By Michael Rad / Published on December 31th, 2007 / Writing
Among the Web's many peculiarities is the way people read online

text. It took me a lot of time (being a writer who loves to read

the greats like Dickens and Kafka) to realize how impatient and

hurried the general web reader is.

Most of the web readers do not read complete sentences and

paragraphs, unless they are reading a white paper or a piece of

literature. They generally scan the headlines, or the words that

grab their attention. Web readers tend to scan text online and

read text offline. They typically do not read a page from start

to finish on the computer screen. Instead, they scan a site

looking for relevant items and then print pages that contain the

information they seek. You need to apply a style and method to

your Web documents that accommodate this type of reading.

I'm not saying there are hard and fast rules for writing for the

online audience, but if you take care of the following

guidelines, you may find yourself on the comfortable side of the

hedge.

==> TRY TO BE CONCISE CONVERSE WITH YOUR READER WRITE IN A LINEAR FASHION USE LESSER LINKS HIGHLIGHT MAIN POINTS IN THE BEGINNING MAKE COMPLETE PAGES IMPORTANT THINGS FIRST MAKE PRINTABLE PAGES
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