Content marketing starts with an idea…
Everything starts with an idea. So how to keep coming up with awesome ideas? Let’s talk about that!
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About Catrinel
Catrinel Bartolomeu @glamatron is a multi-media journalist, producer and digital strategist with over twelve years of editorial and marketing experience, and head of editorial at Duarte.
Connect to Catrinel on Linkedin
Questions we discussed
Q1 Please tell us your career story! How did you become a creative content marketer?
I had always wanted to write and make things. I interned at Esquire and the Voice in NYC in my early 20s, then wrote furiously for magazines and early blogs as the web grew and print shrunk. Was little $ and a lot of work, so i paid the bills making websites till I got pulled into the advertising biz. I worked on some amazing projects, like an interactive iPad magazine for Cessna. While I loved the digital strategy, and (and big budgets) I missed the long form writing.
Then, creating “content” for clients was a hard sell. But, I saw companies like @contently and @hubspot were onto something. One day, I just left because I felt like I’d lost my center. I took a year off and freelanced and talked to everyone I knew I found a home at @ideasbyoz and launched their content program. I was blown away.
Growing an audience is one of the most satisfying accomplishments of my career because I gave people info and help they cared about. When we first started getting comments and emails response, i was absolutely giddy. Still am!
@glamatron that helped you refocus? #vcbuzz
— Todd E. Jones (@tejones) January 10, 2017
Definitely. I worked really hard, to direct and learn skills that would take me back towards editorial.
@glamatron so how did you come up with the twitter username glamatron? does that say something about you? ? #vcbuzz
— Todd E. Jones (@tejones) January 10, 2017
Haha. I was early on Twitter– what young lady doesn’t want to be a glamorous robot? Should’ve probably gone with my name
Q2 Let’s talk about @Duarte! I was quite intrigued by the site message!
I’m so happy to be @Duarte. It’s new, but I feel like I’ve come home, something I haven’t experienced professionally before. There’s so much talent–and @nancyduarte & @PattiSan literally wrote the books on persuasive presentations.
A2: Some of Duarte’s work is massive, like high-stakes keynotes, and @TEDTalks, and things you see @CES #vcbuzz pic.twitter.com/zIKVvLdxrB
— Catrinel Bartolomeu (@glamatron) January 10, 2017
But the same philosophy drives informal meetings & comms for long-term buiz cultural transformations. It’s about the Big Idea and what makes people feel something– and you know I like that, that’s why you invited me here.
There’s also an academy to teach people the methodologies. I’m psyched for my #visualstorytelling workshop. It’s riveting to work w/ thoughtful people who can tap into emotions. Nothing’s more interesting than what makes people tick.
Get a taste reading @pattisan or @nancyduarte on leading through storytelling.
RT @glamatron does @durante work with startups? #vcbuzz
— Todd E. Jones (@tejones) January 10, 2017
Duarte works with any company that needs to use communications to transform. To move people from one place to another.
What do you consider are the most important factors in audience analysis? #vcbuzz
— 24 Hour Translation (@24hrtranslation) January 10, 2017
The audiences’ needs, the audiences’ mindset — how are people feeling when you approach them. What can you give?
Is the work that you do more geared towards members within an organization/trade or consumers within a market? #vcbuzz
— 24 Hour Translation (@24hrtranslation) January 10, 2017
Both! A lot of companies hire @duarte help with their presentation design or to move from Vision to Action but… They also have these awesome workshops and online courses where people can learn the methodology.
Is your work more b2b or b2c? #vcbuzz
— 24 Hour Translation (@24hrtranslation) January 10, 2017
B2B in that we are hired by organizations and we train them. B2C in that we run public workshops.
@glamatron I have another friend who likes Jennifer Aaker from Stanford, good stuff, i love the power of story! #vcbuzz
— Todd E. Jones (@tejones) January 10, 2017
Q3 How do you come up with content ideas on a continuous basis?
It’s a mindset. I’m constantly trying to trigger and collect ideas like a squirrel collecting nuts. I’m probably more neurotic. Like @TonyRobbins says “rarely does a good idea interrupt you, you must actively seek it out.” Can’t over emphasize: HUNT IDEAS.
Every morning: a short idea session on any topic. Be rigorous, focused, don’t censor. Be outlandish–forget budget and physics.
- Read voraciously, daily, & take notes. What do you wish you’d thought of? How can you respond to the last thing that moved you?
