The best tips for online writing with reference to famous celebrities (Article for training purposes)

Writing online, optimising for search engines and marketing your digital content via social media isn’t rocket science. In fact, the basics of digital journalism, SEO and getting seen on Facebook or Twitter are really simple, but it’s the rigorous application of them that can prove problematic for a lot of people. But you can learn how to nail your blog posts, get ranked first on Google and become a social networking expert by learning from generic celebrity X.

Yellow Journalism

 

Discovering, sourcing and verifying articles:

There are a number of ways for online journalists to discover promising new stories. In addition to building contacts the traditional way, it’s possible to use social networking tools such as Twitter Search or Google Trends to monitor for a sudden surge in traffic for a term or phrase. And social networks can also be incredibly useful for finding people to quote or interview, in addition to specific tools for journalists, such as Newsbasis or Help A Reporter Out.

Using data in this way can be a temptation to emulate a content farm, but can also be useful for quality, investigative journalism and great content.

 

SEO

Delivering online journalism and SEO content:

Make sure your articles are written for people first, but ensure that search engines are also included in your audience with a few basic steps, such as including your keyword early in your article, ideally with a link to a relevant part of your site and the desired anchor text. And don’t forget to put your keyword first in your short and relevant headline.

Research variations on your keyword or phrase to avoid repetition, and don’t be tempted to just stuff your content with the same keyword over and over again as it won’t increase your ranking, but will annoy your readers. If you’re looking for relevant keywords, you can use Google’s keywords tool to find which are the subject of popular searches, whether for global or local audiences. You can also use H1, H2 and H3 tags on your site to ensure the right sections are highlighted.

Social Media Day

 

Social Media and inbound links

Social Media won’t necessarily help you rank higher in Google, but it can drive traffic to your site, and also help to get content indexed more quickly by the search engines. You can post links to your content to Twitter, Facebook and Google+, and you should find that it appears in search results faster, particularly if it is repeated by popular Twitter users.

You can also gain inbound links by posting comments on relevant blogs in the same subject area as your article, as long as you leave genuine and interesting comments and your article is relevant. You can also email the bloggers and website owners who run sites in your area of expertise and ask if they’d be interested in linking to your article, quoting from it, or even offering to guest post for them.

The important thing is not to spam either your social networks or fellow bloggers, and not to worry too much about whether links are DOFollow or NOFollow – a natural ratio of incoming links includes both, so you’ll look like a spammer if you only have one.

 

If you love good ideas, let them go…

When I mentioned the questions and answers service I set up on a site many years ago in my post on responding to negative reviews, it reminded me of something I meant to write a while ago.

Like most people who have worked in digital, I’ve spent many an hour trying to come up with new ideas or ways to evolve an existing one. Sometimes that’s been on behalf of an employer, and sometimes it’s been that search for the elusive ‘next Google/next Facebook’ that I suspect most of us spend time daydreaming about.

Besides the recent high profile sucess of a few Q and A sites, I’ve also seen the former UK rival of 140char.com get acquired. I say ‘former rival’ because towards the end of last year I wound down posting original content on the site and effectively put it on life support by simply collecting links about microblogging on Diigo which are then autposted. Meanwhile Shea Bennett continued to post brilliant content on Twittercism.com, which is now part of the MediaBistro empire (recognition which is heartily well-deserved).

At the same time, I also saw news of startup funding for a company which aggregates affiliate offers, but then automatically selects the one with the lowest price for you to recommend to people. Annoyingly I don’t have the link to hand, but I’ll be digging it out to follow the progress, as this was a suggestion I once made to pivot the Ditto project which I worked on a few years ago. And about 12-18 months ago, I’d started asking a few people about a great idea I’d had for a new startup which worked around content filtering – within the space of a week, I’d seen a news article about someone getting funding to launch just that service!

Image courtesy annais on Flickr (CC Licence)

This isn’t a post to claim I’m hard done by, or unrecognised genius. Question and answer sites aren’t a revolutionary concept, Twittercism was always a far more focused product which continued to build an audience with great content, and there’s nothing to guarantee either startup will succeed with or without funding.

But it’s about ideas, and one of the things I’ve realised over the last decade.

If you think you’ve got a great idea for something, whether it’s a digital idea or in the ‘real world’, there are three alternatives:

  1. Hold it really close, don’t tell anyone, and keep planning that one day someone will drop the £1 million you need in your lap by magic. Someone else might have the same idea, and you can complain that it was your idea first.
  2. Let it go by telling people about it, sharing it, and evolving it publicly. Someone else might have the same idea. Someone else might develop a business around your idea. Or you might find yourself being asked to get involved with people sharing the idea – whether that comes from rich investors or a group of people who think your idea is cool. One of the joys of the virtual world is that there is a huge pool of people who may have similar ideas and viewpoints who have complimentary talents, skills and resources that can help you.
  3. Go and bloody do it. Find money. Bootstrap it. Work on it in the evening if you need to support yourself through the day. Get the lowest minimum version of it out and see if people want it (And not just family and friends being nice).

And that’s really what I mean by saying you should let good ideas go – not just that you should let them fly freely away, but you should give them an engine, and see if they run for yourself. Just don’t sit on them endlessly waiting in case they magically hatch.

