As I wrote in Part I of this series, SEO companies can learn a lot from Ernest Hemingway. But they can also learn a lot from a more unlikely source, one of my other favorite authors and the one who inspired me to pursue writing for a living: Kurt Vonnegut, Jr..
The iconic writer, known for a unique and humorous style that is near impossible to duplicate, was a dark optimist who had a clear love for writing. And while his tips on writing are important, his insights on readers are more important. And, though a lot of this is attributed to fiction, the lessons transcend type and make for great arguments in search engine optimization.
We “computer people,” as Vonnegut would call us, have been handed the most impressive and awe-inspiring medium since the printing press. It is important to remember that when writing content of any sort. As Vonnegut says, “what the computer people don’t realize, or they don’t care, is we’re dancing animals. You know, we love to move around.”
We are obligated, as writers, to both know and care that we are “dancing animals,” especially when choosing topics to write about. As a copywriter, it can be easy to lose focus on the audience of a piece–easy to forget we are writing for other people. Topics should cover things that are important, interesting and, ultimately, usable.
Users are looking on the Web for usable information. Remember, for an Internet reader, content is usually a means, not an end.
Vonngeut offers two great bits of advice on how to know you are targeting usable content and how to write it.
His seven steps for creative writing couldn’t apply more to SEO companies if he had written it to do so:
1. Find a subject you care about.
2. Do not ramble, though.
3. Keep it simple.
4. Have the guts to cut.
5. Sound like yourself.
6. Say what you mean to say.
7. Pity the readers.
To put it more simply, in terms that would be used today, don’t fake it. Readers are just like writers. If you don’t care about a subject, why on earth would your reader? If you don’t keep the reader in mind or keep a piece short and readable, what motivation would anyone have to read it? In Part I, I mentioned that the purpose of writing is to communicate. But it is important to remember the basic rule of communication is empathy. If a reader doesn’t care about what you’ve written, why have you written it?
But even when following these seven rules, there is still one thing to remember: nothing is certain. Writing is like picking ponies at the horse track: You can never be sure who will win or what will work. If you’re smart, you can win consistently, but, to win big, you have to take a chance.
As Vonnegut puts it:
“We have to continually be jumping off cliffs and developing our wings on the way down.”
The author series takes the wise words of the best writers of the past century and looks at them through the eyes of an SEO copywriter. If we are to learn, it should be from the best. And thus we shall.