Writing for the Social Media Everyman
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Saved by 2 people (0 private), first by anonymouse user on 2008-07-29
- Yanakiselyova on 2008-09-12 - Tags social media
- Moshler on 2008-07-29 - Tags copyblogger , story sharing , pandering , social media
Public Sticky notes
Does social media make us dumb?
You may have read the study from the Project for Excellence in Journalism and the general reaction to it (the consensus was that social media sites make you stupid and uninformed). While the conclusions are incorrect, the study is incredibly telling about the social media audience and how to write for it.
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on 2008-07-29 by moshler
It’s funny, the inclusion of blogs and other credibility lacking sources is one the reasons they demean social media, but it’s the primary reason I use it. Social media isn’t making people dumber, it’s showing us how dumb people actually are.
on 2008-07-29 by moshler
I’m fairly new to Digg and social news, but I have to say that I now know a lot more about what’s going on in the world. Especially in news topics that I would not have gone looking for - because friends have dugg them and so I got to hear about them that way.
on 2008-07-29 by moshler
Remember when you parents got on your case for hanging out with the “wrong” kids? Maybe they were onto something. Just maybe. Social media can only make you dumb if you hang out with a dumb crowd. A lemming is a lemming. Hang out with a smart crowd and gain from the collective wisdom. It’s up to the individual to build their own smart crowd.
on 2008-07-29 by moshler
For people to blanket cover mainstream media as “credible and professional” is as equally ignorant to blanket blogs as the opposite. There are good and bad reports coming from both camps… Mainstream media is incredibly biased, and anyone who says Fox News doesn’t have a conservative slant has been watching on mute with their eyes closed. I’ve been part of a few news stories ranging from my local paper to national magazines and papers… every single story I’ve been close enough to know the details I’ve seen glaring errors and misguided “facts.” A biased blogger is trying to increase his feed readership by a few hundred or land an extra $20 in adsense income this month… the biased mainstream media outlets are trying to increase their billion dollar bankrolls… either way you look at it, “News is dead” but I trust the guy trying to make an extra $20 over the billion dollar clubs.
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What does this mean for my writing?
This doesn’t mean that you start writing about Paris Hilton, but this does help you understand what your audience is looking to get from an information outlet and model your content for the social media everyman. The social media everyman is looking for an entertaining diversion, while being receptive to learning something new if presented in an “edutainment” format that ties the lesson into popular culture.
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What do I mean by this? Have a look at the following CopyBlogger articles:
- Did Alanis Morissette Get Irony Right?
- The David Lee Roth Guide to Legendary Marketing
- What Owen Wilson’s Pursed Lips Mean to Your Blog
- Don’t Be Cameron Diaz
- What Prince Can Teach You About Effective Blogging
I know many of you thought that Brian was just watching too much E! (and he probably does) but there’s much more to it than that. The hooks used in these articles are celebrities that your average person (however educated or uneducated) knows of or has heard something about and can on some level relate to.
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Yes, having the names of celebrities or anyone in the top 10 searches at technorati in any given day will definitely bring in traffic to your blog.
You can see most skillful marketers and even some spammers using this strategy to hook readers in. The most important element is still quality content, because getting them in isn’t that hard. Retaining them is… now that takes some creativity and good writing.
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Well this post has some truths in it, but it does not tell most of them. To succeed on the anti-social mob sites like Digg you need to write like a nazi propaganda minister.
Especially if you refer to Digg and Reddit.
If you write for Digg: Most importantly choose one of these topics:
Apple (not the fruit)
Ipod
Iphone
Linux
WII
Playstation
Xbox
If you want attract Reddit users:
[Pic]
For both of them include some hate, and/or take something spectalular:
SEOs? Hang ‘em High!
Flash sucks!
Bush Plans To Nuke Iran
Make sure to mention some well known brand names or names. Celebrity names with “naked” combinations work best.
“[Pics]Paris Hilton Cought Naked With Britney Spears” would work best on both Digg and Reddit.
“Woman Runs Over Own Legs at McDonald’s Drive-thru” is also great. Btw. I’m not that crazy to make it up, it’s really the 2nd most popular post on Digg today…
Well, I could go on for a while like that. Probably I will write a post on that topic, hehe.
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Leveraging the knowledge and reputation of a renowned thinker or writer is a great way to get some social media exposure.
George Orwell helped my site make Digg. Just make sure you have good content to back it up.
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Muhammad nailed this one! While Tad Chef offers some good comments above, Muhammad provides a nice template that can prove successful for ‘any’ market.
Add a ‘tickler file’ technique to know what’s upcoming, and use Muhammad Saleem’s article as a guide, and you are on the path to greater traffic.
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Isn’t there are trick con artists use that’s similar to this?
Introduce a series of givens and then drop in the implausible.
But seriously, I’d also add that keeping articles short (within 700 words) usually does the trick, too…
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You’re right, it is basic marketing.
If you’re trying to attract the Joe Blow surfer, you have to writing about what they are looking for to get found.
Then you have to present the information in a way that they “get it.”
I think bloggers who live on the web forget that many, many internet users don’t go much beyond Google.
If your target is in the 30+ age range, don’t assume that they know how to use all the web gadgets that you do.
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Nice post. The easy three step process to write for the social market…two additional tips:
1) Visit http://www.google.com/trends to find out what “familiar” topics are most popular.
2) Keywords in those topics should be in your title post. Then, connect the two (familiar and unfamiliar) as stated in this post.
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So I guess the audience that frequents social media sites tend to be the same audience that read the tabloids. They may even be the far left fanatics that are causing all of the trouble in this country.
When deciding to promote your business in the social media, it comes down to knowing your target audience. If your customers are consertive, chances are they may not be frequenting the social media sites. On the other hand, if your customers are more liberal than the general population, they will be monopilizing sites such as MySpace, Digg, StumbleUpon, Yelp, etc.
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