Write Great Articles in Four Easy Steps

When I wrote my first article, I decided on the topic and just started writing. It was a disaster. The content was disjointed, lacked focus, and made no sense. It also took me hours and hours to produce a piece of garbage. There had to be a better way. Fortunately I found it after a lot of trial and error.
Fast forward to today. I've written hundreds of articles and locked down on a methodology to writing articles which stay on topic, aren't disjointed, and are easy to create. Here's what I do:
Every article I write has four sections, as follows:Opening storyCore message, or "meat" of the articleTake-awaysCloseIf you look at my articles you'll be able to pick up on this structure. The secret sauce comes in not the sections themselves, but the order in which the sections are written. I write the article in the following sequence:Take-awaysCore message, or "meat" of the articleCloseOpening story
Here's why I do it in this sequence. I start first with take-aways because that is what I want my readers to get out of my article. By starting with the take-aways, I ensure that I am putting the reader first and writing for the reader's benefit. Next I construct the core message, or "meat" of the article. The core message has to support the take-aways; if I've constructed the take-aways first then I better ensure the core message aligns to the take-aways. Next I decide how I want to close the article, which is typically a one to two-sentence statement that underscores my core message. The close leaves the last impression which needs to align to the core message. Last, I write the opening story. By writing the opening story last, I ensure that there is a relevant and seamless transition into the core message and that the opening story grabs the attention of the reader.
When I use this structure, I not only get a better quality article, but can produce an article much faster than using the old method of "start at the beginning." If you want to see an example go here. See if you can pick up on the article flow. Happy writing!
Published on August 02, 2017 14:28
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