Waste Not, Want Not Never Run Out of Writing Ideas
A major concern here in WA is the researching and generation of content for our affiliate sites.as well as producing lead generation information in such offer vehicles as e-books and newsletters. Here are some writing based ideas to put this challenge into perspective.
My next-door neighbor got chickens over the summer and I occasionally feed them.
Feeding chickens has completely changed the way I clear the table. I’m amazed at all the things they will eat. I’ve noticed they pick cantaloupe rinds clean, fight over wrinkly grapes, and eat the seedy cores of peppers.
The food we toss into the coop makes the chickens grow and lay eggs.
Making better use of my leftover food reminded me of the value of leftover writing ideas. Here are a few ways to stretch your writing further.
Start with the raw ingredients in your mind
You can’t feed chickens if you don’t cook with fresh ingredients. And you can’t reuse your writing if you don’t write regularly.
You should get in the habit of completely filling one spiral notebook per month, and writing for a set period of time. Write for rounds of 10 minutes, eventually increasing them to 20 and 30. Even if a major disruption goes off after you begin, go on writing.
Carry a notebook with you to jot down your thoughts, ideas, and conversations you hear. Months from now, this material might turn into the perfect lead, or spark an idea for an article or book.
Go through your notebooks
As you start keeping notebooks or journals, you’ll notice they begin to accumulate — physical proof that you have ideas! Periodically go through them and organize your favorite notes.
Start by cleaning out your notebooks, page by page. Rip out interview notes and put them in the appropriate client files. In your notebooks, you will find material you forgot about completely; things like unfinished articles, article ideas, and scenes. When you find these things, create a physical “article idea” folder, and put those papers in there. Then type up the notes and you’ll instantly have a rough draft.
Type up your journals
While cleaning out your storage closet, you could unearth years’ worth of journals. A good habit has always been to write in your journal and hide it. By the time that you’ve lined them up and start to type them out, You can see the pages add up to a full-length memoir.
But as you type, realize that not everything in the journal belongs in the memoir. For example, you may come across a section that could be turned into an article about creativity, another idea that makes sense as a product promotion story, and plenty of material that can be fodder for a YA (Young Adult) novel.
If you have journals you haven’t looked at in a while, dust them off and type them up. You’ll get in touch with yourself, find your most emotional writing, and you may have already written a book.
If you find sections that can be used for something else, copy and paste them into a separate document.
Collect interesting quotes and facts when you read
The information you collect when you read will flesh out your articles, give your ideas more credibility, and can even make your writing more persuasive. Develop a system for saving, retrieving, and using fascinating tidbits you come across.
You can plant nuggets of ideas into your story and they act like invisible hooks that grab onto your reader — hidden magnets that keep him turning the page.”
Some writers have a drawer or folder full of article clippings and quotes they tap into it when they’re looking for ideas. Others organize their clippings by topic. You can repurpose a small accordion file for coupons and label each section with a topic that interests you. When you find a quote, copy it on a slip of paper, photocopy it, or rip it out and stick it into your file, which you can physically carry in a folder or store on your mobile device on the go.
Save your darlings!
William Faulkner said that in writing, you must kill your darlings, but it doesn’t have to be the end. When you feel a pang of regret after cutting a sentence or section from your latest promotion, article, or story, ask yourself if it can be reworked or combined with other material to make a new article, blog post, book chapter, or Face book post. For instance how many times has Superman been killed off and resurrected?
Find fresh ideas in your reject pile
Just because an editor or client decided not to use your story doesn’t mean you can’t use it.
You can open your “rejected articles” folder on your computer and find a story with an anecdote that made perfect sense for an email you are trying to write. Use the anecdote, and tossed the rest.
Start your book today!
Once you start writing more efficiently, writing a book will seem less daunting. If you’ve written a lot about a certain topic, you can start by gathering all of the articles, blog posts, and reports you’ve written into one folder.
Master Copywriter Bob Bly, author of over 80 books, recommends … In Become a Recognized Authority in Your Field in 60 Days or Less, Bob offers an organization tip that simplifies the process of writing a book. “The instant I get an idea for a book I might write, I create a file labeled with the title. I then clip and place into that file every item related to that topic I come across in my reading and web surfing. This way, when I’m ready to write the book, a good chunk of the research is already done.”
Getting more mileage out of your writing is one way to get more assignments and make more money. When you organize your office, computer files, and life with the intention of reusing your words, you will uncover an abundance of ideas.
This crafting of ideas applies just as easily to making your affiliate site content leap off the page!
Recent Comments
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Terrific! I do use the digital version of Bob Bly's suggestion in that I create folders and print off PDF's of everything I find related to the subject. These folders are always named the same—"resources"; and placed inside another folder for the topic. I also collect ideas for subjects, themselves, this way.
Some of these other suggestions I have never employed, yet they're really interesting, like keeping journals and reusing things cut from other work. I have dozens of journals with programming and website projects notes - tons of ideas in those going back almost 2 decades - and I go back through them a lot. But have not done the same for writing.
It sounds like you are very disciplined in this, with good ideas.
BTW, I love, love, love your chickens story, Michael. So informative, colorful, and meaningful, all by itself!
--Fran
Thank you VERY much Fran! I am involved in another forum where I have met with Bob Bly. There is much to tell...(PM)
I am having trouble with the internet in my area. twice I have tried to send you a PM and it just doesn't go. Can you PM me. Might be able to connect that way. I get this "you must be a premium member to PM" and I know that's wrong as we both are.
Not anywhere as interesting as the ideas you come up with Rick. You have a good writer's mind.
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Useful ideas thanks Michael