{"id":62756,"date":"2019-03-12T20:49:09","date_gmt":"2019-03-13T03:49:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.bruceclay.com\/?page_id=62756"},"modified":"2023-09-17T16:49:29","modified_gmt":"2023-09-17T23:49:29","slug":"writing-content","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.bruceclay.com\/seo\/writing-content\/","title":{"rendered":"Key Considerations When Writing Content"},"content":{"rendered":"
What to Write About:<\/strong> Content convinces potential customers and the search engines that you are a subject matter expert. You need content that’s uniquely yours. It must provide some original, compelling benefit to users, whether that’s insight, research, tools, reviews, advice, or a tutorial like this one.<\/p>\n As you research keywords<\/a>, analyze competitors<\/a> and so on, you’ve probably discovered your website’s real issue \u2014 you have insufficient, weak, or out-of-date content.<\/strong><\/p>\n How can you create webpages that work for users and search engine spiders alike? This SEO lesson gets you ready with the key considerations for writing quality content.<\/p>\n We’ll teach you some crucial questions to consider before picking up the proverbial pen.<\/p>\n SEO Tip: Refer your copywriting team to this page. It could help them produce higher-quality content.<\/em><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Job No. 1 when writing content is to attract and serve customers<\/em> \u2014 the people who would want what your website offers. Your content must meet their expectations, grab their interest, and lead them to whatever conversion goal the site has.<\/p>\n So, primarily write for people, not search engines<\/strong>.<\/p>\n You’d write differently for teenagers than you would for graduate students, family-focused homeowners, or retirees. Keep your target audience in mind. It will help you know how to write SEO content that addresses their needs in their words and reaches them effectively.<\/p>\n Before writing any webpage or blog post,\u00a0have a clear goal in mind.<\/strong> Otherwise, you’re likely to write rambling text that isn’t relevant to anything.<\/p>\n The goal shouldn’t be “to rank high for keyword XYZ.”<\/p>\n Instead, always set a user-focused goal<\/em>. For example, this page’s goal is to prepare web copywriters to write content that works for users and search engines.<\/p>\n Your research for SEO<\/a> may uncover a relevant keyword that your website hasn’t talked about yet. Looking at competitors may spark an idea for a great infographic that’ll attract new visitors.<\/p>\n When you sit down to create those new pages, focus on the customer. Make something useful.<\/p>\n Later, you can tweak and optimize your content<\/a> for SEO. (You’ll learn how in this SEO Guide.)<\/p>\n For search relevance, keep your copywriting focused on the goal and the page’s keyword subject<\/strong>. For example, if you write a page about how to water ski, but half the text describes picnicking on the shore, your page’s relevance to water skiing gets diluted. The search engines (and possibly users) won’t know what your page is really about.<\/p>\n Quality is the name of the game in web marketing.<\/p>\n<\/a>Know Your Audience<\/h2>\n
To identify your audience before you write, ask these questions:<\/h3>\n
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<\/a>Know the Goal<\/h2>\n
Search engine optimization often inspires content writing.<\/h3>\n
Focus on the customer when you write.<\/h3>\n
<\/a>Make Quality Content<\/h2>\n