Thanks to you all for some thoroughly engaging responses to my original post.
First, a clarification...
As a copywriter, what worries me is the tendency to turn the accepted minimum number of words per page for SEO purposes (250-300) into a maximum. Hence, if you only need 250-300 words for optimisation, then that's all they'll write.
This, coupled with the 'accepted wisdom' that you shouldn't force readers to scroll down more than 2 or 3 screens deep, conspires to break many websites up into a series of disconnected staccato mini-topics. And so, you end up clicking through three or four pages to get 'the whole story' on any particular topic.
I'm not advocating the super-long hyped-up sales letter copy that most dm writers cut their teeth on. What I'm saying is that, from a 'conversion to sale/ action' point of view, 250-300 words is often too little to give the reader enough information to make the decision you want them to make.
I accept that, because this is an SEO/ SEM forum, then optimisation issues are top of the agenda. But, from a copywriting point of view, I maintain that the decisions that need to be made about the text on any web page are:
1. First and foremost: How much do I need to say on this particular page to allow the reader to make the decision I want them to make? And that can be as little as 300 words, but is more likely to be 500-1000 words.
2. Then secondly: How do I weave the chosen keyphrases into the copy so that the page ranks well but without destroying the sales arguments?
Anyway, I'm probably guilty of 'preaching to the converted' here!
By the way, I'm intrigued! Karon said this in one of her posts:
What Jill did on one site we worked together on was to have the bottom half of the page created as a graphic. I optimized the 1st 300 words or so and the rest got dumped into a .gif.
May I ask why you did that??
Thanks again to my fellow forumists.
BrianR