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Blogging.md

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Blogging

  • Expect 80% of the [[ideas]] in an post to happen after you start [[Writing]] it, and 50% of those you start with to be wrong.
  • To decide if your idea is worth [[Writing]] about, ask these questions:
    • Would this have helped me a year ago?
    • Would this have helped me last week?
    • Do you think this would be interesting to at least like 2 other people?
  • You are best positioned to help people one step behind you. The material is still fresh in your mind. Many experts have forgotten what it was like to be a beginner and have forgotten why the topic is hard to understand when you first hear it. The context of your particular background, your particular style, and your knowledge level will give a different twist to what you're writing about.
  • Share unoriginal ideas. Your own ideas mostly seem trivial to you because you have the right concept structures in place to support them. You wouldn't come up with these ideas otherwise.
  • Start with Why. Start with a question. Write the first flawed answer that comes to mind. Write the first question or objection that comes to mind from that answer. Write the first response that comes to mind from that, ...
  • Writing creates a cache. The cache (i.e., documents) scales data availability. people can access the cache instead of going to you.
  • The more you create, the more ideas come yo you to continue creating. That's the creativity [[Feedback Loops|feedback loop]].
  • Expand your definition of completing a project (any project, no matter how small) to include writing a blog post that explains that project.
  • For long-form content, the diamond model works great for putting a structure around your main idea:
    1. Attention: Start with a story, statistic, or something similar
    2. Main topic: Briefly introduce the main topic you'll cover
    3. Previews: Give quick previews of your subtopics
    4. Subtopics: Go into depth with your subtopics
    5. Summaries: Recap your subtopics
    6. Conclusion: Paint an ideal vision of the future
    7. Call to action: Invite your audience to act or make a decision
  • For short-form content:
    1. Write all your thoughts on a subject.
    2. Argue against those ideas.
    3. Explore different angles.
    4. Leave it for a few days or years, then repeat those steps.
    5. Hate how messy these thoughts have become.
    6. Reduce them to a tiny outline of the key points.
    7. Post the outline. Trash the rest.
  • Alternatively, try the Rift approach:
    1. An inquisitive title, something that is not "the ultimate guide" but more "some notes on..."
    2. A few references. Connect the dots between some links, quotes from other sources.
    3. An anecdote from your own work that provides rich texture and context for what you do.
    4. Some open questions that invite people to discuss.
  • Keep making your post more opinionated until it reflects your true beliefs. Don鈥檛 hedge. People want to hear what you think!