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Tips on Writing Good List Articles
Hello everyone,

We recently did a quality audit of the List articles we've received for eHow so far and discovered some things that needed to be clarified before we add more List titles to the Studio.

We compiled a list of tips that tells you how to solve the main problems we encountered in our audit. These tips apply for all sites and we'd like you to keep them in mind while working with this article format.

We will post this as a PDF in the Resource Center as well so you can easily download it.

Eight Tips for Writing Good Lists

 

1.       Consider your own expertise before claiming titles. If you have no knowledge about Austin, Texas you will want to leave a title like “10 Best Barbecue Spots in Austin” to someone who does. See: “10 Best Things to Do in San Francisco

2.       Call experts in the geographical area that your title deals with for best information. This is not required, but it will save you from searching numerous websites for the same information. An article like “Best Family Restaurants in Portland” could be efficiently researched by calling up a concierge at an established hotel in that city and asking where they usually recommend people to go. Make your article even better, and directly quote that person.

3.       If you are relying on your own expertise, or that of another person, keep in mind that an ideal expert should have 10+ years expertise in his or her field. See: “10 Reasons Why Smoking Is Bad

4.       If you do not have expertise that is clearly reflected in your bio, you must use multiple sources or an expert on the topic as references for your List articles. Use multiple sources, including magazines, newspapers or credible websites to generate a “best of” list. Cross-check names that pop up frequently with good reviews, make sure the positive marks are coming from a credible source, not an advertorial trade magazine or industry newsletter. See: “Alternatives to Birth Control

5.       Never use one source for your list. A list taken from another publication or website (this includes just taking the same subheads) will be considered plagiarism.

6.       Create a clear introduction or overview that sets the parameters of your list. If the title is “Parks in London,” make it clear in your intro what type of parks you will write about, and the criteria you used to include them in your list. See: “10 Human Diseases

7.       Broad titles, such as the one above, needs to cover several aspects. “Parks in London” should include a variety of parks like dog parks, child friendly parks, parks great for picnics and secluded parks that are great for reading a book in peace. If the title is “Hotels in Phoenix,” include budget hotels, luxury hotels, resort hotels and any other type of hotel that would round out a great list. See: “10 Best Things to Do with Kids in London

8.       Make sure all items in your list are factually correct and not outdated. Calling the business is the fastest and easiest way to do this. Remember, websites often remain online even after the business is closed. See: “10 Best Las Vegas Swimming Pools

 

20 Comments

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Jerry Watson
Dec 17, 4:31 PM

ZWrite and NaomiK are correct in that a writer has to weigh the necessary research any type of article requires in relation to the proposed pay. Any research at all, even for an article that pays $15 or $20 is going to be minimal. Researching multiple sources, telephone calls (especially long distance ones), waiting for interview requests to be granted, trips to a library, digging through periodicals and newspapers, making notes, assembling information and correlating it, all the steps we would normally take for a print magazine article that may pay several hundred to a thousand dollars or more are almost certainly not going to happen for $5 - $20. This is one of the major reasons other writers disparage "content mill" writers. On the other hand, Demand Studios is to be commended for encouraging their staff to higher standards of writing.

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Lisa W
Dec 17, 5:49 PM

I just had "Gift Baskets For Pet Loss" sent back to me. I obviously am confused about how t write thee articles, even with all the 'this' so I shall steer clear.

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ViolaH
Dec 17, 8:05 PM

Thank you for using one of my articles as an example in your "Tips" Blog! It was hard to narrow down 10 Human Diseases, so I'm glad you thought my article hit the nail on the head!

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UrielA
Dec 18, 12:18 PM

Yes, "Consider your own expertise before claiming titles"! As a CE, I'd say having the right background goes a long way towards writing a good article. If only authors adhered to that, it would make all our jobs a heck of a lot easier...

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Stevie
Dec 20, 5:30 AM

Huh. I just claimed "Tool for Painting Wood Paneling." That's a fairly straightforward list; finding more than one source is silly - any good source is going to list the same tools.
I see what the intent of the "more than one source" rule is and understand how it applies to a list of ideas, sightseeing spots, restaurants etc. It shouldn't be a hard and fast rule, though.

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Stevie
Dec 20, 3:36 PM

Huh. I just claimed "Tool for Painting Wood Paneling." That's a fairly straightforward list; finding more than one source is silly - any good source is going to list the same tools.
I see what the intent of the "more than one source" rule is and understand how it applies to a list of ideas, sightseeing spots, restaurants etc. It shouldn't be a hard and fast rule, though.

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ShirleyP
Dec 21, 9:48 AM

This is really good good information. Thank You! I am learning a lot from those of you posting also!

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ArletteM
Dec 23, 10:33 PM

I have to agree with ZWrite and NaomiK. While it's good that Demand Studios has high standards and expects quality writing and research, I find that I make well below minimum wage by the time I have finished an article.

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Hollywood_Hammond
Dec 25, 5:50 PM

I would like to quote a local educator for an article I am writing. How do I go about citing that?

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Hollywood_Hammond
Dec 25, 5:56 PM

Can someone tell me how to cite a quote from someone I interviewed?
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