Ryan Dunfee - 2014-02-10 18:33:58
And I forgot! I did want to lend you one favor from one writer/editor to another... shorter is sometimes better. If you want to increase the possible scope of your audience/influence, I would suggest trying a few (not all of them) articles/posts under 1000 words. See if you can break the topic down further to fit within that constraint. I think one of the problems limiting the public's ability to ingest/understand/be interested in climate change, or geoengineering for that matter, is the density of the material. I'd try a few shorter posts that still retain the accuracy and message of your longer ones and see if that improves your traffic at all. May not be your goal, but if so, I thought I'd impart one useful lesson from being behind the traffic tools at TGR.
Cheers, Ryan AUTHOR: Ryan Dunfee AUTHOR EMAIL: ryandunfee85@gmail.com AUTHOR URL: http://TGR SUBJECT: Sheepeater Contact Submission IP: 69.20.143.77 Array ( [Name] => Ryan Dunfee [Email] => ryandunfee85@gmail.com [Website] => TGR [Comment] => And I forgot! I did want to lend you one favor from one writer/editor to another... shorter is sometimes better. If you want to increase the possible scope of your audience/influence, I would suggest trying a few (not all of them) articles/posts under 1000 words. See if you can break the topic down further to fit within that constraint. I think one of the problems limiting the public's ability to ingest/understand/be interested in climate change, or geoengineering for that matter, is the density of the material. I'd try a few shorter posts that still retain the accuracy and message of your longer ones and see if that improves your traffic at all. May not be your goal, but if so, I thought I'd impart one useful lesson from being behind the traffic tools at TGR.
Cheers, Ryan )