How to Write Effective Blog Posts

Old newspaper

The best compliment I ever receive about my blog is that my posts are short, simple, and actionable. Any time I get that response, I feel that I’ve hit the mark. When I get a lot of comments about uncertainty or when people seek clarity, or when I find myself defending parts of the post that didn’t mean anything, or when I get comments about the analogy and not the meat of the post, that’s when I know that I rushed it, or that I blew it.

I’ve shared before about the writing practice, about how I get ideas for posts. This time, I’ll share about what I do to make my posts effective (or what I hope will be effective).

Start With a Useful Title

One thing we’ve seen in Third Tribe Marketing is that when people write a vague topic title for a forum post, it gets very little response. When people are very clear and distinct about what they want or what they’re talking about, they often get a lot of responses. The same is true with blogging. You’ve got precious few moments to grab someone’s attention. Lead with a useful and grabbing title.

Lead In With a Story and an Image

I use images to start your thought processes flowing, and I make the first paragraph a very small bit of personable information that will be relevant to the piece. When I do this well, the goal is twofold: get you thinking about what I’m going to tell you in the piece, and also get you thinking with both halves of your brain (logical and creative) as well as hopefully tickling your heart (at least sometimes).

The first paragraph is all most people will give you to convince them to read, so if you’re going to use the above-mentioned method, be sure that you show people what they’re going to get from the post in that same paragraph.

Here’s an example from a recent post of mine:

I had a strange dream last night, but oddly, it had a lesson in it. I dreamed that I went to a place to sell wool. There was one buyer. They decided whether my product was worth buying. Then, they turned it into yarn. They carded it, they dyed it, they put it on different spools and sold it to hundreds of people.

By starting with a description of a dream, I had you opening up your creative head. By telling you that it was a dream about business, I told you that the post was going to be about business. And hopefully, the effect was that it got you further into the story. The rest of the piece’s job was easy: reinforce and educate.

Go Into An Explanation of the Concept

After your story, extract out the important piece you’re hoping to talk about, and explain the concept. Use the simplest terms possible. Use simple sentences. Sometimes, we think that people want our most colorful and expressive writing. Most times, especially in nonfiction, they want well-crafted and useful sentences. If a chair’s pretty but you can’t sit on it, it’s not much of a chair, is it? (Oh artists, you may begin bristling now.)

Explain the concept, and then help people start to see how they can apply it to themselves. In a post about how to blog effectively, I’d explain that this formula, such as it is, helps people move towards actionable next steps, if you’re lucky enough to lay it out like that. Oh, and I’d point out that transitional sentences like this one help you move from the explanation into the actionable steps.

Make a Wire Frame and Try It Yourself

Try doing something like this:

  1. Pick a topic
  2. Come up with a title (it’s okay if you redo the title after the fact)
  3. Find a graphic to accompany the piece ( I use Flickr for this).
  4. Write a first paragraph that both explains the piece and/or tells us a story to do so. (This might take practice.)
  5. Write the first main point and explain it to us. Make the best one come first. Don’t build us up to it.
  6. Repeat if you have multiple points.
  7. Give us actionable takeaways or a call to action.
  8. Wrap up the piece however you want that call to action to go.

It Takes Practice

I’ve been writing in some form or another for over 35 years (if you count my beginnings at age 5). I started winning awards for writing in high school. But it wasn’t until some time after 9/11 that I started getting decent at writing, and it wasn’t until around 2005 or so that I started convincing other people that I had something that might be useful.

The above methodology has served me well for a very long time in blogging, and it might prove useful to your efforts. Once you’ve practiced it a while, you might tweak and modify it to meet your own needs. Heck, you might have an even better method you’d like to prescribe below in the comments. I’m all for it. But that which you see above is roughly how I do what I do. I hope it proves useful.

There’s Always More

One of the education projects I’m working on for Human Business Works is a professional writing community. We’re a short while off from launching it, but it will offer some great interviews, a writing course, some accountability, some workshopping of your pieces (not just blog posts, mind you), and other related information. I think that writing has become so much more important for most jobs than it’s ever been, so this is one way that I can help out.

I’d love to hear your thoughts on what you’re working on, what you find challenging, and what would be useful in a course of that kind. And thanks.

ChrisBrogan.com runs on the Genesis Framework

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  • http://www.HectorJCuevas.com Hector Cuevas

    Hey Chris..

    That’s a great framework to write blog posts around. I agree with not building up to the best point.. they’ll never get to the end if the first point isn’t great.

    Thanks for sharing this with us..
    Talk soon
    Hector

  • Elaine Nessman

    Great advice. I had a prof once who advised “Never use a big word when a small one will do; never write a paragraph when a sentence will do.” In other words, be succinct. Get to the point.
    Thanks for sharing/

  • http://reallifemadman.wordpress.com Marjorie Clayman

    Good advice. I wouldn’t say questions on clarity mean you’ve missed the mark though. Sometimes you just have bugs flying around like me who see things in weird ways :)

  • http://www.nextlevelinnovation.com Mark

    All the advice you give in this post I will find extremely useful. It is an excellent guideline for someone trying to take steps forward with their blog.

