Tag Archive for 'fiction writing'

Online writing tips – write online books not just web pages or blog posts

Treat your blog or web site as if it were a book for maximum customer satisfaction.

Treat your blog or web site as if it were a book for maximum customer satisfaction.

Yesterday I wrote about online fiction writing and online publishing success through selection and positioning of keywords and discussed some technical aspects involved in using blog posts as a medium for posting your fiction online.

Today I thought I would expand on the subject of keywords by discussing the importance of keywords in your URL or sub-domain and keeping the subject matter of your web site or blog tightly themed.

From a writer’s point of view, the best way to look at blogs and web sites, is to think of them as online books. Keep this rule in mind and a lot of the generally accepted rules for good online publishing practice will start to make sense.

Blogs and web sites are more useful to visitors and readers if they keep to a central theme. No writer would expect to include gardening information in a book that was mainly about caravanning tips, yet blogs and websites that are seeking success in online publishing regularly mix themes on the same blog or web site that are better kept apart. The low cost of blog publishing online, these days, makes multiple publishing platforms eminently practicable.

The URL of a blog or web site is very similar to the title of a book. A book’s title provides information about the contents of the book and so should the URL of a blog or web site. If your blog is about ‘fiction writing’ then ‘fiction writing’ should perhaps be included in the URL. It helps the search engines know what the blog is about so they can send relevant visitors and helps the reader to remember the blog for later use.

The sections of a blog or web site are very similar to the pages and chapters of a book and this raises design questions:

  • Is each page a separate chapter?
  • What are the different sections?
  • Is there a central plan that holds the blog or online book together?
  • What keywords are the prospective readers likely to use to find your writing? Can they be included in the URL?

Blogs are naturally orientated towards daily posts and ongoing streams of information but they can be organised to help the reader who is then more likely to reward the writer by coming back again and again – the very thing all we writers want.

Just as books get recommended to friends, whole websites or blogs may also get recommended, but an individual page or a chapter is far less likely to be passed on by word of mouth, whether it is in a blog or a book.

Online writers and online authors who put a single item of writing online and expect to be extensively recommended across the Web, I suspect, are being very optimistic and, in my experience, over-optimism on the web is generally rewarded only by disappointment.

So, my online writing tip for today is to treat your blogs and online writing as if they were books.

Naturally, books take a long time to write and you may be fortunate to get interest in your book while it is only partially written. Treat this early interest as a bonus – it may even help you shape and form your online book – but always keep clearly in mind the overall structure, chapters sections and theme of your book / blog and a clear view of this theme will help you identify a descriptive URL for your online writing site.

Lastly, all books are written by somebody and your readers need a name (and ideally a picture) to relate to when they recommend you. It is therefore not a bad idea to include your name in the URL, along with key descriptive words. It helps your online readers, it helps the search engines and the extra visitors and advertising revenues you then might receive as an online writer is more than likely to put a smile on your face.

Good luck! More soon!

Bye for now :-)

Rob

Rob Hopcott – online writer

Ideas for writing – home life family skeletons and exciting soap story opportunities

Your home life in a small country village or a large town can stimulate great ideas for writing

Your home life in a small country village or a large town can stimulate great ideas for writing

Finding ideas for writing in your home life might seem unlikely to you. After all, for most of us, our home lives are fairly safe, secure and comfortable. Writing about your home life might, therefore, initially appear boring, uninteresting and uninspiring.

However, relationships are the cornerstones for huge bodies of fiction writing – not least the ever popular television soaps – and the strong relationships in  your home life, perhaps even skeletons suitably disguised and rearranged, can provide excellent ideas for writing and story telling material.

Our home lives shape the people we are. We all have home lives and our desire to look into the lives of others means your home life could provide you with an idea for writing a story that could run and run.

Talking to older members of your family can be a good place to start and might produce surprisingly interesting stories. Were your parents or grandparents in any war? Did your mother have previous relationships before your father? Was your father quite a ‘Jack the Lad’ before he found your mother? How did people go out and find relationships ‘in the old days’? How do you feel about all the stories you have been told?  Mould and alter the experiences so they can’t be traced back and your story might unfold surprisingly quickly.

Has your family got a very strong friendship with another family? How do these families interact with each other? Are there rivalries or jealousies?  What if …?

Imagine your ideal family. Would it be large or small, wealthy or poor, high achieving or living the simple life?

If your interest is science fiction (sci-fi), how would it feel to be part of an alien family living on another planet or in another universe? What would happen if your alien family met human beings? Would the families be friends or enemies?

Of course, the objective is not merely to copy the stories that people in your family can tell but instead to use them as the foundation for a writing idea that you imagine and create yourself. The secret is to use your researches into your family relationships as a starting point for your writing ideas and as a catalyst to stimulate your imagination.

Your home life with all its complex relationships and personal histories is a great place to research and find ideas for writing.

If you would like to read more about ideas for writing you may be interested in my article about using strong feelings to supercharge your writing ideas.

Bye for now

Rob

Rob Hopcott – online writer

Fiction writing rewards better than articles says Rob Hopcott

Fiction writing offers much greater rewards than article writing for me because it lets my mind dream which I suspect is a common need for many writers. Nonfiction writing may offer better writing monetary rewards but, for me, the call of the wild to return to writing fiction is an impulse that is ultimately irresistible.

I particularly like the open ended nature of fiction writing, hence I don’t restrict myself to a specific genre. If you visit my flash fiction stories site, you will find science fiction (sci-fi), adventure, romance, horror, love stories and more. Additionally, since I am an online writer and my own boss, no publisher is there to tell me not to mix the genres which means that I could have a science fiction love story, a horror romance or any other variation that fits in with my idea for a story that works.

So, if you are a writer and are churning out the articles, consider giving your imagination a holiday with some fiction writing. It could be very therapeutic :-)

Bye for now

Rob

Rob Hopcott – online author and fiction writer