Nicer prose, or more page views?
July 5, 1999
Search engines are responsible for a trend which is unfortunate
from a literary standpoint, but probably unavoidable - the
salting of prose with
"keywords."
Theoretically, the more
times a keyword appears on a page, the more likely that page
is to come up on a search for that keyword. In the past,
writers went to great lengths to avoid repeating the same
word too much, sometimes resorting to stilted synonyms exhumed
from a thesaurus. Nowadays, many Web writers do the opposite,
repeating a product name or some other keyword as often as
possible, and seemingly avoiding pronouns like the plague.
If you must resort to this keyword-centric commercialization
of our craft of words (in which artistry is key), the key is
not to go overboard with your use of keywords, and not to use
any word or keyword more times than the keyword really merits
being used.
Do us all a favor.
In the old days, when printers' devils ran around with jars
of paste, an article generally ran the gauntlet of a couple
of editors and a proofreader before being cast in lead. It was
assumed that a writer's work would have to be massaged and
tweaked to eliminate errors and make it conform to the
magazine's house style. In today's rush-rush world, however,
Select All, Copy and Paste may be about all the editing an
article gets. Judging by the number of atrocious errors in
spelling, grammar and style that are found even in respected
and well-funded publications, editors and proofreaders are in
short supply. A writer who submits work that is error-free
and in the proper style stands out like a pearl of great price.
If you take the time to learn and apply the style of the
publication you're writing for, and proofread your work
carefully, your chances of repeat assignments will increase
greatly. Every publication worth its salt has a set of style
guidelines,
which pass judgment on the many gray areas of
English grammar, punctuation and spelling. Some publications
use dashes - some prefer the more traditional colon or
semi-colon. Some capitalize Web, and some even capitalize
Net when it refers to "the" Internet. The more closely you
can conform to the house style, the less work your editor
will have.
Using a spell-checker is only the first step in proofreading
your writing. A spell-checker cannot catch words that are
used improperly, or improper punctuation. If your knowledge
of the fine points is spotty, invest in a style guide (or
visit one of the online ones). Please don't subject the
Web-surfing public to any more wars among "their" "there" and
"they're." And the difference between "its" and "it's" is not
that complicated, folks. Learn it and use it!
Keep your readers informed
Writing for the Web
Links aplenty!
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