Many writers believe that the quality of an article alone is enough to ensure its spread, but reality says otherwise; many an article written with care, based on references and deep analysis, passes by unnoticed, while another article achieves wide circulation because it touches on an issue that people live with.

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The reader is not always looking for the most beautiful or eloquent styles, but rather for the text that explains what he sees, expresses what he feels, or raises a question that was on his mind. Therefore, articles that deal with issues of work, professional relationships, appointments, education, and economics spread, because they touch the details of daily life, and the reader finds himself within their lines. But spread alone is not a criterion for success. There are articles linked to a current event that achieve great interaction, then disappear when the news ends. In contrast, there are articles that remain present because they did not discuss the event as much as they addressed the idea behind it, and these are the articles that transcend the time of their publication. Therefore, I believe that a writer should not be preoccupied with the question: What is the most talked-about topic today? But rather: What issue deserves to remain a subject of discussion even after years? An influential article does not merely describe the problem, nor does it exaggerate in stirring controversy; rather, it provides the reader with a deeper understanding, a different angle, or a logical solution. The true value of an article is not measured by the number of shares, but by the impact it leaves on the way of thinking. In a time when messages and short clips are crowding, the reader's time has become more valuable than ever; therefore, he only gives it to the text that respects his mind, adds to his knowledge, and deserves to be returned to again. In the end, an article may spread because it coincided with a moment, but the article that lives is the one that touches the human, transcends the occasion, and leaves an idea worth reading whenever the question returns again. @DrLalibrahim