Many people wonder - What is a learning portal? Presently, it seems that everyone seems to be finding ways to package and repackage information, but often you will find important pieces missing from the equation. For example, considering the current social, cultural and political climate, a lot of people really want to learn concerning the different aspects life that they don’t readily understand. For those of you up to the task of creating a relevant portal or learning facility there are a few things that you must take into account. The next few paragraphs fails the details for you using an air force portal to give an example. A Defence learning portal should have military articles that investigate different facets of military air defence. These postings can be free or paid but either way they ought to cover all relevant topics in a manner that is informative and discursive. Headlines should be short and engaging - much the same as is warranted in a newspaper. As far as film content, military
videos should feature experts from various ranks of the military who are willing and able to share opinions and best practices. They should be willing to give case studies so that you can ensure that students or users take full advantage of their presentations. 

One of the best techniques for getting the message out there is through the creation of writings through military blogs or message-boards - as this will give users the opportunity respond and create strong two-way communications with their readers. Blogs are truly a easy way get an accurate idea of the lay of the land with regard to the military industry. 
Military personnel often attend military conferences. In fact, if military events or any other related type of tactical events are available they should be featured on the portal as well. Content should cover interesting topics for instance military research - specifically, new developments and new insights that can be auctioned for success. Before you do this however,You must understand and find out how to write a simple yet effective blog. Here a few sound advice tips.

One thing we’ve noticed in on various military events websites is that when people write a vague topic title for a forum post, it gets very little response. When we are very clear and distinct about what they desire or what they’re talking about, they often get a lot of responses. This is also true with blogging. You’ve got precious few moments to grab someone’s attention. Lead with a useful and grabbing title. The initial paragraph is all most people will give you to convince them to read, so if you’re going to use the above-mentioned method, be sure that you show people what they’re going to get from the post in that same paragraph.

After your story, extract out the important piece you’re hoping to talk about, and explain the concept. Use the simplest terms possible. Use simple sentences. Sometimes, we think that people want our most colorful and expressive writing. Usually, especially in nonfiction, they want well-crafted and useful sentences.If a chair’s pretty but you can’t sit on it, it’s very little of a chair, is it? (Oh artists, you may begin bristling now.) Explain the concept, and then help people start to see how they can apply it to themselves. In a post about how to blog effectively, I’d explain that this formula, such as it is, helps people move towards actionable next steps, if you’re lucky enough to lay it out like that. Oh, and I’d point out that transitional sentences like this one help you move from the explanation into the actionable steps.

Try doing something like this:
Pick a topic
Come up with a title (it’s okay if you redo the title after the fact)
Find a graphic to accompany the piece ( I use Flickr for this).
Write a first paragraph that both explains the piece and/or tells us a story to do so. (This might take practice.)
Write the first main point and explain it to us. Make the best one come first. Don’t build us up to it.
Repeat if you have multiple points.
Give us actionable takeaways or a call to action.
Wrap up the piece however you want that call to action to go

I’ve been writing and making military videos in some form or another for over 35 years (if you count my beginnings at age 5). I started winning awards for writing in high school. But it wasn’t until some time after 9/11 that I started getting decent at writing, and it wasn’t until around 2005 or so that I started convincing other people that I had a thing that could possibly be useful. When inspiration for a post strikes, scribble it down in a notebook or a word file. For many bloggers and content creators, finding the topic to write about takes up half the time. Keeping an idea list lets you leap in to a new post quickly when you’re ready to write.

If you try to force yourself to come up with supporting information for your brilliant idea right away, it’s going to take ages. Let that topic sit for a few days, though, and you can add new ideas as they occurs to you - and when you’re ready to write, you’ll already have all the supporting info you need. You’ve probably got twice as many ideas as you need at this point, so it’s time to be brutal. Cut out any supporting idea that doesn’t fit with the main topic of the article. Remember, we’re talking about how to write an article in 20 minutes, not an epic. You can always use the ideas you don’t need for later posts

If you find that you’re stuck, don’t try to force the words to come. Save the article and work on something else for awhile. If inspiration strikes, open up that document again. You can even switch from one blog post to another, spending a few minutes on each as ideas comes to you. It’s a huge time-saver. It’s tempting, when you look through your list of ideas, to save the best ones for later because you think they’ll be easier to write. You don’t want to save time later, you want to save time now. Do the articles you know will come easily to Ctcd and make the most of that time.

The above methodology has served me well for a very long time in blogging, and it might prove useful to your efforts. Once you’ve practiced it a while, you might tweak and modify it to meet your own needs. Heck, it's likely you have an even better method you’d like to prescribe below in the comments. I’m all for it. But that which you see above is roughly how I do what I do. I hope it proves useful.

We’re a short while off from launching it, but it will offer some great interviews, a writing course, some accountability, some workshopping of your pieces (not just blog posts, mind you), and other related information. I think that writing has become so much more important for most jobs than it’s ever been, so this is one way that I can help out.
I’d love to hear your thoughts on what you’re working on, what you find challenging, and what would be useful in a course of that kind.

Also, remember to optimize. Pictures need to load very quickly as you only have a persons attention for a very short time before they bounce. Your picture is the first thing to load, and it took and incredible amount of time to load. This could cause you to loose a lot of readers even if your content is fantastic. Images need to load in a matter of seconds, and a good size is 72 dpi. If you are taking them straight from Flickr then they are not optimized properly to load. They are optimized to be printed much bigger with very high dpi (dots per inch). Your image choice was good. As for what I find challenging, I used really bad post-anxiety. I would sit at the computer and my mind would be a blank. No ideas or post topics. Then I started planning posts in advance and it became much easier. Right now I've got posts planned about a month in advance and it makes me feel so much better knowing that I have enough ideas up my sleeve to fill a whole month.



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