Test Their Content Reading Smarts
“Test Your Hearing Smarts” is the title of a page in the Winter Wellness issue of Prevention Magazine. What helps with tinnitus (ringing in the ears)? Is it earplugs, mindfulness, or surgery – or does nothing help (you’re stuck with the problem)? The answer: There’s no known cure, but mindfulness training (using a white noise machine) can actually help in many cases. Which of these foods are good for your hearing? Coconuts, walnuts, and wild rice all contain nutrients that support good hearing.
At Say It For You, we’ve found, quizzes like this are a very good a content marketing tactic. Online readers tend to be curious creatures and “self-tests” tend to engage and help them relate in a more personal way to the information being presented. What’s more, since one of the biggest challenges in writing to promote a business or practice over long periods of time is keeping the content fresh, quizzes help “vary the menu”.
Other positive aspects of quizzes and tests include:
- “Self-tests” tend to engage readers and help them relate in a more personal way to the information presented.
- Quiz questions and answers can offer a different perspective on fact sets readers have forgotten.
- When readers strain to remember something and then find the answer, they tend to repeat that fact set in their conversations with others (perhaps driving those others to check out the website).
- Our curiosity is most intense when we’re testing our own knowledge, making tests, games, and quizzes hard to resist.
Research done about ads is relevant to quizzes and tests, I believe. A study done at the University of Bath in conjunction with the Nielson company came up with two ways to score ads.
- Information Power Score – measures what the consumer perceives as the value of the message
- Emotive Power Score – measures if the emotion is going to change feelings about the brand
In a sense, quizzes like the Test Your Hearing Smarts are powerful on both counts – important, actionable information is being conveyed to readers, and that information is very personal in nature.
“All bloggers would like to get more interaction and participation from their readers and visitors,” says vandelaydesign.com. Tests and surveys engage readers, we’ve found at Say It For You, making them feel they are part of a conversation with my business and practice owner clients.
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