Most content brainstorms produce mediocre ideas because they start from the wrong question. The wrong question is “what should we write about this month?” The right question is “what are our customers asking, and which of those questions can we answer better than anyone else?”
The process below is what good content marketers do every week using a set of five inputs, a way to combine them, and a 30-minute weekly cadence that produces more usable blog post ideas than any all-day offsite ever did.
Why most content brainstorms produce mediocre blog post ideas
The standard brainstorm goes like this. Someone schedules a meeting. The team stares at a whiteboard. Somebody says “what about a piece on AI?” Everyone half-nods. Three weeks later, somebody publishes a generic “AI is changing marketing” post that ranks for nothing and converts no one.
The problem is the starting point.
A brainstorm with no inputs is a brainstorm of opinions. A brainstorm with inputs is a brainstorm of evidence. Switching from opinion to evidence is the single highest-leverage change you can make to your content process.
Use the five inputs below to understand how to come up with blog post ideas that are actually worth writing.
A brainstorm with no inputs is a brainstorm of opinions. A brainstorm with inputs is a brainstorm of evidence.
Input 1: Customer interviews and support tickets
Look for the language buyers use to describe their problems, their goals, and the alternatives they have already tried.
Where to find it:
- Customer interview transcripts (sales calls, onboarding calls, customer success check-ins).
- Support tickets and help desk transcripts.
- Product feedback channels and onboarding surveys.
- Reviews of your product and your competitors’ products.
What to extract:
- The exact phrases customers use.
- The questions that come up more than once.
- The misconceptions customers bring into the conversation.
A single hour with customer interview transcripts will produce more usable content ideas than a week of staring at competitor blogs.
Input 2: Keyword research, focused on intent gaps
Most keyword research stops finding keywords with the highest search volume when research should consider the search intent, along with how aligned you are as a brand to answer the query.
What to extract from your keyword research tool:
- Queries with decent volume where the top result is weak, outdated, off-topic, or generic.
- Queries where the user intent is clearly something the existing ranking pages are not delivering.
- Queries that wrap around a product or service you sell.
The bar should be whether or not you can come up with a post that answers a users question better and align it with something you sell.
Input 3: Sales objections and discovery call notes
If you can only listen to one source of customer thinking, listen to sales calls. Sales objections are content topics in disguise.
What to extract:
- The questions that come up in every discovery call. (“How is this different from X?” “Does this work for our industry?” “What is the ROI?”)
- The objections that delay deals. (“We don’t have the team to run this.” “We tried something like this and it didn’t work.”)
- The point in the funnel where deals stall, even when they don’t die.
Every recurring objection is a piece of content that should already exist. If sales is answering the same question 20 times a quarter, that’s 20 hours of sales time per quarter that a single blog post could absorb.
Input 4: Competitor content audits
This is the input most teams overuse and misuse. The goal is not to copy what competitors are writing. The goal is to find what competitors are missing.
What to extract:
- Topics competitors rank for but cover poorly. You can beat the page.
- Topics competitors cover well but with an angle you would disagree with. You can publish the counter.
- Relevant topics in your space that no competitor has covered.
Skip the topics where competitors already have a strong page and you would just be the fifth article that looks exactly the same. That’s busywork disguised as a content idea.
Input 5: Social listening and community lurking
Where buyers actually talk:
- Reddit threads in your niche.
- LinkedIn comments under thought-leader posts.
- Industry-specific Slack and Discord communities.
- Conversations on Twitter or X.
What to extract:
- Questions that keep coming up.
- Hot takes that nobody has written a real article about.
- Posts that get high engagement where the comments add value. The comments are your post.
Our own 5-pass content editing framework started in a Reddit thread where dozens of editors said they wished someone would just write the process down.
Communities are full of validated, unwritten content.
How to combine the five inputs
You’ll end up with a long, messy list of raw ideas. The combination step turns the mess into a ranked plan.
Score each idea on three dimensions, 1 to 5:
- Strategic fit. How directly does this idea map to a topic our brand is positioned to own?
- Search demand. Is there meaningful volume or clear buyer-stage intent?
- Effort to win. Can we produce this with the resources we have, and can we make it the best page on the topic?
Sum the three scores, filter, and sort. The top 10 are your content backlog.
If a top-ranked idea scores high on fit and search demand but high on effort to win, flag that the idea is worth the investment. Save the low-effort, low-fit ideas for filler weeks, or skip them entirely.
The 30-minute weekly brainstorm cadence
This process doesn’t need a quarterly offsite. It needs 30 minutes a week.
The cadence:
- Monday morning, 30 minutes solo.
- Pick one input. Don’t try to run all five in one sitting.
- Pull 5 to 10 raw ideas from that input.
- Drop them into a running ideas backlog.
- Once a quarter (or once a month depending on your bandwidth), score everything in the backlog and replan.
Cycle through the five inputs across five weeks. By week six, you’ a’re back at customer interviews with a fresh batch of transcripts.
This cadence produces more usable ideas in a month than a quarterly all-day brainstorm produces in a year. And it doesn’t eat anyone’s calendar.
Your next 10 blog post ideas
Run this brainstorm once today.
Pick one input. Spend 30 minutes. List 5 to 10 raw ideas. Score them on the three dimensions.
The goal is a handful of useful ideas, and useful ideas come from systematically harvesting evidence.
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