October 2, 2007

Muhammad Saleem, Lyndon, Murakami and The OC - (Sorry Tom Cruise, No Sympathy For You)

Magnetic Content
 
Do you feel that your best content slides through the social sites without getting the attention they deserve? Do you spend hours researching to write valuable posts only to see a trickle of traffic, a handful of votes, and no new subscriptions? What are you missing? Why are you not pushing those buttons in your audience’s brains?Muhammad Saleem wrote a post on Copyblogger about utilizing cultural cloaking devices to make a connection with social media participants:

The hooks used in these articles are celebrities that your average person (however educated or uneducated) knows of or has heard something about and can on some level relate to.

Lyndon, from Cornwall SEO took it one step further and stated (wisely):

Connecting on a cultural level is vital if you want to attract a reader. This doesn’t mean your article has to have a mass appeal, just the headline. Your article can focus in on a subject that has nothing to do with the “icon” you have mentioned in the headline. It is merely a device.

In my headlines I introduce recognisable imagery to instill a curiosity factor in a reader. Something that seems a little ridiculous or a little silly. Maybe I follow the Monty Python school of headline writing.

A thought occurs. It’s the imagery rather than the word that is important. It is what a reader imagines in their mind. Once you connect as a writer, to someones imagination, then you have won the battle.

It’s all about finding the door into a readers head.

It’s the imagery rather than the word that is important. What a great thought. I would add: it’s the music too.

Haruki Murakami, a great japanese author whom I strongly recommend, explains in an interview:

I am a writer who learned everything from Jazz. [...] When I sit in front of the keyboard, I think I am staring at a piano and then I start playing. [...] I still look up to Miles Davis as a model of constant self renewal. I take that and adapt it as a literary model.

Spot on. So we have images and music in our minds. And it all grows from that? What a concept.

It reminds me of an interview I saw on TV (okay I admitted, I also watch E). It was the writer of the popular TV series The OC, Josh Scwartz. He said he started writing the script for the show with one scene and one song on his mind. It was this:

The final episode of Season One. That’s what inspired him. Josh and his team wrote one of the most successful teen drama shows on the last years inspired by this vision. He could see the emotional impact of that scene and it all grew from that. Isn’t that exactly what Lyndon is saying?

So if you are still there, thanks for not bailing out on my post. I sincerely appreciate you putting up with me. In exchange for your time I will give you a pointer that has the potential to increase dramatically the traffic you are getting from social media sites: Before hitting the Publish button read your headline and put yourself in your reader’s shoes. Does it make you smile? Does it intrigue you? Does it make you angry? If the answer to all of these questions is “no” then you need to keep working on it. Find an original angle. Make a connection with something your readers are familiar with.

So why did I include Tom Cruise in my headline? Well I don’t know, maybe “to instill a curiosity factor” in my readers? Is that too manipulative? Do you feel baited? If so, please allow me to bait you one extra mile and ask you to post your formal complain in the comments section.

By the way, do you need a linkbait writer?

If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!

Permalink • Print • Comment

Trackback uri

http://www.socialseo.org/muhammad-saleem-lyndon-murakami-and-the-oc-sorry-tom-cruise-no-sympathy-for-you/trackback

9 Comments on Muhammad Saleem, Lyndon, Murakami and The OC - (Sorry Tom Cruise, No Sympathy For You) »

October 2, 2007

Michael Dorausch @ 11:39 am:

Wow, this is the first time I’ve seen MuhammadBait, LyndonBait, or MurakamiBait. I suppose we’ll get to measure their celebrity status by seeing how many times their names appear in SEO blogs.

Muhammad and Lyndon both had great articles, but do they actually expect someone to be able to incorporate this regularly? ;-)

Sphunn!

admin @ 11:51 am:

Thanks Michael :)

But you are leaving out Ryan Atwood, Marissa Cooper, and the rest of The OC Crew, not to mention Scientology Guru Tom Cruise!

In all seriousness I think Muhammad and Lyndon posts were a nice breath of fresh air.

I was getting a bit sick of all the “5 Sure Fire Headline Formulas” kind of posts. Not that I didn’t enjoy when Brian from Copyblogger started posting those but then everyone jumped on that wagon and abused it.

Formulas are cool, but sometimes we need to dig deeper and understand the mental processes of reading and message perceptions.

Windyridge @ 4:41 pm:

I have been working on the title thing, I realize it’s importance, especially with the advent of Blogrush.

Lyndon Antcliff @ 11:17 pm:

@Michael, no I don’t expect anything. I am merely sharing my thoughts on the matter and what works for me.

What I bang on about is you have to find the kind of style that works for you. A problem with a lot of these “how to” blogs - which mine is not - is that they lay things down in a rigid instruction format. What I like to do is jog a readers brain a little and get them to think of their own writing and test a few things out.

There is a place for 5 ways to write a headline, as there is a place for other styles.

I like the post because it talks about a jazz methodology, which is very much how I write. Sorry I couldn’t find the authors name on the post or even on the blog, points off ;)

Good post.

October 3, 2007

admin @ 6:13 am:

Murakami is not the only writer who’s inspired by Jazz. I will expand on this on a follow up post.

Sorry you couldn’t find my name Lyndon :) I guess I should work on it. Although I wrote a very basic About page (top menu) it’s not easy to find.

This is a brand new blog and I still have a lot of work to do in regards to Layout, Design and Usability. The problem is that I get carried away writing posts and I keep putting it off.

For the record my name is Marcos Azaro and I am also known as Gotan Raider.

Michael Dorausch @ 7:43 am:

@Lyndon: My last sentence was tongue in cheek, not a criticism.

@admin: I didn’t really notice the Tom Cruise until after, I’d still consider that successful. You had me baited on the Muhammad and Lyndon mentions, figuring this would be related to their posts.

Funny about ‘The OC’ is that many scenes are filmed across the street from my house (not in OC). May have to write an article about it. :)

Brian Clark @ 1:14 pm:

>>Formulas are cool, but sometimes we need to dig deeper and understand the mental processes of reading and message perceptions.

Whew…I guess it’s a good thing I wrote every post that Mu used as examples. He’s a great observer. :)

admin @ 4:38 pm:

Brian Clark from Copyblogger commented on my Blog?

I must be doing something right! :)

Brian: you are one of my inspirations.

October 4, 2007

Brian Clark @ 8:02 pm:

You should aim higher. :)

Thanks for that, though.

Leave a Comment




Made with WordPress and a healthy dose of Semiologic • Myrna's List Reloaded skin by Myrna Weinreich