Post by account_disabled on Nov 26, 2023 8:38:51 GMT
If you felt the lack of yet another definitive guide to do this or that, here we are. I really like writing guides like this, but it must be said that I am committed to delving into the topic as much as possible. Is there really a definitive guide? No, it's a contradiction: in a month this guide may no longer be valid. We are now bombarded with articles on how to write articles. Why on earth, then, should you read this? Because there are elements that few, perhaps, consider and others that many don't even know about. But now let's get to the heart of the guide.
From idea to post: feasibility study How many Phone Number Data times have you stopped to think if it's worth writing that article you had in mind? And how many of you write a post without even thinking: is this content I want to publish valid? I've been known to trash 170 article ideas for this blog. Most of it was represented by the usual title which now, after so long, no longer communicated anything to me. Who knows what was on my mind at the time. Other ideas, however, would have produced posts of no value: chatter without substance. Before writing an article I ask myself two questions: Has that post already been published? Can I say something new and useful? The answer to the first question, in the specific case of this article, is yes, but the same answer also applies to the second.
Result: the post must be written. In reality, you also need to ask yourself a third question: am I capable of writing this post? Every now and then I write down some ideas in my file, but some remain there waiting for me to have the knowledge and experience needed to transform them into a concrete article. In conclusion, an idea, before being developed into a post for our blog, must pass a sort of feasibility test. Side readings : have you already read my 154 ideas for writing posts ? The choice of keywords: is it really useful? Many people argue that before writing a post you need to search (or at least establish) the keywords to focus on. This is a practice that I have never used, finding it artificial, unnatural and even limiting.
From idea to post: feasibility study How many Phone Number Data times have you stopped to think if it's worth writing that article you had in mind? And how many of you write a post without even thinking: is this content I want to publish valid? I've been known to trash 170 article ideas for this blog. Most of it was represented by the usual title which now, after so long, no longer communicated anything to me. Who knows what was on my mind at the time. Other ideas, however, would have produced posts of no value: chatter without substance. Before writing an article I ask myself two questions: Has that post already been published? Can I say something new and useful? The answer to the first question, in the specific case of this article, is yes, but the same answer also applies to the second.
Result: the post must be written. In reality, you also need to ask yourself a third question: am I capable of writing this post? Every now and then I write down some ideas in my file, but some remain there waiting for me to have the knowledge and experience needed to transform them into a concrete article. In conclusion, an idea, before being developed into a post for our blog, must pass a sort of feasibility test. Side readings : have you already read my 154 ideas for writing posts ? The choice of keywords: is it really useful? Many people argue that before writing a post you need to search (or at least establish) the keywords to focus on. This is a practice that I have never used, finding it artificial, unnatural and even limiting.