Category Archives: Copywriting and Content Writing Tips

Content Creation Inspiration for When You’re Stuck

content creation inspiration for when you are stuck

As I’m sure you know by now, a consistent content creation schedule is essential to a successful website. Unfortunately, as is bound to happen from time to time, you may find yourself with no idea what to write about. Idea generation can be a real challenge — coming up with new and interesting content ideas that both capture readers’ attention and engage them isn’t always the easiest of tasks.

Luckily, there is a solution!

If you feel like you’re all out of ideas, consider diving into the following rabbit holes to find inspiration for your next great article.

Blog Comments

Get content writing ideas from blog comments

Get content writing ideas from blog comments

Have you ever noticed your blog posts leaving your readers with more questions? While this isn’t unusual — you can’t stuff every bit of information into one article about a particular subject —  it is a fantastic way to come up with content ideas for future pieces.

It’s important to regularly scroll through your comments (even in older articles) to see what questions pop up. Anything that can’t be answered in a sentence or two would make a great subject for your next post. This is especially true if you find yourself answering the same question time and again, as that’s a pretty clear-cut sign you need to clarify some things.

Q&A Sites

Content writing ideas from Q & A websites

Content writing ideas from Q & A websites

If you can’t find anything in your blog comments, it’s time to check out question-and-answer sites like Yahoo Answers and Quora. These sites give you an inside look at what people are interested in reading about related to your industry, as well as their most burning questions. If there’s a large number of questions and answers surrounding the same topic, an article written about it will be sure to find a large audience.

Social Media

Content writing ideas from social media websites

Content writing ideas from social media websites

There are two lists you should create on Twitter and Facebook. The first is a list of your ideal readers (these can include your best customers). As you follow them, keep an eye on what content they share and reply to. These are the topics you should be covering on your website.

Your second list is industry influencers. Watch how other users interact with them and what questions they ask. Often, influencers too busy to respond to every question — that’s where you can step in and save the day.

Hashtags are another great way to find ideas for content. Search and follow the most popular hashtags in your industry. Be on the lookout for buzzwords, questions, and articles with a lot of engagement.

Finally, look into Reddit if you already haven’t — it’s a content idea goldmine. Industry subreddits will be chock-full of questions, popular articles, and boisterous discussions surrounding just about everything. You’re sure to come away with an entire list of subject to cover in your writing.

Industry Publications

Content writing ideas from industry publications

Content writing ideas from industry publications

No matter what your industry, there are bound to be at least a handful (if not hundreds) of sites that publish news, trends, and other pertinent bits of information to do with your trade. Browse through these sites on a weekly basis and watch for the articles with the most engagement. Once you have an idea of what the hot topics are, you can create content that either expands on what’s been discussed or has a different viewpoint entirely.

Another place to look for industry news is the library. Yes, you read that right, the library. Contrary to what you might believe, if you haven’t been to one in a while, libraries aren’t dying out. Public libraries still see 1.5 billion visits every year — that’s roughly four million visitors each day! Chat with the reference librarian at your local library and ask where you can find resources targeted at your specific business. You never know what nuggets of helpful information may be hidden somewhere in those shelves!

Your Competition

Content writing ideas from business competitors

Content writing ideas from business competitors

You should never be afraid to look to your competition for new content ideas. By no means should you plagiarize their work, but finding inspiration from them is completely acceptable. You can use their content as a jumping-off point by touching on points they didn’t, offering a different perspective, or just flat out disagreeing with them. Whatever you do, just be sure to keep things original.

Brainstorm

Content writing ideas through brainstorming

Content writing ideas through brainstorming

When all else fails, there is always a good old-fashioned brainstorming session to hopefully spark your creativity! Whether you use a whiteboard or a piece of paper, writing things down by hand is the key. You’ll remember your ideas better if you write them out by hand rather than using a word processor.

The good news if you’re flying solo is that brainstorming doesn’t have to be a group project. Start by writing a main theme in the middle of your surface. Then, chart related themes, ideas, or questions around the central idea. Next to these smaller themes, outline even more related topics. Connect the ideas with lines.

