Suffering from blank-page anxiety? Before you go on the hunt for inspiration all over the Internet and elsewhere, turn to the resources around you and realize that you can create exceptional content with what you already have at hand.
Thinking of content topics doesn't have to be such a long and grueling undertaking. Use the following starting points the next time you need an idea.
Individual achievement
- Talk about a transition to a new role and how you had to adapt your skills to succeed.
- Think of lessons you learned the hard way and share with those who are just starting out.
- Describe your thought process for approaching different tasks in a way that will help others be better organized or prepared.
- Write about a mentor figure or a brand you admire. Explain why this person or company has excelled, and how others may be able to follow a similar path.
- Share your action plan for the future. Give people a sneak peak of what's to come and talk through the steps you'll take to accomplish your goals.
Tools
- Create a video tutorial that walks people through how to use a tool for a specific task.
- Review a new or lesser-known tool that you believe more people should use.
- Present creative, alternate ways of using a tool, including plugins and combinations that make using multiple tools together advantageous.
- If there's an in-house tool that you use, put together a case study of why it's better than some of the commercial tools that other brands use.
- Perform the same task with a few different tools. Note which one is most cost effective, easiest to use, saved you the most time, etc.
Lists
- Compile resources for different subjects and skill levels.
- Gather content that shows the best examples of what people should be striving for.
- Rank your favorite tools, blogs, ads, etc.
- Give reasons why someone should or should not follow a certain tactic or strategy.
- Curate useful content and put together "best of" lists.
Internal resources
- Ask the sales team what their most common roadblocks are. What content can you put together that will aid them in illustrating the solution?
- Sit in on meetings in different departments. Take what you've observed about their communication styles and workflow and turn it into content about processes such as effective ways to brainstorm or overcoming internal objections.
- Find out what questions your account managers get asked most frequently. Put together a blog post or other resource that lays out the answers.
- Request that every department share their biggest accomplishments on a monthly or quarterly basis. Select at least one to develop a case study.
- Get to know your coworkers. Find out more about their backgrounds, their daily routines, and future aspirations. You can highlight employees in a video or blog series introducing your team, or better yet, you can learn a new way of thinking or working that you can write about.
Industry
- Find an opinion piece that people in your space are discussing. Back it up with new research or make a case for the other side of the argument.
- Explain the steps that your company is taking in response to a new policy affecting your industry.
- Introduce a new technique or strategy you're using. Detail why this could work better than industry techniques that are becoming stale.
- Comment on a trend you see emerging and why or why not it should continue.
- Share tips and best practices.
How-to
- Have each person on your team write down a five step process that takes them through a daily task start to finish. This can be used for an email campaign or a blog or video series.
- Ask your leadership team for pointers on how they've developed the business and how they keep it running smoothly.
- What skills would be helpful for your customers to have so that they could better understand your product/service or use it more easily? Teach them.
- Write down the steps you took in a successful campaign. Layout this process so that it can be repeated.
- Interview several experts on the same topic, asking each how he or she accomplishes a certain goal.
Company culture
- Get involved in your community and volunteer. Talk about what you're doing and why it's important to you.
- Ask coworkers to each share one benefit of working at the company that they've never experienced at another job.
- Have someone from the leadership team discuss the company's core values and why they are integral to the brand.
- Congratulate new hires and talk about why they're great fits for the team.
- Let interns shadow an employee for a day and write about what a day in the life of someone in this role entails.
Educational series
- Teach a skill or illustrate how to use a tool or software.
- Put together a set of lessons that will take someone through an entire plan or strategy.
- Summarize long articles or eBooks into short snippets, highlighting the actionable takeaways.
- Create quizzes and interactive lessons and then post a walkthrough of how to arrive at the correct answer.
- Host a workshop or lunch and learn for your team internally, and film it or have someone create a summary.
Events
- As soon as the list of speakers comes out for a big event in your industry, select a few who are covering topics in which your audience is interested and reach out to see if they will do an interview or guest post for your site.