- Ask more questions than you think necessary. Push your curiosity, it’s the key to an engaged, creative life. Get uncomfortable.
This post is on types of questions (curiosity, synthesis, exploration) you can ask to instigate ideas.
Embarrassingly, I go on short “observation walks.” I make mental notes of what I see, smell, hear. Tap into your senses.
- Make a conscious effort to tie everything you read and experience back to your work and themes and categories you’re writing on.
- Go back to your personas. What questions are your readers asking? What do inquiring minds want to know? How can you help?
A lot of writers write for specific person. You, a content marketer, probably write for several. But write for one at a time. I can talk about coming up with ideas forever. Possibly even longer than even @jaltucher — has there been in idea-off yet?
Here are links to ideas posts I published or commissioned:
- How did one company increase sales by 52% using creative ideation?
- How would I find unique and fresh topics to blog about?
- 10 Ideation Techniques And Methods Change How you Think: These Ideation Techniques go Deep
What do you think the biggest obstacle that people face when creating an effective presentation? #vcbuzz
— 24 Hour Translation (@24hrtranslation) January 10, 2017
They try to create a presentation before they understand what they want to say. They can’t articulate the big idea. People also have trouble visualizing complex data and eliminating unnecessary information
Q4 What do you do when you feel stuck? What if life gets in a way? How to never stop generating great ideas?
The first thing is to realize you’re stuck and to accept that for just a minute. Chill man. Take moment to pause and evaluate. To read about the “pause” in a spiritual way, see @AniPemaChodron. Give the feeling full attention for 90-seconds, then move on.
Ask questions to reframe the situation. Can you change your perspective to where you wouldn’t be stuck? Usually, when you feel stuck, you’ve either gotten too narrow or too broad. So zoom in or out to get perspective.
If you find you’ve hit a wall, turn around. Work on another project, go for a walk, leave it alone, take a freezing cold shower.
Hemingway used to drink, but that’d put me to sleep. Focus on figuring out what works for you.
Best case scenario, you have a clip file or an idea pipeline of topics you can pick up and start writing about. If a creative mindset your lifestyle, you can compile it in hours. Have a few topics that don’t need tons of research.
Remember to file ideas where you can find them easily. Audio/text/notes… have a place. #vcbuzz
— Don Sturgill (@DonSturgill) January 10, 2017
Q5 What are your favorite idea generation tools? We love tools!
I love tools too and I believe they can inspire you and give you direction, but they can’t come up with a “great idea” for you. A “topic” differs from an idea. A topic is broad and static. An idea’s got legs and is ready to run in a certain direction.
Get used to referring back to idea files… and you’ll never be without a start. #vcbuzz
— Don Sturgill (@DonSturgill) January 10, 2017
I also think you can use analog tools, like ideation games when it comes to coming up with ideas.
I definitely use keyword tools to see what topics I might want to rank. I use @semrush, @ahrefs and @ideasbyoz
BEST ways to brainstorm: (1) read (2) zoom in / out (3) organize ideas for future #writing #vcbuzz
— Ann Smarty (@seosmarty) January 10, 2017
Also use SEO tools for competitive. to see what I can write better. On a mission to rank good content above bad. Want to join?A6: I use a lot of organization tools too, to organize ideas. I’m a long-time @evernote user — the trick is to use it for everything and to tag.
Like everyone else, I use @pocket— but I need to highlight, so I export important articles to @evernote and mark them up. Devs of the world, I know a more graceful solutions must exist, happy to talk about it.
Also crucial to organize your time, and to set creativity goals. I’m a big fan of @getplanapp and of @StridesApp
Tools are very personal. You have to find the tools that fit your systems, rather than building your systems around tools.
A5 Definitely MyBlogU! https://t.co/KjE7XPoOH6 #vcbuzz
— Anna Fox (@manifestcon) January 10, 2017
Our previous content marketing chats:
- Content Marketing Through Story Telling w/ Todd E. Jones @tejones of @grafixcatmedia #VCBuzz
- Writing to Impress: Content Marketing Twitter Chat with Don Sturgill @DonSturgill #VCBuzz
- Niche Content Marketing: Twitter Chat with @LindsayGriffith #VCBuzz
- Content Marketing Experiments: Twitter Chat with @JustinPLambert #VCBuzz
- Is Viral Content Marketing Only For ‘Fun’ Niches?
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