49. An interesting
title
The first headline
A smaller headline
Text Text Text Text Text Text
Text Text Text Text Text Text
Another headline
And another smaller one
Text Text Text Text Text Text
Text Text Text Text Text Text
56. It asserts that the user
is in the right place
and this page has the info
they’re looking for
60. How to do it on content-
heavy web pages:
● TL;DR introductions ( 50 words)
● Bullet point summaries at the top of
the page
● In-text links in the hero so they can
skip to where they want, instantly
62. I know this probably isn’t
the first time
you’ve heard this…
64. Formatting helps users
figure out:
1. Where they need to go
2. What they need to engage with
3. Where is the info they’re looking for
4. Why they should care
67. Types of formatting to
direct readers’ attention:
● Heading and subheadings =
“street signs”
● Rich text (bold, underline, italics) to
highlight specific pieces of
information
68. ● Bullets (fascinations) and numbered
lists for easy scanning
● Using a variety of media to support
the content (keep up interest)
77. "Your readers should be so
compelled to read your copy
that they cannot stop
reading until they read all of
it as if sliding down a
slippery slide."
- Joseph Sugarman
79. So try to:
● Vary sentence length
● Use white space liberally
● Cut sentences in the middle
(and starting the next with
“And” or “Because”)
80. Super tip:
Read your writing out loud
to yourself while editing
(works like a charm!)