Also called the 5 Ws + How, every great story needs to answer these questions:
- Who…is/was involved?
- What…happened?
- Where…did it happen?
- When…did it happen?
- Why…did it happen?
- How…did it happen?
While these rules were written for traditional journalism and news coverage, they can be applied to almost any story you write for HackerNoon, even if they’re not event based.
For example, if you are writing a guide on How to Redirect AMP URLs in WordPress, you might change those questions slightly like so:
- Who…is this guide for/relevant to?
- What…is this guide going to teach?
- Where…or to what platform/tools is this guide applicable?
- When…is it best to use this guide and how long will it be relevant?
- Why…is this guide necessary and why did you write it?
- How…do you do it?
If your story seems to be missing the answer to one of these crucial questions, we may ask you to add that missing information before publishing.
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2.c. Objectivity in ranked listiclesTable of Contents:
1. Editing Protocol Overview 1.a. Second Human Rule1.a.i. Verified Writers1.b. Time to Review2. Standards of Quality2.a. Originality Score2.b. 6 Ws Score2.c. Objectivity in ranked listicles2.d. Unranked listicles2.e. Actionable advice3. Red Flags3.a. Subject Matter3.a.i. Subject matter saturation3.b. Plagiarism3.c. Sources and Citations3.d. Formatting is bad or broken3.e. Grammar level: gibberish3.f. Story is Too Short🔗 4. Backlink Rules & Guidelines
4.a. Backlink Limits4.b. Banklink quality and diversity4.b.i. Diversity of sources4.b.ii. Internal linking4.b.iii. Changing links4.c. Reposting and Canonical Linking4.c.i. Canonical links to company domain4.c.ii. Canonical links to blog networks or social networks