Start with a strong opening paragraph. State the core problem or insight immediately. Don't bury the lead. The first 2–3 sentences should make the reader nod and think "yes, this is exactly my problem."
Continue with context. Why does this matter now? What's changed in the industry? Ground the article in something timely and specific to your reader's world.
First Major Section Title
Introduce the first major idea. Keep paragraphs short — 3–4 sentences max. White space is your friend, especially on mobile.
Expand on the idea with a concrete example or data point. Specificity beats generality. "NPS dropped 11 points in 22 minutes after a payment-api degradation" is better than "technical issues hurt NPS scores."
Key insight or powerful quote from the article goes here. Use this sparingly — once or twice per article for maximum impact.
Subsection Title
Supporting detail, data, or example for the subsection. If you have a chart or diagram, insert an image here.
- First key point or takeaway
- Second key point with a bit more detail if needed
- Third key point
See this in your data
Book a 30-minute demo and see Cegavi detect the causal chain between your technical incidents and NPS drops.
Book a free demo →Second Major Section Title
Continue the article. Each major section should flow naturally from the previous one. The reader should feel like they're on a journey, not reading a list.
💡 Pro tip: This is a callout box for important tips or notes. Use it to highlight information that would otherwise get lost in the body text.
Third Major Section Title
Continue with the third main point. A typical article has 3–5 major sections. Each section should advance the argument or narrative.
- First step or point — brief explanation of what this means
- Second step or point — brief explanation
- Third step or point — brief explanation
Conclusion
Summarize the key takeaways in 2–3 sentences. Don't introduce new ideas here — just reinforce what the reader learned and why it matters.
End with a clear next step. What should the reader do now? This should flow naturally into the CTA below.