Failed attempt to write series, again!
Why I'm stopping my blog series format. Discover why individual posts outperform series and my new writing strategy.
I have tried writing complete series again. And again failed. And I am stopping it again.
There are a couple of reasons for it. First and foremost, I am not good at it. Nowhere near even readable, I guess. Now, I don't know the reason specifically for that. Maybe I can write on specific topics better instead of things that are continuous.
And that is the reason the complete series thing is not that good but individual write-ups are getting good reviews.
There is one more thing. Few things are just very random that can't fit in series at all. A few days back I was trying to run SignalR with F#. I succeeded but that will not fit here. Before that there was an article about getting started with Servicestack from very zero. And that also can't fit here.
So, I finally thought to kill it for a while. Because of this I couldn't write a few other things I like to write. I am putting this in this series as a completely non-technical part.
There will be more articles about web, game and F# but not in series form.
So, wait for the next one.
Frequently Asked Questions
The author found that writing continuous series wasn't playing to their strengths, as individual standalone articles were receiving better reviews. They discovered that certain topics work better as independent write-ups rather than serialized content, making the series format ineffective for their writing style.
The author plans to continue writing articles about web development, game development, and F# programming. However, these will be published as individual articles rather than as part of a series format.
The author found that individual write-ups were receiving positive reviews while the series format resulted in lower-quality work. This suggests their writing strength lies in focused, standalone topics rather than continuous, interconnected narrative structures.
Yes, the author will continue publishing new articles, but they will be standalone pieces rather than part of a series. Readers can expect more content on web development, game development, and F# topics in the future.