37+ Writing Prompts for Your Creative Enjoyment

Writing Prompts for Your Creative Enjoyment
Writing Prompts for Your Creative Enjoyment

37+ Writing Prompts for Your Creative Enjoyment

As writers, we need to be able to reach out into the world around us and find creative motives.

Writers hit writer’s block and need help outside of our own heads to be able to keep moving forward in our writing.

Use these writing prompts to help with finding creativity for your novels and creativity.

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Writing Prompts for Your Creative Enjoyment

  1. Common! I don’t have all day! Pick up your weapon and face me!
  2. He hates me! I knew it!
  3. I didn’t know what to do so I hid in the bathroom and prayed!
  4. I had never seen anything so beautiful!
  5. The treasure glimmered in the firelight and reflected in her eyes.
  6. Where were you last night?
  7. Why am I the only one that thinks this is insane?
  8. Tell me again, were there two of you or four of you?
  9. I told him I could only give him a ride a couple of miles down the road, but when he pulled a gun on me I said, where do you need to go? He was pretty polite after that.

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More Writing Prompts for You:

  1. I should have seen them coming. I can’t believe I missed that.
  2. So is this bathroom still a crime scene or can I?
  3. I’m headed to the scene. You stay here and check the database for hits in the last week.
  4. He remembers your lies.
  5. Hey, do you know where Tom is? I saw some people walking around his place last night after dark.
  6. Woah she let you take her truck? I didn’t ask
  7. He’s got the brain of a pigeon. He can’t do much damage.
  8. Did your cellmate say anything about his sentencing?
  9. What did you say the guard said?
  10. Libraries are not rooms full of books. They are rooms full of worlds, galaxies, and opportunities.
  11. So should I book you for fraud or accessory to murder or both?
  12. What is going on? Why are you in my house?
  13. OW! I told you I don’t know anything! Why do you keep slapping me?
  14. How did she take the news?
  15. You okay? I haven’t seen you this worried since you lost your ring?
  16. Call me when this is all over. If it ever is over. Don’t bother calling if it’s not.
Writing Prompts for Your Creative Enjoyment

Interested in starting a blog of your own? Check out Bluehost.

If you enjoy Writing Prompts, Storytelling and writing in general, you might love owning a domain of your own where you can write about it? Ever want to own your own domain name (Yourname.com)?

Bluehost hosts your blog so that you can own your domain and make money blogging. Check them out only if you’re interested in making money blogging; otherwise, go for a free blog instead 🙂

Try Grammarly, The Free tool that should be in every writer’s toolbelt.

Try it for free now.

Maybe you love the feel of real pages in your hands as you write instead.

Love creative writing? Check out this creative writing Journal.

More Writing Prompts for You:

  1. Wow, manners. What’s gotten into you?
  2. Why does she bite when you try to feed her?
  3. Stay with me! Stay with me! Don’t pass out! Stay with me!
  4. He was wearing a cowboy hat and boots and a bow tie.
  5. I didn’t know what to say so I just stared at him. That’s when he jumped. It was the worst day of my life.
  6. People are never there when you need em huh? Aw just give me another whiskey
  7. Is he dead? Did he know it was me?
  8. It nicked your artery so you almost didn’t make it.
  9. I’ve never made a real decision in my life. Every decision has always been made for me.
  10. Keep your eye on her until we know what the rest of the gang is up to.
  11. No no no. Don’t say the “C” word. I didn’t want you to see me as the “cancer kid.” I wanted you to know me for me, while I still had some time left.
  12. I don’t want them to think we are organizing our stories. Let’s not be seen together for a while.
  13. This steak isn’t cooked! At all! I want to speak to your manager!
  14. Underneath the salad leaves something was stirring and vibrating. And then a cockroach crawled out missing one of its legs.
  15. In its presentation this is perfect, but in its execution, it is a complete and utter failure.
  16. I wish you wouldn’t have allowed your curiosity to control you.
  17. Now that you know my secret, I’m not quite sure what to do with you yet.
  18. I can’t go home! I can’t go anywhere!
  19. I told her not to look down, but you know how it goes.

Interested in starting a blog of your own? Check out Bluehost.

If you enjoy Writing Prompts, Storytelling and writing in general, you might love owning a domain of your own where you can write about it? Ever want to own your own domain name (Yourname.com)?

Bluehost hosts your blog so that you can own your domain and make money blogging. Check them out only if you’re interested in making money blogging; otherwise, go for a free blog instead 🙂

Try Grammarly, The Free tool that should be in every writer’s toolbelt.

Try it for free now.

Maybe you love the feel of real pages in your hands as you write instead.

Love creative writing? Check out this creative writing Journal.

 

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37+ Writing Prompts for Your Creative Enjoyment

We Hope You Enjoyed: 37+ Writing Prompts for Your Creative Enjoyment

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Create Tension: Create Riveting Tension in your Stories

Create Tension: Create Riveting Tension in your Stories
Create Tension: Create Riveting Tension in your Stories

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Create Tension: Create Riveting Tension in your Stories

At DTWT we talk a lot about creating curiosity for your readers.

If you want them to keep turning to the next page you have to continue to create questions for them to want answers to.

Something that goes hand in hand with creating curiosity in your readers is creating tension.

Tension is a way of creating curiosity, but without questions so to speak.

Tension makes your reader desire to know how the tension will resolve and what will be the ultimate end of that tension.

Here are some ways you can create tension and think about it in your stories:

Create Tension: Create Riveting Tension in your Stories

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# 1 Create Tension: Keep the Stakes High

In order for your tension to work at all, the stakes have to be high.

You have to make sure that the character has a lot at risk.

In order to create tension, we have to put things that our character finds important at risk.

And that risk doesn’t always have to come from another character.

In some stories, your main antagonist doesn’t have to be a human.

It could be nature for instance.

Let’s say we are writing a story set in the wild west.