If you’re stumped on what might be relevant to your main theme, do a little word association. When you look at your central idea (or subtopics), jot down a few words that you immediately associate with the said theme. No matter how silly these words might seem, they may be just the thing to spark an idea or two!

Conclusion

In order to stay competitive in today’s market, it’s imperative you have to stay on top of content creation. But quantity is only half of the equation. You also have to address newsworthy and interesting topics in a way that grabs your readers’ attention. When you’re constantly churning out article after article, it can be easy to run out of ideas. However, a quick glimpse into industry publications, trending topics on social media, or even your own comments section, will be sure to break your writer’s block and get you back on track to creating fabulous content.

How to publish quality content regularly on your website

Publishing quality content regularly

Publishing quality content regularly

Regularity is as important as quality if you want to get benefit out of your content marketing efforts.

When you regularly publish quality content on your website it gives a message to your visitors that you’re constantly updating your website and hence, they should keep track of it (a motivation to sign up for your email updates).

Search engine crawlers – this is something that I have observed but I don’t know if it actually happens or not – also take note of your publishing schedule, and start crawling your website accordingly.

If you publish content regularly, your website is crawled regularly.

The more you publish, the more reason you give human visitors as well as search engine crawlers to access more content.

The more you publish, the more search terms you cover.

The more you publish, the more content you make available that can be shared on other websites and blogs, and on social media websites.

But it is easier said than done.

There are two obstacles to publishing content regularly:

  1. Great ideas for publishing new blog posts
  2. Making sure that the quality is up to the mark.
B2C content marketing challenges chart

B2C content marketing challenges chart

So, regularity and quality are both indispensable. One or the other tend to suffer when you try to maintain a balance.

The quality aspect can be easily taken care of.

Be genuine.

Try to provide something valuable, something meaningful, something you think can really help people.

This will ensure that you publish quality content.

Quality means meaningfulness.

Meaningful means something that really helps people.

What helps people?

Take the example of my business: content writing. How can I help you? There are two ways I can help you:

  1. Help you write better content yourself
  2. Help you decide whether you should hire me as your content writer or not

But, why should I help you write better content because this means you won’t hire me?

You may or may not.

If you want to write on your own, you will do it anyway.

If you don’t find the information on my website, you will find it somewhere else.

You’re not looking for a content writer, at least not right now.

Right now, you want to write on your own, and you’re just looking for some good start, or some insight that can help you write better.

Right now you don’t want to hire someone, and if I don’t offer you help, you will get that help from somewhere else.

So why should I provide you that help?

If nothing else, it generates goodwill for me.

In the future, if content is needed by you or by someone you know and if that content cannot be written without the help of a content writer, you would rather hire me than someone else.

Then comes the second point: helping you decide whether you want to hire me as your content writer or not.

How do you decide that?

You want to know how I write. You want to know how I express ideas. To help you with this

  • I publish dedicated pages on every possible question or doubt you may have regarding my content writing services.
  • I regularly share my knowledge with you through my content writing and content marketing blog.
  • I provide you samples of my work.
  • I improve my search engine rankings so that you can find me for relevant keywords and search terms.

This gives me plenty to write about.

This brings us to the question of how you can publish quality content in your website or blog regularly, for your particular business. You can do the following…

Maintain a list of topics

Maintaining a topic listThere are many tools you can use these days to maintain a list of topics. You will be creating topics according to the topics, and consequently, the keywords that you want to cover.

Remember that topics must be consistent with the central theme of your website or blog. If you are a mobile app development company them most of your topics must be about mobile app development and related fields.

You can use a simple note book to jot down content writing ideas. You can use something like Google Keep. You can use Evernote. You can use an Excel sheet. Or Trello cards. Whatever you find convenient. But, definitely have a system of maintaining topics.

Use something you can immediately use. As you write more and more and get into the habit of thinking proactively about your content, ideas will suddenly come and if you don’t record them immediately, you may lose them.

