As a blogger, sometimes new ideas for posts flow like a river. At other times, however, your brain can run dry for days.
Part of blogging is realizing and accepting the fact that, on occasion, you will get stuck. Another part of being a blogger is finding ways to get yourself unstuck and continuing to feed the system with your content.
Stuck or not, your audience awaits. They read and subscribe and tell other people because they want to read what you will type next. Attention spans, however, keep shrinking. If you keep them waiting too long, they will simply move on.
One of the tricks I use to get unstuck revolves around LinkedIn. As a community and a communication tool, LinkedIn allows me to get directly to the humans that make up my target readers. LinkedIn is now up to 70 million members across the globe, and is typically used by professionals of all shapes and sizes. In terms of finding my audience, it’s a pretty safe bet that they are users. Here are some of the things I do when I get stuck:
5 Tips for Using LinkedIn to Develop Blog Content Ideas
- Ask questions and get answers to seed questions around your topic areas and gather qualitative feedback. Pay attention to the comments that folks leave. There’s oftentimes golden-nugget ideas that can easily be turned into entire posts.
- Build and launch polls for more targeted questions, or for current topics of debate, around your focus area. Not only does this give you a good feel for where potential readers stand on any given issue, but it will also deliver you a list of new readers to send your finished post. The graphics that LinkedIn produces (with results) also make great images to include in your post.
- Launch a discussion on specific groups around the topic you want to write about. In doing this you will be the facilitator of that conversation. This approach will take some time, but also give you the chance to connect one-on-one with new, potential readers.
- Send InMail or use Introductions to connect with people who might make interesting interviewees for your blog. This is also a great way to get the ball rolling in relationship development with interesting people by using the social graph.
- Use TripIt to set up video interviews with interesting people who will be within a cab ride of your next distance meeting. This also doubles as a great way to build relationships with the folks who fit your business’s customer profile. Why? Most people will say yes to giving you 30 minutes to interview them on their business and what’s important to them, before they will give you time to pitch them on what’s important to yours. Don’t ever cheat this one. Get the first meeting for the interview and a relationship. Ask for the pitch well after you’ve had time to get to know the human.
How else do you use LinkedIn to come up blog content ideas?
Photocredit: the talented Becky Johns





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