In Content Marketing, Are Listicles Part of the Problem or a Solution?

 

What reunites you with your car keys, slashes your dessert budget, transports you to Margaritaville, and douses the flames shooting out of your head, all while making you nicer? Well, as Amy Maclin asserts in Oprah Daily, it’s mediation.

As a content marketing trainer at Say It For You, I couldn’t help both admiring  – and critiquing –  “9 Surprising Benefits of Mediation”. Turning your frown upside down? Providing TLC for your IBS? Soothing Your Achy-Breaky Back? All titles to induce a smile. Good, cleverly written explanations, too.

(“Reunites you with your car keys” alludes to the fact that meditation improves cognition, according to a study of older adults; “Transporting you to Margaritaville “refers to the fact that mediation turns on the body’s parasympathetic nervous system – the flip side of fight or flight.)

“There are good reasons listicles remain one of the most popular forms of content today,” Hubspot points out. They’re readable, and, precisely because they’re bite-sized, they’re sharable. What’s more, nobullmarketing says, list posts are shared more often than posts in other formats. Still, given the quality of some list posts, there’s a chance they might be considered lightweight, the authors caution.

Travel writer Eric Reed does consider listicles lightweight. “If there is one thing we can certainly agree on above all else” he says, ” it is that listicles constitute the lowest form of journalism.” When you write a listicle, he points out, you’re not providing a transition from one thought to the next. Difficult subjects need a unified narrative, and listicles lack the background readers need before they can really get into your story.

At Say It For You, where we create content based on a combination of independent research and interviews with our business and practice owner clients, their staff members, and their customers, we view content marketing as SME-DEV (Subject Matter Expert Development). While listicles certainly have a place in our content marketing “toolbox”, we prefer to utilize the “Power of One”, focusing each blog post on one new idea, or calling for a single action.

Focused on one thing, a post has greater impact, since people are bombarded with so many different messages each day. Ms. Maclin, what I’d love to read is one long, detailed article, focused on the research concerning the many cognitive health benefits of meditation.  The title might even be “Meditation Can Reunite You With Your Car Keys”.

 

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Reasons to Write a 300-Word Business Blog Post

 

Fascinated by the Writer’s Yearbook 2023 article “10 Reasons to Write a 100-Word Story”, I began thinking of all the discussions around the questions of the optimal length for blog posts. Ran Walker, explaining while he’s stopped writing novels, said “I could no longer bring myself to write stories where I had to expand them beyond what I felt their natural lengths were.” Writing shorter stories forces you to refocus and choose only what’s important, Walker says. Word count matters, but it’s about condensing, not expanding, changing for the better the way you pace your story and what you choose to show the reader. Using just 100 words allows you to “create a resonance in a single moment.” Following is my (under-300-word) opinion post:

How long should your blog posts be? asks Wall Street Journal’s Joe Bunting. When it comes to our writing, we want more, he admits, not less: more readers, more comments, more backlinks, and more traffic. He’s experimented with different lengths, Bunting says, finding that each has advantages. Shorter posts tend to garner more comments, while longer posts get shared more widely. Medium-form posts are good for generating discussion. Very long, in-depth, heavily researched posts (2,400+ words long generate more Google traffic, he notes.

“Though content must be relevant, it might differ in types, mediums, formats, and style in order to arouse interest or evoke debate…but to be read at all, blog posts must always deliver upon their promise,” firstsiteguide.com cautions. “Before blogs became political in the early 2000s, they were merely means to make private thoughts and opinions public. The personal touch, however, remains their vital characteristic to date.”

Opinions have always differed on the optimal size for a blog post. Having composed blog posts (as both a Say It For You ghost writer and under my own name) numbering well into the tens of thousands, I’m still finding it difficult to fix on any rule other than “It depends!” I agree with Ran Walker that purposely keeping content short forces us to choose only those elements that drive home the single point that is the focus of that one post. Research on “duration neglect” reveals that when people assess an experience, they tend to forget or ignore its length, rating an experience based on the peak (the best or worst moment) and the ending. Writing shorter posts allows me to “create a resonance” around a single concept.

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Blog Content Writing – Up For the Count

word count for blogs

One “fake fact” included in Alex Palmer’s book Alternative Facts is that part of the reason Charles Dickens’ novels ran so long is that he was paid by the word. Truth is, while his novels’ length was often dictated in advance, Dickens’ earnings were pegged to the number of novels sold.

Today, some professional writers for hire choose to charge based on word count or page count, while other ghostwriters prefer to charge flat project rates or hourly fees, varying by experience, subject matter and location, Brafton, a leading UK content marketing company explains.

As much as we all wish for it, there is no simple answer to the question “What is the right length of a blog post?” A longer blog post doesn’t necessarily rank better than a short one. The reason search engines generally appear to favor longer posts is because they are detailed, hence considered to be providing more information to readers. But, when writing blogs, one needs to consider the topic, the goal, the target audience, the industry, and the competition to find which length works best. Focus should be on quality, not quantity.

You know your business and your customers better than anyone else, so why would you hire a ghostwriter to take over such an important task as blogging? There are plenty of reasons, Shandra Cragun of BKA Content explains:

  • You lack the time to write lengthy, informative blog posts.
  • Writing isn’t your strong suit.
  • The content creation process overwhelms you.
  • You want to elevate your brand’s story with well-written and highly engaging content.