Always be on the lookout for topic ideas

Lookout for content writing topics

Don’t start thinking about what to write when you start writing. One option is keep your ideas repository nearby. Another option is to constantly be at the lookout. Check you Twitter timeline to see what the others in your stream are publishing. Subscribe to feeds and use something like Feedly. Subscribe to email updates that send you new blog posts and articles about your industry right in the inbox. Use Google Alerts. Interact in the forums, or at least follow the discussion threads.

If you have had an informative conversation with your client, even that can be a source of a great topic (you don’t have to reveal the name of your client).

Respond to articles and blog posts published somewhere else

Image result for respond pngAgree with something published in another website or blog? Disagree? Got something if your own? Why not respond through your own blog post or article?

In fact, this is how initially blogging spread…long time ago when it wasn’t yet associated with content marketing and SEO. Someone wrote something on his or her blog and then the others responded through their own blog post, linking to the original post. It doesn’t just make blogging interesting, it also gives you new ideas on an ongoing basis.

Repurpose your existing content

Content grows on content. Your existing content is teeming with new content writing ideas. Take for example this subtopic “Repurpose your existing content” – I have previously written a complete blog post just on this topic – How to repurpose would content.

Creating your blog posts out of existing blog posts and articles is just one way of repurposing your existing content. You can also create

  • Infographics
  • Random images to post on Instagram
  • Slides
  • Small e-books by combining multiple blog posts
  • YouTube videos
  • Social media posts

Read books and magazines in your field

Read books and articles for new content writing ideasDeveloping and expertise, in-depth knowledge in your field is very essential to creating quality content. Books, at least it is assumed, are often written by experts are people who have done lots of research and have come up with new insights into your profession. They give you lots of food for thought. You can find lots of topics in these niche books an marketing d magazines.

Hire an experienced content writer

Hire an experienced content writer

Hire an experienced content writer

“Experienced” is the key word here. Everyone can write occasionally. But if you need to publish high quality content on your website on an ongoing basis, it is better to collaborate with an experienced content writer rather than trying to do it on your own. You may be an expert in your field. You may also be able to articulate your thoughts through writing. But can you do it consistently? Do you have enough time to follow a schedule?

Remember that regularity is very important for successful content marketing. If you publish content haphazardly, although over a long period of time it will definitely benefit you, it will depend on chance. But if you regularly publish high-quality content following a strict pattern, the benefit will be more consistent, more predictable. This is something a content writer can provide you.

You may like to read 20 benefits of hiring professional content writing services.

Maintain a content publishing calendar

Content publishing calendar

Content publishing calendar

A content publishing calendar is basically a topics and ideas list, but with dates and timeframe attached to every stages. A calendar tells you what you will be publishing on a particular date. This instills a sense of organization into your publishing process.

You also spend some time with your content writer deciding on various topics, deciding on when certain topics should be drafted and scheduled. The more you get into the habit of organising and scheduling, the better will be the inflow of ideas.

Curate content

Content Curation

Content Curation

Curation is also a good way of publishing content regularly without running out of it. Curation means finding well-written blog posts and articles on other websites and then linking to them from your own website with small input from you. It takes just a few minutes and before you know it, a repository of quality content begins to build up under your domain.

Concluding remarks

Just like in any form of marketing, successful content marketing, requires consistency. A pattern needs to exist. If you decide to publish something every Wednesday, then it should be published every Wednesday. If every 15 days you want to publish a long blog post, then you need to stick to this schedule. As mentioned above, if you cannot come up with original topics regularly, you can link to content published elsewhere. Make sure the content that you publish – whether you publish original content, or you curate it, make sure that it helps your visitors.

What is conversational content writing?

What is conversational content writing?

What is conversational content writing?

There was a time when content writing was mostly done to improve search engine rankings for selected search terms or keywords.

Although, still, the primary reason why clients contact my content writing services is to improve their search engine rankings – which my content writing definitely achieves for them – they also understand the importance of conversational writing. They know that to be effective, their writing needs to make an impact.