The family we are writing about relies on the land and farm to live, but one winter it gets too cold and the land freezes over and the animals start to starve and get diseases and the family didn’t have a good harvest last year and now they are on the verge of starvation themselves.

What’s is the tension created here?

We create tension by making our readers think: What will the family do to survive? Will they survive?

Life or death scenarios work well but it doesn’t have to always be that high of stakes.

In order to create tension, the stakes have to be high.

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# 2 Create Tension: By making your readers feel like they can’t guess what will happen.

In order for tension to really work, there can’t be an underlying thought in your readers’ minds of “I can see where this is going and they will be fine.”

That happens often in T.V. Series and that’s is partly why they die after season 2.

When you start to see a repeating pattern of how things will resolve and everything will be fine you start to lose interest because there is no curiosity there. There’s no mystery anymore.

It’s easy to lose interest when there is no mystery left anymore.

In order to create tension we have to keep our readers guessing.

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# 3 Create Tension: By making your readers feel something.

We as consumers of stories LOVE stories that make us feel something and feel what the character is feeling or feel so much for the character that we want the worst or the best for that character.

If we can get our readers feeling emotions for our characters we will create tension for those characters when we put them in a bad situation or a sad situation.

In order to make our readers feel for our characters, we have to help our readers resonate with them.

One sure-fire way to make our readers feel for our characters is to make them as real and human and vulnerable as possible without going overboard.

If they are too vulnerable they can appear pathetic and whiny = BAD

If they are too perfect they can appear to be too far beyond us for us to feel for them = BAD

For our readers to resonate with our characters they have to be a little good and a little bad. Very much like regular humans. There are good people out there, but all of us have faults even though we are trying our best.

Find ways to make your characters more human and when you go to create tension, your readers will find themselves being surprisingly emotionally involved.

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# 4 Create Tension: By using time.

Time-sensitive events are one of the easiest and best ways to create tension.

Nothing creates tension more than a ticking time bomb, literally.

Your time bomb doesn’t have to be a literal bomb but it could be anything, it just has to be time-sensitive.

In 24 hours the bomb blows up.

In 12 hours we kill your family member.

You have 7 hours to get the money or else.

If you don’t get me my money by tomorrow I’m gonna show up at your daughter’s daycare.

The storm hits tomorrow.

The store closes at 5.

The bank will foreclose your house at the end of the week.

If you don’t get them to agree by Friday don’t bother coming into work on Monday.

Make the stakes high and add a timer to it = Tension.

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I hope this helps! Now get out there and write something amazing!

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Fictional Characters: 28+ Bad Habits to Introduce to Your Fictional Characters 

Fictional Characters: Bad Habits to Introduce to Your Fictional Characters
Fictional Characters: Bad Habits to Introduce to Your Fictional Characters

Fictional Characters: Bad Habits to Introduce to Your Fictional Characters

We made this list of character habits so that writers could use them to get creative inspiration for writing more dynamic characters.

Everyone has bad habits.

Some are more obvious than others.

Some characters are super-secret about their bad habits, while other fictional characters are oblivious that they have a bad habit.

And some are obnoxious about their bad habits.

This will be a list of bad habits for you to use for your fictional characters.

Use one or two or many, but remember, the more believable the better with little character traits such as bad habits.

Bad Habits for Your Fictional Characters:

Fictional Characters: Bad Habits to Introduce to Your Fictional Characters

Worrying.

Worry can kill. It can also ruin relationships and ruin a good date. 

Doubting.

Doubting someone your character cares about can soil the relationship. A character could push others away with their doubt.

Distrust.

A character could be so jaded by the world that they chronically never trust anyone.

Easily angered.

You know the type. Ticking time bomb. Walking on eggshells being around them.

Picking nose.

Ew Gross.

Picking at face.

Distracting when you’re trying to talking to someone that is constantly touching their face.

Talks too much.

Ever get stuck talking to someone that never takes a breath?

Bad Listener.

Relationships can end or begin based on a character with good or bad listening skills.

Talks too little.

Ever been trying to get to know someone and all they have to say is, “yah” “nah.”

Flatulence.

Enough said.

Smoking.

This could be a habit they know they want to quit but have a hard time.

Chewing Tobacco.

Don’t pick up the wrong bottle in their house!

Alcoholic.

Nobody wants to be around an angry drunk.

Drug addiction.

Ever have your character steal for drug money?

Pain Killer Addiction.

Easy to get into. Even easier for a character to hide for a long time. No smell and everyone has prescriptions right?

Always late.

Your character could lose their job.

Nail Biting.

Does your character disgust their love interest because their fingers are always in their mouths?

Always on their phone.

Who isn’t always on their phone these days, but when your character is staring at their screen while having coffee with a friend bleeding their heart out, that friend might look for friendship elsewhere…

Talking with a mouth full.

Your character might not get asked to eat out much…I wonder why?

Gets lost in social media.

Who doesn’t? But maybe your character missed an important event because they were scrolling social media.

Video game addiction.

Ever miss Christmas because you had to get that game achievement? Family members do not like that sort of behavior.

Not sleeping enough.

We’re not talking insomnia here. A character could have an accident at work just from a willful lack of sleep.

Poor Posture.

Does your character look like a hunchback?

Not dealing with stress well.

Does your character bottle everything up and worry about it alone?

Eating addiction.

Does your character’s weight affect their life and relationships negatively?

Doesn’t brush teeth.

Doesn’t shower.

No care for hair.

Does your character lack hygiene? What type of social problems do they encounter on a daily basis?

Lying

Has your character lied one time too many and burned too many bridges with their lies?

Stealing

Who did they steal from? Are they a casual shoplifter, a bank robber, or did they bite off too much and steal from the mob?

Cheating

Did they cheat on a test, a lover, or a spouse? Did they get caught? What are the consequences? Does their lover know?

