Ya-hoo!
Medical Journalist in Forbes.com,Matt Herper reported that when he switched from writing frequent short articles to writing less frequent longer articles his traffic numbers increased dramatically, showing that health care consumers not only want to know what but why.
"i think its partly because, in medicine, a lot of the challenge isn't just pointing out what is important, but also why" Matt says. "For a piece to be really valuable, you need to take the reader into another world." As you can see his audience is trending up, even as his output dramatically slows down.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/lewisdvo...ng-strategies/
Ya-hoo! Texting's hold on culture is finally showing cracks!
(As you can guess, I'm not, nor ever have been a fan of texting. I just hoped the whole fad would blow over like the Farah Fawcett hairstyle of the '80's)
Medical Journalist in Forbes.com,Matt Herper reported that when he switched from writing frequent short articles to writing less frequent longer articles his traffic numbers increased dramatically, showing that health care consumers not only want to know what but why.
"i think its partly because, in medicine, a lot of the challenge isn't just pointing out what is important, but also why" Matt says. "For a piece to be really valuable, you need to take the reader into another world." As you can see his audience is trending up, even as his output dramatically slows down.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/lewisdvo...ng-strategies/
Ya-hoo! Texting's hold on culture is finally showing cracks!
(As you can guess, I'm not, nor ever have been a fan of texting. I just hoped the whole fad would blow over like the Farah Fawcett hairstyle of the '80's)
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