Writing the Content of your Site - Traditional vs Web
Friday, November 30th, 2007We previously discussed how to style the way you write your copy, but what are you actually writing as your copy?
Most companies have a myriad of sources for their copy. Brochures, catalogs, newsletters, public relations, the list is endless. But what happens when you directly transcribe from the plethora and place it on the web. Most people would move on; simply reading something on paper feels a lot different than it does on a computer screen.
With that in mind, what you write for print is generally not the same as it would be for the web. The web has a lower attention span and if you do not catch your viewer’s attention quickly enough, all they have to do is click back, next, or search somewhere for something else. I am a user of the Firefox Add On StumbleUpon and it is the bane of my existence. I simply click a button and it leads me to a different page of my interests I designated. Now, if the page I’m on catches my eye and keeps me their, I stay and I even say I like it.
With traditional media I overview the table of contents and see if anything sparks my interest. Then flip through the pages and read the things I noted or anything else that catches my eye. Like the web, I have a short attention span, but I am more inclined to read things in the magazine then I am online. Why? There is less content to move onto.
Also, a lot of text can be dull, especially while reading on a computer screen. On that note, I’ll try and keep this short. Make sure you grab your reader’s attention but also keep it tasteful.


