Turtle Wexler
Active Member
I was reading <a href="http://www.sportsjournalists.com/forum/threads/84964/">this thread</a> about styles for referring to high schools. Someone made the point that your print story may have a kicker that reads "high school football" but you lose that for the web.
When you have a subject kicker, a photo, maybe a graphic, a box score, etc. in print, it's easy for people to pick up context clues that the subject is high school football.
But how do you get around that online? Do you rewrite the headline for the web? Do you have a special index page or graphic that designates the subject? Any other tricks your site has picked up for helping readers to know what the subject is?
When you have a subject kicker, a photo, maybe a graphic, a box score, etc. in print, it's easy for people to pick up context clues that the subject is high school football.
But how do you get around that online? Do you rewrite the headline for the web? Do you have a special index page or graphic that designates the subject? Any other tricks your site has picked up for helping readers to know what the subject is?