Avoid being an armchair commentator. Upgrade your next list article by following these five simple steps.
Most list articles — think “The Top 10 DSLR Cameras” or “The 5 Best CRM Products” — are written by armchair commentators.
They’re utilitarian, boring, and easy for rivals to copy.
Even if your lists rank well, their success is usually short-lived. Eventually, a competitor with greater authority (and perhaps a bigger word count) will swoop in.
Despite mountains of pageviews, try to measure their return on investment and you’ll find that… well, there probably isn’t one.
But there’s no need to fret.
Your list articles (or “listicles”) can be transformed into interesting, defensible, revenue-generating assets in five steps.
Here’s how.
1. Choose novel selection criteria
Most list articles are based on the same research methodology. If it had a name, it would probably be called “the first 10 things I found on Google.”
You search for your target keyword, scan the top-ranking content, and choose an assortment of popular things — software, products, people — to collate in your own article.
It’s a pragmatic process: deadlines are tight, original research is time-consuming, and compiling a list of popular “things” will never be controversial.
But this selection process is neither useful to your target reader nor defensible.
Your list risks recapitulating the same information as the existing search results.
It becomes another commodity among many.
Good listicles — like all good content — need a strong hook, a way to pique the reader’s interest and differentiate them from similar lists.
Your selection criteria can create this hook:
Try ditching the “best” qualifier and pick something more concrete and interesting (e.g., X Overlooked/Foundational/Overrated…)
Target a particular reader or use case (e.g., X for Front-End Devs/Content Marketers/CFOs…)
Focus on a particular product trait (e.g., The X Best Browser-Based/Freemium/No Code …)