Post by account_disabled on Dec 3, 2023 10:50:53 GMT
Do we always agree on what we wrote? I don't, for example, and I'm convinced that it's the same for you too. But it's normal, as I said before, ideas change, right? Our own experience allows us to see things from a different perspective. When to update content? When we have changed our mind, precisely, or when what we have written is no longer valid. If we write a guide, that guide will necessarily have to be updated. Like tutorials. Or articles about SEO or social media.
How to update old content? On Blue Pen I talked about how to rewrite an old blog article , explaining why it should not be overwritten with the updated date, but should be written again by linking to the old one. Change target Who did we write that Phone Number Data content for? For a specific audience, certainly. Now, we must consider that there are generally two types of online users: expert ones and less expert ones (Americans bluntly call them dummies , the denied). Having said this, it is easy to understand that we are faced with two different types of communication. So we have to create two different contents for those readers.
Years ago I wrote the beginner's guide to WordPress, which could be followed by an advanced guide to WordPress. But in my opinion there is also a third type of user: the one who is always in a hurry and doesn't have time to read, or maybe not even want to do so. These users need other contents, visual ones. Turn old content into a series of posts Taking this post as an example, I have the opportunity to write a series of 12 articles on how to use the art of recycling in content marketing. A post is already written in the other blog, ok, but there are still eleven left. And maybe I'll write them.
How to update old content? On Blue Pen I talked about how to rewrite an old blog article , explaining why it should not be overwritten with the updated date, but should be written again by linking to the old one. Change target Who did we write that Phone Number Data content for? For a specific audience, certainly. Now, we must consider that there are generally two types of online users: expert ones and less expert ones (Americans bluntly call them dummies , the denied). Having said this, it is easy to understand that we are faced with two different types of communication. So we have to create two different contents for those readers.
Years ago I wrote the beginner's guide to WordPress, which could be followed by an advanced guide to WordPress. But in my opinion there is also a third type of user: the one who is always in a hurry and doesn't have time to read, or maybe not even want to do so. These users need other contents, visual ones. Turn old content into a series of posts Taking this post as an example, I have the opportunity to write a series of 12 articles on how to use the art of recycling in content marketing. A post is already written in the other blog, ok, but there are still eleven left. And maybe I'll write them.