Sunday, October 30, 2016
Content Rule 1 The Blank Sheet Of Paper Test
Content Rule 1 The Blank Sheet Of Paper Test
Nothing gets taken out of context more than web content. Except maybe innocent remarks by public figures. Search engines pull bits and pieces from your page. People cut-and-paste. Aggregators grab headlines. We all tend to ignore the lack of context and write like we always have: We assume readers will see all our stuff together.
Ive frequently mocked the results. Ive also talked about techniques for headline writing and the like.
But I looked back and cant find a single place where I lay out the rule. So here it is:
The Blank Sheet of Paper Test: If you wrote this text on a piece of paper and showed it to a stranger, would they understand the meaning? Is this text fully descriptive?
You can apply this to headlines, ALT attributes, title tags, captions and any other text that might end up shown out of context.
For example:
Fix a flat isnt fully descriptive. Will it teach me to fix a tire? Offer a service that fixes a tire for me? Is it for bicycles, cars, motorcycles or the spare tire around my gut?
How to: Fix a flat bicycle tire works better. I know exactly what Ill see if I keep reading.
Another example:
Mustang Rides Into Sunset
versus
Ford Mustang Rides Into Sunset
Some writers might say the first heading is a little more stylish. I get that argument. You have to balance style versus clarity yourself. I always lean towards clarity.
Its Not Just For Headlines
Use the Blank Sheet of Paper Test for ALT attributes and image captions. The text should fully describe the image:
Happy people isnt sufficient:
Frighteningly perfect, somewhat racially balanced beautiful people laugh and make me feel inadequate seems better.
Its also a dynamite standard for title tags. Title tags should fully describe the page. If they pass the BSPT (thats Blank Sheet of Paper Test, because Im tired of typing it), theyre good. This doesnt pass, and its a lousy title tag:
700c Road Bike
Compare that to this:
Domane SLR 8 Performance Road Bike w/ Dura-Ace Trek
(A guy can dream)
I know, if youre not a bicycle person this might be meaningless, except you know its a speedy bicycle. But thats enough. Heres something a bit more mainstream:
Broccoli
versus
Organic Broccoli Florets, pre-cut, pre-washed, no bugs
The bugs part is especially important to me. Im fine with bugs, but once a few beetles creep out of a head of broccoli, Dawn (my better half) wants to set fire to it.
Its not just a minimum
The BSPT is about the maximum you should write, too. If youre describing things that arent in the image, on the page or in the content, you need to re-think. If your page sells broccoli florets, then this is a spammy title tag:
Organic broccoli florets delivered wholesale retail broccoli recipes
If it isnt on the page, dont include it.
Same for an image:
Seven people meeting consulting with Portent doing SEO, PPC, consulting and analytics in Seattle doesnt work here:
Fully descriptive means describes the thing to which its attached, not describe the entire universe.
It helps lots of stuff
The Blank Sheet of Paper Test improves:
- User experience, because people know what theyre about to read/watch/hear
- SEO, because search engines want to know what theyre about to rank
- PPC, because page relevance is part of quality score, and the BSPT is all about relevance
Its not my idea, by the way. I cant remember who taught me this test. But its held up well over 20-odd years of digital marketing stuff.
Give it a shot. If youve got a title tag, headline or something else you want to test, leave it in the comments.
The post Content Rule #1: The Blank Sheet Of Paper Test appeared first on Portent.
// // from Portent https://www.portent.com/blog/internet-marketing/content-rule-1-blank-sheet-paper-test.htm
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