What’s the ideal length for online stories?
That’s a
question that has challenged writers since the advent of the Internet.
The mantra
for some time has been shorter is better, considering that Canadians today have the attention spans of goldfish.
But is that true?
The answer
is yes—and no.
Research
indicates that while people like shorter stories, they also read longer ones.
That’s what
the business news website Quartz discovered in 2013.
Based on its
experience with its website, it found the best user engagement was with stories
below 500 words, or more than 800.
"People
read short, fast content on the web,” he said, but also long-form analytical pieces.
And why is
that?
Articles of
between 500 and 800 words are too long to be sharable, he said, but too short
to be in-depth.
What catches
attention, he suggested, was short, sharp takes on news stories that
are creative and say something new, or long in-depth articles providing strong
detailed narrative or insightful analysis.
The stuff in
between is the dead zone—articles that provide detail but no insight.
This finding
was so popular, it became known as the “Quartz Curve.”
But that was
in 2013—a million years ago in Internet time.
What about
today?
In fall
Emily Loewen, Digital Content Coordinator for Mennonite Central Committee Canada,
did research to find what stories were most popular on that organization’s website.
She found
that the best-read stories were about what MCC’s supporters were doing to
help, humanitarian disasters, and the
agency’s observations about events in the news.
She also
found some interesting information about reader engagement and story length.
Of stories
under 500 words, 60% were read all the way to the end.
For stories
between 501-1,000 words, 30% were read all the way.
1,000 to
1,501? 18% were read to the end.
32% of
stories 1,500 to 2,001 words were read all the way.
What about 2,001 or higher? 0% were read all the way.
Loewen’s
research seems to confirm the “Quartz curve”—although MCC’s maximum seems to be
on the higher end.
It also
indicates that no story should be longer than 2,000 words.
Her research
also shows what we intuitively know: Lots of people never make it to the end of
our stories, whether they are short or long.
Which makes
it all the more important to use the pyramid style of writing—making sure the most important information is
near the top of every story.
As a matter
of interest, this post is 444 words long—which means I’ve avoided the dreaded
dead zone.
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