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Use Prose to Put the Focus on Your Words
Welcome to the Prose theme for the Genesis WordPress Framework! The Prose theme was designed to highlight your words with a clean, simple design that calls attention to the text.
Design matters
Sometimes writers think that design and communication are separate. That it’s the writer’s job to communicate with well-chosen words, and then the designer’s job to “make it pretty.”
Design is actually much more important than that.
The right design doesn’t just look good. It actually communicates something important to your readers.
- Good design conveys your authority. Professional design shows your commitment to your audience, and that you aren’t some “fly by night” who slapped a site together.
- Good design enhances your content without drawing attention away from it. You don’t want your readers to say, “what a great-looking design.” You want them to say, “what a remarkably useful blog, I’m going to read this every day.”
- Good design allows you to highlight what matters most to you. Clean, open design with plenty of white space allows the ads and images you choose to stand out on the page.
Good design always serves the needs of the project. A wonderful theme for a photography blog would be the wrong choice for most writers. A craft shop owner has very different needs from a real estate agent.
Smart theme design takes into account what you’ll be using your site for, and supports your purpose beautifully.
You want some flexibility
Even though you may not consider yourself primarily a designer, you still want some flexibility.
Maybe your readers prefer a larger font. Maybe you have a gorgeous custom header and perfectly shows who you are and how you work. You probably have certain colors you’ve chosen to reflect your individual brand.
That’s why we built design controls into Prose. What are design controls? They let you change simple things about the appearance of your site (like colors and fonts) without knowing anything about coding, PHP, CSS, HTML, or any other abbreviations.
If you can click and drag, you can customize Prose.
Images Add Life to Your Site
Prose is designed for writers, and it was created as a showcase for your words.
But that doesn’t mean images aren’t important, or that they’re just decoration.
The old cliché about a picture being worth a thousand words has some real truth to it. Why? Because images can create an instant emotional response.
The image you choose might convey a sense of calm, or love, or humor, or outrage. And it can do all this in under a second, creating an emotional “backdrop” for your content.
Adding images is easy
Just click the image icon on the WordPress dashboard, and in under a minute you’ve added a great-looking image to your post. (You can find hundreds of thousands of images at the inexpensive stock photo houses, or choose from the incredible variety of images available through the Creative Commons license.)
Don’t like how it looks on the left side? Takes two more seconds to align it right or center instead, or to add a caption.
By the way, did you know that image captions are some of the most-read elements of any web page? You can use captions for humor, to add clarity, or to reinforce your key points. Or if you prefer, you don’t have to have a caption at all. It’s completely up to you.
Adding a caption is easy, you just enter a few words in the “caption” field when you upload your image, and a frame and caption are added automatically.
Develop a visual “brand” with your images
Your image choices can be corporate or funky, soothing or jarring, pretty or intense. It’s up to you.Instead of the cheerful sunflower image I used at the top of the post, what if I’d chosen an image of spiky Venus Flytraps? It would change the mood from mellow to edgy in an instant.
Over time, the types of images you choose will become part of your brand. They’ll work with your words to convey all of the value your content has to offer. Along with your well-chosen words and the sleek design of your site, your image choices will become part of your unique identity — and part of what makes you stand out among the rest.
What’s a WordPress Framework and Why Do I Need One?
(Genesis is the theme framework, and Prose is what’s called a Child Theme.)
So what’s a theme framework, anyway? And why is it a good thing for your blog?
Here’s the scoop:
When it comes to web design, form and function need to be separated
In other words, how your web page works (what are sometimes called “back end” elements, like the code that Google analyzes to figure out your search engine placement, or the security code that keeps evildoers from hacking your blog) should be separated from how your web page looks.
Why? Because those back end elements need to be updated from time to time. Security evolves, SEO evolves, WordPress evolves, and your page function needs to grow with those things so that everything works the way it should.
But the last thing you want is for your carefully designed web page to suddenly look completely different because you updated your WordPress theme.
That’s the beauty of a framework. When you click that button to update Genesis, it automatically takes care of all of those security and SEO issues for you. But it doesn’t touch the design of the page, because that’s handled by “child themes.”