Yelling

Does this character shoot themselves in the foot with their mouth?

Junk Food

Cavities anyone?

Loud Mouth

Has their talk too big and not be able to back it up attitude got them into a little bit of trouble?

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I hope this helps! And we will probably add more later!

Now get out there and write something!

What bad habits will your next fictional character pick up?

Do they have one or two already?

Will they acquire one while your readers read about them?

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Writing Characters: How to Write Unique Character Reactions Your Readers Will Care About

Writing Characters: How to Write Character Reactions Your Readers Will Care About
Writing Characters: How to Write Character Reactions Your Readers Will Care About

Writing Characters: How to Write Character Reactions Your Readers Will Care About

As readers, we don’t think about character reactions much, we just enjoy them, but as writers, one of the most important parts of writing characters and any scene is how our characters are reacting to people and events around them at any given moment.

We need to understand how to write characters when they are at home watching T.V. doing nothing and when they are escaping a brutal shoot out with explosions.

When writing characters, writing their reactions is extremely important.

How they react to one another, how they react to events, how they react to dialogue; how they react to what you put them through is the most interesting part of your character’s true self.

The way your protagonist reacts to others will decide whether or not your readers like your protagonist, much in the same way that we decide if we like people in real life based on how they react to certain situations we engage them in.

All that to say, as writers it is extremely important that we understand that how our characters react is extremely important and we need to be able to write their reactions well to carry our readers along with the story without hitting any bumps in the road.

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Writing Characters: Your Characters Need to React to Events that Happen and React Appropriately.

When it comes to writing characters we need to understand our characters well personally and how they would react to what happens in a scene and react well.

Imagine sitting down with your protagonist to have coffee or a meal. Can you imagine how they would act in such a scenario?

Can you ask them questions in your mind and see how they would react and answer?

Can you interview your characters in your mind to find out how they would react to the events you want to put them through?

And what does it mean for them to react well?

It means that character needs to react the way only that character would and not the way a different character would.

For Example: Two girls are sitting on a train. Let’s call them Girl A and Girl B They just met. They are not more than acquaintances if not complete strangers.

A staff member from the train steps up to Girl A and says “mam, I’m so sorry we just received word that your parents have died in a horrible car accident.”

Girl A shrugs her shoulders and says “Ok.”

But Girl B the stranger, balls and screams and cries inconsolably for the duration of the ride.

You can see this would be a weird reaction.

We would expect Girl A to react the way Girl B did as it was Girl A’s parents that died a horrible death and Girl B doesn’t even know Girl A or her parents. Girl B might even try to kindly console Girl A, but we wouldn’t expect her to ball and scream about the scenario, but we might expect Girl A to do so, and if she doesn’t we will immediately question her in our minds.

This example shows that when we are writing characters we do have to think about how our character will react and how it must make sense and if it doesn’t that will make our readers curious. 

This type of reactive thinking can be played out in several ways.

We either make the character react the way the audience expects them to and it helps the reader solidify how the character reacts and thinks and who they are as a person.

We can also use a character’s reaction to make the reader question why they reacted that way if the character reacts in a way that doesn’t fit.

Both are great tools to help your readers enjoy the story and carry the story along while revealing a character’s true nature.

Writing Characters: Your characters need to react to each other.

Writing Characters: How to Write Character Reactions Your Readers Will Care About

Normal people react to what others are doing all day long.

We say how are you doing to the grocery clerk.

We move over on the subway to let people through the doors.

We hold open doors at stores for others walking in behind us.

If someone curses at us in traffic, we react to it. We all react differently depending on who we are and what we believe.

In the same way, when writing characters your characters need to react to each other and they need to react appropriately.

Friends are sad for each other when something bad happens to one.

Enemies might not react or they might even be seen enjoying some bitter happening to the protagonist and the protagonist may even react to the enemy’s reaction.

It is very important that your important characters react to each other and react to the events happening in the plot depending on who they are around when the event happens.

If it happens when they are together the reader will see them react together.

If it happens separately we get to see who tells who what, how much and why. All things that are important to the plot and character relationship building and development.

Some characters might react one way around their friends, but completely different in public around strangers.

While you are writing characters the better you can write this in and make it unique to each important character you have the better your reader will be able to understand who each character is as an individual.

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Writing Characters: How Our Character Reacts Says Much About What They Believe.

When a person reacts to an event or another person it can say many things about what they believe.

When a person gets stuck behind a slow car on the road, if they get mad and scream and curse, they might be the type of person that believes that they own the road and that no one should get in their way and that the slow car is actually hurting or abusing them in some way unbeknownst to them.

If on the other hand the character ignores it and keeps smiling and whistling while driving, they may be more of an optimist that believes that they have to find the silver lining in everything.

We must do this as writers writing characters well. We must find events and dialogue to show what our characters believe about themselves and the world around them.

As we are writing characters the more our readers are able to see more deeply who our characters are they will grow to love and hate them and when they feel so deeply about our characters that’s when they are really hooked and curious as to what will happen to these characters that they’ve come to know so deeply and so well. 

People, in general, are more interested in people they feel deeply about, even if they loathe them. The type of person we don’t think much about is the character we feel indifferent towards. We aren’t very curious about what happens to them.

Use this truth to your advantage and reveal to your audience who your characters are in a deep way through writing characters’ reactions.

What events have you put your characters through and how have you had them react?

Do you know who your character is and how they would react to any given situation, or do you create your character’s personality on the fly as you go?

I hope this helps! Now Get Out There and Write Something!

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Psychopath: How to Write The Perfect Psychopath

How to Write The Perfect Psychopath
How to Write The Perfect Psychopath

How to Write The Perfect Psychopath

Psychopaths are fun to write because they make epic villains.

They also make for an extremely fascinating protagonist.

For whatever reason you’re are looking to write one, you are in for a fun ride researching the perfect psychopath and bringing them to life.

