[Estimated read time: 8 minutes]
One of my most memorable interactions in college took place in English 202, when my professor would have us come to the front of the class and share with him (while seated in a chair right beside his desk) what our thesis was for the assignment we'd be working on for the first half of the semester.
In nearly every case, my thesis was too long, something my professor had no truck with.
"Smith," he'd say, "if you cannot explain it in a sentence, you don't understand it clearly."
I'd always walk away wondering how on Earth I was supposed to distill my idea into one sentence.
It would be years later, while studying physics, that I encountered a similar quote, often attributed to Albert Einstein ["Unless you can explain it simply, you do not understand it fully"], before I finally understood the message my professor was trying to get across: "The better you understand an idea, and can distill its essence internally, the easier it is for you to share the idea succinctly and clearly to the reader."
We now live in a world overflowing with words, even as the time we have to read them gets shorter and shorter.
All around we hear, see, and read where people don't have time to write — yet when they do write, it's more essay than note. All the while, the folks consuming our content are crying out, "Give me the damn info, already!"
Ann Wylie, one of the preeminent writing and communication coaches in the world, agrees, writing in a recent newsletter: "The longer your story, the less of it your readers will read — and the less likely they are to understand and act on it."
In fact, she shares research conducted by Wilbur Schramm, who she calls the “father of communication studies,” highlighting the effect of story length on reading:
- A nine-paragraph-long story lost three out of 10 readers by the fifth paragraph.
- A shorter story lost only two.The short and the long of it: More people read further when the story is shorter rather than longer.
"That’s the 33% reading gap between a short piece and a longer one," says Wylie. "Bottom line: The longer your piece, the less of it they’ll read."
I think it's time we all took a stand against word bloat, focusing our attention on writing shorter, punchier content.
If you're in (and I hope you are), I'm going to share three simple tips for creating amazing short content, replete with real-life examples showcasing exactly what I'm talking about.
Where digital can take a cue from print
Before I dive into the tactics, I'd like to quash what I think might be three objections to writing shorter content:
- Brevity is tough.
- But some people enjoy reading longer content.
- What about those times when I need more words to make my point?
Let me take them in order:
- I cannot help you here. Life is tough; but the alternative is far worse. The same can be said for people not consuming your verbose content. It's worth the effort to attempt to write shorter.
- Yes, and they'll likely enjoy it even more if you cut needless information. Most importantly, imagine all of the OTHER people who'd consume, enjoy, and share your content if it didn't take forever to read it.
- In almost every case, we could make our messages more effective if we actively looked for ways to write more succinctly.
“We take it as a given that the more information decision makers have, the better off they are,” wrote Malcolm Gladwell in Blink. However, “that extra information isn’t actually an advantage at all … In fact [it’s] more than useless. It’s harmful. It confuses the issues.”
In my opinion, the rise of blogs, where we're all free to write as much as we like, has helped to ruin great writing. I wish we'd steal from print — where space is anything but free — the notion that each word needs to make a case for its own existence.
Why listen to me?
In some way, shape, or form, I've been an editor for more than half my life, going back to college when I was an Opinions Page editor. I've since held editing jobs for newsletters, magazines, and websites. I've also won numerous writing and editing awards, including from the Associated Press.
Maybe my most fun editing job is the one I have now as the head of YouMoz, Moz's user-generated content website.
In this role I get to work with hundreds of writers, see thousands of posts, and have meaningful interactions that lead to authors becoming better at sharing ideas than they ever thought possible.
Also, given the high volume of posts we receive, I've developed a strong sense of what typically derails a piece. All things being equal, it's length. In nearly every case — even for content that we eventually accept — posts come in far too long. Sadly, most authors refuse to cut pieces, even for the sake of clarity.
The authors who are up to the challenge typically follow one of three paths:
Tip #1: Show, don't tell
Instead of using words to tell your story, use screen captures. How-to content is vital in the content marketing space. People want to know how to do what you've described. Why not show them?
This works very well for any step-by-step posts where readers would be better served seeing what they are to do.
A few great examples include:
- How to Find and Fix Structured Data Markup Errors via the Google Search Console, by Al Gomez
- The Brand Halo Effect: Does Brand Awareness Impact Organic Search Rankings?, by Tom Coad
- Here’s How to Automate Google Analytics Reporting with Google Sheets, by Gabriele Toninelli
Notice how, in each case, the authors use an economy of words but place a priority on screen captures.
Also, don't be afraid to use a single image or a short video to capture and share your idea. Not all ideas need the added weight of text.