OK, so what’s a child theme?
So, the framework handles all the stuff you don’t see — the SEO, the security, etc. It also handles things like making your plugins work the way they’re supposed to. The theme framework is all about how the site works.
The child theme is in charge of how the site looks. The colors. The layout. The typefaces.
The child theme controls the “look and feel” of your site. And the exact same content will have a very different feel depending on how that content gets presented.
The nice thing about child themes is that with the Genesis framework, you can change them in just minutes.
That means you can take a funky site with a handmade flavor, like our Bee Crafty theme, and in about two minutes you can give that site a sleek professional gloss by switching to the Enterprise theme.
And you’ll never touch the important “behind the scenes” code that make your site work exactly the way you want it to.
The biggest security hazard for most blogs
Unfortunately, bad guys are everywhere, and blogs get hacked every day.
The most common culprit? Bloggers who haven’t updated their theme or their WordPress installation because they’re worried it will mess up the look and usability of their sites.
Outdated software is a major security hazard. One of the key reasons Brian Gardner developed the Genesis framework in the first place was to make updating his theme code one-click-easy.
When it’s easy for you to update your WordPress theme (and your version of WordPress) and you don’t worry about anything breaking, you’ll do it more quickly. And that keeps your blog (and your readers) safer from hackers.
Let’s sum it up: why frameworks are better
- The framework-and-child-theme model is more secure.
- It allows for better, cleaner code (which helps your SEO).
- It keeps plugin compatibility issues under control.
- It lets you change the look of your site virtually instantly, without breaking anything.
- And it lets the theme framework adapt as SEO and other factors evolve
So in case you were wondering why Matt Mullenweg, founder of WordPress, said “Child themes are the only way you should build your WordPress site on top of a framework … ,” well now you know.
7 Tips for Capturing Short Attention Spans
You might have noticed that people’s attention spans are getting shorter.
You can probably thank/blame the internet for that. But it doesn’t matter what’s causing it — what matters is that you’ll have to factor it in when creating your content.
Because if your reader gets bored and drifts away, they’ll never get the chance to benefit from your terrific content.
There are a couple of nifty tricks you can use to help make your content easier to read — and easier for your readers to stick with.
1. Use subheads
Subheads are the various headings and subheadings you can add to your text.
Here’s the “H2” subhead
This is normally styled as the largest subhead after your headline style.
Here’s the “H3” subhead style
Most bloggers use either “H2” or “H3” to break up their posts into manageable, bite-sized chunks.
You can use subheads throughout your post to guide the reader’s attention and give the “bird’s eye view” of what the post is about. After an initial skim, the reader is tempted to come in for a closer look.
Here’s the “H4” style
You probably won’t use the H4 tag very often, but it’s nice to have when you’re writing a really complex post and you need to break things up. In fact, you have six “H” styles to choose from.
Here’s “H5”
And here’s “H6”
Incidentally, it’s easy to go into your Design Settings and change how these look. You can make your subheads bold or italic (or both), change the typeface, make them all caps, and adjust the font size and color for each level.
It won’t take you more than a few seconds to instantly adjust your blog to exactly the way you like it.
2. Start with short sentences
Did you notice that I started this post with a single sentence? Then the next paragraph also had short, punchy sentences.
You don’t have to keep up that writing rhythm throughout your post, but it helps to snag that short attention span and get the reader engaged.
3. Use short paragraphs and plenty of white space
You might notice that Prose has lots of white space. That means lots of room for your words to stand alone.
Big blocks of text all crammed together are hard to read, and they don’t invite the reader to linger. You can help by keeping most of your paragraphs short, just 3-4 lines. It’s easy to do and it helps the web reader stick with you.
4. Make your content readable
This is a small point, but it can make a big difference.
Make sure your font size is large enough to read. (Go up a point or two if many of your readers are over 40.)
Use a typeface that’s easy on the eye and readable, rather than something that might be quirky but hard to read. (Those fonts are ok for headers and a few design elements, but don’t ask your readers to read a whole post in them.)
