I have a simple question for you: how do you consume long and short-form content?
I'm not asking whether Google likes it long. Nor am I asking whether long is better than short for social engagement.
I'm asking how you, personally, consume it.
When you're reading your favorite blog and find a 3,000-word article, do you read it in its entirety? Or do you read the first few paragraphs, scan the rest and bookmark it for later? Or upon seeing how long it is, do you immediately move on ("Ain't nobody got time for that!")
When you see a short article (e.g. 300 words), are you inclined to read it immediately? Or do you assume it contains minimal value given its short length and move on?
Folks have recommended for years that we create long-form content. And to that end, a 3,000-word article tightly written is an impressive thing.
But unless I'm really interested in the specific topic it addresses, I won't read it. I don't want to spend the time.
Here's an example:
I read a lot of food-based content and immediately start drooling when someone mentions steak. But I won't read something like this...
The Food Lab's Complete Guide To Pan-Seared Steaks | Serious Eats
It's too long. And that perception is surely not in the author's interest.
So back to my question for you. Search visibility and social engagement aside, how do you consume long-form and short-form content?
I'm not asking whether Google likes it long. Nor am I asking whether long is better than short for social engagement.
I'm asking how you, personally, consume it.
When you're reading your favorite blog and find a 3,000-word article, do you read it in its entirety? Or do you read the first few paragraphs, scan the rest and bookmark it for later? Or upon seeing how long it is, do you immediately move on ("Ain't nobody got time for that!")
When you see a short article (e.g. 300 words), are you inclined to read it immediately? Or do you assume it contains minimal value given its short length and move on?
Folks have recommended for years that we create long-form content. And to that end, a 3,000-word article tightly written is an impressive thing.
But unless I'm really interested in the specific topic it addresses, I won't read it. I don't want to spend the time.
Here's an example:
I read a lot of food-based content and immediately start drooling when someone mentions steak. But I won't read something like this...
The Food Lab's Complete Guide To Pan-Seared Steaks | Serious Eats
It's too long. And that perception is surely not in the author's interest.
So back to my question for you. Search visibility and social engagement aside, how do you consume long-form and short-form content?