Six Things to Write About When You Don't Know What to Write AboutWhat to write about?

Every week this summer I’ve typed that into my Google search while debating what to write about for my weekly article.

There is something weird about summer that provides many with incurable writer’s block.

I have an entire list of things to write about, and yet often feel uninspired to write any of them.

Or, I want to write something on the list, but I need to do this interview and that research prior to writing.

Or else produce something that is just me waxing lyrically about some topic with no actual substance to back it up (and you all know how I love to wax lyrically).

So today as I typed into Google “what to write about” and saw a SERP page full of great suggestions, I figured…”hey, why don’t I write about what to write about.”

Not only is it incredibly meta, but it allows me talk about myself.

A particularly good subject, and one of my favorites.

Obviously a win/win.

So here goes!

Write About Yourself

This is my default.

The moment I lack for a topic, I turn to my favorite one: ME!

I’ll think about:

  • Experiences
  • Struggles
  • Victories
  • Learnings
  • Interpersonal situations
  • Client situations
  • Mistakes
  • Failures
  • Confusions
  • Background and family
  • Hobbies (for example, I write about bodybuilding a lot)
  • Things I might have a different or unique perspective on.

And then create a blog post around one or two interesting circumstances.

Heck, sometimes I even write about, or from the perspective of my cat or dog.

I find these to be the most well-received blog posts I do.

Why?

Because, although we might all be very different, most experiences, fears, worries, concerns, are universal.

And it’s just nice to hear other people struggle, experience, and work through similar things to you.

To this day, I probably get the biggest response both privately and publicly when I write about failure, self-doubt, and my frequent struggles to get out of my own way and deal with my Type A-ness.

We all have these doubts and struggles, as well as victories and learnings, and often it’s just nice to know others experience the same.

Say Hello to Dr. Analogy

You know what the cure for the common writer’s block?

Analogies.

If you’ve read….well, pretty much anything I’ve ever written, you know I love analogies.

Analogies are just how I think and process things internally, which makes them an easy way for me to write about pretty much anything.

And even for those of you who don’t naturally think in analogies, they are a great starting point to dig into topics that other’s might not relate well too, or could benefit the displaced perspectives analogies often provide.

Study a Case to Case a Study

What to write about?

How about a case study that shows a real life example of how to, or not to, do something.

The biggest pushback we get from clients about this one is:

All of the work we do with our customers is under NDA. We can’t do case studies.

Create Case Study Stories

And sure, that means you can’t name brands, exact circumstances, and any identifying information, but it doesn’t mean you can’t build a case study story around the circumstance, solution, and results.

Look at the point you want to prove from the event and then change needed names, industry, and details, but maintain a story that retains that point.

If data is used, change actual numbers, but maintain context.

So if their database grew by 80 percent in real life, then it grew by 80 percent in the case study story.

The numbers can change, but the rate of growth stays consistent.

Just Ask

In other circumstances, and when the case study focuses on successes, we’ve just asked clients if they’d be OK with a case study.

We let them approve it before it is seen by anyone publicly and tell them exactly how it will be used.

To date, almost all of the clients we’ve asked to feature in a case study have been thrilled to be part of it.

Casual Case Studies Work, Too

Finally don’t feel like this has to be big and formal.

You’ll see in reviewing any several of the blogs written by our team that often we just leverage a conversation or casual day-to-day client service situation as a launching pad for a blog on a certain issue.

The take away here is nothing is more powerful than to leverage the stories you are creating with your clients or organization to write content that educates and engages your community.

This Day in History

This is one of my favorites, and not just because I’m a history buff, but because it really provides some timely content tie-ins when I’m not sure what to write about.

I’ll search all the events or important birthdays/anniversaries that occurred on the day (or around the day) my blog post will publish.

The History Channel has a great daily round-up.

Is there a tie-in?

Is there something unique or substantially I can extract?

Does an event make me think about a topic that would be valuable to my audience?

History repeats itself, so might as well use it to help you figure out what to write about.

Phone a Friend

Ask our team, my parents, friends, and even clients and they’ll tell you I often turn to them when I need to figure out what to write about.

Asking someone else gets you out of your own head.

AND, even if the topics aren’t perfect, the people pleaser in you (or at least in me) feels obligated to write something really great based on their suggestions, because they went out of their way to provide them.

This helps when you are feeling like a lazy content producer and your writing brain is sluggish.

That extra push to make someone else proud is a huge help.

Let Someone Else Write it: Go UGC!

What better what to figure out what to write about then to let someone else do it.

At least once a quarter I’ll turn to Facebook, Instagram, and or Spin Sucks Slack Community and ask my communities there a specific question.

Then my blog post just compiles their awesome, hilarious, and insightful answers.

I long ago accepted the fact that other people are much more insightful for me, so why not let them do the heavy lifting?

They always create articles much better than I could ever do on my own.

What to Write About

And there you have it.

That’s my list of go-tos when I just don’t know what to write about.

How about you?

Laura Petrolino

Laura Petrolino is chief marketing officer for Spin Sucks, an integrated marketing communications firm that provides strategic counsel and professional development for in-house and agency communications teams. She is a weekly contributor for their award-winning blog of the same name. Spin Sucks. Join the Spin Sucks   community.

View all posts by Laura Petrolino