  • http://www.chrisljordan.com Chris Jordan

    As my blog reaches it’s one year anniversary, I still don’t have a defined topic or call to action, but I think that’s because I’ve lacked practice. One year old, but only 32 posts…

    So at this point I’m taking a step back and posting daily; first to get used to delivering the amount of content I think is really necessary to become *relevant*, and second, merely to practice. I have to believe that a blog in it’s early years almost has to take shape on it’s own before it can really be something.

  • http://www.twitgift.me JeromeC

    Hi Chris,

    I use my first paragraph to summarize the whole blog, making my readers that they’re in trouble (to keep them reading), and to elaborate more about the title. It’s always the first paragraph that I kept on revising and more, it’s time consuming, because I want to balance everything up than to confuse my readers after they read it, lol.

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  • http://www.kherize5.com Suzanne Vara

    Chris

    Very sound advice here that bloggers who are new or those that are looking to increase authority or loyal readers should really take note of. The title has to be enticing enough to be that gotcha with the opening paragraph being the payoff to the title. If not, click off or those that do continue to read are left trying to figure out what the post was about and they stuck around to read.

    In models such as this, they are a guide and something to take and mold into your own. Yes the best practices are those listed above but some write the headline last or get the photo last (like me). It works for me. Creating a model that works for you and does produce content that is in-tune with the industry lingo/talk, the target talk and what is acceptable to them the better the article will be.

    A post can be your best ever but if they are not doing what you ask of them in the call to action then some work needs to be done. It takes time to gain loyal readers and those that trust to act upon what you wish them to do. That is where the work comes in but we know the more we write the better we become, the more people start to notice and trust – so long as the takeaway give them something to take away.

    @SuzanneVara

  • http://twitter.com/mazakaro Rahul Gupta

    Nice article. It will help me to write more better articles. Thanks :)

  • http://ivanhernandezonline.wordpress.com/ Ivan Hernandez

    Extremely useful advice Chris! I will start implementing your suggestions right away!

    Thank you very much!

    Ivan

  • http://www.danielrose.com.au Daniel Rose

    Thanks for this extremely helpful post Chris, some great ideas for engaging writing.

  • http://www.thedesktopanalyst.com The Desktop Analyst

    Chris, I must say that I found this post to be short, simple, and actionable, jk.

    The title is the hardest thing to write for me & that’s a big problem. Usually, I just go with whatever conditions I’m spoofing but I’m not conveying the gist of the post. It’s like the people have to already know what they’re getting into & that’s bad marketing on my part.

  • http://twitter.com/Antiqueproduct Antique

    Thanks for your explanation, may be an inspiration for me to learn to write

  • http://twitter.com/Antiqueproduct Antique

    Thanks for your explanation, may be an inspiration for me to learn to write

  • http://twitter.com/BTRIPP Brendan Tripp

    Chris … I find it amusing that this post pushes 1,000 words … one of the things I’ve been doing mental gymnastics with following one of your previous “writing blogs” posts was trying to get things shorter. When I started “blogging” rather than “journaling” (I’d been blithering on LiveJournal for 10 years) I was initially trying to keep posts in the 500-600 word range, and found it interesting that this was pretty much your recommendation. However, I’m relieved to find that this is, like the “Pirate’s Code”, more what you’d call “guidelines” than actual rules!

  • http://twitter.com/garious1 Garious

    Readers have a super short attention span these days and your tips just make perfect sense. I guess when it comes to blogging – keeping it short, catchy and simple is the very key to making your blog a huge hit. Unfortunately, we still see those blogs that don’t make any sense at all since those are written for the sake of SEO ( the black hat way ).

  • http://twitter.com/garious1 Garious

    Readers have a super short attention span these days and your tips just make perfect sense. I guess when it comes to blogging – keeping it short, catchy and simple is the very key to making your blog a huge hit. Unfortunately, we still see those blogs that don’t make any sense at all since those are written for the sake of SEO ( the black hat way ).

  • http://twitter.com/garious1 Garious

    Readers have a super short attention span these days and your tips just make perfect sense. I guess when it comes to blogging – keeping it short, catchy and simple is the very key to making your blog a huge hit. Unfortunately, we still see those blogs that don’t make any sense at all since those are written for the sake of SEO ( the black hat way ).

  • Anonymous

    Great, solid advice as always. These tips work for more than just blog posts — I think they could be applied to most pieces of online content that you are using for marketing (articles, web pages, press releases, etc…) A catchy headline, solid info and an actionable close are standards we should all keep in the back of our minds when writing. — Tara

  • http://www.ferreemoney.com Social Media Money Makers

    All good points (and steps) for composing an effective blog. So good in fact, I clicked your RSS feed and added your Blog to my “Pro Blogger” Folder. The #2 Rank on Ad Age didn’t hurt either.

    It takes longer and requires more effort, but I find blog posts that have a relevant video in the blog post is an effective element.

    Of late, I’ve been studying why and how the guy who created the SEOPressor plug-in for WP blogs works so well with getting ranked better and faster than the conventional formula I’ve been using by adding quality backlinks to my blog. I wasn’t aware that Google Caffeine algorithm prefers blog posts with the combo of BOLD, Italic, Underlined with the right % of KW density [2-4%] and the other 200 variables used to rank/rate a site, did you?