- Scan the live tweets and recaps of conferences you weren't able to attend. Find common themes and determine the hot button issues that emerged. Contribute your unique perspective on these subjects on your blog.
- If someone from your company speaks at an event, have him write a bonus blog post that expands on something in his presentation. Make sure he posts his slide deck on SlideShare and links to the blog post in it.
- Put together a list of all the conferences, meetups, and networking nights in your area. Rank them, talk about why people should attend, compile basic information like cost and dates… make this a robust, go-to resource.
- Go above and beyond the traditional recap of what you learned. After a set time period of putting those lessons into practice, demonstrate the use of your new skill set with a mini case study of your results.
Research
- A/B test everything you do for your internal marketing. Write up the results and draw conclusions that can lead to best practices.
- Create a survey about the tools and tactics people in your industry are using and which they find most effective.
- Analyze market research about consumer behavior relative to your audience and present a study.
- Find a popular study done in the past few years and update it with new research and fresh insights.
- Walk your audience through the research and measurement process at your company.
Theories
- Write about why you believe a certain trend has emerged and what this means for the future.
- Give advice for a hypothetical client or user.
- Relay the possible causes for results that you've seen in your analytics data.
- Make a prediction about how a new policy or technology will impact how you do business in the future.
- If there was one aspect of your role you could add or takeaway to make your job easier, what would it be and how would it make you more productive? Make a case for it.
Higher-level overviews
- Create a resource with the definitions of basic industry terms.
- Give a periodic update on the state of your industry.
- Take content filled with technical terminology and industry jargon and simplify it to a beginner's version.
- Use an analogy to clarify and simplify a subject that would be otherwise difficult to explain to someone outside of your field.
- Illustrate how the different teams and departments in your company work together cohesively in a basic framework.
Promotional
- Host a contest and give away a new product, tickets to an event, or a free consultation.
- Highlight employees who have been nominated for or received awards and let people know why they deserved that honor.
- Share customer testimonials.
- Remind your audience about the details of your Twitter chat and prompt them to help generate questions for the discussion.
- Enumerate new features of your product or service.
Seasonal
- On Valentine's Day, reveal yourself as a not-so-secret admirer of one or more brands. Let them know why you enjoy their content and how you strive to emulate a certain aspect of their business.
- Give a shout out to some of your best employees for Labor Day.
- For Thanksgiving, personally thank some of your biggest brand fans.
- During the holidays, send small physical gifts to people in your audience or even industry peers and then write a blog post or make a video saying what you're sending and why.
- Discuss your New Year goals and how the changes you plan on making will a better experience for your audience.
Out of the box
- Respond to email feedback (positive or negative) through a blog post or video.
- Write a satire piece about a recurring problem in your industry.
- Dig through old posts and republish with updates. Explain why your thoughts and recommendations have changed over time.
- Do some pro bono work and turn it into content about your capabilities.
- Make over your "About Us" section, spruce up your 404 page, or whatever else seems lackluster on your site, and then feature it in a special before and after content unveiling.
Your turn
Whether or not you decide to use these exact ideas, I hope I've given you some directions to explore. Think hard, collaborate with smart team members, and make these your own.
Brainstorming should start broad before the content manager or editor-in-chief narrows down ideas based on marketing goals, target personas, and availability of resources. For a more in-depth look at that process, check out the eBook I created for iAcquire, Content Strategy for Digital Marketers: A Six Week Guide to Creating, Promoting, & Measuring Great Content. You want to make sure you have the right structure in place because as we all know probably too well, good ideas don't always pan out the way we hope for when they're not part of a well-crafted strategy.
No matter which post topics you choose, remember to infuse these ideas with personality, data, and insights that only you and your brand can offer. Publishing content that provides value no one else can is what truly leads to the traffic, social shares, and links you crave.
