How to write a popular article
Our top tips for creating an article that attracts lots of readers are:
|
Contents |
[edit] Introduction
Designing Buildings Wiki is an open-access platform. You are free to write articles whenever you choose about anything to do with the construction industry, from business planning and design to construction, operation and decommissioning.
You can write about theory, practices, procedures, products, services, projects and even companies. In fact you can write about anything at all to do with the construction industry. All we ask is that your articles are balanced (ie they are not promotional pieces) and they are encyclopaedic in style (ie they are not blog posts).
When articles are written about the right subject, in the right way, they can reach tens of thousands of readers a year.
Our top 40 articles are each read more than 100 times a day - every day. That's more than 35,000 times a year. |
This article explains what makes a popular article then tells you how to create your article.
[edit] What makes a popular article?
[edit] It's all about Google
90% of our traffic comes from Google searches, so:
- Your article needs to be about something people are likely to search for.
- It needs to be written in a way that means Google can understand what it's about.
Otherwise nobody will read it.
[edit] What do people search for?
People are looking for practical answers to help them in their daily work.
Our most popular articles are about:
|
Our least popular articles are about:
|
To help you understand what sort of things people search for, start typing a range of different phrases to do with your subject into Google and see what it predicts you are typing.
Increasingly, people are asking Google very literal questions, "How do I .......?" and Google is looking for content that it knows has the answers.
How to help Google understand your article
[edit] The title
The most important thing Google considers when trying to understand an article is the title. So make your title a plain language, literal description of the subject the article is about. For example, one of our most popular articles is called 'Types of drawings for building design'.
Don't try to be clever with your title or over-complicated, Google won't understand it.
[edit] The content
You need to think like a Google does.
If you write; 'Frank Lloyd Wright was an architect born in Wisconsin in 1867', Google will understand what you mean and will return those facts in search results. If you write; 'Frank was really great and helped turn dreams into reality', Google will have no idea what you mean and it will not feature in search results. |
To help Google understand your article:
- Stick to the facts.
- Use simple, plain language English.
- Break your article into clear sections.
- Use plain language headings to give your article clarity and to segment information. For example; 'history', 'definition', 'research findings', 'references' and so on.
- Break long articles into several shorter articles.
- Give images plain language, literal titles. If you call them pict2001344.jpg, Google will not understand what they show.
- Define specialist terms and acronyms.
- Avoid long, complicated paragraphs.
- Use bullet points to separate distinct facts or information.
- Add links from your article to related information.
- Adding links to your article from related information (such as from your website or social media posts).
[edit] Duplicate content
Whilst we do allow you to post content on Designing Buildings Wiki that already appears elsewhere on the internet (such as articles that appear on your own website) Google may categorise this as duplicate content, and may exclude it from search results. This will significantly reduce the amount of traffic it receives.
You will get much more traffic if you post original articles, or at least variations of existing articles.
[edit] How to create your article
[edit] Click the orange button
Log in or register, then click the orange 'create an article' button.
Type your title into the the search box to see if it already exists:
- If an article with your title does not already exist, just click the link next to the search results and your article will open in a text editor ready for you to start writing.
- If it does already exist, add to or improve the existing article, don't start a new one. If you significantly improve an existing article, you can list yourself as the main author, and add your profile at the top.
You can type your article from scratch, or paste it from another application, but keep your formatting as simple as possible; plain text, simple headings, simple bulleted or numbered lists, simple tables, hyperlinks and images. Anything more complicated may cause interoperability problems between our software and the software you are copying and pasting from.
Our software will automatically insert hyperlinks to other relevant articles on Designing Buildings Wiki when you save your text. It will also insert a table of contents if you use more than three headings. You don't have to do anything.
[edit] Add your profile
To make your profile appear at the top of your article, open your article in the text editor, move the cursor to the end of the article, and click the 'insert signature' button.
Then save your article and your profile will appear at the top, just like mine does at the top of this one.
[edit] Protect your article
If you are an expert who does not want other people to be able to change your article, you can protect it. Just save your article, then click 'Protect' at the bottom of the page.
[edit] Examples of a high traffic articles
- Types of drawings
- Tender documentation
- Preliminaries in construction
- Bill of quantities
- Retention
- Variations
- Procurement route
- Strip foundation
- Design and build
- Pile foundations
- Construction industry acronyms
- Stair design
--Simon Baxter 15:48, 25 Sep 2018 (BST)
Featured articles and news
Quality Planning for Micro and Small to Medium Sized Enterprises
A CIOB Academy Technical Information sheet.
A briefing on fall protection systems for designers
A legal requirement and an ethical must.
CIOB Ireland launches manifesto for 2024 General Election
A vision for a sustainable, high-quality built environment that benefits all members of society.
Local leaders gain new powers to support local high streets
High Street Rental Auctions to be introduced from December.
Infrastructure sector posts second gain for October
With a boost for housebuilder and commercial developer contract awards.
Sustainable construction design teams survey
Shaping the Future of Sustainable Design: Your Voice Matters.
COP29; impacts of construction and updates
Amid criticism, open letters and calls for reform.
The properties of conservation rooflights
Things to consider when choosing the right product.
Adapting to meet changing needs.
London Build: A festival of construction
Co-located with the London Build Fire & Security Expo.
Tasked with locating groups of 10,000 homes with opportunity.
Delivering radical reform in the UK energy market
What are the benefits, barriers and underlying principles.
Information Management Initiative IMI
Building sector-transforming capabilities in emerging technologies.
Recent study of UK households reveals chilling home truths
Poor insulation, EPC knowledge and lack of understanding as to what retrofit might offer.
Embodied Carbon in the Built Environment
Overview, regulations, detail calculations and much more.
Why the construction sector must embrace workplace mental health support
Let’s talk; more importantly now, than ever.
Ensuring the trustworthiness of AI systems
A key growth area, including impacts for construction.