Step 2: Come Up With Ideas for Your Blog

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zihadhosenjm55
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Joined: Sun Dec 22, 2024 4:37 am

Step 2: Come Up With Ideas for Your Blog

Post by zihadhosenjm55 »

Step 2: Come Up With Ideas for Your Blog Post With RightBlogger
Another way to come up with your blog post idea is to use the Blogging Tools→Post Idea tool. (If you don’t have a RightBlogger account, you can use the free blog post idea generator instead.)

Let’s say you have a blog about healthy eating and you want to write something on that topic, you’re just not sure what. Go ahead and put “healthy eating” in as the Topic/Keyword, then hit Generate.

Screenshot of the RightBlogger idea generator tool with results for the topic 'healthy eating'
You’ll get 10 blog ideas—if you want more, just go ahead and run the tool find owner of cell phone number free philippines for the same keyword. You can brainstorm tens or hundreds of ideas in dramatically less time than it would take to come up with them on your own.

Another amazing tool to use, if you’ve already got an established blog, is the Smart Suggest too. This works like magic (seriously, I was blown away the first time I used it to come up with topic ideas for my own blog).

You simply pop your blog’s URL into the tool and it’ll instantly analyze your existing posts and come up with 10 titles on similar topics. Here are a few it created for RyRob.com:

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Screenshot of the RightBlogger Smart Suggest tool with results for the website ryrob.com
Step 3: Outline Your Blog Post With RightBlogger
As a freelancer, I deal with a lot of blog post outlines. With some of my clients, I develop their ideas into full outlines and get those approved before drafting the full piece. With other clients, they send me outlines to work from. And for my own blog, I outline posts ahead of time to help me stay on track with my content calendar.

There are a couple of ways you can use the Post Outline tool in RightBlogger:

Use the tool to create your outline first, then edit the outline (removing/changing ideas that you’re not so keen on, and adding any extra ideas)
Write your outline first yourself, then use the tool to check whether you’ve missed anything you’d want to include
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