Some Things you Should Know to Write the Perfect Psychopath:

Perfect Psychopaths Feign Charm Like It’s Their Role in a Movie

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Psychopaths are usually well-adapted actors. They feel nothing emotionally and so they learn to adapt to society by figuring out the “rituals.”

-Smile

-wave

-be polite

– when someone tells you something bad has happened to them, react with a sad face and say “I’m sorry that happened to you.”

-when someone tells you good news, smile and say “How wonderful for you!”

-When someone tells you they are having a baby, don’t ask them if they’ve considered the safety of the vehicle they are currently driving. Pretend to be excited for them.

– In public, don’t stare.

-If you are caught looking, pretend not to be.

The Perfect Psychopaths think in terms of how to adapt to their environment and get what they want.

They can be very good at charming you while having sinister motives behind getting closer to you.

Usually, if a psychopath is charming toward you they are trying to get something from you or get away with something without you knowing.

They are like chameleons and do their best to adapt to any given situation. If they make a mistake they may lash out with anger or recoil and manipulate by feigning victimization.

The perfect psychopath will have multiple backup plans for blending into their desired social circles.

The Perfect Psychopaths have an extreme sense of self-importance and maybe even a “God Complex”

They usually see themselves as geniuses and view everyone else as less intelligent than they are.

Even if they carry out heinous acts against unsuspecting victims they can often be delusional in thinking that what they are doing has a “greater” purpose and centuries from their lifetime, societies will see their genius and call them heroes.

They act on the desire to have others see them as they see themselves: as the hero, the genius, the great savior of the world.

You may find that as a “good” character they are narcissistic and intelligent and think everyone around them is dumber than themselves, but they will act in appropriate manners when the social situation calls for it.

You can write your perfect psychopath as someone that has trained themselves to act correctly, or you can write your psychopath as someone that is learning social manners.

Either way can make for fun writing and complex dynamics.

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The Perfect Psychopaths MUST have a Plan and have Everything in Their Control

How to Write The Perfect Psychopath

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How to Write The Perfect Psychopath

I wouldn’t say the perfect psychopaths are big planners as much as they make a plan for everything because they must have a sense or feeling of control over everything they care about.

For example: Let’s say they have a secret murderous addiction in mind. They are going to be constantly planning out every move. This will enable them to control their family their friends, their victims, the police, and anyone else that happens to get involved along the way. No one must be allowed to get in the way of their plot.

If they are a boss of a company they are going to have each role planned out so that their company succeeds and if anything threatens that they may plan to “take care of it” by whatever means possible.

Child psychopaths will find ways to control their friends, siblings, and parents. Whatever their “world” is they will naturally plan out how to control the situations and they might not even realize it while they are doing it.

Psychopaths are usually Emotionally Inept.

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This trait plays a role in their need to be amazing actors. They don’t want to be good at acting, they need to be.

They have a hard time socially knowing when and how to express the right emotions at the right time until they learn to from an outside source.

They don’t feel emotions like the rest of us.

This makes them disconnected and unable to connect with most anyone.

Humans rely on emotions to connect with each other and feel for each other. They can only make real connections when they are taught or teach themselves social cues and showing emotions based on the circumstance.

They do emote anger, but sadness and regret they seem to have a difficult time with. It has more to do with how they feel about other character’s situations.

If someone knows what it feels like to experience loss, they are more likely to feel empathy for another human when they see them also experiencing loss.

Psychopaths are unable to feel empathy for this reason.

They have no idea what it feels like to feel emotionally bad so they have no idea how to feel bad for anyone else.

If they decide to try to learn to act appropriately, it is mostly to be able to control their environment to continue to get what they are trying to get and not lose relationship points with those that they have convinced to trust them and be around them.

Some psychopaths learn to react to situations as if they are feeling emotions and some don’t bother.

Usually, a sinister psychopath will view feigning emotion to make people happy as a futile game that is a waste of time and energy.

A more mogul psychopath that wants lots of power will view feigning emotion as a way to gain peoples’ favor and trust and they need people in order to become more powerful. (Think of some politicians that might think this way.)

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 Psychopaths are MASTER MANIPULATORS.

You may find your master manipulative psychopath being the second in command of an army whispering one thing to one general and another thing to another general so that the two generals fight and the psychopath gets what they want out of it.

They like to play master of puppets behind the scenes.

They love to know that what they say and do controls people and their decisions. It feeds their feelings of importance and intelligence above others.

You might find your psychopath in high school dating the most popular boy in school so that people like her and see her as popular, but in secret, she hangs out with the boy next door that is the weird kid at school.

You would never catch her dead talking to her true friend at school, but only at home when no one sees her. Remember she can never lose control.

Your master manipulator might be working his way up the corporate ladder and find him figuring out who his next competitor is so that he can find ways to take out his competitor from the running.

Remember, psychopaths, need to be in control. So she or he is not just going to work hard to get the position. They will plan and scheme to MAKE ABSOLUTELY SURE there is no way possible that he could lose.

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Even if it means creating a trap that breaks his competitor’s leg so that they have to take sick leave for months while the bosses choose who gets the position.

You might find your psychopath manipulator as a bank teller who regularly uses access to people’s information and money spending “habits” as blackmail for keeping their money secrets.

As you look to get ideas for writing your next psychopath I hope this helps! 

How to Write The Perfect Psychopath

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Now get outta here and write something!

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How to Write The Perfect Psychopath

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How to Write The Perfect Psychopath

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5 Tricks How to Hide Your Villain Right Before Their Eyes

5 Tricks How to Hide Your Villain Right Before Their Eyes
5 Tricks How to Hide Your Villain Right Before Their Eyes

5 Tricks How to Hide Your Villain Right Before Their Eyes

One of the most fun and entertaining things to do as a story lover and writer is to hide the villain right in front of your audience and keep them guessing until the end.