Tip #2: Make a statement
This was my go-to tactic when I first started blogging for my own site in 2010. I keep track of the information listed in the screen capture in a Gmail draft, but you can use Evernote or whatever note-capturing platform you prefer. (I sometimes capture the initial idea in a Moleskine pad, then transfer it to Gmail later. I like using Gmail because it's easy to search for my idea when I'm ready to work on it.)
The key element with this approach is that it ensures I have a clear, strong point to make, then can back it up with supporting facts. The real genius of this approach is once I've covered my three points, I'm done.
The goal isn't to write everything there is to write on a topic; the goal is to share sufficient information that leads to learning and/or opens the topic up for further discussion.
If you decide to use this approach/style of post, keep these numbers in mind:
- 100: Number of words to make your point in the initial paragraph
- 300: Total number of words for the three supporting points
- 50: Number of words in the closing paragraph, including the call to action
I've seen this approach work very effectively for SMBs and enterprise brands.
Tip #3: Write anecdotally
If you're familiar with the Wall Street Journal, you've no doubt seen the treatment they give to the beginning of many of their stories. It's called an "anecdotal lead," where you use a real-life person/example to make the reader aware of what the story is about.
The goal is to make them so interested they cannot walk away, but not provide so much information that they don't read the story.
And by using a real person to make the point, the stories are more interesting, more personal, more memorable, and more likely to be read.
Last year we rolled out a section on YouMoz called called "Here's How," where people share how they/their team/their brand did or does something using a story to provide step-by-step details to make the impact real to the audience.
Authors have readily cottoned to the idea of sharing content in this form, in large part because they're living through the experience, so sharing it with rich detail is easy. They simply share a little of the who and the what, then go straight to the how. In fact, the goal with regard to Here's How is for 90% of each post to be how-to information.
Here are a few examples:
- Here’s How to Turn First-Time Customers into Loyal Fans with Context-Rich Content, by Rocio del Moral
- Here’s How a Brand New Website Built an Email List of More than 1,300 Contacts in Three Days, by Sam Anthony
- Here’s How to Break down Reporting Options in Mobile Analytics, by Ran Avrahamy
Don't be afraid to steal this approach. It works. But remember, don't over-tell the story.
Leave them yearning
Speaking of over-telling, I've gone on far longer than I'd hoped to with this post. But there's one final point I'd like to leave you with.
Take advantage of the comments sections on blogs. Instead of trying to cover everything under the sun, use the comments to share additional elements that didn't have to go in the story itself, but would provide great insight for those who've read your content.
By taking this approach, you can leave a little to the imagination in the post, then reward readers for sticking around.
What are your thoughts on the three ideas shared above?
My problem is that or I tend to over explain things, becoming verbose, or I over distill a reasoning using some sort Julius Caesar's "Veni, vidi, vici" phrase.
Giving for granted that what you have wrote is correct (I truly agree with you), I think that reality is more nuanced.
In other words, there are writers, who - no matter their efforts - deliver better and stronger messages with a longer writing, and others who are all the contrary.
Again, brevity IMHO doesn't mean short content, but clearer. If clarity is present, a content well structured so that people can understand it and read all through it without getting lost, then the objective of the writing is accomplished.
Using images, charts or others formats in order to express better a message, that is a given, and also a big relief for a writer.
Also, the more condensed the writing, the more loudly each misstep yells. For example - if I remember my Latin correctly - Caesar wrote "Veni, vidi, vinci." (I took Latin more than 52 years ago.)
Making things interesting, taking real life experiences/examples, using screen captures and so on will definitely help but it doesn’t mean to write short. It’s all about making everything clear by the use of captures or textual and it doesn’t matter how much length it will take.
The goal is to make readers stay and come again.
Nice points here Ronell but I am not agree with you for not covering everything in post and making it for comments. Yeah for some people it will work but what if a user will have confusion in between the post and he don’t want to ask via comment because of any reason.? May be he will leave.
I think we have to make everything clear without worrying about the length because the number of readers are huge and everyone have his/her own choice.
Great article - thank you for sharing.
I, too, have some of the same questions as others here. How do we balance between length for search engines and readers?
Thank you.
Very interesting and informative article. I especially like the part where you mentioned that a writer should add more info in the comments section. This will most certainly keep the blog/article alive! I'm an SEO expert (https://www.aplus.net.nz/ ) and I do write from time to time. I agree that the content should be to the point and not lengthy because no one wants to spend so much time reading a very long blog.
