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How to Generate Unlimited Story Ideas

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For some of us writerly types, content comes easy. In 15 minutes alone with my keyboard, I can produce a 500-word press release, or enough crumbs to rebuild an entire granola bar, with nearly the same amount of effort. It just comes out.

For other types of folks, extracting copy is like pulling bad teeth.

And for engineers, it's like pulling good teeth. Strong, deeply rooted, healthy molars from the stout gums of an ox who isn't the least bit interested in dental care as a lead-generation tactic.

I work with oxen—er, engineers—for a living, cajoling and coercing content enough to fill a very large B2B website with technical articles, webinars, and slideshows galore.

But, at the outset of my career, a viable strategy for building that library of juicy, keyboard-rich, optimized oxen teeth did not make itself obvious.

Lame Tactic 1: Incentives

To solicit copy, we first tried carrots in the form of a $500 bonus to article authors. That resulted in two things: utter disinterest on the part of most of our staff; a jump in submissions from the two guys who were already writing all the articles.

Every B2B has a techie or two who "gets" marketing. We love those guys a lot; we totally, utterly do; but they can't write articles for every expert, industry, and specialty.

Our business—materials testing—requires complicated scientific conversations: voices from many perspectives and specialties, often working in collaboration. Thirty-seven articles on polycarbonate resin—while riveting—were not going to get us where we needed to be.

Lame Tactic 2: Enforcement

Our next tactic was the stick (funny how well this oxen metaphor is playing out). We built article and webinar quotas directly into job descriptions, tucked them snugly into marketing plans, and generally dropped them like content cluster bombs into planning meetings.

We sat the managers down, made a few strategically terroristic threats, had them sign off on many sinister Gantt charts, and voila: We had our "bad cop." Then I closed in on the engineer under the single swinging light bulb, convincing them that (with my help) they could whip out reams of Nobel-worthy prose and blow the socks off all their friends at the next materials testing conference—a psychologically devastating "good cop/stage mother" combo.

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'Don't Tase Me, Bro!' Or, How I Got an Engineer to Write a Whitepaper

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ari McKee-Sexton is marketing communications manager at Stork Materials Technology, a network of testing laboratories in the US and Europe.