Image courtesy ieshraq on Flickr (CC Licence)

The best thing about all this is that it shows a percentage of my ideas are in the same ballpark as some successful businesses, or are in a ballpark deemed worth pursuing by others, which validates them by competition, if not success. Ideas aren’t a finite resource, and now, more than ever, I’m in a position where I’m able to choose the ones I believe are worth pursuing, and to let the others go. And without wanting to overdramatise, there’s something nice about knowing that if I miss an opportunity now, it’s because I’m in the middle of actively pursuing some others, whether it’s microniche publishing, or getting together with interesting digital people in the local area.

A quick sneaky peek…

There’s not much there yet, but just had to share some of the excitement that’s building behind this image…

Jodanma digital design and development

And there’s a basic holding page at Jodanma.com if you’re at all intrigued, with a lot more to come (We can’t reveal our first clients yet, for example, but they’re great ones!)

The magical power of great writing and insight

Sometimes the effect that great writing and content can have is almost magical, whether it’s due to what is on the page or screen, or due to the timing of it. For instance, having written about some of the different inputs that are helping me create better work, I fired up Tweetdeck today, and the first thing I saw was @Documentally tweeting a link to his own take on a same subject.

The power of great content has also been hitting me from various angles this weekend, thanks to the often-documented genius of two great writers – Arthur C Clarke and Cory Doctorow. As I went through a pile of old books for sorting, filing or selling, I fell into re-reading Childhood’s End, which was originally written by Clarke in 1952, although my version has a re-written foreword and first chapter from 1990. Considering the book was partly inspired by the site of barrage balloons over London during World World 2, imagine the power of seeing the following, particularly at the same time as reading the latest UK issue of Wired, which features this article by Steven Levy on artificial intelligence, and leads with the application of AI to sorting in warehouses.

“The average working week was now about twenty hours – but those twenty hours were no sinecure. There was little work left of a routine, mechanical nature. Men’s minds were too valuable to waste on tasks that a few thousand transistors, some photo electric cells, and a cubic metre of printed circuits could perfor. There were factories that ran for weeks without being visited by a single human being. Men were needed for trouble-shooting, for making decisions, for planning new enterprises. The robots did the rest”

As Steven Levy notes, AI was being looked at in the 1950′s, and the eventual direction of the current successful AI is different to the original plans of replicating the human brain. But even so, that almost 60-year-old paragraph from Clarke can’t fail to resonate. And as someone with a young child and a corresponding diet of animated films, this also really stood out.

“The hundred years since the time of Disney had still left much undone in this most flexible of mediums. On the purely realistic side, results could be produced indistinguishable from actual photography – much to the contempt of those who were developing the cartoon along abstract lines.”

Again, not necessarily something that was inconceivable in the 50s, but something that is hitting us now with the likes of Avatar, or the massive leaps in videogame cinematics over the last 10-20 years.
On the platform, reading

Present day technology and predictions:

But what of the present day? Someone once wrote that the way to predict what technology would arrive was to read popular science-fiction, because that hugely influences the interests and passions of the geeks who go on to make it a reality…

Well, I’ve recently given my father two Cory Doctorow books (Available as free downloads from Cory’s site, or via the likes of Amazon in dead tree format), and I’ve also bought one for my partner, and as she rarely reads any geeky things I put in front of her, I bribed her with some chocolate to give it a try…

reading

Remember, at this point, that my family all believe I have what my good friend @pjeedai refers to as a ‘Chandler Job‘. They understand I work on a computer, and at some point, I’m able to pay some bills and buy food for another month.

Having read Little Brother, I now have a partner who not only enjoyed the book, but is slightly more interested in what it is I do, and what I’m passionate about. And I can now mention cryptography without her eyes glazing over completely.

But the biggest and best surprise of all has been buying my dad copies of ‘Makers‘ and ‘For The Win‘. Having spent years trying to bridge the gap between his talents at practical stuff – in addition to working as an electrician, he’s also a dab hand with cars, and a talented artist – and my supposed skills at writing and ephemeral digital stuff such as social media and gaming, one of my big joys was hearing him talk about 3D Printing after reading Makers, and seeing some of the ways in which it’s immensely inspiring, disruptive and important. Hence why my plan to purchase a Makerbot is increasingly important.

I thought ‘For The Win’ would be riskier – it’s a more alien subject, as it deals with unionisation of gamers in virtual worlds – but as someone who has experienced unions and working practices in the real world for his whole life, I figured he might find it interesting. But the biggest personal thing for me is that I’ve been talking about gaming, virtual worlds and virtual economies to people for years, and my dad never really got what the hell I was talking about. Until I spoke to him on the phone last night, and he said that now he understood all the gaming stuff I’d been telling him about – and started asking me a few questions about it.

With great writing comes great effects:

Without diving into the world of literary semiotics, there’s a whole world of meaning and significance which come the person ‘consuming’ content, rather than those creating it, regardless of their original artistic intent. And that’s something which can reach and affect people after decades, or hundreds of years, in deeply personal and moving ways, or in ways that can inspire movements. It’s also something which you can occasionally lose sight of, particularly in an age of search engines, content farms, and corporate content.

Never forget that by investing time and effort in crafting something to the best of your ability, that you may get back far, far more than you put into it!