    To Summarize:

    This is a strong article on how to be a better blogger. Relevant Video should be considered if you want your blog post to be Google Caffeine friendly. This site would be a good candidate to grab the RSS Feed if you want to be a better blogger. The Genius Theme is a nice WP theme.

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      I know nothing about the SEO side of things. I just use Scribe when I have to rank. I rarely try to rank, however. I do my selling the more annoying way.

      • http://JimRaffel.com/ Jim Raffel

        I love this response as it relates to SEO and selling the annoying way :) Also, great post Chris. I follow a similar pattern and I suspect I picked up the bits and pieces from SM101 but this is great to see the whole process here in one post. Thanks!

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  • https://www.webhostinglogic.com/services/domain-name-registration.html WebHosting Guru

    I exactly understand what you mean as you had defined it in an outline manner. I had browsed some of your posts and see an actual example of how to do it. Thanks.

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  • http://suwanneerefugee.blogspot.com Suwannee Refugee

    I don’t know how people read real long blog posts. I scan them and if I see good information, I’ll pull up a chair. 500 words max!!

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  • http://www.interactivedata.be/ Didier Daglinckx

    Are you using the same or a similar schema when preparing the video posts ?

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      Naw. I’m a total idiot when it comes to video. I just shoot it. : ) Really. I just shoot.

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      Naw. I’m a total idiot when it comes to video. I just shoot it. : ) Really. I just shoot.

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  • http://www.magnet4marketing.com Fabrizio Van Marciano

    Great informative post, I must admit I find it a time consuming challenge to read long posts, short and sweet is the positive way forward.

  • http://twitter.com/digimags101 Laura Zavelson

    With regard to your professional writing project — I believe the most important skill in journalism/writing today is being able to sort through all the available information and show the reader the path through it to insight or understanding. Sure, you need to be able to not lose the lead and write a great headline. But I think that the great writers going forward must also be great editors. You have to be able to read 20 blog posts and decide which has the most relevance. You have to be able to read a website and 7 press releases and decide what’s real and what’s hyperbole. You then have to process all that information, make your own call on “the answer” and share that with your readers in a way that’s not totally boring. In fact, it needs to double as entertainment.

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      I agree that curation is really important, as is synthesis. You’ve got a great point in that.

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      I agree that curation is really important, as is synthesis. You’ve got a great point in that.

  • Anonymous

    A very helful article for me as blogging beginner. I was afraid not to get ideas, but this doesn’t seem to be the case (after only a few weeks of blogging). But so far I’m astonished how long it takes to create content. My style still needs some improvements. And the editor in Drupal is just annoying.

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      I can’t talk much about Drupal. I wouldn’t wish it on my worst enemy versus something slender like WordPress, but then Chris Pirillo LIVES in it, so what do I know?

      As for topics and themes, it’s a practice thing. It takes a while to get the right groove on.

  • http://iggiandgabi.blogspot.com gabi

    Great post. Wonderful advice and very clearly laid out. I’ll have to apply it to my own blog.

    As for what I find challenging, I used really bad post-anxiety. I would sit at the computer and my mind would be a blank. No ideas or post topics. Then I started planning posts in advance and it became much easier. Right now I’ve got posts planned about a month in advance and it makes me feel so much better knowing that I have enough ideas up my sleeve to fill a whole month.

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  • http://homespunlife.wordpress.com Tess

    Hi Chris! Love this post, but I cringed just a little when I read #3 about grabbing illustrations from Flickr. What about copyrights? Are there some photos on Flickr that are wide open for use by anyone?

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  • http://www.coopersbarnyard.com Frankie Cooper

    I will use this information to help me write better blog post and articles.

  • Lilymilu123

    Thank you for your methods. I will use these.

  • Lilymilu123

    Thank you for your methods. I will use these.

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  • Harriesmike

    I’m preparing to start a blog and found Chris Brogan’s article very helpful. I very much like the fact that you welcome our thoughts and on what people are working on. My job is about the development side of Continuous Improvement in large organisation. I would like to gain interaction and to get people thinking more about the ‘work they do’ and ‘how they do it’. Our organisation is full of variance with several main stratgeis and numerous policies. It also does not really like to use the term ‘customer’. Thank you for your openess.

  • Harriesmike

    Just noticed my spelling mistakes in my earlier post. A good lesson to learn.

  • CreativeMystic

    Optimization! That is my only suggestion… Pictures need to load very quickly as you only have a persons attention for a very short time before they bounce. Your picture is the first thing to load, and it took and incredible amount of time to load. This could cause you to loose a lot of readers even if your content is fantastic. Images need to load in a matter of seconds, and a good size is 72 dpi. If you are taking them straight from Flickr then they are not optimized properly to load. They are optimized to be printed much bigger with very high dpi (dots per inch). Your image choice was good.

    I am an artist, and have studied this part in depth. I am enjoying reading all your blogs about social media and blogging as I am teaching myself as an artist how to apply this technology to me as an artist. Thank you for all you informative posts.

    Magical Blessings Sj

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