It’s a welcome change. It shows that they have begun to understand what an important role content writing plays in the success of their business. It no longer is just a tool to mindlessly fill the website with “keyword-centric” content for SEO.

What does conversational content writing mean?

In very simple terms, conversational content writing means writing in the way we normally talk.

What is conversational content writing?

What is conversational content writing?

How do we talk?

Do you talk to a friend like this – “In view of the last conversation that we had pertaining to your conference proposal I would like to put forth a suggestion that you may like to consider while making the presentation.”

You don’t. You may simply say, “Remember the talk about your conference? Would you mind if I suggested something? I feel it will really help you make a better presentation.”

We don’t use very long sentences. We don’t use complicated expressions. We use day-to-day words.

Since conversation means an informal talk, we’re not talking to impress, and the same holds true for writing. We’re not writing to impress, we are writing to engage.

It’s just like talking to a friend or a casual acquaintance.

No, I don’t mean you should use abusive words (just like you use them with your friends) in content writing, but even without using cuss words you can be conversational.

Many writing experts or advisors say that you don’t need to be a stickler for grammar rules, but I think it depends on what you’re writing.

On one hand you don’t want to come off as a person who doesn’t know the language he or she is writing in, on the other hand, your writing shouldn’t sound as if lots of effort is being put in to sound “polished”.

A word of caution: there is a difference between writing in a conversational style and dumbing down your writing.

For example, you can write on blockchain technology and its implications on bank transactions, using all the jargon that is being used in the industry, but still, you can make your writing conversational.

Why conversational content writing is better?

Casual conversations are more effective

Casual conversations are more effective

You want to engage your readers.

You don’t want to bore them or put them off or distract them by using words and expressions they don’t understand.

Remember that content writing is all about achieving the end goal – getting more business.

The purpose of content writing isn’t showcasing your writing prowess.

The person who is reading your blog post or your email message must feel at ease. He or she shouldn’t feel intimidated. The sentences and phrases must not sound lifeless.

Also, it is easier to trust a person who talks to you rather than delivers a long monologue of highfalutin words, expressions and promises that sound bizarre.

Stiff writing sounds artificial whereas, conversational writing sounds authentic.

“Proper” writing makes you sound distant whereas, conversational writing style makes you seem like a friend or an acquaintance.

Also, once you practice, it’s easier to write content in conversational style compared to the formal style you might be used to.

Here are some benefits of writing content in conversational style:

  1. Easier reading for your visitors and email recipients.
  2. Clarity of thought as you focus more on the message and less on how you should write that message.
  3. Simpler sentences make bigger impact as people’s brains aren’t occupied with trying to decipher what you have written.
  4. Your readers can easily identify with you because you talk in their language.

Conversational content writing is better for SEO

Conversational content writing is better for SEO

Conversational content writing is better for SEO

Your SEO is decided by artificial intelligence driven by the machines. Although the ranking algorithms used by major search engines like Google and Bing are quite advanced, they prefer simpler sentences that mean exactly what you are writing.

Conversational content writing makes you write simpler, to-the-point sentences.

It is advised that a sixth grader should be easily able to understand what you’re writing.

If a sixth grader can make sense of what you have written, so can artificial intelligence.

How to write in conversational style?

When newbie content writers approach me and seek my advice on how they should write, I always tell them, they should write as they talk minus grammar mistakes.

Every writer who truly wants to write has a unique style.

Sure, many organizations and businesses prefer to stick to a style guide, and there is nothing wrong in that, but the style guide is mostly used to structure the content rather than dictate how a content writer must write.

Listed below are some pointers to keep in mind when you’re trying to write your content in conversational style.

Assume someone is sitting in front of you having coffee, and talk to that person

Talk as if sitting across a coffee table

Talk as if sitting across a coffee table

This is the easiest way of adopting a conversational style while writing content.

Imagine someone sitting at the coffee table in front of you and your talking to that person.

Remember that depending on who that person is (defining the persona) you may slightly change the way you talk to him or her, but basically, the keyword is “talk”.

