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Think of a feature release as a timeless story that could have been written by a journalist. Explore creative ways and angles to present your message. Use a captivating headline and attention-grabbing first paragraph. Sum up detailed benefits in the second paragraph.
To write a feature article, start with a 2-3 sentence paragraph that draws your reader into the story. The second paragraph needs to explain why the story is important, so the reader keeps reading, and the rest of the piece needs to follow your outline, so you can make sure everything flows together how you intended.
Research your subject a lot. Create questions that linger. Let your subject to do 90 percent of the talking. Record your interviews. Develop your angle. Find pull quotes that move the story. Tell the story. Check your facts (and check them again)
Examples of feature stories include news features, profiles, spot features, trend stories, and live-ins. Feature stories can be found in the main news section of a newspaper, especially if they profile a person or group currently in the news.
Introduction. Set the scene. Bring it to life. Body text. Having got your readers hooked at the start, keep them reading. Conclusion. Create a satisfactory ending so that the reader understands that the story has reached a conclusion.
Start with the headline. Convey the news value in the first para. Write one or two quotable quotes. Provide detailed background information on the subject. Place your boilerplate in the end. The Common Mistake. Reverse Your Thinking. Define Your Goals.
Focus on Narrative, Not Quotes. Show, Don't Tell. Be Clear About Why the Subject Is Newsworthy. Create an Outline. Spend Extra Time at the Beginning of Your Story.
Focus on Narrative, Not Quotes. Show, Don't Tell. Be Clear About Why the Subject Is Newsworthy. Create an Outline. Spend Extra Time at the Beginning of Your Story.
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