Write Articles That Hit the Bull’s-Eye Using the 5T Plan
by: Barbara G. McNichol
When you need to take time out of a busy schedule to write an article for a trade publication, you’ll want to use the 5T Plan to facilitate the process and hit your targeted bull’s-eye. It worked like magic for professional speaker Ruth Kay Petersen in writing an article for the magazine Step Into Success.
As her consulting editor, I was fortunate that Ruth Kay had lots of existing material for us to work with: i.e., her promotional brochure, two issues of her newsletter, several articles, her booklet Fun Stuff to Keep You Laughing, and her presentations. First, we had to decide which existing materials fit the needs of this magazine, its readers, and the editor’s current requirements. We needed to define our “bull’s-eye.”
Because this was the first time we’d worked with this publication, we had to deal with several unknowns. First, we researched the editor's expectations for this article. It had to be about 1,000 words, saved in MS Word, and sent within six weeks via disk; it would be published three months later.
Next, we defined the steps of the 5T Plan and worked through the first four before we wrote a single word. These steps are:
1. Target audience
2. Takeaway
3. Theme
4. Tone
5. Test
1. Describing the Target Audience
These questions provided a starting point in the writing process:
• Who reads the targeted publication?
• What are the demographics and psychographics of its readers?
• What do they hope to gain by reading the publication?
We learned that the majority of Step Into Success readers are women in direct sales who have a wide variety of experience. Often they coach others in their organization. This publication provides inspiration and fresh ideas to help them stay motivated in their sales jobs.
2. Fine-tuning the Takeaway Message
We narrowed Ruth Kay’s wealth of material to one concept: how to add lighthearted fun to a sales person's day. She wanted to make sure the article’s message aligned with the principles she delivers from the platform. Our intent? To match her experience with the needs of the targeted readers. This goal kept us on a straight path toward crafting the right message for the article: What do we want the audience to think, do, or remember as a result of reading this piece?
Ruth Kay wanted the readers—both aspiring and experienced sales people—to see the value of using laughter in their everyday interactions. She wrote her article to provide 10 outrageously fun ways to “Add Laughter to Your Sales Success” (the title). As a result of reading the article, sales people would step up the “enjoyment” aspects of their jobs and reap rewards for doing so.
3. Determining the Theme
Working with a theme encouraged Ruth Kay to play with our fabulously rich language and give her article more personality. The theme is the imaginative pathway leading to an article’s message, but not the message itself. The message has the power; the theme adds color and clarity.
Ruth Kay settled on “laughter is powerful” as a theme. In both her writing and speaking, she’s a master of outrageous hyperbole, achieved by telling embarrassing stories and turning them into kernels of wisdom. That part of her personality needed to show up creatively and clearly in the article.
4. Setting the Tone
Once we clarified the message and theme, we paid attention to the tone and style of articles currently being published in Step Into Success. Before we worked on the first draft, we asked these questions:
• Do articles use first, second, or third person (I, you, or he/she)?
• Do paragraphs tend to be long or short?
• Is bullet form used, or longer prose?
• Does the publication include the author's credentials and contact information?
• Do the articles commonly feature subheads, graphs, charts, or sidebars?
We wanted to follow a similar tone in style and format.
5. Testing Your Intent
Before sending her masterpiece to the editor, Ruth Kay gave her article to some sales people who face the challenge of staying inspired. In addition to getting their general reaction, she asked them to pick out the elements we’d built into the article. Could they easily answer these questions after a quick read?
• Who is the target audience?
• What is the key message?
• What is the theme?
• Do the tone and style fit the magazine?
Their responses provided the answers we were seeking, plus a bonus. They laughed out loud at the humorous scenarios and imaginative ideas. Clearly this 5T approach had brought us directly to Ruth Kay's desired destination. Bull’s eye!
About the Author
Barbara McNichol helps nonfiction authors through expert editing and her searchable e-guide, Word Trippers: The Ultimate Source for Choosing the Perfect Word When It Really Matters, available at http://www.BarbaraMcNichol.com.


