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Battling Internet ADHD: Ten Tips for Writers
by David Beveridge

Write for a reason
Get to the point. One of the basic references for Web design is Steve Krugs, Dont Make Me Think. My book for Web writers (not yet available in stores) will be called, Dont Make Me Yawn. The Great Democracy that is the Web has spawned far more spam and yammer than thoughtful prose. Dont fall in love with your own voice. Make sure every word supports the message.

Write for scanners
The five-second rule applies, only make it shorter. Visitors look at a Web page, then they read it. Think of your page as the cover of a magazine. A visitor will first absorb the total picture, then kick into reading mode and skip tra-la from headline to headline until they find, a) what theyre looking for, or, b) something better. Dont lose the scanners with deathless prose.

Get engaged
Lively writing will draw visitors to your message.
I know youre trying to be precise. I know youre trying to be complete. I know you need to get the whole message across. I know. Believe me. Im reading it and trying to...zzzz.

Compartmentalize
Give long content a good home.
Okay, sometimes content gets long. Sometimes it is supposed to be long. Sometimes it even has to be long. Understood. When that is the case, tease it up front, and put the long content where the long content goes. People who want to read it will follow the trail, and the rest of us will be spared.

Grammar kind of counts
Complete thoughts...less important...key words...phrases. Just kidding, ha ha. The point is, this may not be advertising writing, it may not be headline writing, and it had better not be bad writing. But in most cases it also is not pure narrative. Sentences, loaded with subordinate clauses, clogged with interesting but unnecessary detail, need not begin slowly, gain traction, and rise to a crescendo before a graceful, gradual, inevitable descent to a complete, satisfying end.
Just say it, and get out.

Smooth or Extra Chunky
Just enough information makes visitors feel refreshed!
Chunk your content into easily digestible portions. My brother-in-law-the-restaurateur talks about plate coverage, making sure the beans and the catfish and the French fries coexist in harmony and balance. Portion control for your visitors comes from teasers and intro paragraphs and Learn more… and Read article…. Chunking your content gives visitors a taste, rather than a force-feeding.

Tighten it up
When I was in grade school, my newspaper editor father reviewed my papers for me. He never understood why I cried when my three-page report on Chile became a two-paragraph brief under the machete slash of his red pencil. But he was right. I didnt need that word. I didnt need that paragraph. I had said the same thing on the previous page. I did need to revise and rewrite and cut and cut some more. I did, and I still do, and so do you. Writer, edit thyself.



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