In print, your document forms a
whole and the user is focused on the entire set of information. On the Web,
you need to split each document into multiple hyperlinked pages since users
are not willing to read long pages. Users can enter a site at any page and
move between pages as they chose, so make every page independent and explain
its topic without assumptions about the previous page seen by the user. Link
to background or explanatory information to help users who do not have the
necessary knowledge to understand or use the page. Make the word count for
the online version of a given topic about half the word count used when
writing for print:
Remember -users read slower when online
Users find it painful to read too much text on screens, and they read about
25 percent more slowly from screens than from paper. Users don't like to
scroll through masses of text, so put the most important information at the
top. Web users are impatient and critical: They have not chosen your site
because you are great but because they have something they need to do. Write
in the "news you can use" style to allow users to quickly find the
information they want.
Guidelines for Creating Online Content
Credibility is important on the Web where users connect to unknown servers
at remote locations. You have to work to earn the user's trust, which is
rapidly lost if you use exaggerated claims or overly boastful language;
avoid "marketese" in favor of a more objective style. A few hyperlinks to
other sites with supporting information increase the credibility of your
pages. If at all possible, link quotes from magazine reviews and other
articles to the source.
The Web is an informal and
immediate medium, compared to print, so users appreciate a somewhat
informal writing style and small amounts of humor.
Do not use clever or cute
headings since users rely on scanning to pick up the meaning of the
text.
Limit the use of metaphors,
particularly in headings: Users might take you literally.
Use simple sentence
structures: Convoluted writing and complex words are even harder to
understand online.
Puns do not work for
international users; find some other way to be humorous.
Add bylines and other ways of
communicating some of your personality. (This also increases credibility.)
The Web is a fluid medium: Update pages as time goes by to reflect all
changes. Statistics, numbers, and examples all need to be recent or
credibility suffers. For example: Before a conference, the page about the
event might point to a registration form; afterward, point to slides or
presentation transcripts instead.
The
Works
"Content is the King, and Eyeball is the King Maker"
BOUNDLESS.
CREATIVE.
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