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9 Ways People Respond to Your Content Online

Blogs and Twitter have almost eliminated any barrier to publishing. You have an idea and in a few minutes your thoughts can be online. Think about it – with every person thinking about more than 50,000 thoughts a day, producing online content can be simple.

Maybe. But simply churning out meaningless content does not guarantee that others will read what you write. Make this mistake and people will read what you write and write you off.

What’s the alternative?

Use your creativity to generate content that will inspire and transform the lives of the audience in a positive way. Remember that it costs time (and indirectly – money) for your audience to read what you write. And, they expect a good return for that investment.

You will know whether you are succeeding in influencing your audience in a positive way because the audience will tell you. No, maybe not directly but by the way they respond to your content.

So, here are the nine ways your audience will respond to your online content:

  1. Spam: If your content does not provide a reasonable ROII (return-on-investment for an interaction) for the reader or is self-serving or simply useless, the reader will mark it as spam. Posting something that may be assessed, as “spam” is the fastest way to losing credibility.
  2. Skip: The reader makes an assessment that he or she won’t lose much by reading it. In this case, the reader has not written you off yet but if you consistently create content that is worth “skipping,” the reader might write you off.
  3. Scan: The reader thinks there are only a few parts that are of relevance and wants to get right to the core of the content and skip the rest.
  4. Stop: The reader is touched by the article and stops to think about the article, it’s relevance and what it means to him or her personally and professionally.
  5. Save: The content is so good that the reader might want to re-visit this multiple times.
  6. Shift: The article is transformational. The reader is so deeply affected (in a positive way) by the article that it shifts some of their values and beliefs. In other words, this piece of writing will transform the reader and make him or her grow.
  7. Send: The content is not only useful to the reader but also to one or more people in the reader’s network. The reader simply emails the article or a link to it to people that he or she cares.
  8. Spread: The reader finds the article fascinating enough to spread it to anyone and everyone via a blog, twitter or the social networks that he or she belongs.
  9. Subscribe: This is the ultimate expression of engagement and a vote of confidence that you will continue to provide great content. When the reader wants to continue listening to your thoughts, he or she will subscribe.

Finally, here are a few things to consider before you post your next online content:

1. Understand Your Audience

Unless you are writing something for your private consumption, your audience should be the center of the focus and not you. The more you know about your audience, the better you can connect with them. Think about:

  • Who is your audience?
  • Why are they reading what you are writing?
  • What are their concerns in general and what are their concerns NOW?

2. Check Your Objective

Some questions to think about:

  • What is the purpose of your article?
  • What assessment do you want the reader to create by reading your article?

3. Unleash Your Creativity

You know the audience and you know the purpose of the article. Now the next step is to unleash your creativity and create something that will generate the kind of response that you are looking for.

Some questions to think about:

  • What would be unique (content, point-of-view etc.) in this article that will make the audience do what I want them to do?
  • How can you make this article “extremely relevant” to the current times?
  • What can you include that will increase the “longevity” of the article?

4. Learn from Feedback

You already know the nine ways that people respond to your online content. When people act the way they do, they are providing you valuable feedback. Keeping your emotions aside, learn from the feedback and incorporate this learning into your next article.

Background: An earlier version of this article was titled Skip, Scan, Stop, Save and/or Spread. Thanks to several people especially Seth Godin, Guy Kawasaki and Kathy Hendershot-Hurd who helped me enhance the initial concept through their comments.

About the Author: Rajesh Setty is an entrepreneur, author and speaker based in Silicon Valley. Rajesh maintains a blog at Life Beyond Code. You can also find him on Twitter at @UpbeatNow.

Rajesh Setty:

View Comments (88)

  • Thank you for this article, and thank you Brian(of CopyBlogger) for referring readers to it.

    My personal blog has always enjoyed a certain audience, but interestingly enough only 2 people out of 60+ feed subscribers tend to comment on the posts. I find that quite interesting, and wonder what causes it.
    I haven't yet shaped up my pro blog - I will start linking to it once I do - but your post has definitely become another guideline I will refer to while writing my posts on it.

  • Thank you, Rajesh, for this conicise view of how people engage with our blogs (I especially love the back-of-the-napkin) illustration. I've got a number of clients that I can use this with, starting with ME!

    I appreciate your help and willingness to share.

    Cheers!

  • Cool thoughts - I like the progression from spam to subscribe. One thought - it seems like one step is missing - that of responding (sorry, can't come up with an "s" word for that). Seems to me like "subscribe" is almost implied (ie., they're receiving your content, right?), and the biggest transformational experience isn't so much to subscribe, but to respond - to do something, to add their thoughts to the conversation, to click a link, to buy, etc.

    That seems more transformational to me than just subscribing. But maybe I'm being picky, too - either way, great post.

  • Quite amazing piece of wisdom this one is. Especially the "questions to think about" at the end will help my writing in the future.

    As a sidenote, most of the time I scan articles, but the picture stopped me right away (perhaps a "tactic" to utilize too) and before leaving this comment I saved & subscribed already!

  • Regardless of the medium, people very quickly make decisions about what they're going to invest time to read.

    My first scan of a blog post is to see how long it is.

    (Actually my first scan of a blog post is the title; most never get farther than that.)

    I wonder how the ideas in this post apply to Twitter, where the 'posts' are 140 characters or less?

    If you apply the 80/20 Principle, does this mean people only read the first 28 characters before they decide whether to read the rest of the post?

    Cogent post; concise graphic; another ODKLNT opportunity.

  • Very interesting. I am more likely to spread an article via Twitter or blog than to save/bookmark it. I plan to do both with this article, as I think it's time to take a hard look at my content and decide how to improve readership. Thanks for the advice!

  • Hi Raj,
    I came through from Copyblogger. I've recently decided I need to learn more about my audience and so am looking at ways I can solicit feedback from them.

    I've already emailed a couple of my regular readers with a short list of questions and I also plan to set up an ongoing short survey. I came across a free program (http://www.4qsurvey.com/) I can use on my blog that randomly chooses readers and asks them if they'd be willing to answer 4 short questions. I haven't trialled it yet but hopefully it'll give me more of the qualitative info I need.

    Great article. Thanks.

  • Thanks to all of you for your kind comments, suggestions and participation.

    You all made my day here and it seems like suddenly I have a lot of new friends :)

    THANK YOU.

    Best,
    Raj

    PS: I am reading every single comment and thanks again for taking the time to post your thoughts here.

  • Very concise way to break down the responses. Thanks for posting this!

    Your own content is its own proof, as I came here from Copyblogger... and will cross post on my blog, that I'll be thinking even more carefully on how I write.

    Thank you for the great post!

  • Another reason why I'm already a subscriber. Consistently insightful, well-written posts here. It also doesn't hurt if you can sum up all your points with alliteration, too!

    Also kudos to Nancy B for mentioning the monetary reward part. One way to do that would be to compile selected posts into something like "Copyblogger: The Book".

    Thanks for the inspiration and motivation.

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