Making a good posting GREAT

 

An example of the difference between an “ok”  blog post and a brilliant posting  crossed my reader yesterday and it was too canonical not to comment on. 

Scott Hanselman wrote about his wish (shared by so many of us) for a way to signal to tech support that we’re clued in, without sounding obnoxious.  

In short, his suggestion is that you say a magic word (“fizzbin”) as a signal that you know what you are talking about thus saving everyone a lot of time.

My point however, is that his article can be used as an object lesson in what makes a good post great, and, fortuitously, you can see the difference in this case by drawing a line where a competent blogger might have stopped writing. Had he done so, Scott woud have had a perfectly respectable posting, but by adding a short dialog, his posting went from “ok” to instant classsic. Here is a brief excerpt:

Fizzbin

(This image is cropped and the red was added by me)

Click here for the full postin.

I believe that it is the dialog, and especially the geek-familiarity Scott implies with the final line (“sweet!”)  that really nails it.

 

Great post.

 

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About Jesse Liberty

** Note ** Jesse is currently looking for a new position. You can learn more about him at https://jesseliberty.bio Thank you. Jesse Liberty has three decades of experience writing and delivering software projects and is the author of 2 dozen books and a couple dozen online courses. His latest book, Building APIs with .NET, is now available wherever you buy your books. Liberty was a Team Lead and Senior Software Engineer for various corporations, a Senior Technical Evangelist for Microsoft, a Distinguished Software Engineer for AT&T, a VP for Information Services for Citibank and a Software Architect for PBS. He is a 13 year Microsoft MVP.
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