Forum Moderators: not2easy
Short phrases are good headlines to allow easy visual navigation on a page, and listing 6 short phrases as bullets is probably better than trying to incorporate those ideas into a well-worded paragraph.
Nevertheless, conventional sentence structure has its place. News articles, well-crafted product descriptions, etc. require more structure and description than phrases offer.
Yes, I am trying to keep my titles short and short headers too.
But yes I have lots of content for each page, it's just that I thought that the readers don't read complete sentences in the text, so now I am bolding some points in the text, but I want to keep a clean look on the site, it's a tough balance
I know it is imperative to have lots of content for the spiders, I am doing that.
Thank you
Any other tips would be greatly appreciated.
Users should never have to use a link, just to see where it leads.
Then there is the issue of key words in links :)
When you really need detailed info, the experts recommend the newspaper "upside-down pyramid" style.
Start with the bare facts at the top, as in a headline.
Then add more detail in each paragraph below, always putting the most critical info the highest.
Pretend that an editor is going to delete some part nearest the bottom, to help you decide what is really important to include and how high up to put it.
Now, instead of saying "think how special a landscape painting will be in your home? and have landscaped painting a link that goes to the landscape painting page, instead I would just discuss the advatanges of buying a landscaped painting from me?
Would that be better to do on the first page?
Right now, I thought it would be best to make the hyperlink that are some of the keywords inclujded on the home page, but now I think it would be better to do it the other way?
i'm so consufed, and need help!
thanks
-a-
No matter how good or important your point is, no matter how urgent the call to action is, it can easily get missed in the middle of a large block of text.
Personally, I prefer paragraphs that are 4 - 8 lines long. The wider the column, the fewer lines.
To clarify some of the former points just a little:
the pyramid style doesn't just mean writing in headlines or in bullet points. The art of it is to give people with different attention spans or with differing levels of interest as much information as they need or want.
Thus theoretically, a headline would encapsulate the story, as would the first paragraph, then the following three or four paragraphs and then the main body.
Here's an example:
<headline>
Queen Takes Bishop's Porn Check
<first par>
A constitutional court will decide on the legitimacy of Thursday's vice raid on a high-ranking Church of England official, legal experts said today.
<longer intro>
A wrangle between the Church and Buckingham Palace broke out following the search of Anglican premises for what police officers described as "compromising photos".
A senior Palace executive had given the thumbs-up to the raid after the Metropolitan Police officers expressed uncertainty about jurisdiction.
But ecclesiastical lawyers now believe that the police and royal officials may have overstepped the mark - and an application has been made to the House of Lords for review by the Constitutional Court.
<body>
The raid on Canon Albert Sproggett's luxury penthouse near the Palace of Westminster was carried out on Thursday by the Metropolitan Police Anglican Taskforce ....blah blah blah
For good examples of succinct writing look at tabloid papers NOT for their content but for their way of presenting it.
The main web copywriting "crime" I notice is that sentences and paragraphs are far too long.
Edit: correcting excessive instances of the passive voice!
[edited by: stever at 8:30 pm (utc) on Aug. 18, 2004]
For fast scanning or reading, paragraphs should be much shorter than in traditional writing. In general every new thought should also be a new paragraph.
I think this is sometimes referred to as "chunking", breaking up text into "bite-sized" bits.