My thoughts exactly when reading this article. I think the fault lies partly in the way we make conversations that affects the way we write. When explaining something to someone over the phone or in person, we tend to be as lengthy as possible in order to share as much information as possible. This is not translated well into writing as the more info that is included in the writing, the more info the user has to process and that causes the downfall of most articles and blog posts.
Maybe we can all start by talking in short and concise ways as well.
Wonderful post and also great to see a perspective coming from a professional writer as yourself. I find that my SEO efforts are normally directing people who write the content from my research and at times I can provide them the terms for the content then it is up to me to place internal links, secondary headings, ect. With this article I can now do a better job in explaining what I need but more so how to get good quality writing done even for myself.
I think that a way to look at if content is good is useful, and with the mention of showing the reader through screen shots, info-graphics ect you take their reading experience to a new level giving them a tool for the future that they can reference on your topic.
Thank you for your many contributions and knowlege to the community we all appreciate it.
Great article and strong points. I struggle with being succinct when writing or speaking because I like to provide as much information as possible where it's relevant to the subject. Many articles I read feel incomplete to me, as if the writer got lazy and only put in 60% of the effort they could have. There's nothing more frustrating to me than taking the time to read an article on something hoping to glean enough information to make an important decision on a matter, only to discover that the article wasn't comprehensive enough. I guess there is a balance to be found, but don't you think that certain topics may lend themselves to brevity while others demand a more thorough and comprehensive treatment?
A short time back Rand published a post about creating what he called 10X Content, and the premise was to look at all the content available on your topic, then make it better. To me, better indicates "more comprehensive." Be the go-to source for any information needed on a topic. Don't make people read 3 articles and watch 2 videos to get all the info they are looking for - put it all in one convenient place for them. That's not to say you can't cross-link to related, more in-depth content that deals with specific sub-topics, of course.
Perhaps the key is to write comprehensively about narrow topics, rather than narrowly about comprehensive topics.
Also, since you are an editor: under Why Listen to Me "sees" should be "see" and under Tip #3 you wrote "called called." :)
Very well said! I think there is definitely a place for verbose articles as long as the content is well-written and transparent.
I set up a Moz account just so I could thumbs-up this post. Well said, Ronell. Well said.
Excellent post, Ronell! With your awesome post, Great Content vs Long Term, and Rand's last post on Great Content, this post couldn't have come at a better time. While the online marketing world has been abuzz with long-term content, we always needed someone to come up with fresh insights and dismantle the myth that great content is long-form content. Thanks again for sharing your tips - copywriters should now focus on brevity rather than wordcount.
Speaking of great content, here's a wonderful post from Content Harmony.
Linking to Content Harmony in a post written by Ronell is very meta-blogging :D
Good morning Ronell,
I'm a true believer than an image cannot be more important than words, but also a true believer than words and images are a perfect combo.
It kinda reminds me of an advertisment class where the teacher said: - do you know when cartoons are used in ads?- And we all were like: -yeah sure, when it's an advertisment for kids.-
And he was like: -you're all wrong, they're used to explain for example quimical producs like clothes cleaner, or something that needs to be explained perfectly so everyone would understand how it works.-
An example: IT CAN CLEAN THE STAINS WITH ITS "ULTRACOMPLICATED FORMULA NO ONE UNDERSTANDS" BY DOING THIS (cute bubbles cleaning the stain).
I know it might sound silly but it's one of the best ways to get it :D.
And about making a statement, sometimes it's also an amazing way to expose something than writing the longest paragraf ever.
You give such good advices!!
Palmer.
Hi Ronell,
I am a blogger for Econsultancy and in the process of writing a best practice eCommerce book for them. Your article has been a big help to me. In our space it is too easy to go on and on. I am receiving a lot of push back from my editor to reduce the volume of content in my book and your article has helped to crystallise my thinking.
Thanks, Greg
Tip 2 is something i am going to try for my own. I get easily sidetracked and by using the recommended amount of words for each subject i need to weigh every word before i put them on paper. A good way for me to keep on track
I think that long pieces look great if you make them yourself, but its not worth it if you lose attention from readers. I'm sure to that that with me for the future!
While the piece may a bit longer than a traditional post, it has what a preacher I know would call "handles" -- something you can hold on to and use, over and over again. Will be sharing on Twitter and LinkedIn.
Thanks Ronell,
As always I would like to add on my opinion, few days back I read one post in Moz which said that "pointers and story telling kind of thing help your blog in being more readable and attracts" there was another post which talked about poetic version of words can also help in my blog." (I just wrote blog post taking them into consideration, to my surprise I am ranked 47th (keyword of the blog) without doing SEO :)
So now I might try 1 post based on your suggestions.
