Writing and content writing are two very different things. When you are just plain writing, you probably don’t have a care in the world and write as you please without fear of getting it wrong. You can do and say whatever you want on that piece of paper or in your online notes.
Content writing means that you are writing for other people. Not for yourself. You are producing a piece of content that others will read over and take advice from. They will also form an opinion of you, good or bad. Not only will actual people read your article but so will Google. Trust me Google and the other search engines will also form an opinion on your content and treat it accordingly.
Therefore, you should always follow certain rules to ensure that your writing reaches a particular standard that gets you the results you are looking for.
Moreover, you must always avoid certain content writing mistakes. Content writing errors can lead to a lack of engagement, SEO penalties, and worst of all, mean comments. While the last of those may not seem that bad, you will be amazed at what some harsh comments can do to your confidence.
Some mistakes are acceptable, but others need to be addressed right away. If you keep reading, you will see what content writing mistakes must be avoided:
Keyword Stuffing
This is a huge mistake from an SEO perspective. Search engine optimization revolves around Keywords. You should include them in your content, but you absolutely cannot stuff them. Go ahead and talk to any SEO agency in the world, and they will tell you that the leading cause of SEO penalties is keyword stuffing.
For those of you that don’t know what this means, it basically refers to trying to force loads of keywords into your content unnaturally. As a result, the sentence structure fails, nothing makes sense, and you have just got too many keywords. Google hates this, which is why you will get penalised.
It used to work but Google and technology got wiser and better. Today you will turn up on the first page of Google if you deserve it. Google wants to send its customers to something that really helps them, not something that does not make sense and is therefore useless.
No Breaks
Tell me something you notice about the structure of this blog post. It has numerous paragraphs. I have broken up the text by producing shorter chunks of writing, which makes it easier for you to read. From a readability perspective, the worst thing you can possibly do is create a piece of content with no breaks in the text.
Instantly, this makes it harder for people to read and digest. They hate the way it looks, and most people won’t even bother reading your content. Use paragraphs to break things up and give people a chance to breathe. Images are also useful for breaking up any big chunks of text.
You could also call upon bullet points. These are beneficial for:
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Breaking up text even more
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Helping you summarise key points
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Adding more structure to the article