If you've had success with ideas like this in the past or if you have plans to try out something new, I'd love to hear about it in the comments!
What a great post and great resource! Thank you, Amanda! :)
Wow this list couldn't have come at a better time. Thanks for sharing so many great ideas.
Great post Amanda. I especially think that taking a look at internal resources and processes can provide great content ideas that can be useful to your audience. If you create your own processes or templates and share them, they can be great resources for people to implement in their own business. I know these are the type of content I find the most interesting and actionable.
Amanda,
Lists
This post is a perfect example of these two points -- thanks! I am recommending this to the content creators at our company. :)
Awesome! I hope they find it useful :)
Thanks for sharing these tips Amanda. I will going to use this as my guide for our content marketing. I already use some of the tips above and I was really amazed by its outcome. I'm looking forward to read more posts from you.
This has ended up in my inbox twice today and having read it, I can see why the office is talking about...thanks, Amanda.
Wow that's great! Thank you.
Amanda, your article is a wonderful resource for those who feel they "don't have anything to write about". In speaking with clients, we advocate a lot of the ideas you mention, and more importantly, the 'Individual Achievements', 'Events' and 'Internal Resources'.
Each of these happen more often than business owners know about. For example, we just joined the Chamber of Commerce and also BBB Accredited recently, so what did we do... We wrote articles about them to share with our social networks with links back to the full post on our company blog.
The Internal Resources is an awesome tactic and one which gets the business owner and his team thinking. Generating FAQ sections as a new blog category or a new page in the site can be a tremendous online resource for site visitors or if you'd like to share the link in an email while vying for a contract you want to win. It can be much more than just FAQs though as you touch on. Experiences, stories or before and afters are extremely useful for depicting a specific service or a solution you offer to a common problem your visitors have. Relaying those stories and experiences in content and images or graphics can really generate a lot of buzz, social shares and build more trust in a company. We're working on this with a client going through a new marketing plan for their 4 locations and can't wait to see some of the results from the content we are collectively producing.
Thanks again for practicing what you preach with your 'Lists' and 'Industry' experience. It was a fun read! - Patrick
So glad you're using many of these tactics already! Thanks for your comment, Patrick.
Well, its helpful having to learn of the different content starters that any industry can apply. A blogger or Internet marketer would surely gain knowledge of what can inspire him/her to create contents from the details shared here.
More so, I love the creativity and style in which the 75 content starters were discussed. The ideas shared under the 15 different headings are inspiring!
Superb article Amanda - well done and thank you for writing it. It's certainly one of the best articles on blog post ideas and content creation I've seen in a long time.
I've just added this to BLOG POST IDEAS - a huge compendium of the world's best articles and guides covering blog post ideas, content creation and blogging, as used by over 19,000 bloggers globally.
If you're interested, you can access it freely here:
https://flipboard.com/section/blog-post-ideas-%26-content-creation-tips-b2C5id
Regards,
Robin,
I agree tutorials are a great way to add content to a blog and get a link from youtube. I make all my tutorials as video blog on youtube, then I post the video on my blog and write a post about what I shared in the video. Which is great you get a link from youtube and add valuable content on your website.
Blog posts that answer a commonly asked questions is an easy way to create content. I write down the most commonly asked questions, I receive and make a blog post about them, great idea! Which you can add to a F.A.Q page or on a blog. I also ask my employees about what questions our customers are asking them, as an addition resource for the topic. Thanks Brandon
Great post Amanda.Thanks for sharing It helps a lot.
I Second all the positive motions about this article :)
Business Casual Copywriting's Dead Page was awesome around Halloween. Saved to pocket :)
Amazing post thanks!
GREAT tips Amanda! CONTENT is everything! Video tutorials are a great way to share content to your blog and social accounts.
Hi Amanda,
Thanks for sharing such brilliant tips. I am always searching for some tips like these and I will definitely apply in my content marketing project. Waiting for your next posts.
