PressRiot almost ready for beta
September 18, 2007 | 1 Response
When I dropped the music format here, I promised a new site was coming. I even went as far as to register a domain and post the occasional link to this upcoming Canadian music review spot (see? I just did it again). Well that is about all the progress anyone has seen so I thought I would let you all in on how it is coming along.
The site will be in blog format, but divided by monthly issues. I’m either going to release each issue in bulk, or set them to be autoposted in weekly or daily intervals. I am almost ready to go live with a beta preview version of pressriot.ca, which means a scaled back version to gain some user input before the big release. The site will go live and people will be able to read and rate all the articles.
As far as the writing and content production, it is going pretty well. I have enough articles on my own and I’m waiting on some other submissions, I have just about enough to do the first issue.
The development stages are basically finished, save for once people actually get in and start to try it out. It was relatively simple to get a working model going being that I planned on using Wordpress as the core.
The inlying challenge was to get it up and running with enough distinction from section to section. I wanted to have the main blog page more category oriented rather than just laying out all the freshest posts in reverse chronological order. Sounds like exactly the opposite of WordPress doesn’t it? Well it can be done.
Once again, its all in the theme. The theme essentially structures everything using the loop. You can call anything from just the post content of a single post, single category, anything really. I’ll get more into this when I talk about the awesome theme I discovered in a later post. When will it be? You’ll have to subscribe to the feed if you don’t want to miss it.
I’ve been testing the core of the site in a far away secret location, nobody will ever find in order to keep things under wraps. Nothing is currently hosted under the pressriot domain. Its all on a secret account hosted an a sea-barren shanty, floating in uncharted off the coast of Zürich. It is guarded by a one-eyed crow with a hooked beak. He will peck out the eyes of anyone who attempts to spoil the surprise.
Writing for print vs. Writing for the web
September 12, 2007 | 0 Responses
Writing for print
Print publications tend to favour articles with short, punchy sentences, information that is attributed to well known sources and articles that are written in the reverse pyramid structure (the most important information in the beginning and gradually bulking down as it continues). Space is often a factor and articles are edited accordingly. Different rules apply with headlines; i.e. - Online you would be fine to write an article like “How to open up a beer using your belly button” but in print you would be asked to rewrite (belly button beer opener?).
Another thing is that most fun and unusual punctuation and structure are frowned upon because the text on a printed page must look uniform for the ads to really be able to bounce(parentheses are out of the question).
Writing for the web
Online publications usually include a lot of keywords and keyword phrases in their copy. The text is written with search engines and the terms that people will be searching for when their page shows up. A lot of publications now are bending the traditional rules of article writing due to the increased popularity of social media sites. Lead paragraphs are especially affected as it pertains to the way media is gobbled up by users of Digg or StumbleUpon. Space isn’t as important because of the many ways that content from a given site can be parsed; i.e. - RSS feeds, MyYahoo, ect.
Internet copy writers can get away with a lot more as far as use of cliches, slang or loose grammar values.
Writing for the reader
This doesn’t include any of the above. It can have certain aspects of both styles if they are properly balanced, but neither needs to be there. Writing for the reader consists mainly of just being hospitable. It is not just opening your post with an introduction, barking out some facts and then leaving and leaving the reader to wallow through your words like a textbook. It is welcoming them to your page and greeting them warmly at the start of a post. Telling them some things about your life that they don’t especially have to know. Make the reader feel included and they will stick around.
Bring it all together
The key is take equal parts of writing for online and writing for print and present them for the reader. It is good to include some aspects of web copywriting to make your stories easier to find and the reader will thank you for that. Its also great to keep it to a mimimum and maintain an engaging factor in your writing that doesn’t just repeat terms for the sake of Google and your reader will definitely thank you for that.
