Do you know what stinks? The world is acrawl with canned-spam, cookie-cutter, rinse-and-repeat weblogging advice — and people follow it slavishly instead of keeping their own counsel, living their own ideal, following their own star.
That is: If I read another weblog post on how to write weblog posts, I think I’ll scream. To absolve myself of charges of hypocrisy, in advance, this not a post about how to write posts, it’s a post about how to write.
Do you want to know how to write? Here’s the tiniest taste of a first lesson: Start in the middle.
Not: “This is my report on…”
Not: “Webster’s defines…”
Not: “How can I begin to tell you…?”
Start in the middle, the way you’d start a phone conversation with someone you knew would be calling.
Like this: “Do you know what stinks?”
Oh, yes, comforting rules abound, but they are the very same rules you rebel against in every other aspect of your life. You say, “I don’t want the cookie-cutter taupe-on-taupe one-size-fits-all same-damn-thing.” And yet you scour the web, looking for sage advice about how to produce weblog posts that will not challenge, will not inspire, will not aspire, will not invoke, convoke or provoke, will not do anything except testify to your perfect ability to master perfectly bad advice.
If you are not interested in what you’re writing, how could you expect anyone else to be interested?
If you are convinced (by your own conviction or by having imbibed from too many fonts of false wisdom) that you cannot hope to connect with other people except by resort to EZ-reading tricks — dumbing the entire universe down to the drooling imbecility of the dumbest conceivable specimen — why would you expect anyone to respect and reflect upon your brilliance?
Good grief!
If you are writing to manipulate, follow the rules. They work.
If you’re writing to sell a product, follow the rules. They work.
If you’re writing to hide, writing to dissemble, writing to occlude, writing to obfuscate, writing to pull the wool over as many eyes as you can capture — follow the rules. They work.
But: If you are writing to communicate — make a connection and build on it. Start in the middle, for a start. It enraptures living minds. But write as yourself — as your self — not some brainless robot assiduously following an algorithm.
Seth Godin identified three types of weblogs: Boss blogs, cat blogs and viral blogs. Unheralded, the viral blogs have split in two: Those driven by an outsized passion, and those ravenous to manipulate to an objective — often an unnamed objective.
The rules of rinse-and-repeat weblog writing are written for the latter type — and I could not possibly care less about them. Spam is spam, no matter how it’s canned.
If you’re interested in writing for passion — for action, for love, for joy, for laughter, for change, for wisdom, for art — then write. Cicero said, “Usus est magister optimus.” Practice is the best teacher. If you can move yourself, you can move the world. It won’t be EZ-reading, but nothing that matters comes easy. And nothing that comes easy matters very much at all, in the end.
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Technorati Tags: blogging, real estate, real estate marketing
Tony - bienesraicesvideo.com says:
Excellent post. I had not read the seth’s pdf before. Lot of new things to think about and work on.
Tony
March 6, 2007 — 10:09 am
Jonathan Greene says:
*drool falls from my chin*
“Writin’ is fun.”
March 6, 2007 — 11:24 am
jf.sellsius says:
Zen Blogger’s Manifesto
Do not follow in the footsteps of others,
seek what they sought and make your own footsteps.
Write not for others, as there are too many.
Write for yourself, as there is only one.
Subtract before you add.
Listen more than you speak.
Give more than you take.
Make but do not measure.
If you want to change the world, love someone.
All manifestos are dung.
http://tinyurl.com/35h348
March 6, 2007 — 6:20 pm
Ed says:
AMEN!
I too am so tired of those that post about nothing. The spirit of blogging is totally lost in those trying to make a quick buck on advertising. Let have some real discussion on real topics.
Thanks Greg, good blog. Now back to the show….
– Ed
http://www.ropenhouse.com
March 6, 2007 — 9:24 pm
Russell Shaw says:
LOVED, “If you are not interested in what you’re writing, how could you expect anyone else to be interested?”
I used to find myself bored beyond belief with certain people when they were speaking. It took me a while to figure out why. It wasn’t that I didn’t care about what they were talking about. THEY didn’t care about what they were talking about.
March 6, 2007 — 11:54 pm
Jillayne Schlicke says:
Hi Greg,
In Seattle, I get a lot of Realtors in my classes who just don’t know how to write for whatever reason, and I mean write like you’re talking about writing: With passion, conviction, a strong opinion, with humor, with grace and style. This is a skill honed by practicing over and over again. My best friend is a writer and he says if you want to be a writer you have to write something every day.
Industry attorneys have taught Realtors that their job is to fill in blanks on forms and once they compose from scratch, they increase their liability.
Blogging has hit some folks hard. There’s some fear of the unknown involved and what we hear instead is “I don’t have the time.”
March 7, 2007 — 12:15 am
apella says:
Ahhhhha and Thank You!
I could not agree with you more, please do not try to take away my identity by stating what is and what is not, please do not tell me not to write in a style that I grew up reading or that my possible readers may like to read, please do not say I am wrong for the use of details and passion. If my post is too long the reader will leave, the ones that stay will at their own will, I will not tell them how to write or what to read. In the end I will have a good book and not a billboard.
Greg Keep Writing as I will, and I will keep reading and Thank you again!
March 7, 2007 — 2:17 am
Jeff Brown says:
Greg – As you’ve guided this blog to where it is today, ‘content is king’ has been the bedrock foundation.
It’s also been the guiding force for my blog. Even if a particular topic is relatively boring, if the results are truly beneficial to my audience, I try to write about it with that result in mind.
Writing with my head and my heart is always first and foremost with me.
Great post.
March 7, 2007 — 10:18 am
Steve Leung says:
Excellent anti-treatise
March 8, 2007 — 2:53 am
Jay Matthews says:
Greg, fantastic – inspiring – invigorating post. Far from yet another “conversation about the conversation.”
Jillayne, great take on why real estate pros may have trouble blogging. I’m looking forward to your class later this month.
March 8, 2007 — 3:53 pm
Jillayne Schlicke says:
Hey Jay,
Good for you for doing some pre-class homework: checking out one of the best RE blogs around.
March 9, 2007 — 10:48 pm
Teresa Boardman says:
The keyboard does most the work. the trick is to disengage the brain
March 11, 2007 — 10:02 am