Throw in a twist here and a twist there and voila, you surprise everyone that they knew who the villain was all along and they met them in chapter 2 but didn’t have a clue until the very end.

In some stories, the villain is bold and insidious and it’s obvious the entire time who they are, but some stories the villainous creature is scheming and conniving and even in their own mind is the good guy.

Whether your villain is insane and doesn’t recognize they’re evil deeds as evil or they are doing their best to fit into society and hide their dark secrets, it can be a lot of fun for readers to be surprised as to who the real villain is.

So here are some fun and creative ways that you can entertain your readers by hiding your villain right before their eyes:

Want a Psychological Suspense read you can’t put down. See if Teresa Driscoll’s “I Am Watching You,” is for you.

1. Make your villain enjoyable.

5 ways to hide your villain in plain sight writing 2.0: A villain in a greed hoodie with his face just hidden out of view and the words how to hide your villain in plain sight with the word villain capitalized, bold, and in jagged red letters.

When readers are poring over your words they expect to find the villain as some cruel ugly hag, but if you make her nice and kind and enjoyable, they might just skip right past this one on the possible guilty subjects list at first, expecting you to reveal them later, being none the wiser to have just met them.

Give your villain a scene or two where they are enjoyable and likable and perhaps even charming and potentially heroic and you’ll find folks are pleasantly surprised later on to learn that that charming character is actually an evil character in disguise.

Make your evil person a random shopkeeper that helps the protagonist find an item in the store in the first couple of chapters and even gives them a discount showing the villain to be charitable to throw them off the scent even more.

                                                                        

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2. Make your villain an idiot.

A good way to hide your bad guy from your audience at first is to make them believe he is a fool or a bumbling idiot. 

By making him a fool at first, you make them look like a side character in the story. That adds extra dynamics and enjoyment, but nobody would ever expect the fool to be the cunning evil undertaker in disguise.

5 Tricks How to Hide Your Villain Right Before Their Eyes

Want a Psychological Suspense read you can’t put down. See if Teresa Driscoll’s “I Am Watching You,” is for you.

3. Make your villain appear weaker physically.

Give them some sort of physical handicap to make them “appear” to be physically “weaker,” but in truth, they are NOT weaker at all. It is only a guise. Give them a limp or hobble. Make them a character with paraplegia or quadriplegia. Make your villain a character with muteness, deafness, or blindness so that your heroine and reader are none the wiser to their evil schemes and less likely to put them on their mental suspect list.

It doesn’t even have to be an actual ailment to your villain. The antagonist could be feigning the injury or birthed medical condition altogether. Both work equally well for making a dynamic character with complicated ideas and emotions.

Readers expect the evil antagonist to be strong and of equal strength physically to the protagonist. By making the villain appear “weaker” or “vulnerable,” your readers could look right over them and might not suspect a thing.

Think Mr. Glass in Unbreakable and Glass. People all around him underestimate him, but that is the most dangerous thing to do. The main antagonist in Glass assumed she could control and outsmart Mr. Glass and that was her fatal mistake.

Because of her foolish assumption, she fell right into his plans perfectly and handed him everything he needed to show the world that the myth of superhumans was real. She assumed she was smarter than him and could control him and that was her downfall.

(Side note: make sure to have the utmost care and respect with how you research disabilities and write characters with disabilities, whether they are humans or fantasy creatures that you are writing. We all have friends and loved ones we know with disabilities, so be kind and respectful. Disabilities can be written about in fiction in a responsible and respectful way 🙂 .)

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4. Make them attractive.

How to hide your villain right before your readers eyes 4.0

One of the easiest ways to throw your readers off the scent of the villain is to make them attractive. Make them kind, polite, and charming. 

Make them the life of the party. The person that could spit in your face and that you would still want to be their friend and have their attention.

That character could never be the villain, could they?

5. Make the villain assist the protagonist.

Have the protagonist meet them on a train ride and have the villain help them find their cart and sit with them and have a very needed helpful conversation.

You could go as bold as to have the villain be there “sidekick” up until the time of turning against them, or you could have the villain help them in a moment and turn the reader’s mind to think that the villain is just a kind helpful person in the story.

Take this as far as you like.

I hope this helps! Now get out of here and write something!

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Bonus Material for fans of “How to Hide Your Villain In Plain Sight”

How to write A Game Making Villain

It’s the last quarter. There are only 30 seconds left in the game. 

The rivalry is heated and both sides want the WIN but only one can have it.

The good guy knows he is good but he knows that the villain is just as strong as him and maybe even smarter than him.

The stakes are high. At the end of this 30 seconds, the power of the universe will be either in the hands of good or the hands of evil.

What will happen and what will decide the fate of the universe?

So how do we do this as writers day in and day out?

How do we write a villain that is a game-changer or game maker?

The villain is equally important if our reader is to feel any emotion from our telling of the story.

So how do we make sure that our villain does his job in pushing back the heroine?

How to Write A Game Making Villain:

  • Write a Villain that Draws us in and surprises us
  • Write a Villain that could be your reader’s next-door neighbor
  • Write a Villain that doesn’t care about anyone but themselves
  • Write a villain that has extenuating qualities
  • Write a villain that has a palpable description

Want a Psychological Suspense read you can’t put down. See if Teresa Driscoll’s “I Am Watching You,” is for you.

Write a Villain that Draws us in and surprises us

One of the key secrets to great storytelling and writing stories is creating surprise.

Most writers and critics would call this a twist at times, but it doesn’t always have to be a twist.

With a villain that surprises our reader, it could be an act of cruelty.

One great way to do it is betrayal.

Think Judas and Jesus. Think Brutus and Caesar, “And you Brutus…”

Betrayal is a great way to surprise our reader with who the villain is as well as really put on the emotional sting when they find out.