Regards
Pulkit Thakur
I love this article, Ronell.
When I was still at school and later at University, I would always start my writings with a short sentence, a word or two. This always worked with my teachers, calling me eloquent and paying attention to my 'talent'.
I also like how you structure your posts and how you used the tactic in this post as well. :)
Keep up the good work.
Best,
PopArt Studio
Very useful article especially for seo webmasters and copywriters.. Frankly speaking I haven't tried some techniques mentioned in the article but at the same time most of them are used by the light of nature..And most of all I like anecdotal introductions and story framing..They attract readers attention from the first line and set easy and fluent pace up to the end.
Love this distillation of principles and I'll use it for my future writing.
There is one thing, though.
Your 3 examples of YouMoz posts that do a good job following the first principle have very low thumbs up from the Moz audience. Now it could be that the upvotes should be taken with a grain of salt, but it's the first thing I always look to, and I love it as a good quick heuristic to see if things are worth reading.
If you look back on historical Moz posts, most (but not all) of the posts with the most upvotes are either epic knowledge-bombs that are so good that people can't resist voting up and sharing such as https://moz.com/blog/the-new-seo-process-quit-being-kanye, or they are very good distillations and explanations of SEO/inbound theory and principles such as https://moz.com/blog/can-seos-stop-worrying-keywords-focus-topics-whiteboard-friday.
So if I'm a data driven SEO writing a post, I'd want to replicate what has worked in the past for maximum exposure, and short pithy posts seem to not be winning!
NICE.It's very interesting.Have to concentrate in the content what we are using and the words. short and sweet will always give the better value for the readers.
bizbilla
An insightful article with regards to content writing specially when we are constantly emphasizing on the fact that good content plays an important role in optimizing a site. When "Content is the King" to know the art of creating the right kind of content is very important.
Thanks for the post, Ronell. As I have some experience in blog writing, I’d like to add that every sentence of a high-quality blog should be stand-alone and can be read in isolation. Anecdotal writing is effective, but most of the bloggers I’ve seen tend to go overboard with it.
As a fellow writer, I couldn't agree more. I feel the world has shifted away from verbose, complicated language and moved to digestible English. I don't think anyone has to 'dumb it down' but we do have to make a conscious effort to be clear and concise. If you can say it in one setence, say it in one.
Great piece.
In my opinion, I will rather read a short and concise article than a long and wordy article. I am not a good reader and actually I am easily get bored. I am still practicing to be a good writer and I want to be a concised-article writer because I know that this generation is not fond of reading long article. This is great. More articles to write.
Really really love this post, I think an anecdotal approach is very important for harnessing a core audience and building a following. I'll definitely be passing on some of these tips to my clients!
Hi Ronnell
There are several ways to reach the customer correctly. The ones I like is to demonstrate with facts and not with words and give everything I explain a humanized version that the client can empathize better with what we say
Great post!!
Great 3 Tactics! I test it :)
While being concise, we also need to be clear. Conciseness without clarity is confusing.
Hi Ronell,
Thank you for taking the time to write this great post. I second the points you have made and want to add that because we are constantly bombarded by adverts everywhere we go in the form of digital ads, pop-ups,etc. our mindset has evolved to adapt to these distractions but outright ignoring them or by thinking "so what's your point?"
That's why I agree with you when you say we need to make content that is not only unique but that it piques the interest of the reader, then leaves them yearning for more. The generation of the millennials is already upon us and we need to adapt new strategies if we are to succeed in this new age.
Kudos once more for the great article
- Aaron
Writers tend to think about tightening their writing. What does that mean? Like sneaky calories, a lot of unwanted words and phrases will find their way into our writing unnoticed and then bog it down. The main aim should be to write in a concise fashion so that the whole meaning is can be easily understood.
Wow - amazing post man!
Exactly what I was looking for...Thanks @Ronell
Great article and I would subscribe to that right away!
Keep it simple, stupid.
This post does an excellent job of explaining why writing short is tougher than writing long - brevity takes clear and focused thinking, while rambling on forever really doesn't. I also learned that good writing needs to be pinpoint-focused in college as well (when working on a thesis for a political science course, and not in any of my journalism classes - go figure).
Good piece, Ronell. Good to see your post here at Moz. I also come from the school of shorter is better, having had a writing professor who used to give all of my first drafts Fs and then he would tell me to rewrite the story again better with half as many words. That used to just floor me. Now when I edit a contributor's piece from 1,500 words to 800, that floors me more. To write for 500 words and say nothing is a real problem on the internet.
