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Are Your Titles Irresistibly Click Worthy & Viral?!

Are Your Titles Irresistibly Click Worthy & Viral?! | Just Story It | Scoop.it

In fact, the title makes often the difference if I read or not an article. We have so many sources of information that it has become impossible to read them all. That's why I think that this post is an important article that you should read too. [note Martin Gysler]

 

How you title your stories as you create your content, blogs, marketing materials and the like is critically important in order to get people to read your material. This post from fellow curator Martin Gysler helps us a lot in crafting compelling titles that promote readability and shareability. Thanks Martin for the article and your review below!

 

The 80/20 Value of Titles


Recently, Rand did one of the best Whiteboard Fridays I've seen in a while (I do watch all of them) about increasing the likelihood of your content going viral. He touches briefly upon the importance of your title for click through rate and sharability, but in this post I'd like to take a more in depth look at titles and how they help spread your content. (By the way, this is my first YouMoz - woohoo!)

 

In my opinion, the elements of writing click worthy titles deserve more attention. In the wonderful marketing book "Made To Stick", the Heath brothers note that any good news or editorial writer may spend 80% of their time crafting the title (or "lead") and then whatever time they have left on the body of the content.

 

For those familiar with 80/20, what this means is, the size of the title compared to the actual content (and time spent crafting it) disproportionately affects the success of that content. It's one small piece of text with a lot power!

 

Read more: http://mz.cm/Aeh2Sq


Via Martin Gysler
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‘The future of storytelling’ media mindset bias | Limor's Storytelling Agora

‘The future of storytelling’ media mindset bias | Limor's Storytelling Agora | Just Story It | Scoop.it
Any research project that comes up with a conclusion compacted into a couple of words all beginning with the same initial letter, instantly provokes in me the...


Ahhhh -- here's another great blog post about the nature of storytelling that teases out key distinctions between storytelling, technology, and media.


Today these 3 terms get lumped together in ways that are sometimes quite odd. Statements like, "with technology and media the very nature of storytelling is changing and evolving"  doesn't pass the smell test. Media and channels might be changing -- but storytelling itself?? Hmmm.


Here my colleague Limor Shiponi delves into a recent research report about the future of storytelling to show us the fallacies in the reports assumptions. And ask questions like, "What are we doing??!"


Now why should you care? Because no one wants to get sucked into hype that is creating distortions and false promises.


Oh, don't get me wrong -- I am just as excited about the future of storytelling in business as others. I just want to play with eyes wide open. Otherwise we'll all experience false starts, failures, and misdirection that will eat up time, money and effort. I'd rather be smarter going into a storytelling project than ending up disappointed!


So read this article and let me know what YOU think. It is not a very long article, but it is throught provoking.


What insight would you contribute to what Limor has begun? I look forward to hearing from you.


This review was written by Karen Dietz for her curated content on business storytelling at www.scoop.it/t/just-story-it 

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