10 Tips on Writing the Living Web
posted in Writing tips |I found these over at A List Apart. They’re excellent advice for either webloggers or print-loggers, err, paper-writers. These are their headings, with my explanations or synopses, or just plain ole ’shoot from the hip responses.’
- Write for a reason
Well, duh. And make the reason more than just “I burped today. It tasted like pizza.” Although that could be interesting, in the right context. A few of my posts have been more filler than content, I’ll admit, but that falls into the ‘Write Often’ category. - Write often
What if nothing exciting has happened since the last post? Write about something mildly interesting happening in the news. Write about something dorky. Do a book review. Prove to your readers that your life is more than “get up, go to work, come home, eat, sleep, get up.” Sometimes, I’ll admit, I do things just so I’ll have something to blog about. Or I’ll write about something really dull (woo, running over to the school and back).
- Write tight
Definately. Don’t use very too many words, ok? And also eschew obfuscation. - Make good friends
Get some. Some of mine are better than I thought.
Find like-minded webloggers who you can link to in times of stress. - Find good enemies
Joseph Conrad wrote of enemies: “You shall judge of a man by his foes as well as by his friends.” (more enemy quotes). A good enemy is a foil for your own beliefs, someone strong who you can argue with. Be careful about treating them with respect. They may read your weblog too, and they can write … too. - Let the story unfold
You’re a storyteller. Do it. - Stand up, speak out
If you see an injustice, you have a voice. Use it. - Be sexy
Sex is, according to my nonscientific poll, roughly 85% of the Internet Business Section is related to sex. The other 15% has to do with refinancing your home mortgage. - Use your archives
Link to yourself, in your archives. Make your archives search-engine friendly. When someone is reading an archive page, make it easy to find out who you are and what you’re currently writing about. - Relax!
We’re all just people. Well, maybe if Thomas Jefferson was blogging, you could feel a little shy. But he’s not.

