Post by account_disabled on Feb 19, 2024 1:16:02 GMT -7
That way, when I hire a developer to fully code the blog, I’ll already know what I’ll need to bake into the site to make it grow without my assistance. With the call to action at the bottom of the post, I’ll be testing new button images as well as including “Share by email” “Grab link” “Stumble” & “Reddit” links. With embedded images, I’ll test adding additional image heavy social networks like Pinterst & Tumblr to the share options, as well where I position the buttons on the image. I also test adding share buttons to light-boxed images to see if that makes any .
oracle social shares image source I may also experiment by adding Buy TG Database a triggered light-box when the visitor gets to the bottom of the article, similar to what Upworthy does when a video ends. social lightbox 2. Designing For Discussion Content On the other hand, we have Discussion Content. Discussion content is meant to be thought provoking, inspiring, bewildering, whatever. The primary point of this type of content is of course start a conversation. Something I believe is broken with the typical blog is that you must scroll to the bottom of the post to leave a comment.
When I read a thought-provoking article, it’s individual lines or thoughts that compel me to comment, not the article as a whole. But to comment on a single line, I have to highlight the line, scroll down, paste, leave my thoughts, click submit, wait for the page to reload, then find where I left off. How incredibly distracting. I’m not the only one who believes this is a problem either. Forward thinking websites like Medium use a commenting system that allows visitors to leave their thoughts on individual paragraphs. medium Filament.io (Digital Telepathy‘s incubator) is also working on a project called Highlite that proposes to put comments on the side.
oracle social shares image source I may also experiment by adding Buy TG Database a triggered light-box when the visitor gets to the bottom of the article, similar to what Upworthy does when a video ends. social lightbox 2. Designing For Discussion Content On the other hand, we have Discussion Content. Discussion content is meant to be thought provoking, inspiring, bewildering, whatever. The primary point of this type of content is of course start a conversation. Something I believe is broken with the typical blog is that you must scroll to the bottom of the post to leave a comment.
When I read a thought-provoking article, it’s individual lines or thoughts that compel me to comment, not the article as a whole. But to comment on a single line, I have to highlight the line, scroll down, paste, leave my thoughts, click submit, wait for the page to reload, then find where I left off. How incredibly distracting. I’m not the only one who believes this is a problem either. Forward thinking websites like Medium use a commenting system that allows visitors to leave their thoughts on individual paragraphs. medium Filament.io (Digital Telepathy‘s incubator) is also working on a project called Highlite that proposes to put comments on the side.