Nice post amanda.thanks for sharing..can anyone suggest me which can be a best seo process..?
A really comprehensive set of content topics there, Amanda. Very useful as a starting point for brainstorming sessions.
everywhere CONTENT IS KING.....in Search Engine Optimisation....
Holy List Bat Girl. I think you about covered it all. Thank you Amanda
Great list Amanda!
A great idea from the list is "Dig through old posts and republish with updates. Explain why your thoughts and recommendations have changed over time." This is particularly useful for e-commerce sites as products continually update and new brands/ranges are introduced. Time to update our buying guides I think :)
Thanks, Brad! Sounds like a great plan :)
Hi Amanda,
Thanks for sharing this great article. Plenty of ideas that we can all get inspired from. Even if we think that there is plenty of content about a specific topic on the web there is always a way someone can improve it, update it and add some value to it and you have mentioned all of them!
Hi Yannis,
Exactly -- it's just a matter of finding the content gap that you can fill. Thanks for your comment.
Great post Amanda! A lot of inspiration right here. Sharing this right now :)
You already know all the good ideas are taken, so why even bother? It's better to write about what you know and adapt it or connect it to whatever your endeavor is.
I'm writing an SEO book now that really just focuses on 80's movies. Everyone knows 80's movies, at least everyone in my target audience, but they don't know a lot about SEO. Can the two be connected? I guess we'll find out.
Maybe we should be looking more to connect disparate things from across the room instead of heading to the closet to look for new ideas. After all, that's where we put old things we should have thrown away, like those boxes of 80's movies.
Sticking to what you know always makes for the best content for sure!
Hi Amanda,
It can be easy to get a little lost every now and then and this post provides a great refresher :)
Thanks for the great list.
Cheers, Mark. Thanks for reading!
Hey Amanda,
This is plethora of content ideas, I am not sure if you have left anything to add more. :) Its awesome that we have so much to write about and share.
We had some similar kind of success in past where we have worked for a client from software industry. We started writing content about the company, its values and products, but the response wasn't great at that time. Then we made some tutorials on how to use their software products which received decent coverage among users.
Moving forward, we decided to make tutorials for software products (not belonging to our client and whose tutorials were not available online) outside the company just to help our readers. That tutorial's idea really clicked for us as we had so much to write and share.
Thanks
Thank you! There are always more ideas and trying out different things until you find success is the right way to go about it. I'm glad you found something that worked.
I Love Posts like this.
They are very actionable , very implementable , very understandable and we can easily determine that these factors do amount a lot for seo benefits .
Thanks again for writing this article . Bookmarked and Shared with friends.
Thanks for providing this Amanda. I think this piece is very useful and it is very important to have a solid framework for continually producing high quality content for a website or business.
Love the list-definitely received the bookmark. Also thanks for providing examples as well (I did enter the search geek contest now that I know about it)!
You're welcome! Good luck :)
I've been waiting for someone to compile a list of great content starters. Awesome job Amanada!
Amanda,
Some strong, excellent ideas you've shared here. I've already spotted several I will put to great use for creating content. I've found coming up with great ideas to be at times laborious and frustrating, often to the point of robbing energy from the process of execution. Having a list such as list helps tremendously.
RS
I agree -- sometimes picking a topic is the hardest part. I'm glad I could help :)
Thanks for providing this cool post Amanda! It's so much helpful. I like it very much.
These are fantastic! Excited to dabble in the research content ideas. Also, we're starting to add better custom images to our content, tailored to a social outlet. Trying to see how our content should appear based on how a user is finding it. Not necessarily a content topic - but something to keep in mind!
Love that idea! Would definitely be curious to hear what you take away from testing it.
Nice Post Amanda,
Very useful tips. I just loved it and definitely going to try many of them.. thanks again.
Thank you! I hope they lead to great posts for you.
One of the best post ever seen for link builders...Keep sharing like this, waiting for more updates. :)
thanks