Post by account_disabled on Dec 20, 2023 7:15:19 GMT
I write quite quickly. An article takes me around 1 hour to write. The hardest thing for me is not writing or finding something to talk about (I have a pretty long ToDoList). The angle of attack of a subject is already more complicated. More difficult: the image that will illustrate the article. The hardest part is probably the title. The same content can have many different titles: are we making a statement? do we ask a question? shall we make a list? Are we provoking? and within what limit? Shall we keep it short (at the risk of not being clear enough)? Are we going long (at the risk of being cut off when sharing on social networks)? we are positive (how can we do more?)? we play on fear (how to avoid losing everything?)? do we stay professional? How far do we reveal our expertise? Shall we add a personal touch? Or are we 100% personal? Are we serious? Are we trying to make people laugh?.
Do we remain experts? Are we writing for an 11 year old? Will what is clear to me be clear to others? Will they have Email Data the impression that I take them for idiots? So many questions to answer. Not necessarily for each article but rather from a perspective of a coherent editorial line. All my items are original items. I'm the one who wrote them. When I take elements from other people, they are always cited. I have sometimes made translations/adaptations but either by having requested authorization before or by having cited and put links to the original source when I was unable to contact the author. Numbers For me, numbers are only one indicator (and even then, not the main one) of performance. As I have explained several times, the articles that have had the most impact on my activity are neither the most read, nor the most liked, nor the most commented.
How I published articles that affected me each brought in more than €100,000 . But I also know that we live in a world where numbers are everywhere. Each of us knows that our system is based on numbers and comparisons and that in school, this begins in early childhood. So I have selected here, for those who are interested and who may have missed them: My 5 articles that have had the most views. My 5 articles that had the most likes. My 5 articles that have had the most comments. My 5 articles that got the most engagement. Engagement corresponds to the following ratio: (likes + comments + reshares)/number of views. This could be between 5 and 20 different items. In reality that makes 10 articles. Some are only present once in these 4 rankings. Only one article is in the Top 5 each time (Thank you Jean-Claude?). My 5 articles that have had the most views: Stop wasting time on LinkedIn: 25 things to know about the publication algorithm (+ 35,000 readers).
Do we remain experts? Are we writing for an 11 year old? Will what is clear to me be clear to others? Will they have Email Data the impression that I take them for idiots? So many questions to answer. Not necessarily for each article but rather from a perspective of a coherent editorial line. All my items are original items. I'm the one who wrote them. When I take elements from other people, they are always cited. I have sometimes made translations/adaptations but either by having requested authorization before or by having cited and put links to the original source when I was unable to contact the author. Numbers For me, numbers are only one indicator (and even then, not the main one) of performance. As I have explained several times, the articles that have had the most impact on my activity are neither the most read, nor the most liked, nor the most commented.
How I published articles that affected me each brought in more than €100,000 . But I also know that we live in a world where numbers are everywhere. Each of us knows that our system is based on numbers and comparisons and that in school, this begins in early childhood. So I have selected here, for those who are interested and who may have missed them: My 5 articles that have had the most views. My 5 articles that had the most likes. My 5 articles that have had the most comments. My 5 articles that got the most engagement. Engagement corresponds to the following ratio: (likes + comments + reshares)/number of views. This could be between 5 and 20 different items. In reality that makes 10 articles. Some are only present once in these 4 rankings. Only one article is in the Top 5 each time (Thank you Jean-Claude?). My 5 articles that have had the most views: Stop wasting time on LinkedIn: 25 things to know about the publication algorithm (+ 35,000 readers).