Three Pieces of Animal Wisdom for Business Bloggers

Take good advice wherever you can find it, is my thought when it comes to good blog content writing. After all, as Charlie garfieldBrown’s Snoopy warns us, “There’s no sense in doing a lot of barking if you don’t really have anything to say.”

But, really, how can we, over months and years, continue to “have something to say” related to our field, keeping our blog posts relevant over long periods of time without losing reader excitement and engagement?  The answer is extraordinarily simple, yet extraordinarily difficult: We have to keep learning, constantly adding to our own body of knowledge – about our industry or professional field (in my case, about those of our Say It For You clients), and about what’s going on around us in our culture.

There’s a second compelling reason to keep freshening up content, and a second cartoon creature, Dogbert, hits that nail on the head: “This is called a yawn,” he remarks. “When you see one, stop talking about yourself.”

In creating content for marketing blogs, we should remember that people are online searching for answers to questions they have and for solutions to dilemmas they’re facing. It’s all about them as potential customers and clients, never about us (or about our business owner or professional clients).  Even before we begin to write, we need to think, “But, enough about us! It’s all about them!”

Garfield reminds us blog writers to inject a lighter note into our content. “I seek truth,” he says, “but a cookie will do”.

Humorist Jeff Fleming  explains the secret behind the Garfield humor. Humorists use serious “set-up” statements, then come in with a third statement which is not what listeners are expecting.  That “misdirection” causes surprise, which is what strikes listeners’ funny bones.

As a corporate blogging trainer, I actually advise writers against using misdirection, given the very short attention span of the average online reader. But the element of surprise can be used to wake up blog readers and keep them engaged. Putting things together that don’t seem to match is one “misdirection” technique, lending an “aha” effect when readers get your point.

Snoopy, Dogbert, and Garfield may have wisdom to share with business bloggers!

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