Many elementary school children
know the miracle of Charlotte's Web. Weaving the words "Some
Pig" into the center of her web, Charlotte keeps Wilbur
from the frying pan. E.B. White's story provides some fascinating
guidelines for web spinning.
Charlotte's wisdom assures Wilbur about what matters. On
the one hand, when Wilbur tries creating his own web, she
instructs, "You can't spin a web...and I advise you
to put the idea out of your mind." Wilbur lacks "spinnerets,
and ... know how". She also informs Wilbur, "...you
don't need a web." However with some "know how",
every webmaster may weave a "terrific" web. A
spider called Charlotte offers wise suggestions.
Have a plan.
Wilbur had no plan to save himself from the butcher, and
when first asked, Charlotte did not have much of a plan.
She does suggest the importance of "working on it",
and in her case, "hanging head down...that's when I
do my thinking". Don't suggest you turn yourself upside
down, but do suggest taking time to ponder YOUR plan. When
Wilbur asks if he can help, she says, "I'll work on
it alone". I am convinced that you must design your
own plan when weaving your web. Stay away from templates
and pre-made web site designs. Generations of web designers
preceded Charlotte; she mimicked the structure, but not
the content. Her choices evolved from her unique and distinctive
plan.
Have a purpose.
Charlotte promises keep Wilbur from ending up as a holiday
meal. She concentrates all her energy toward this one thing:
saving Wilbur's life. Every web site has to have a clear
cut purpose. Whether a site provides a specific message
like "Terrific Pig" or a site's directory offers
vast resources and information. Essentially you, the web
master, must own the purpose with passionate determination.
Spider webs provide entomological evidence that what you
create lives from you and feeds you.
Have patience.
Wilbur worries (who can blame him). Web masters worry too.
Charlotte gives Wilbur practical advice. "Get plenty
of sleep, and stop worrying". Nothing wears down commitment
more than worry. I've done it for months wondering if the
efforts made will produce the results wanted. Daily checks
of stats and Google Adsense & ClickBank revenue reviews
wear you down if the rewards accrue slowly. Charlotte knows
better, she could wait "hour by hour...deep in thought".
Finally, an idea (or a fly) would show up.
Charlotte's lessons pass on to generations of web weavers.
Each of them understands one essential and inalterable lesson,
"...we are going out into the world to make webs for
ourselves". I am not suggesting you reject or ignore
skillful helpers; I am suggesting that the decision of what
your web represents remains yours. Always weave your own
web.
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