A text-intensive site also needs a light background (white or a color that’s nearly white is usually best), with dark text. White text on a dark background is eye-catching, but it’s also hard to read for more than a word or two.
And if you’d like to bump the font size up just a bit more, it’s a quick change in your Design Settings. Three clicks, and easy to find in your WordPress Dashboard.
5. Take advantage of block quotes
The blockquote style is intended to set off material you’re quoting. It’s a great way to visually break up a post and pull that reader’s attention to something interesting you want to talk about.
If advertising is for a good cause, it is worthwhile. Buddha advertised enlightenment or Nirvana. If it is reasonable and beneficial, it is good, but if it is only for profit, cheating, and exploitation, or is misleading, then it is wrong.
~ the Dalai Lama
Another good tool is the “Notice Box.”
Notice boxes can pull the eye right to your most important content. Use them sparingly! Once per post is usually plenty. You do want to break your content up so it’s easy to read, but you don’t want so much formatting that the page gets cluttered. It’s a balance.
6. Use bulleted lists
There are two kinds of bulleted lists you can use in WordPress, and they’re both great useful ways to make your content easier to scan and pull in reader attention.
The numbered list
- This is a numbered list.
- You don’t have to put the numbers in — they’re coded for you automatically.
- These are great for those “101 Ways to Do Something Really Cool” posts that readers tend to love.
- They’re also excellent for step-by-step content, which is another type of content readers always go for.
- Numbers of any kind tend to hook people’s attention. That’s why I used a number in the headline of this post!
The “unordered” list
- The “unordered” list is a vanilla bulleted list, without any numbers.
- Because your reader can’t orient herself with the numbers, it’s smart to keep these to 7 bullets or fewer.
- It’s often smart to pull the most important points of your post into a bulleted list. Again, you’re helping those short attention spans focus.
- I always try to keep my bulleted lists to an odd number. It’s just a bit more visually pleasing. So 3, 5, or 7.
- And yes, once in awhile, I’ll just do a “list” with one bullet point.
7. Don’t forget a great image
Remember that strong images can pull the reader in and engage her emotionally before she’s even had a chance to respond intellectually to your words.
Images can make your reader feel happy or sad, tender or angry, before you’ve written a word. They’re a great way to snag those short attention spans long enough to hook them with your content.
You can find terrific images from the inexpensive stock photo houses, and there are also literally millions to choose from that are available with a “Creative Commons” license. Choosing a strong image takes a little longer, but it’s a great way to add impact to your content.
Making Your Blog a Great Place to Hang Out
You may have heard that social media is all about “community.”
So what does that mean, exactly? And is community even relevant when you’re blogging commercially — say to support your copywriting business, or to build a business site for your clients?
Why you care about developing a “community” on your blog
The reason you want a strong and vibrant community to develop around your blog is that it creates social proof.
Social proof is what makes a crowded coffeeshop more appealing than an empty one. It makes people wait in long lines for hit movies and must-see concerts, and makes the latest iPhone feel almost essential.
Not everyone follows the crowd, but your customers do. And creating a crowd around your content shows that you’re smart, well-connected, and that what you write is worth talking about.
How to create social proof on your blog
The first place to start is to create a strong comment section. Not every blog has comments, but until you’ve developed other means of social proof (like large Facebook or twitter followings), a lively comment section is probably the quickest and easiest way you can develop one.
One simple way to get more comments is just to ask for them. If your blog is new and you want to get the comment ball rolling, ask at the end of each post “What’s your take on this topic? Let us know in the comments.” You can also ask friends on social media to come by and offer a comment or two.
Make commenting more fun
Another way to get more comments is to make commenting easy and fun for your readers. Prose helps you with this by offering threaded comments, which let readers answer one another’s comments. When readers engage with one another, your blog becomes an “event” where people come to make connections.
All Genesis themes also come with “Gravatar” already installed for you. Gravatar is the one-stop place where readers can associate their email addresses with an image, to be used all over the web. Because when your commenters have faces, it’s much easier for them to feel like a community.
And finally, of course all Genesis themes have anti-spam plugin already installed. Because spam comments don’t enhance your reputation or your community!