In terms of word count, Cragun observes, there are some topics for which only so much can be said, while there are others about which a lot more can be said. Don’t give a ghost blogger a word count request that far exceeds the collective information on the subject, she cautions.

Opinions have always differed on the optimal size for a blog post. Having composed blog posts (as both a Say It For You ghost writer and under my own name) numbering well into the tens of thousands, I’m still finding it difficult to fix on any rule other than “It depends!”

Chip and Dan Heath’s book The Power of Moments describes research that found that when people assess an experience, they tend to forget or ignore its length, instead rating the experience based on the “peak” (best or worst moment) and the ending. My conclusion about word count? As Albert Einstein famously said, “Make everything as simple as possible, but not simpler.”

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In Blog Marketing, Write Less??

 

“This book is really short,” writes Seth Godin in the acknowledgments section of The Dip. This is something he’s learned from his readers, he says – Write less. “Seth Godin,” the book jacket explains, is one of the most popular business bloggers in the world. “While Godin doesn’t claim to have all the answers, he will teach you to ask the right questions”.

So, from a blog content standpoint, is “writing less” a good idea? Maybe not, according to these three sources, writes Jasmine Gordon of lean-labs.com.

  • Medium – The ideal length of a blog post is seven minutes or 1,600 words.
  • SERPIQ – Top three Google results are between 2,350 and 2,500 words.
  • Neil Patel – Posts of at least 1,500 words earn the best SEO and social sharing results.

On the other hand, Gordon points out:

  • Data from Write Practice indicates that posts of 275 words are best for eliciting comments.
  • While visual media is not technically part of the word count, it’s an aspect of length,, because it takes time to consume.
  • Some topics don’t need 3,000 words to be covered adequately.
  • If you’re blogging multiple times a week, you can afford shorter, engagement-driven posts.

At Say It For You, we tend to agree with the checklist Jasmine Gordon offers. We blog content writers will know we’re done with a particular post IF:

  1. we’ve covered the topic in depth
  2. we’ve offered more value than the competition
  3. we’ve incorporated high-quality visuals
  4. we’ve verified our research and facts

What’s more, Gordon says, if your name is Seth Godin (to whose book, The Dip, I referred in Tuesday’s blog post), all bets are off (Godin’s posts, God bless him, are often 75-500 words long).

“Opinions have always differed on the optimal size for a blog post,” I wrote just a little over a year ago. Having composed blog posts (as both a Say It For You ghost writer and under my own name) now numbering well into the tens of thousands, I’m still finding it difficult to decide on the best length for each post.

From Chip and Dan Heath’s book The Power of Moments, I learned about a phenomenon called “duration neglect”. The basic concept is that when people assess an experience, they tend to forget or ignore its length, rating it based on the best or worst moment in that experience. I suspect that principle holds true when readers are experiencing a blog post. They are going to remember only two things – the best part and the ending.

The long-form/short-form debate will no doubt continue for decades to come, but my own instinct is to stick to a central idea for each blog post, then “say it until it’s said”. Along the “write less” theme, Seth Godin once offered a piece on the length of business meetings, in which he observed “Understand that not all problems are the same, so why are your meetings?”

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Business Blog Repurposing With a Purpose

re-purposing blog content

 

Finding ways to recycle existing content has a number of benefits, Megan Marris writes in Wordstream.com, including:

  • reaching a new audience
  • “dusting off forgotten tales”
  • making the most of your efforts

Your top notch content deserves repurposing, Marris states, but only the best will do.

  • Wordstream offers a rather impressive list of suggestions on alternative ways for using content from existing blog posts, turning them into:
  • webinars
  • podcasts
  • case studies
  • Power Point slide decks
  • Ebooks
  • Videos
  • Infographics
  • Twitter posts
  • online courses

Cornelia Cosmiuc of cognitiveseo.com adds to the list, suggesting that posts be turned into hands-on guidebooks, and that interview blogs be turned into expert advice e-handbooks.

I agree. At Say It For You I stress that it’s absolutely essential for blog marketers to learn to reuse content. Maintaining consistently high rankings on search engines depends on longevity. That means writers must maintain the discipline of regularly posting relevant, value-laden content over long periods of time.

But as a business blog writing trainer, I see repurposing as having a broader meaning than simply turning content from blogs into video scripts, social media posts, or email blasts. My idea of repurposing involves turning existing blog posts into new ones. The content in the new posts reinforces the content from the former posts. But the new version progresses to new information and perhaps a new slant on the subject.

“There are two things that make writing difficult to read. One is not giving enough detail and giving only a spotty coverage of an idea. The other is to try to give too much detail for the space allowed. Short articles should only provide a high-level discussion of your topic or in-depth coverage of one aspect of it,” advises quicksprout.com. One way to repurpose short blog content is to choose one small point and expand on it in a new post.

Derek Halpern of Social Triggers says it all: “You don’t have to create content day in and day out. You just have to work on getting the content you already have in the hands of more people.”  And that’s the main idea behind repurposing content, according to Hubspot.com: Take something you’ve created, put a new spin on it, and give it new life.

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