Generating Timeless Content
Let's face it. Although there are sections of your site that you
will hopefully update continuously (see previous entry on
Generating fresh content), there are others that will likely
remain untouched for years at a time. If you have a page with
the history of your company, that's not the type of thing that
will change from day to day. Or if you're an award winning
artist, although you will hopefully continue to win awards, it's
not going to be happening on a daily basis.
So when you are writing the content of pages that will likely
not be updated on a regular basis, there are a few things you
will want to avoid so that the content can be more timeless.
1. Always mention dates, not ages.
Don't say that your company is five years old. If you do, you'll
have to go in every anniversary of your company and update that
figure. Instead, say the year or date that your company started.
The same thing applies to biographies of individuals. If you
really want people to know how old that person or those people
are, give their birthday, not their age. If worst comes to
worst, say things like "over 15 years of experience," or "our
company has been in operation for over 50 years."
Of course, if your site is written wholly or in part by a
programmer, it is possible for them to calculate those ages
automatically with a program. But for the typical website
creator, the date will be sufficient.
2. Don't double up on content.
Let's say that your email address is mentioned throughout your
website, as well as on your Contact page. Over the course of a
couple of years, your site could very well grow to be a couple
hundred pages. If you now decide to change your email address,
you are stuck changing it on every page it appears on. Dozens,
to say the least.
Instead, in every place that you instruct someone to contact
you, simply place a link to your contact page.
3. Simply don't mention facts that are likely to change.
Let's say your business has a high turnover rate in regards to
employment. Maybe you hire college students. Whatever the case
may be, you don't want to have to update your staff page every
two weeks.
Instead, simply mention the more permanent employees, like
yourself. If you want to mention the other employees at all,
talk about them generically. If they are college students, you
could mention that. But only be as specific as absolutely
necessary.
4. Don't talk about specific technologies that are likely to
change.
We live in a world with constantly changing technology. Where
were all the blogs in 2000? They really didn't exist. So when
working on pages that will likely not be updated often, don't
mention specific technologies.
Instead of mentioning an email newsletter or a blog, simply talk
about how open your company's communication policy is, and that
you use technology standards. Then on the page that actually
houses your blog or the sign-up form for your email newsletter,
you can go into more specifics.
As you design your site, make sure you decide early on which
pages are going to warrant constant updates and which are not.
Then these guidelines can be used to help you write for those
pages.