The Way to Set Up Betrayal

If you want to use betrayal to surprise your reader with your villain you’ll have to set it up for it to have a great effect.

The villainess should start out in the story as someone close to the heroine. It could be their sister, mother, cousin, or best friend.

When we meet the villain we should think that they are a side character and are good. 

Write them playing with the heroine as children. They can grow up together telling each other their deepest most trusted secrets.

They can go to the same school, or live in the same castle.

They can fight alongside one another in battle or be on the same basketball team.

Whatever you choose, make them close before ultimately showing that the villain was right underneath the reader’s nose all along and then write them doing some act of betrayal and showing little remorse for it.

They could be cheating with the heroine’s boyfriend or husband.

They could be secretly plotting to kill them to take their place on the throne.

They could be planning to take revenge for an act the heroine didn’t know they felt bitter about.

Whatever you choose, make the betrayal heinous and hard for the reader to accept without feeling angry for the heroine, or it might not work in the story.

Write a Villain that Could be Your Reader’s Next-Door Neighbor

 

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If you want your villain to be bigger than life, you need to make sure the villain comes across as a plausibly real person.

Villains that are fun but too spooky are sometimes forgettable, but the villain that could be their next-door neighbor in real life is hard to get out of mind. If they have a hard time looking at their neighbors the same way after they have read your story then you’ve opened up their eyes to how dangerous a seemingly “good” person can be.

The idea is the psychopath next door.

Write the villainous character as someone that is the leader of the neighborhood watch in the cul de sac.

Everyone knows and loves the villain and the villain is greatly kind and generous in daylight and during office hours, but if you somehow got surveillance into their private home or office you’d cringe to find out what they are doing in secret.

That’s the key to a game making villain that’s real, but pure evil.

They are kind and generous in public, but in secret, they have nasty skeletons in their closet, or better yet the backyard of their second home.

Don’t take this overboard, don’t write them as fake nice that’s so easy to see through. Write them as genuinely kind so that when our reader learns what they do when no one is looking, they’ll be shocked, surprised, and in horror.

You can even carry this out in a creative way by picking a person in real life that you know or look up to.

Give the villain their personality and mannerisms and this will help your reader see and believe that this character is very real to life and could be their next-door neighbor.

Write a Villain That Doesn’t Care About Anyone But Themselves

A game making villain is completely selfish. A complete narcissist could work.

But don’t be so extreme or your reader will just be sick of them and ready to see them die or lose and move on.

Their actions have to give the reader hope that there is some good in them.

One of the reasons Darth Vader was so HUGE in villain history is that the entire trilogy Luke was saying “I can see the good in you. There is still hope.”

If our readers see a villain that does good things but surprises them with the evil deeds the villain commits our readers might cling to the idea that it is possible that they could change.

Leaving it possible means that curiosity about the villainess character can continue.

But we as the writer know deep down inside that our villain is complete and utterly consumed with selfishness and will never change despite leading the fact that the villain manipulates our heroine and leads them on.

Write a Villain that Has Extenuating Qualities

Give the villain excuses for the way he or she acts.

Give them a goal that the reader could possibly perceive as a good goal.

In Lord of the Rings, every member of the Fellowship of the Ring had the potential for good and evil.

Boromir wanted to take the ring and use it as a “weapon against the enemy.” But everyone knew the ring poisoned the wearer’s mind, turning them insane or against the good and towards the evil Saruman, making anyone a potential threat.

When Boromir says they should use it against the enemy it is tempting to think that this is a good idea. But deep down we as the readers know this is a bad idea. 

When Boromir acts in this way his motives are potentially good, so when he tries to take the ring from Frodo the reader can be curious to know if his actions are good or bad. During this act, he acts as a potential villain but in the end, we know that ultimately the true villain is Saruman.

When we do this for the reader we make the villain and their acts more emotional and deep for the reader.

Write a Villain that has a Palpable Description. 

Use the physical description of your villain to make her or him jump off the page and into your reader’s mind.

Give your villain a back story that leaves them with a hideous scar. 

Use that scar to tell a story.

 For example: the character has a deep gash in their back. When the villain was six years old the hero was fighting another villain in the same neighborhood that they lived in. The fight got so bad that it ended up destroying a part of the building above the villain. The villain’s apartment caved in and it killed her parents. A piece of rubble pierced her back and totally severed her spine, leaving her a paraplegic for the rest of her life. The villain blames the hero for her parents’ consequent deaths and her paraplegia. She hates the hero for this and plots ways to get revenge every single day.

Try to think of other ways to use their physical description as a way to remind the reader of their twisted back story.

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I hope this helps you write a game making villain!

Now get out there and write something!

Other posts you might just love to munch into:

How To Write 4 Scenes That Reveal Who Your Character Is Seamlessly

4 Tips How to Write your Character Hitting Rock Bottom

5 Tricks How to Hide Your Villain Right Before Their Eyes

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As a Blogger, Why Making Viral Content is a Bad Blogging Strategy
As a Blogger, Why Making Viral Content is a Bad Blogging Strategy

As a Blogger, Why Making Viral Content is a Bad Blogging Strategy

If you are a blogger don’t get caught up in the wrong thing.

If you are a blogger and are wasting LOTS of time on trying to make EVERY post written a viral post you may be putting your energy into the wrong place.

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This is a terrible goal and a waste of time for most any blogger and I’m going to tell you why:

1. The amount of time you put into the blog post is unlikely to amount to its “viralness.”

There is absolutely no guarantee that if you spend a bunch of time trying to write a post that you think we’ll go viral that it will.

It can be surprising what audiences like and don’t care for.

I use Pinterest to drive traffic and I am often surprised as to what pins people love and ones they don’t. I’ve created many thinking oh they’ll love this one. And crickets…

At the same time, I’ve had some that I threw together in a minute and they went viral, which really shocked me and made me realize:

As a Blogger, the goal shouldn’t be to spend most of our time and energy figuring out what goes viral and trying to make that.