If it helps, before writing, record. Use an audio recorder on your phone and communicate your message just the way you are talking to someone.

Don’t pretend to sound erudite. Having said that, if this is your natural style, then sure, play around with it.

Basically, no matter how you write, it shouldn’t be stiff.

Make ample use of “You” and “I”

Speak in terms of you and I

Speak in terms of you and I

Write in the first person as much as possible. Since, conversational style means talking to someone and assuming that a person is sitting in front of you, it makes more sense to use “you” and “I” instead of “you” and “we”.

Though, I will admit that it is not always possible to use “I” instead of “we” especially when you are writing on behalf of your business. On your official web pages, it makes more sense to write in terms of “we” because we are writing on behalf of your entire team, but on the blogs, it is better to use the personal touch.

Also, when you are sending out email campaigns, it is always better to use your name and then use “I” and “you” instead of “we offer this” and “we offer that”.

Tell a story

Tell a story through conversational content writing

Tell a story through conversational content writing

“Tell a story” has almost become a cliché in the realms of content writing and content marketing. What does it really mean?

It’s like, instead of telling that my content writing services are awesome and then leaving it at that, I give you a live example of…

Mr. Mason’s business wasn’t growing because of low conversion rate. Even his search engine traffic wasn’t picking.

He had worked with a few content writers, but after having spent a few hundred dollars and having published 20 odd blog posts, the performance of his website was the same it was before he started trying out various content writers.

Then he came across my Credible Content website and liked how I have structured the main web pages and the amount of information that I have shared on my content writing and content marketing blog.

Since he had already been disappointed with his previous content writers, he contacted me skeptically.

At the outset I told him that more than “SEO content” he needed good content, conversational content, and engaging content.

There was no emotion in his existing content.

If you don’t feel enthusiastic when talking to people, how are you going to motivate people into becoming your paying customers and clients?

Whatever he had written on his website, it didn’t feel that he really meant it.

We agreed to revamp his existing content instead of writing new content because although his current content wasn’t performing, he had chosen good topics and those topics were relevant to his business.

So, I spruced up his main content and blog posts. I rewrote content that was looking like essays into two-way conversations.

Totally recognizing his need for better SEO, I rearranged the text to make it more search engine friendly.

The existing content was quite thin. I rearranged some of the posts into authoritative, long form blog posts and included verified data from trusted resources.

I set up a routine/content calendar for him, which is very important.

In a couple of months, both his rankings and bounce rate improved.

Now he is regularly getting content from me. His business is picking up.

That’s a story.

Try to help people

Help people through content writing

Help people through content writing

When you are constantly trying to make people do something for you, your stakes are higher, and this shows in your writing.

Instead, just try to help people. Helping gives you confidence. When you have confidence, it automatically shows through. Confidence makes conversational content writing easier and seamless.

Helping doesn’t always mean writing tutorials. Helping also means helping them make a decision in your favor.

So, if writing tutorials is not your game, you can publish industry news.

If new research data is regularly available in your niche, analyze the data and explain it to your visitors.

You can publish news. You can publish interviews. You can respond to blog posts and articles published elsewhere.

The basic idea is, regularly generate engaging, useful content you are enthusiastic about. You will be automatically writing conversational content.

The importance of understanding user intent in content writing

Importance of understanding user intent for content writing

Importance of understanding user intent for content writing

In India there is a famous Bollywood song sung by the legendary Kishore Kumar: Hum the wo thi aur sama ranged samajh gaye na? Jaate the Japan pahunch gaye cheen samajh gaye na?

Roughly translated, it means, I was there, and she was there, and the weather was magical, but, while trying to reach Japan, we reached China (means, I meant to say something else, but I said something else).

The second expression of the song, trying to reach Japan but reaching China, often happens in SEO, and due to faulty content writing.

When writing content for SEO, it is very important to understand the user intent: exactly why a person is using a search term to find information he or she is looking for.

If you haven’t optimized for the right search terms, you may get lots of traffic, but the traffic won’t convert, and then you will wonder why it’s not happening.

