Post by account_disabled on Dec 20, 2023 3:30:57 GMT -5
We have reached the last chapter of the small web writing course . It's time, therefore, to do some exercises to improve your writing techniques for content published online. Let's summarize the various articles published so far: The theme The title of a page How to write a page title The contents The prominence Relevance and relevance The typography The layout Essentiality and clarity Avoid mistakes How to link The description of the page How to write text for the web Of course, not all articles lend themselves to pure exercises. There is little exercise to do on the topic, but in another form a homework assignment can be assigned.
Exercises on the topic of the site In the chapter on the topic I talked about contextualization and optimization as two essential characteristics for the contents of a site. Features that will allow your texts to be Special Data read and found more easily online. Examine your site: are the texts you have written contextualized and optimized? Before publishing your next post, carefully consider whether it is perfectly in theme with your site. Revise it based on how much it deviated from the topic you are covering. Exercises on page titles I have dedicated two articles to the usefulness of a web page title and how to write it. Its importance for the success of a page is therefore clear.
Insert the titles of the last ten articles or pages you have written into a list and rewrite them, following the advice given in the course. Rewrite the titles of ten articles taken at random from the blogs you follow: do you think they can be improved? Content exercises Content represents the fundamental part of a site , which is nothing more than a container of information. Often considered the last wheel on the wagon, content is the first objective of those who write for the web. A priority that cannot give way to others. I have listed seven characteristics that content must possess: Uniqueness Originality Information Completeness Periodicity Clarity Relevance Re-read the last ten articles you have written and published and list which features you think are missing. Write your next article with all seven of those characteristics in mind.
Exercises on the topic of the site In the chapter on the topic I talked about contextualization and optimization as two essential characteristics for the contents of a site. Features that will allow your texts to be Special Data read and found more easily online. Examine your site: are the texts you have written contextualized and optimized? Before publishing your next post, carefully consider whether it is perfectly in theme with your site. Revise it based on how much it deviated from the topic you are covering. Exercises on page titles I have dedicated two articles to the usefulness of a web page title and how to write it. Its importance for the success of a page is therefore clear.
Insert the titles of the last ten articles or pages you have written into a list and rewrite them, following the advice given in the course. Rewrite the titles of ten articles taken at random from the blogs you follow: do you think they can be improved? Content exercises Content represents the fundamental part of a site , which is nothing more than a container of information. Often considered the last wheel on the wagon, content is the first objective of those who write for the web. A priority that cannot give way to others. I have listed seven characteristics that content must possess: Uniqueness Originality Information Completeness Periodicity Clarity Relevance Re-read the last ten articles you have written and published and list which features you think are missing. Write your next article with all seven of those characteristics in mind.