Our goal should be to create more content as a blogger and adapt as our audience reacts.

Which brings us to our next point:

2. Our goal as a blogger should be to make lots of quality content.

As a Blogger, Why Making Viral Content is a Bad Blogging Strategy

This idea as all ideas should be taken with a grain of salt of course.

As a Blogger, you should definitely spend some of your time researching what people in your niche like and want to read.

The point is, when we first started we probably spent too much time on research and not enough time on building a habit of just creating and letting things flow naturally.

So as a blogger spend some time researching, but most of the time and energy creating.

3. Are you using your research time efficiently?

As a blogger, you should create while you research your topics.

Don’t make the mistake of researching a topic for a week without jotting down post ideas or even writing a post as you go along in your research.

As you’re reading, (if you are a blogger) great ideas will come to your mind. You should write them down.

Either write them in notes, or feel free to start putting them in your next blogger post and revise later when you’re done researching.

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4. By creating more blog content that is well done your odds of it going viral go up exponentially.

It’s almost like a time bomb waiting to go off.

The more you create as a blogger the more likely you will create something that people will latch onto.

The less you create the less likely you will create a blog post that goes viral.

I personally found that the time I put into making something go viral didn’t work as well as making lots of content and then when one of mine did hit a nerve with my unique audience trying to create more blog content like that and better than that.

Convert your energy as a blogger into creating lots and lots of good content. Learn your unique audience and give them what they want.

Try this for yourself and let us know how it goes!

Hope this helps and inspires you to create more! Now get out there and write something!

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Other posts you might love:

6 Easy Practical Steps to Becoming a Better Writer in 30 Days or Less

How to Know What Your Readers are Thinking: What Do They REALLY Want?

What Should I Write About: 22 Writing Prompts to Give You BIG IDEAS


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Do You Want Your Story Characters To Be Original? Consider These 5 Traits

Do You Want Your Short Story Characters To Be Original? Consider These 5 Things

Do You Want Your Story Characters To Be Original? Consider These 5 Traits.

Story Characters To Be Original. Write more interesting Characters

Do you want your story characters to be original, not boring, and also likable?

What are you willing to do to help your story characters to be original?

What have you done to help your story characters to be original?

Do you have ideas for how to make your story characters to be original?

Then there are some things you’ll want to consider while you are writing your characters. Unique and original characters in our writing don’t just happen by mistake or accident. It takes time, planning, and clever storyboarding to really make our readers dig in.

It is surprising how many beginning authors leave these simple writing tricks out and don’t consider them. Not well known or famous or well-practiced authors. Time tested and practiced authors know that in order to make characters interesting there are certain human traits to consider and add but in a very strategic and specific manner. 

These aren’t just tricks of the trade, they are important pieces of every character’s story and every short story or novel writer at least needs to consider them.

These are not listed in an order of importance, just listed in a way that you can see them and use them for your benefit in any of your writing to make your story characters to be original.

5 Things to consider when writing to get your story characters to be original :

  1. Oddities
  2. Imperfections
  3. Likes
  4. Dislikes
  5. Choices

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#1 Oddities

If you want your story characters to be original, traits that make your character odd to any “normal” person are very fun to think about. Anything that makes them feel more and more human and less like some strange creature from a perfect place is ideal. You don’t have to go overboard with this. Just think of a few unique traits that’ll make your character stand out among your other characters. Giving them each different personality can make your story characters to be original.

What are some easy ways to show off these Character Oddities?

Talking style:

How does your character talk? The way each character in your story talks is a big deal for how your readers will see and interpret how they act on a normal daily basis. 

For this, the best thing to do is to think about people you know in your immediate sphere and use the way they talk to help make your characters seem more real to life. Use their speech patterns and also let your readers know if they have an accent or not. Do they slur? Do they have a funny shaped mouth that makes words sound different? Write that stuff in there. Let the reader know if they say the word “going” funny or normal. Do they “going,” “goin,” or “gon?” Let your reader know.

Do they use distinct hand motions when they are talking? Do they shift back and forth? What are their eyes doing? Do they look around or make direct eye contact? All these traits make a character more believable and more relatable.

Which brings us to the next point. What is their body language saying?

Body Language: 

To do body language well and to your advantage, you might have to do some research just to make it really good.

Do they cross their arms a lot? Do they have a hard time standing still? Do they fidget? What do they fidget with? Do they bite their nails? Do they cross their legs? When they think do they lookup? Do they look down?

For body language, think about your own body language and what you do when you’re feeling a certain way. Also, go to a public place and watch peoples’ body language and what people do naturally when they aren’t thinking with their arms and legs and heads and eyes and eyebrows. The more detailed you can be, the more fun you can make the character by making them come to life in your reader’s imagination. Don’t take 5 paragraphs to explain mannerisms just add a little here and a little there and you will really make your character distinct and your readers will naturally come to know them the way you do.

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# 2 Imperfections

If we want our story characters to be original we should make sure they have some defining imperfections.

Even though we are scared by nature to write imperfections into our characters, this is actually what makes them human. Readers can’t resonate with a character if they never see how they are indeed imperfect in some way. It’s just unbelievable if they are too perfect. It makes the reader disinterested if the character has no problems. It’s not real to life and it can become boring. 

It makes sense that we want everyone to like our characters and we’re afraid if they don’t that they won’t like our story, but that’s actually just the opposite.

A good way to get over this fear is to realize that people don’t have to like your characters like they like people in real life. It’s actually the opposite. Depending on who the reader is they may your secondary character more than your main or your villain more than your hero, but as long as the story is good they will keep reading. Obviously there is more to it than just that, but just don’t worry if they don’t want to be “best friends” with your main character. That’s not the point of a good story.

