How Web is different from print
Of all the things that make the Web different from print, linking is the most important.
Are we tool-making animals or are we animals made by tools? It’s an old question. How much did the quill shape our minds and worlds? We invented the printing press which then invented a new society, a new way of thinking.
“Scribal culture could not sustain the patenting of inventions or the copyrighting of literary compositions,” Elizabeth Eisenstein writes in her book, The Printing Revolution In Early Modern Europe. “It worked against the concept of intellectual property rights. It did not lend itself to preserving traces of personal idiosyncrasies, to the public airing of private thoughts, or to any of the forms of private publicity that have shaped consciousness of self during the past five centuries.”
And what of the Web? We invented the Web. How is the Web re-inventing us? What makes the Web different from print?
We need to carefully answer this last question because otherwise we are in danger of approaching the Web with our print-thinking and print-techniques. We are in danger of saying: ‘This is what quality writing is,’ when really what we are saying is: ‘This is what quality print writing is.’
Here are some of the ways the Web is different from print:
The Web is about links
The Web is about tasks
The Web is about finding
The Web is about permanence
The Web is a process
The Web is about the customer
The Web is about links. Print is about units of content. A 500-word article, a book, a magazine, a report. Print writing is often a solitary task. The Web is about linking. We’re linking one piece of content to another. We’re linking the consumer of the content with its producer.
The Web is a functional, task-oriented place. We come to the Web to do, and we already have the context when we get to the website. Print lends itself to length and because print is physically going out to the reader, it tends to have lots of contextual language. The Web is bare, hermetic, pared-down-an ugly but useful place.
The Web is about the customer trying to find the content, rather than the content trying to find the customer. The Web turns much of advertising and marketing on its head. You must know the words your customers use when they search. Otherwise you are lost.
The Web is about permanence. Over time, most print content degrades, dissolves, disappears. Try finding that brochure you published in print in 2003. But if you put it up on your website, it’s still there. This is the great blind spot of web teams. Review and remove.
The Web is a process. Print is an event. You get it all together and then you publish. And then it’s over. Job done. On the Web it’s job begun. The print and IT culture of launch and leave is a ruinous strategy on the Web. Great websites involve continuous improvement of your top tasks.
The Web is about the customer. It is not about the control of elites. It is about the wisdom of crowds, the collective intelligence. At the center of the Web is the customer, not the organization. It is about the things the customer wants to do, not the things the organization wants to do to the customer.

Paul Higgins says:
Added on December 8th, 2008 at 3:31 pmCan’t agree with “The Web is bare, hermetic, pared-down-an
ugly but useful place.” Good web design doesn’t have to be “ugly”. In fact, “ugly” would detract from the usability of a site and dissuade people from using it. Good web design is still about presentation - presentation of the information your customers need, using words (and pictures!) they understand, and in a manner that can easily be found, whether by linking or by search engines.
Paul
Amy Donahue says:
Added on December 8th, 2008 at 4:33 pmThis paragraph doesn’t make any sense to me.
” The Web is about permanence. Over time, most print content degrades, dissolves, disappears. Try finding that brochure you published in print in 2003. But if you put it up on your website, it’s still there. This is the great blind spot of web teams. Review and remove.”
So it actually seems that part of the power of the web involves impermanence (”remove”). And has some possibility for either saving an object (but it often does need maintenance of sorts for continued accessibility) or getting rid of what doesn’t work or isn’t needed. Print hangs around in lots of copies that don’t change; the web has potential not only for new ideas in the same place, but to possibly document/maintain old ideas in that one place or just get rid of them completely.
Trevor Stafford says:
Added on December 8th, 2008 at 4:35 pmI read every post that comes my way from Gerry, it’s good reading. But I must point out the irony of starting this piece with:
“Of all the things that make the Web different from print, linking is the most important.”
And then not including a single link!
What about a link to Eisenstein’s book, or the 6 ways web is different from print?
Gerry McGovern (blog author) says:
Added on December 9th, 2008 at 5:45 amAmy, web content stays unless something actually happens to remove it. Print content tends to disappear over time.