happens. This is where you tell your visitors whether they should do business with you.

Web page writing or website writing is a mix of content writing and copywriting. You inform, educate, but more than that, you sell.

3. Email writing

As I have explained above, I’m shifting the focus to quality rather than the number of words. I like writing emails because I love to communicate. I can write convincingly. I can stick to the point. I can communicate what the client wants to communicate to his or her client or customer. The only precondition is, the client must be able to tell me what he or she exactly wants to communicate.

4. Case studies

A case study is a detailed examination of some problem a customer or client had been facing and how that problem was solved by a service or are product. Detailed method is described, including technologies.

A case study is like a story. You tell about a customer or a client and what problems he or she had been going through. Then how those problems were solved through your effort or through your product. It uses engaging storytelling to weave a narrative around what you offer.

5. Landing pages

Landing pages are very focused. Unlike the usual web page or the blog post page of a website, a landing page has a single objective – to prompt the viewer to take a particular action. This action might be buying a product, or a book, or subscribing to a mailing list.

Landing pages are used for PPC and email marketing campaigns. People are driven to landing pages by promoting the link to them. For example, if you want to draw people through Google AdWords campaigns or Facebook campaigns or even email marketing campaigns, you use a landing page.

Landing page is mostly copywriting.

Other than these five categories, I have also been writing e-books for some clients, but mostly it is blogging, website writing and landing pages.

Content writing and Blue Ocean SEO strategy

Content writing and Blue Ocean SEO strategy

Content writing and Blue Ocean SEO strategy

The concept of Blue Ocean SEO strategy has its roots in a book titled Blue Ocean Strategy, Expanded Edition: How to Create Uncontested Market Space and Make the Competition Irrelevant.

What it means is, when implementing your marketing strategy, focus on your own, individual strengths and abilities and forget your competition. Additionally, survey a marketing segment that is not served by your competition. The opposite is Red Ocean strategy that heavily relies on what your competition is doing.

According to the book, the Blue Ocean Strategy doesn’t concern itself with the competition. This is because the existing markets are already oversaturated. If you decide to compete with your competitors, even in terms of content writing and content publishing, scores of competitors are already vying to out do you. Unless you are a mega million company, in terms of publishing content and increasing your visibility, it may turn out to be a losing battle. I’m not saying it always must be a losing battle, but in most of the cases, immense effort is required.

Finding your Blue Ocean means finding your market that only you can serve. This can also work in SEO content writing. How?

There are two ways:

  1. Target markets that are not being targeted by your competitors.
  2. Write on topics that are not being written by your competitors.

But then what about all those competitive keywords you want to be found for? Those are still relevant, right?

For example, if I want to be found by people looking for a professional content writer, how does it help me if I target a completely alien keyword?

This is not what it means.

You can use the same keyword, but you can use some different combination. Fewer people might be searching for that combination, but at least, you will rank well, and you will receive quality traffic for that uncommonly used keyword.

Here is a small example:

Popular title: How to find the best content writer for your business?

Less popular title: How to avoid finding the worst content writer for your business

Another less popular title: The nightmares to avoid when hiring a content writer for your business

Another way of looking at it is that most of your competitors are focusing on generating content that drives people to their sales pipelines. Most content is being created for the purpose of driving sales. Nothing wrong in that.

But they forget the primary purpose of content writing and publishing: providing purposeful content that improves lives.

Content writing for your website is all about improving experiences for people. They are less bothered about your business and more worried about solving their problems. If you solve their problems, they become interested in working with you.

So, what is Blue Ocean for you here in terms of content writing?

Shifting your focus from “give me work, give me work!” to “this is how I add value, this is how I help you, this is how you solve your problem.”