Writing Style for Print vs. Web
Print publications -- from newspaper articles to marketing brochures -- contain linear content that's often consumed in a more relaxed setting and manner than the solution-hunting behavior that characterizes most high-value Web use.In print, you can spice up linear narrative with anecdotes and individual examples that support a storytelling approach to exposition. On the Web, such content often feels like filler; it slows down users and stands in the way of their getting to the point.
For example, in print, discussing the tall-friendly rooms in the Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas feels somewhat interesting. That's not the case online when a user is looking for tall-friendly rooms in Chicago (or wherever he or she is going next week).
Web content must be brief and get to the point quickly, because users are likely to be on a specific mission. In many cases, they've pulled up the page through search. Web users want actionable content; they don't want to fritter away their time on (otherwise enjoyable) stories that are tangential to their current goals.
Recent Related Entries
The story of a literary hoax; or, how Elizabeth Pepys came to be quoted on "turds that do fly"A wonderful post by Whitney Anne Trettien, who examines the reception of a feminist spoof of Pepys famous diary, in order to explore the strange human desire to trust those who reveal shameful private failures. (That is, unless her whole...
Star Wars One Line at a Time
Nick Montfort just e-mailed a link to his brilliant textual interpretation of Star Wars. Great use of characters in a purely linear narrative environment....
Disappearing Jobs
Sad news from the MLA, as reported by Inside Higher Ed.Today the Modern Language Association is releasing information on just how bad the situation is: The number of job postings in the MLA's Job Information List will be down 21...
"Report a Concern" at Google Maps
Philipp Lenssen at "Google Blogoscoped" spotted a change in Google's panorama map interface, and asked me to weigh in.Since a recent Google Maps Street View update, Google shows the wording "Report a concern" at the footer of their panorama photos...
Is Assessment a Four-letter Word?
I really like what Steve Ersinghaus wrote about assessment.One of the significant issues I've faced has to do with attitude. Mine, not the students. Typically I ask students not to worry so much about making the deadline, but that the...

Leave a comment