Creativity
Writing for the Internet, whether you call it e-copy, web copy,
web text, or website content… is essentially a craft.
Ordinary Writing With A Job To Do
Most websites contain text copy written primarily for the benefit
of the visitor. Websites however, really have two very different
audiences: people and search engine-indexing spiders. Both require
a different style of writing and yet both need to be addressed
by the writing. While this may be best left to the talents of
a professional web content writer, for now I will explore some
basic rules that technical writers use for crafting their writing
to serve both.
If it means business, then your writing should attempt to grab
the
reader's attention quickly and it must be engaging enough to
keep them reading until you have successfully led them take some
form of action.
Writing For The Two Audiences
In reality, it is perhaps more important that your website copy
satisfy the needs of the search engines. After all, in order
to
become visible to your second audience (the visitor) your website
must first receive adequate ranking by your first audience (the
search engines) and be listed near the top of the listing
results… preferably within the first two pages.
Let's first consider your website's second audience, the visitor.
Most website visitors come looking for something specific and
they want it fast so your website better deliver.
Writers must clarify their goals and understand the purpose
of the
website. The site's "unique selling proposition" or
USP, must be in
line with the visitor's purpose for being there. Writers must
know
the type of person being targeted and then write in a conversational
style that is simple and direct.
Concise Writing & Clear Headings
Help Visitors
We tend to read differently from computer screens than from
other offline print mediums. Basically we don't read… we
skim read, ignoring details to better our reading speed. For
this reason website text content must be more objective, more
concise and
easier to browse through. The message must be written so it can
be easily scanned.
Every word on the page must fight for its rightful place and
stay
true to that old adage "less is more." The opening
statement must first solve the visitor's problem. The body of
the page should then list the benefits, not the features.
Writers
ask how the product or company features translate into
customer benefits. What are the benefits for the visitor is
choosing this product or service? Navigating through web page
content
must also be intuitive for the visitor. What works best are
proven layout formats and conventions that most visitors easily
understand. Closing statements must offer an effortless "call to action" using
the easiest, most direct route for the visitor to take, to get
what
they came for. The call to action must be clear-cut with rewards
that are irresistible and reaffirms for the visitor why this
is something they need.
Satisfy Your Site's First Audience…The
Search Engines
For most, this is a hidden problem when it comes to crafting
their
writing. What the search engines want is completely different
from what visitors are looking for. Search engine indexing spiders work primarily with text, visible
HTML text that is. They simply cannot read flash, JavaScript,
graphical text, etc. Your web page text copy must therefore be
placed within the html coding so that it is more accessible to
the search engine
spiders, more "search engine friendly" if you will.
But just as text copy must be properly placed within the html
coding in order conform to the needs of the search engines, the
writing itself,
also needs to be "search engine friendly".
The writing
needs to be keyword rich with relevant content that
supports the keyword phrases being targeted within the page.
When a searcher types in a "keyword phrase" the
search engine tries to match up web pages in the order that
it thinks
is the
most relevant to the searcher's request. Essentially, the search
engine scans
through its database looking for web pages that contain the
keywords used by the searcher. Using an algorithm (a mathematical
formula
based
on hundreds of pre-set criteria) it then ranks the web pages
from those deemed most relevant to those deemed least relevant. Web page copy must therefore be written to satisfy the "keyword
criteria" needs of the search engines in
order to be ranked at the top of the listing results. Web
pages that consistently maintain high rankings are usually
constructed with excellent keyword
rich html text on static pages.
"Search Engine Friendly" Copy
-Giving Search Engines What They Want
Professional web content writers understand this and write keyword
rich text content that satisfies the needs of the searchengines
while still being valid for the visitor. Once they research and understand what phrases visitors are
using to find what a site is offering, they choose their keyword
phrases carefully. Each page is then written to be content rich
around a theme that supports a main targeted keyword. Inevitably
writers will use variations of a keyword phrase (or other less
compelling
keyword phrases that relate to a particular theme) and work them
into the copy as well.
Search engines look at a variety of criteria as
they relate to
keyword phrases including keyword frequency, weight, prominence,
proximity and placement within the text and within the html.
While each search engine has its own criteria there are a few
accepted norms for keyword placement within the text content
and within the html coding. It is the writers' responsibility
to understand
and utilize these norms.
Spam techniques like hidden layers or hidden text should be
avoided to protect your site from being penalized or banned all
together. While individual pages should contain unique content
they still must work to support the targeted keyword phrases
throughout
the site.
Use Writing That Makes Both People And Search Engines Happy
Writing for the Internet is a craft that has its own style and
set of rules and peculiarities… especially, when it is
trying to address
both people and search engines. As such, it is imperative that
your content be well written/ crafted to satisfy these two distinctly
different audiences. Remember, before it can convert visitors
into clients, your website must first satisfy the needs of its
first audience, the search engines, and achieve top rankings
with them so that it can become more visible to your second audience,
the searcher… your customer.
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About the author:
Chris Genge is the President of 1st on the List Promotion Inc,
a
professional website promotion firm. He writes on current and
emerging search engine marketing theories. Chris has been involved
in
the SEO industry since its very early days, and has since 1997,
focused on researching and implementing the most effective search
engine optimization techniques.
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