Your Audience, Your Content, Your Success.
Your Audience, Your Content, Your Success.

Your Audience, Your Content, Your Success.

by Janith · 6 comments

Audi­ence, Pur­pose and Form are closely inter­re­lated yet many blog­gers tend to over­look or neglect it. They impact on your choice of con­tent and use of language.

Writ­ing con­tent is such an open and vast land­scape, where any­one can write any­thing but by being aware of the APF Guide­lines you give your­self a spe­cific bound­ary to work with.

Frankly, it’s cru­cial to have bound­aries because many writ­ers have a set topic but then wan­der off to com­pletely unre­lated points. A sim­ple real­iza­tion of these guide­lines before you start writ­ing, will ensure bet­ter tar­geted con­tent and fur­ther please your loyal read­ers — I can almost guar­an­tee it but it’s up to you how you imple­ment these tech­niques and reap the the best out of it.

Audi­ence: Who are you writ­ing for?

In choos­ing the style of your writ­ing you need to have a clear idea of who con­sti­tutes your audi­ence. How can you write or cre­ate pieces that suit your audi­ence? Research your read­ers’ inter­ests before you write. Sim­ply by look­ing over your “Pop­u­lar Posts” and “Most Com­mented” will give you a rough idea. The key is to fol­low your audi­ences’ likes and avoid their dis­likes as best as you can. Now, you can’t please every sin­gle reader but deliver to the major­ity and respect the minor­ity. Once you hit the big shelves, you don’t need to worry about this tech­nique because your audi­ence fol­lows you.

Audi­ence: This isn’t a democ­racy, It’s a dictatorship.

Your audi­ence dic­tates the style of your writ­ing. “Style” refers to the ‘man­ner’ of writ­ing; that is, whether your style is for­mal or infor­mal as dis­cussed here. Writ­ing styles can also be described within these broad cat­e­gories, for exam­ple as flow­ery, plain, elegant.

  • For­mal Writ­ing is appro­pri­ate for fac­tual and pro­fes­sional niches and any writ­ing that is aimed at an audi­ence expect­ing an offi­cial address. For exam­ple the Google Blog and such use for­mal writ­ing (most of the time) as a sign of respect from a busi­ness point of view.
  • Infor­mal Writ­ing is appro­pri­ate at many lev­els, too, but it is nor­mally used to cre­ate every­day con­tent in around a relaxed atmos­phere. Infor­mal writ­ing is NOT incor­rect; it is sim­ple writ­ing that assumes a friend­lier and relaxed rela­tion­ship between you and your audi­ence. My favorite exam­ple for this is ShoeMoney’s blog which deliv­ers pro­fes­sional advice in a social and “infor­mal” tone.

Describe Your Audience

If you write notes on the key fea­tures of your audi­ence this will help you to keep your reader in mind. The most impor­tant pointer to keep in mind is that it’s your con­tent, your audi­ence and your suc­cess. If the first two don’t appre­ci­ate one another, the third will be a unreach­able and dis­tant dream. Always ensure you that you focus your writ­ing to  suit your read­ers. Regards TeenProBlogger

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Article by Janith

Hey, I'm Janith. 16 years old, and livin' in Aussie.I'm with Twitter because it's the simplified version of Facebook + Myspace - crap. Along with Alex, we run Blogussion and plan to bring the blogging house down!

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Corey Freeman December 31, 2008 at 12:24 pm

Umm…if it’s all about your audience…then it is a democracy. Majority rules. You don’t always want to focus to please everybody. Sometimes you have to (and need to) write things for yourself. Those are your most honest (and sometimes most successful) articles.

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TeenProBlogger December 31, 2008 at 12:33 pm

Hey,
Dictatorship in a contextual sense, as in what interests your readers should influence the content you write. I understand what you mean, but imagine, let’s take my blog for example.

It’s a specific niche of Blogging Tips/SEO and I have a range of readers with specific interest that dictates what I write. I mean, if my next article is about gardening flowers, I’m more than likely to loose interest of all my readers, if not loose them as readers all-together.

Hope that cleared up that little dilemma, I see how you got misguided by that statement, but the bigger picture brings back sense to it ;)

TeenProBlogger

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SERPGenius December 31, 2008 at 8:02 pm

Woah there Corey, hold up – appreciate what he’s writing because it makes sense.

there’s just way too many blogs out there that just write about plain crap without any sense behind it. you cannot just write what ever you want even if it is your blog.

no matter what you say, sure there’s blogs that “truly voice the author’s opinion” but do you think if a blogger who swears and puts down anything he feels isn’t right suddenly starts writing about love and his feelings would have his readers? maybe he’ll find a new audience but what good is content that doesn’t appeal to your readers?

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Corey Freeman January 1, 2009 at 3:33 am

@TeenProBlogger
I wasn’t saying go off topic, I was just saying sometimes you should write for yourself. I wasn’t confused, I was making a statement. Never once did I say to break the niche, just don’t get caught up trying to please everybody.

@SERPGenius
I didn’t say I didn’t appreciate what he was saying, sheesh.

Dude, I wasn’t saying that you should completely ignore your readers. I’m just saying that there are some articles you write because you want/need to write them. Like my own “why i hate it when people ask me how i make money” article. I didn’t say to just write whatever, I said you should also write for yourself.

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