It’s like, you run an art gallery where people should come and buy, but they think it is a museum, so they simply visit, admire the art, and leave.

There was a time when the sole purpose of search engine optimization was increasing traffic.

Businesses even used banners with animated monkeys and asking users to click on the monkey and then when people clicked on it, they were taken to a website. Such was the level of directionlessness and desperation.

As the dust settled and “SEO experts” as well as website owners realized that more traffic didn’t necessarily mean more business, greater stress was laid on conversion.

Understanding user intent and then writing content accordingly, is the best way of improving your conversion rate.

In terms of SEO, what is user intent?

What is the intent for searching?

What is the intent for searching?

What is the intention of the user? Why is he or she using the search engine at this very moment?

Is he or she looking for information to increase general knowledge or he or she is looking for something to buy?

Suppose, someone searches for “content writing”.

Now, merely by looking at the phrase “content writing” you cannot make out whether someone looking for this term wants to learn about content writing, is researching about the topic, or looking for a content writing service?

If someone searches for “what is content writing” it is clear that the person wants to know what the term means.

If someone searches for “content writing services” it becomes clear. The person is looking for a content writing service.

If someone searches for “how to set up a content writing service” the intent is completely clear. The person wants to learn how to set up a content writing service.

If a person searches for “content writing service for my web design business”, again, the intent is completely clear. This person is looking for a content writing service for his web design business.

This HubSpot blog post explains the concept of understanding the user intent with the example of a pizza. The author is a Google rater. The author explains how to use the experience of a Google rater to understand the importance of user intent and then create content accordingly.

Recommended reading: How to write content for Google’s human quality raters

How to understand user intent for your own business?

The same way: don’t go for general terms. When writing content for your business, focus on longtail keywords.

Recommended reading: How to incorporate longtail keywords into content writing

Writing your content according to longtail keywords makes user intent as clear as it gets.

Think from your own point of view. When you are searching on Google, you want to find the most appropriate information for your search.

To make sure that you find the right information, you submit a search query that is as precise as possible.

Recently my wife wanted to find a sofa repair service in the neighbourhood. It wouldn’t have been much helpful if she had simply searched for “sofa”, or “repairing sofa” or “sofa repair” or, totally skipping sofa and searching “repair service”.

She searched for “sofa repair service in Indirapuram”. Although the listing that she found was from JustDial.com, it is the most appropriate query for the job and hence, if you are a sofa repair service that wants to attract customers in Indirapuram you must target for this search term. Here, the user intent is as clear as it can be.

For your business, instead of going for generic keywords, go for the exact product or service, or the exact feature your target customer or client should be looking for.

If you are an interior design company, it would be nice if you could manage to get yourself listed on Google’s first page for the search term “interior design company”.

Realistically it might not be possible considering there might be thousands of interior design companies vying for the same position.

Instead, aim for something like “interior design company in LA” or, “interior design agency in LA” or, “interior design company for residential complexes” or, “interior design company for my reception area” – try to understand the user intent and then create/write the content accordingly.

Here is that song, very hilarious.

33 great content writing tips for content writers

33 content writing tips for content writers

33 content writing tips for content writers

No, I’m not writing these 33 great content writing tips for content writers, I’m simply linking to this excellent blog post that has collected opinions from highly experienced and talented content marketers and writers.

As you must have noticed – or you haven’t, because this is just a second such post – I have started publishing shorter blog posts, mostly linking to content writing and content marketing posts published on other blogs and websites, with a small take from yours truly.

Of course, this is not going to be my dominant blog posting pattern, I’m going to do it just when I’m too busy to create lengthy blog posts of my own. When I get lots of assignments, my blog lies in a state of neglect, sometimes even for a month, which is not good.

As I have written in this blog post titled Why it is important to publish fresh content regularly on your website, if I don’t publish content for a long time, other content publishers surpass me and my traffic from search engines decreases. Queries from my website suddenly begin to dwindle.

