Taking your print styleguide online
Many magazines and newspapers have styleguides. Typically they are written and enforced by the production editor and they are an incredibly useful way of ensuring a consistency of tone and execution in a brand's editorial output.
They can also cause severe problems when applied to online content. There are several reasons why:
- Your readers are global not just UK-based
- Your readers may not necessarily know your brand and its idiom (they could have reached your site by referral or search result, for instance)
- Things change much more quickly online than they do offline
Now all this doesn't make a styleguide obsolete - far from it. But moving one into the online arena should be accompanied by a far-reaching review of its recommendations - particularly by testing them against the many online indicators of reader behaviour.
You say notebook, they say laptop
For instance, one clear example of how an offline styleguide may be out of step with onlineterminology is the usage of laptop v notebook.
Several Dennis magazine styleguides have traditionally backed notebook over laptop, and they would expect the website to reflect that preference.
However as online journalists we have access to qualititative tools that show what our readers actually use when they search for content. These include:
- search logs from Dennis site searches
- Yahoo's keyword selector tool
- Google Trends
Our Widearea search logs have consistently shown that our readers enter 'laptop' ahead of 'notebook' by a factor of more than 3 to 1.
Yahoo's keyword tracker - which tracks the usage of search terms across Yahoo's search engine - showed that in one month 2.6m people searched for 'laptop' or 'laptop pc' compared with 750,000 who typed in 'notebook'.
Multiply the figure by 10 to get get arough idea how many people performed the same searches on Google.
All these tools say the same thing: use laptop rather than notebook and you could double or even treble your online audience. They also suggest that perhaps the print magazine should take heed of their readers' quantifiable online behaviour and adapt accordingly.

