What's considered a good blog? We have trainings that we can do and write about, but there's not really much to offer since they're pretty straightforward.
What's considered a good blog? We have trainings that we can do and write about, but there's not really much to offer since they're pretty straightforward.
All suggestions below are great tips.
Here's my take on blog writing for Path to Programmable 3.
I see blogs could cover these themes:
You can earn up to 40 points per blog. Something that is more complex or is substantive such that it can help other people will get more points than simply a general update (e.g., I received my kit blog)
Randall
--element14 Team
You can earn up to 40 points per blog
I think it'd be best if we said a minimum of 40 points per blog at our discretion, what if someone feels they're having to hold back?
cstanton I just was curious about this, so asking here. I see that some of the blogs with a solid effort on the contents are getting 40, same as other blogs with a minimal amount of effort with some photos and general information. Do you have any kind of rubric on how you are distributing points for a blog?
<layman's perspective>
To me it seems no-one likes seeing blogs that are just filler blogs (i.e. blogs with no real content, just padding to try to get points without much benefit to readers). Us blog readers are not blind, we can see when we are being short-changed when it comes to reading a blog, so contestants are only losing out themselves by gaming the system by writing minimal content. Just keep in mind that blogs should help people, not be filler stuff.
For what the interim blogs could contain, Randall mentioned that in a comment earlier. And keep it helpful/interesting if possible. I think generally if a blog author, design challenge or not, has got something to say in a blog, then just say it, i.e. keep it authentic/real. People see through fake stuff!
On the other hand, if people write filler blogs with no useful content, then sure they might get some points, but I wonder what they will do when it comes to writing any longer final blog, which carries quite a lot of points. They will have no decent interim blogs to help them, if all they have is filler content.
To me it seems that anyone who wrote reasonable, authentic content throughout, will have a lot less work to do to collect their thoughts and summarize and present their key bits of info.
So, if two people both get the same score of 40 for their interim blog, nevertheless, the person who wrote more authentic and useful content, will benefit, because they will find it much easier to write the final blog and score highly with it.
Also, I can imagine it puts less pressure on you during the Design Challenge, because if you end up thinking you need to write a ton of content for an interim blog, then you might not spend much time actually doing lots of engineering work for the project. It's a balance.
In the past, some Design Challenges needed 10 blogs, and that seems like a lot of pressure throughout. I think if you try to think about point-scoring too much during the challenge, it's not good for you, and not good for the challenge, and not good for the readers. It's like going back to 10 lengthy blogs in that case. I bet you'll do better by simply keeping it authentic/helpful and don't stress yourself out either.
You'll then be in a great position to write with clarity about all the work and findings in the final blog.
</layman's perspective>
element14 blogs are public, anyone can access them and although there is a certain anonymity think that future employers, or department heads or even your children as is my case will be able to read them and you will want to be proud of your job.
My recommendation is not to think about the competition but to focus on learning and telling what you have learned and above all enjoy the training.
I think the important thing is that your blog has meaning and serves as a help to you and to the other participants beyond being too long or too deep.
Seeing that practically all the blogs have the maximum punctuation I think is very good to generate a good atmosphere in the training. I am comfortable with that.
Do you have any kind of rubric on how you are distributing points for a blog?
I'm not the person marking them.
However you can pull together an answer to this from these places:
Tips on Writing the Final Summary Blog and Winning the Big Prizes
Semi-related with good advice:
How To Write A RoadTest Review
And let's throw in some SEO advice from Google:
https://developers.google.com/search/docs/fundamentals/creating-helpful-content
I agree mostly. The only thing is that having a good initial blog is not a necessity to have a great final blog.
javagoza Your blog was one of blogs that I had in mind when taking as an example of the type of the blog that people put a lot of hard work into making interesting. Also, I am not too focused on the points either; I was just curious about how the organizers are handling the points distribution. Anyway, looking forward to read your future blogs!
Hey, I apologize for the wrong assumption. And, thanks!
Hey, I apologize for the wrong assumption. And, thanks!