So you've listened to the
advice, and you're going to start your own publication. Obviously, you
must have some writing ability, or collaborate with someone who does,
and you must be knowledgeable in the areas you will cover in your ezine.
One of the biggest mistakes
a fledgling publisher can make is to focus their publication on something
they don't know much about. While it is possible to get content from
contributing authors, which does add a great deal to your publication,
if you are to succeed, you must have original content.
Many people can write an
occasional article that is excellent. Writing an article or column however
on a regular basis, is a demanding task.
The hardest thing is to
get ideas for articles. It seems that once you do get an idea, the article
then flows rather easily.
So, where do you get the
ideas?
Actually ideas can come
from anyplace. Many come from questions your readers might ask. Sometimes
a simple question can blossom into a full blown article. Email you receive,
even spam, can contain a keyword that sets your creative juices flowing.
Browsing the web is a great
place. Discussion sites, where people are talking about something might
give you an idea. Many times people get into rather heated discussions
and the controversy itself might breed an idea.
Articles by other authors
can stimulate your thinking, but you have to be careful here. While
we all know you can't take another's work and claim it as your own,
you also can't take their idea and simply rewrite it a bit. There is
a gray area here, and sometimes you may be taken to task even if you
have never seen their work.
One great source of ideas
is articles that are out of date. Many people, for example have written
on the subject of how to submit your web site to the search engines
to get a high ranking. Conditions change so rapidly in this regard,
an article could be written several times a year on this subject alone.
What was true just a few short months ago may not be today.
The web is a dynamic place
that is constantly changing. Not a day goes by that there is something
in the newspaper that could spark an idea. Just this week I read an
article about discount web sites for airline tickets. Another article
talked about the disparity between urban and rural areas for web access.
Still another compared the number of minority households that had computers
- and yet another talked about the "Spanish Market".
The ideas are there, and
if you keep a log of them, the next time you sit down to write one,
you should have a never ending supply. If you get an idea, simply write
down the title of the prospective article.
Many times, as the article
develops, the original title may not be appropriate. But, even if you
do change the title for your current article, keep the old one. Who
knows - a year from now it may light another spark.
A search of the web on
quotes is a fertile place to look. "Power Quotes" by Kevin
Eikenberry - powerquotes.net
- has a wealth of information. Dr. Kevin Nunley - drnunley.com
is an idea factory. There are others like these that should be on your
required reading list.
When doing research for
the current article you are writing, the web is a fertile place to look.
Always keep a paper and pencil handy, and if you get an idea write it
down. Keep that same pad and pencil next to your bed. If you get an
idea, don't trust your memory to write it down in the morning.