Last week, I attended BlogWorld & New Media Expo, a three-day conference and tradeshow for bloggers, podcasters, Web content creators and social media innovators. While I wasn’t able to attend all 130+ sessions, I did listen in on some very good ones and have been recapping them here.
Also available: 7 Deadly Social Sins, a recap of the session featuring UnMarketing’s Scott Stratten; How to Humanize Your Brand, featuring Livefyre’s Jenna Langer; Reporting for Bloggers, with tips from journalist David Copeland; 7 Don’ts of Online Community Management, featuring Debba Haupert; How to Attract Members to Your Online Community, which featured a panel of four experts; and 40+ Content Creation Ideas for Your Blog, with Rich Brooks.
We often talk about the science of blogging, but we don’t often talk about the art of blogging -- and blogging is most definitely an art. As someone who blogs regularly, I know how hard it is to get people to read blog posts. And let’s be real -- it doesn’t matter how good your content is if no one is reading it.
In this session, Nate Riggs, director of social business for The Karcher Group, shared his tips for creating list posts, which he said are some of the most-shared content on the Web (along with how-to’s).
Following are highlights of his presentation:
Frameworks
With blogs, the framework (or style) you use makes it easier to stay consistent in your blogging practice. Your content becomes more inviting, readable and memorable, and it helps you stand out in a crowded space.
Think about it: If all else is equal, including content, the style of your blog posts makes all the difference and can help you get readers. That’s readers, not traffic -- there’s a big difference. Readers are going to get you to your end goal.
List Types
There are three different list styles:
- Simple list: more than 10 listed items (e.g., “101 Ways to…”). Tip: Include backlinks. If you include 20 backlinks, the people you linked to will share it and it will open your post up to more people.
- Detailed list: less than 10 items. Although it has less items, it includes much more detailed descriptions with each, maybe even paragraphs. Tips: If using paragraphs, bold the first sentence. Long paragraphs are unattractive to read.
- Blended-media list: non-text based. These are especially easy posts to read because they’re not text-heavy.
With lists, the title becomes very important. People are attracted to numbers in the title (e.g., “8 Actionable Tips to Master the List Post.”)
8 Actionable Tips
Riggs shares these eight tips for creating list posts. “These are just frameworks,” he added. “It’s important for you to improvise and find your own style.”
1. Write your list to make a difference for one reader. Write as if you’re talking to one individual person, rather than the whole room. Your writing will have more impact.
2. Draft your list body first. Think about what your list elements are first, and then write the opening and closing.
3. Don’t write in a linear format. Use mind maps to develop list elements at random, and then order the list. Take the ideas in your head, dump them into a document, then order them.
4. Make your lists easy to navigate. Use headers to break up long lists into categories, etc.
5. Always include the number of listed items in the title, e.g., “50 Ideas for…”
6. Place target keywords into your list for SEO juice. “Lists are a great way to build keyword density,” said Riggs.
7. Leave your list incomplete and ask your readers to add listed items in the comments. “Lists aren’t just about teaching someone,” explained Riggs. “They’re also about getting your readers involved.”
8. Experiment with combining list frameworks. Use different list styles within the post.
Again, it all comes down to getting people to read your posts, and lists are very powerful posts.
“We talk about conversion, but if no one reads your stuff, you’re never going to be successful as a blogger,” said Riggs.
What do you think? Are there any tips you’d add to this list?
Whether you're a reporter, blogger, author or other content creator, ProfNet can help you with your search for expert sources. You can send a ProfNet query to tens of thousands of experts and PR agents, or search the more than 50,000 profiles on ProfNet Connect by keyword, institution type and geographic location. Both are free!