#contentorganization — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #contentorganization, aggregated by home.social.
-
Coming Monday: How do you organize practitioner-oriented blog posts to help readers actually find what they need?
Most blogs just use categories and dates. But readers don't think in categories – they have problems to solve. I've been working on a simple pattern to organize content by reader challenges instead.
Comments or feedback welcome!
-
Coming Monday: How do you organize practitioner-oriented blog posts to help readers actually find what they need?
Most blogs just use categories and dates. But readers don't think in categories – they have problems to solve. I've been working on a simple pattern to organize content by reader challenges instead.
Comments or feedback welcome!
-
UPDATED DRAFT BLOG POST: "Organizing Blog Posts Into Topic Packs: A Simple Pattern to Support Learning"
Blog readers have problems to solve, not topics to browse - yet most blogs are just organized by tags and dates. What would also organizing by those problems actually look like?
To kick off 2026, I wanted to organize my blog posts into topic packs. Here's a sneak peek at why and how:
Comments or feedback?
-
UPDATED DRAFT BLOG POST: "Organizing Blog Posts Into Topic Packs: A Simple Pattern to Support Learning"
Blog readers have problems to solve, not topics to browse - yet most blogs are just organized by tags and dates. What would also organizing by those problems actually look like?
To kick off 2026, I wanted to organize my blog posts into topic packs. Here's a sneak peek at why and how:
Comments or feedback?
-
DRAFT BLOG POST: "Organizing Blog Posts Into Topic Packs: A Simple Pattern to Support Learning"
Blog readers have problems to solve, not topics to browse - yet most blogs are organized by categories and dates. What would organizing by those problems actually look like?
To kick off 2026, I wanted to organize my blog posts into topic packs. Here's a sneak peek at why and how:
Comments or feedback?
-
DRAFT BLOG POST: "Organizing Blog Posts Into Topic Packs: A Simple Pattern to Support Learning"
Blog readers have problems to solve, not topics to browse - yet most blogs are organized by categories and dates. What would organizing by those problems actually look like?
To kick off 2026, I wanted to organize my blog posts into topic packs. Here's a sneak peek at why and how:
Comments or feedback?