It doesn’t mean when I’m writing lots of blog posts – lengthy blog posts – I have less work, no, those are my more efficient days and somehow I’m able to manage to shuffle between writing for this blog and writing for my clients. Sometimes I lose this balance, and since I cannot afford to neglect client work, the blog ends up being neglected.

Coming back to the 33 content writing tips for content writers. If you don’t feel like visiting the above link, I’m presenting those steps as bulleted points below:

  1. Let your individuality drip through your writing. Just because you are writing for a business doesn’t mean you cannot write with a flourish. Use humor. Give your readers some rude shocks. Contradict. Be flamboyant. But remember one thing, your sole purpose is to promote the brand or the business for which you are writing.
  2. Write useful content. People will be reading your content to either get entertained or to derive some mileage out of it– for example, you are reading these content writing tips either to improve your content writing, or just to get an idea so that you are more aware when you are working with a content writer.
  3. As I mentioned in .1, be yourself as a writer, but always put the needs of your readers before your desire to be a writer. Write to help them.
  4. Know the pain points of your readers and address them as soon as possible.
  5. Be consistent. Although as a content writer this tip is good if you are writing for your own website or blog (like yours truly), what it means to say is, you need to publish your content regularly. Better, follow a pattern. If you have decided that you are going to publish one blog post every week, then make sure that you publish one blog post every week.
  6. Provide answers to people’s questions. Provide them as much information as you have or can gather. Write in such a manner that they can easily follow what you are saying because they might be accessing your answers from their mobile devices.
  7. Pay attention to your title. The title is the hook that is going to draw people to the body content. The title is also important to get clicks from search engines and other websites because it is your title that often appears as the main hyperlink. If your title is uninspiring, no matter how great the rest of the content is, you are not going to get much leverage.
  8. Write share-worthy content. What it means is, whenever you are writing, put all your energies into it and make it as good as possible.
  9. Challenge your readers. To keep them interested in your writing, you can always withhold some information. It isn’t always necessary to give them all the answers they seek. Maintain the curiosity level by holding back some information.
  10. Editing. Proofreading.
  11. Authentic.
  12.  Relate to your readers’ needs and write accordingly.
  13. Be yourself.
  14. Do something original and then write. Don’t regurgitate (as I’m doing with this post). You will come up with original ideas if you stretch yourself and do something out-of-the-box, and then write about it.
  15. Write something you care about. People will be able to feel your enthusiasm through your words. If you’re not an enthusiastic about what you’re writing, your writing will seem boring and uninspiring to your readers.
  16. Write contemporary and topical content.
  17. Present accurate data, but with your own personal twist.
  18. Focus on originality. For that, for a change, instead of writing blog posts, you can write case studies because case studies are normally unique because they are written around a particular situation and its solution.
  19. Share your experiences. Share what you have learnt yourself.
  20. Make your writing valuable (I know, many of these tips are repetitive).
  21. Empathize with your readers (again, repetitive).
  22. Understand your audience and master your craft.
  23. Have fun. If you have fun writing, people will have fun reading – this is actually true.
  24. Use very focused, succinct and crisp sentences. Longer sentences confuse people.
  25. Tell unique stories. Tell stories that only you can tell.
  26. Write for one person. It is like, define a persona, and then write for that persona. This is some advice that I often give to my clients (at least those who care to talk to me). You don’t need to please everybody. You don’t need to target every keyword in your industry.
  27. Experience (yup, I know).
  28. What’s the point in what you are writing?
  29. Know your audience inside and out (again, again, again).
  30. What is the purpose of writing what you are writing?
  31. Define the personality of the person you are writing for and then solely pour your heart out to that person.
  32. If not one, then write for two people (yes, this is a tip too).
  33. Always keep a big list of ideas with you so that you never run out of them (a very good tip).

So, these are the tips compiled in the above-linked blog post. When I was writing the steps above, as you realized it with me, many tips are repetitive and this seems to be one of those posts when more than the content, what’s important is linking to influencers so that you can tell them that you have linked to them and then hopefully, they will link back to you or they will tweet about you.

But, anyway, it is always good to revisit good things about your craft because it keeps you focused.