I like many struggle with Google telling me everything needs to be long and my background telling me everything needs to be short. I suppose like everything else in our SEO, content marketing world, there is no EXACT right answer and for every example of a good short article, there is an opposite example for a good long article.
But does anecdotal really work for how-to articles?
I'm just thinking about my own behavior, but I want to skip those initial paragraphs and get to the bullet points as quickly as possible.
Hi Guillermo,
I think it works when you want to explain some "how to:" and you want to give some example of how NOT to. Like "I tried this and this and this... and they didn't work because what happened to me... ". It's good to emphatise with your readers, even if it's just a little bit so the read gets easier.
Saludos :D
Nice article but it seems to contradict advice for contemporary blogs. Some suggest writing 3000 words like Neil Patel.
Or some of his ghost writers ;-)
On a more serious note, we should read what others say about SEO or Content or whatever, but never take their conclusion for granted if not über proved by practice... or if Neil Patel (or Rand or Danny Sullivan) suggest to write everything in bold, will you do it?
Hello Ronell,
As a person who has self learned SEO, Social media, content and more, I love this piece and it just is PURE GOLD to me because this is what I try to explain people all the time. I was always told that "Less is More" but people around me think writing more makes an impression that You know everything.
The challenge is to get your message across with a limitation of words/characters. That's 1 of the biggest reasons why Twitter is my favorite platform. It forces you to THINK, to be Innovative and get your message across in those 140 characters. Creativity lies in using the least possible words to get your message across as clearly as possible. (And for a change a smaller piece on Moz) haha I wish they let you post more often here. .
Great work mate.
I understand the concept of short content that is straight to the point.
However, is it true that long content(1000words or more) ranks better for SEO compared to short content?
It is accordingly to correlation studies, which are not causation studies.
In other words... some long forms (which are 5000+ words) do fantastically well and the majority do fantastically bad.
Great information! I'll be sharing this with my teammates as we begin the process of condensing 30+ sites into one simple, user-friendly website.
This is an extreme example, but it's a lot like a robber demanding your wallet. You don't want to tell the robber a long-winded story as you're being held up. Instead, it's in your best interest to just give him/her what he/she wants so they can move on without further violence.
Its amazing article, this is very useful information for all person witch is working for the content marketing and writing the high quality content. this is great article and I suggest to you we will subscribe right away!
After years of academic training that taught me to write for clarity and succinctness, it's often challenging for me to write enough to meet the SEO recommended number of words on a web page!
Feel free to liberate yourself from that pain... in reality doesn't exist an "SEO recommended number of words on a web page" :-)
We often complaint about a content written by a writer, difficult for us to understand. But have never tried to adapt ourselves, to the way a writer tries to express one's feelings, ideas etc., which however, is necessary. Content both long as well as short, can be effective, but, the condition is we try, understand a writer's perspective in the right earnest. Every content written is good and pictures, graphs, tables etc., added to it, just add on its overall value. Last but not the least, every writer wants one's readers to at least go through what one has written, may be also at a glance, giving it a bird-eye view even, increasing the intensity of its reading, according to his/her personal needs, preferences, priorities and the like.
Hi Ronell
Great article !! And according to what you samples
Sometimes when we write we do not realize that the reader wants to read more, but wants to read less, and that things are not written, but show !!
In addition we also know that one who reads is a person with feelings, motivations and concerns and not a robot. We are human !!!
I like many struggle with Google telling me everything needs to be long and my background telling me everything needs to be short. I suppose like everything else in our SEO, content marketing world, there is noEXACT right answer and for every example of a good shortarticle, there is an opposite example for a good long article. [Links removed by editor.]
Is difficult to write content with much information and not bore you with texts too long to general readers
Great article, Ronell. Finding that balance between not enough and too much and catching a reader's attention and losing it can be a tough thing to hone in on. I personally like to consider not just the information I want to put out there, but also the audience I'm writing for. Who are they? What are they normally interested in? Is there any statistical data out there on the audience and what types of information resonate with them? We're also in the age of tl;dr, and it's not just younger people. The internet seems to have really shortened the attention spans of just about everyone who uses it. I especially like your tip #2 which could help anyone get to the point quicker. Having a solid headline that includes what the reader will get out of it and why is good too.
Thank you very useful.
It made me remember a sales trainer who always said to us at sales training, "give WIFM" ("What´s in it for me") ...
Excellent article and very relevant to the business world. Thank you!
Wonderful article, great information for all of the folks working for the content marketing out there
Storytelling makes Content Marketing more successful.
Great information to write high quality content for your site.