#2: Ask Questions
If you’re struggling to come up with the sub-points for your blog post or the plot points for your story, then start asking questions.
For non-fiction, you can ask questions like:
- What does the reader already know – and what do I need to tell them?
- Why is this particular topic important?
- How can I break this down into simple steps for the reader?
For fiction, you can ask questions like:
- Who’s the hero of this story?
- What obstacles are standing between the hero and his/her goal?
- How can I make the reader really care about the outcome?
As you ask questions, you’ll find that your idea becomes clearer in your mind.
Try it:
Pick one of your ideas and start asking yourself questions. You can use the ones above to get you going, if you want.
Answer the questions in writing – don’t just think through the answers. You’ll be pushed to think more rigorously, and you’ll have a record of your ideas.
Example:
Writing Magazine currently has a competition for an “epistolary short story”. That could be told through diary entries, letters, or social media posts, text messages, or other more modern forms.
Some immediate questions come up for me when I look at that idea:
Why are the characters only communicating through text? Do they talk to one another (face to face or on the phone) during the story?
Will the timing of communications matter? What if a message goes astray?
How can the characters’ individual personalities be shown through the way in which they send messages … or even through the mediums they choose?
Will the conversation be private (e.g. texts), a group conversation (e.g. WhatsApp), or a public conversation (e.g. in a blog’s comments section)?
All those questions can help develop the idea and take it in a particular direction.
#3: Create an Outline
Some ideas are fairly straightforward. You might have a clear(ish) picture of what to include already. If that’s the case, a simple outline might be enough to flesh your idea out.
An outline is just a linear list, in order, of the main points that you want to cover. These key points can often become your subheadings or chapters.
Your outline can be very high-level (e.g a list of ten chapters for an ebook) or very detailed (a list of subsections for each chapter with several bullet points for each).
Try it:
Choose one of your ideas and create an outline: write down three – five key points that you want to cover, in order. (Don’t worry too much about the order being exact: you can always change it later.)
Example:
Here’s the outline I used for my post Internal and External Conflict: Why Your Story Needs Both (and How to Do Them Well):
- Introduction
- Why is Conflict So Important in Your Story?
- Different Types of Conflict Make Your Story more Interesting
- What’s Internal Conflict?
- What’s External Conflict?
- Using Internal and External Conflict Effectively in Your Story
Coming up with ideas is, for many writers, the easy part! Choosing and developing an idea can be much harder. If you’re struggling to pick, give yourself a bit of time. Let your ideas “rest” for a few days or weeks … then come back to them. You might just find that one jumps out at you.
For more help with coming up with ideas, developing them, and getting the writing done, check out Get Writing. It’s a set of four guides to different areas of writing: blogging, short stories, novels, and freelancing … plus a whole bundle of extra goodies.
If you want to dip into any of those areas (or go further with them), then this is the resource you need. Find out more here.