Monday, July 1, 2013

How to Write a Blog Post That People Will Read (Part One)

I see them all the time in my Facebook feed. You do too. People's blog posts. And you mean to click them, you really do. But first you have to read this other thing. And somehow you never get back around to your friend's blog post. So when they ask what you thought about it, you shamefully ignore them.

This scenario plays itself out over and over again every day on the internet. So how can YOUR blog avoid this fate? Let's discuss.

If you've been reading this blog so far you know that by now you should have:
You've all done these things right? (Slow nods)

If you've done the second thing especially, you have a few pieces of information at your disposal, especially if you've (smartly) picked something you can naturally talk about and are interested in. You know:
  • The language of your "thing"
  • The things that make people happy about your "thing"
  • The things that frustrate people about your "thing"
Using these pieces of information you can write a blog post that is highly relevant and, more importantly share-able.

Step One: Find out what people are talking about

How do you do that? Consult the great and powerful Google, of course! Use Google Trends and run a few of the keywords you know are associated with your "thing" into it. If your "thing" is gardening, for instance, you might run a search on the words "soil," "planting," or "fertilizer." The articles that come up are trending topics for those keywords.

Google Trends is fairly easy to use. You go there, search the keyword you want to know about (let's go with "garden soil." At the top a line graph will appear with various points marked off by letter. Hover over those letters and you'll see the articles and other media trending on this topic.

 So now you know what people are searching for/reading on your topic of choice. 

Step Two: What do YOU know about what people are talking about?

This is where the last two things come in. Let's go with the analogy about gardening. If you garden you have personal experience with it. Say you see that an article is trending lately on a particular kind of potting soil and you've used it. Perhaps that warrants a review of that soil. Or perhaps it warrants your top five choices for potting soil. Or perhaps a post on picking the right potting soil that mentions the trending potting soil. The possibilities are endless but I think you can see where I'm going with this, right?

Step Three: Craft a blog post that's easy to read and share

How do you do that? Ah...we'll go over THAT in part two of this series. But until then, get to searching and remember that if you have any questions, leave them in the comments! I know somebody is reading this blog!

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