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The Truth About Online Content: It's Time For Writer

Google.com, one of the web's hottest search engines, has indexed over 
1,346,966,000 web pages to date. The World Wide Web is officially 
gigantic, with hundreds of thousands of corporate, small business, 
and ecommerce websites vying for something more than just 
the "eyeballs" that web analysts hailed in the 1990's. In order to 
create success, websites are now searching for a steady, interactive 
audience. Why aren't they succeeding? Could it STILL have something 
to do with the content?
Understanding The Content Buzz
About a year ago, the entire web was filled with a few wonderfully 
hip,fatally cool clichés; "Content is King," "Your Website Needs 
Stickiness," "CRM is key!" and new resources, allegedly customer-
oriented, began to explode across the internet. Syndicated web 
content became a cool way to get free words to fill up space on a 
website. Soon, companies such as moreover.com began create a content 
overlap. Website competition may be presenting the exact same news 
feed at the exact same time, with the exact same keyword-rich ...
... 
content! 
Once again, the web industry began buzzing, "Learn How to Create 
Unique Content for Your Website!" The HTML Writer's Guild began 
offering classes in "Advanced Web Writing", EEI Communications began 
offering corporate training courses in "Writing for the Web and New 
Media", and universities across the country added web writing to 
their technology-driven and webmaster-centered curriculum. Once 
trained, web design companies began touting their new "writing 
skills", offering a one-stop-solution to their new website customers.
The Buzzkill for Web-Based Business 
Before you ask, "What does this have to do with me, as a writer?" 
Answer this question: Did you just read ANYTHING about writers in the 
last two paragraphs? 
Of course you didn't. Writers, traditionally, have shied away from 
web markets. Many writers simply think that their skills are not 
meant for web-based work, resulting in a strange shortage of web 
content writers. 
"Wait," the well-informed web surfer may say, "There are plenty of 
writers on the web! In fact, there's enough quality writing online 
that Salon.com can now charge for content!" While it's true that web-
based magazines that specialize in content attract professional 
writers, it is not true that the average corporate website, ecommerce 
outfit, or web-based business attract web-specific writers. 
As an experiment, go to google.com and type in "content creation" 
right now. How many writers are pulled up vs. web developers 
offering content services alongside their website development and 
design? Why do you think they do this?
Apparently, writers just aren't interested. At a recent Creative 
Network gathering, a publisher told me that it is "Great" that I 
write for the web. He employs over 60 writers at his consulting firm, 
yet none of them are really interested in web writing. They do, 
however, want to outsource work to me because their clients are 
looking for this skill.
There is a common assumption that web-based solution providers (such 
as web designers, programmers and developers) are experts in all 
facets of web-based business. Alongside this assumption is 
the "technophobia" that plagues many writers and prevents them from 
offering their services to online markets. We think that we're 
unwanted or unneeded, and our services will be rejected.
Where does this assumption come from? Perhaps it is because 
the "techies" created and coined the word "content" when describing 
the text on a website. Rather than a pretty word such as "prose" or a 
practical word like "writing",the buzz about online content created a 
bizarre rebellion against creativity and gave writers a strange 
aversion to web-based work; how could a writer be needed for 
something as dull as "content"? Isn't this something that web 
designers handle? 
The context of writing, when applied to online media, is perceived 
somewhat differently. New web style guidelines, which helped people 
read online without getting a headache, for a time became the sole 
criteria for judging whether website content was up to standards. 
Jakob Neilson, a famous industry analyst-turned-usability guru, 
pigeonholed web writing and content alongside web design. Instead of 
hailing "content" as a wonderful way to communicate with website 
visitors, the term "concise, objective, and scannable" was born, and 
web design and content became a means to the ultimate 
goal; "usability." (Who can be creative when they're using words 
like "usability" and "user interface", anyway?) Webmasters created 
the web, coined new terms, and used new, techie language to describe 
old products.
The Results
How many corporate websites out there actually make you want to work 
for them? How many ecommerce websites sound excited and knowledgeable 
about their product lines? How many email newsletters do you actually 
find worth reading in a given week? Most likely, unless you're just 
not very picky, you'll have trouble naming more than one or two 
sources. Which means, that out of all the websites and newsletters 
out there, there are only a handful that are getting what they want; 
repeat, loyal visitors. This is where content creation as a writing 
career becomes a reachable goal.
The Solution
If corporate websites want web content that inspires, creates an 
emotional response, or at least sparks a memory (tech 
term: "branding"), it's time for them to go to the people who will 
give articles and copy a chance in hell for success. That's us, 
folks! While web writing does combine a unique set of skills, with a 
little talent and the right training, a writer can easily transition 
from print to web and fill this important writing niche. 
It's time to claim our writing markets online and offer our skills to 
the companies that need us most. Most of them are waiting for a 
reliable source of content to come along.
We're the freelance writers. We're picky about the words we use, the 
sources we quote, and voice and tone of the content we create. We get 
to know an audience, not "users" or "eyeballs". And we pride 
ourselves not only on aesthetically pleasing text, but creating prose 
and copy that works. Not in a mechanical sense, but a human sense.
Freelance web writers are not simply riding the web industry buzz, 
but we're busy carefully crafting words that say precisely what a web 
company needs to say.
That's right; there are creative folks who make a living writing for 
the web! In fact, we were writing for the web before it came along. 
We've been writing "concise, (slightly) objective, and scannable" 
documents since the middle ages. 
Back then, we called it poetry. :-) 
So, are you ready to write for the web?
  
    
     ABOUT THE AUTHOR 
  
   Melissa Brewer is a full-time freelance writer and web content 
consultant. Visit: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/webwritingbuzz 
or send an email to: webwritingbuzz-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
 
  
  
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