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Tight writing. That doesn't mean bad or easy writing.
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Copy of about 600-800 words is better for SEO and catching the long tail of search.
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Title – Subject – Support, in that order, like subject, verb, object.
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Titles should be snappy and informative – clickable, but clear.
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Leads (first sentence or paragraph) should get to the point. Tell the reader what the article's about first thing.
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No fancy, wordy intros where it's not clear what you're talking about.
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Information beats fluff every time. Pretty is for books and newspapers (and only sometimes).
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Information does not beat style every time. Style keeps people awake.
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Sans serif fonts are easier and faster to read on computer screens.
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White space is awesome – even better than big, pretty pictures.
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Content should be
scannable.
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Think in bullets and subtitles.
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People like lists.
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Pictures should be specific and informative, not generic, decorative and ad-like
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Photos should be relevant to content.
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People in pictures should look friendly and approachable (and have their whole head).
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Photos should be full body if possible (so guys can check out packages and stuff).
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Spell stuff right. It makes you look smarter.
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Grammar IS important. Unless you're not really a professional.
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Online press releases should be even tighter than Web copy.