
Do your web pages flow? By flow, I mean can you read through it without asking yourself what is this about again? If you find yourself stopping and starting when reading your own web pages, take this basic writing advice and try it out on your own web site content.
There are 3 Parts to Any Good Web Page
Everything I know about writing, I learned in grade school. When writing, you want to break your content up into three parts.
- The Introduction
- The Story
- The Conclusion
How Do You Use These 3 Parts of a Web Page?
In the introduction, you want to introduce what you are talking about, and give a summary of what will be found inside, if the reader chooses to dive any deeper.
The story would be the meat and potatoes of your web page. There, you talk about what you mentioned in the introduction.
The conclusion should do a quick summary again of what was in the story, and give you one last “sell” on why it was great.
By breaking your web site’s pages into chunks like this, you can help your writing flow better. After reading the introduction part, I should know what to expect, in the story I get the information, and in the conclusion, I get a summary of what has been covered and why it is important.
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