Things that make for good imperfections can be psychological problems. ADD, ADHD, Schizophrenia, trauma, etc. Whether or not the character has a psychological problem can be interesting for many reasons. WARNING: if you choose one of these, do your homework. Don’t just guess or watch a movie. If you get something wrong, you’ll quickly lose readers. Know what the disorder is really like in real life and write appropriately.

You’ll also want to add Personality imperfections. Are they a horrible listener? Do they lie a lot? Do they brag too much? Use things you know to be common problems with people to help you write the character’s personality.

What problems do they face physically? Are they overweight? A smoker? An Addict? Do they have one hand? Are they blind? Deaf? Out of shape? How does this affect what they are trying to accomplish? Are they handicapped in any way? Is there any way they can use this to their advantage?

Have you read a story where the protagonist is a paraplegic? That could make for interesting writing since it doesn’t happen often.

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# 3 Likes

If we want our story characters to be original we should give them unique “likes.”

These are not massively important to the plot, but you can use them in clever ways.

Say your character likes to ice skate. Have her and friends go ice skating one night and while they are there some boys holler at them and treat them disrespectfully. They think nothing of it, but later on, in the story, their friend goes missing and you find out the last person she was with was one of those boys from the ice skating rink.

You can also use likes to show character traits. Is your character OCD about working out? Do they run everyday?

Do they have hobbies like sewing? Did they rip their jeans while running away from gang members? Were they able to sit down and sew them together themselves?

Do they have certain clothing they like to wear? Can you tie in their clothing choices to add to their character traits? Do they dress sloppy and comfortable? Or do they want to appear professional all the time so much so that they wouldn’t even consider wearing sweats out of the house?

Can you use future goals they have to resonate with your audience? Is your character a detective that’s really good at their job but dreams about retirement?

Is your character a slob that dreams about cleaning up their life, but always says tomorrow?

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# 4 Dislikes

Very similar to “likes” characters have to have “dislikes.”

Do they not like onions? Do they get mad in traffic? Do they hate waiting in lines? What type of pizza toppings do they not like?

Whining, complaining,  and getting mad are great ways to help your reader get sucked in and even chuckle at the simple life things that frustrate us as humans every day. 

Your reader will either be like “What?! How can you not like pepperoni?” Or they’ll be like “yeah traffic is the worst. It makes me so mad too.”

Use these to make your characters more realistic, but don’t take a ton of time detailing them.

Think of likes and dislikes as icing on the cake you’re presenting. They mostly make it look pretty, but it’s not the cake.

And definitely try to use some clever ways to tie it to the plot.

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# 5 Choices

Choices are easier ways to show character traits that directly or indirectly affect the plot and move things along.

For instance, let’s say we have a character named Gabriella. Gabriella is a very time-sensitive person. She is always calculated and never late. She takes the Southbound highway every day, but unlike her coworkers, she takes exit 21 because she has mapped out the fastest route which takes her through downtown. The rest of her coworkers that take the same highway always just stay on and take exit 22 because it’s easier but it’s 2 minutes slower.

Gabriella is more concerned about the extra 2 minutes she’d be “wasting on the highway” as she would put it.

On a normal day in broad daylight, Gabriella was ripped out her car going through downtown at 7:45 am on her way to work off of exit 21. No one has heard from her since and it’s been at least 2 days.

Now, from this example above you can see that Gabriella has an underlining temperament of not wasting any time, especially not for convenience. She’d rather drive through downtown to save 2 minutes than “lose” 2 minutes and stay on the highway. You can make a character like Gabriella make many choices based on time efficiency in an example like this, but the example shows how we’ve displayed a key part of her character, how it affects her choices, and how her choices then affect the plot.

I think the choices a character makes and why are some of the easiest writing tips to show character traits and tie them into the plot seamlessly and without much effort.

I hope this helps!


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Share with us in the comments below.

Tell us about the characters you’re creating.

Experiment on us.

What is your character like?

What are their imperfections?

What are their likes and dislikes and what are you going to do to tie them into your plot to reveal character traits and be clever?

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Other posts you may enjoy:

How To Write 4 Scenes That Reveal Who Your Character Is Seamlessly

What Should I Write About: 22 Writing Prompts to Give You BIG IDEAS

7 Writing Tips that you MUST Use From the Writers of Stranger Things!

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Do you want your story characters to be original?

What does it take to get your story characters to be original?

What have you done to get your story characters to be original?

For your story characters to be original have you considered doing more research?

Share with us in the comments what you are doing to get your story characters to be original.

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What Should I Write About: 22 Writing Prompts to Give You BIG IDEAS

what should i write about writing prompts
what should i write about writing prompts

What should I ask myself when I’m wondering, “what should I write about?”

It is that fateful moment again.

You have gotten out of bed. Brushed your teeth and showered.

The aroma of coffee (or tea, I’m drinking more tea these days personally) fills your kitchen. You pour that beautiful hot steamy comforting liquid into your #1 Boss Mug that you unashamedly bought for yourself since you work from home.

You make your way to your favorite nook to write and you get into your brain stimulating position.

You stare at your computer screen and here it comes…”What should I write about?”

You sit for a moment staring at the screen. Then out the window. And think again, “What should I write about today?”

You wait and wait for inspiration to WOOSH through your door and slap your brain and the words to start flowing masterfully and…nothing.

The dreaded question we ask ourselves every morning doesn’t seem to help much when we are stuck in the vaccuum of our own head. But not you.

If you are reading this you are one of the smart ones that knows in order to get the words flowing ideas must come from elsewhere and you are here to find them.

I hope that this post helps you find that spark to get started today and many days from here on out 🙂

22 Things to help you think through the question, “What should I write about?”

What you can look forward to in this post:

  • Start with simple writing prompts: What are you passionate about?
  • What do you already know a lot about?
  • What relevant events are going on?
  • What do you have strong opinions about?
  • Is there a controversial topic that’s ‘hot’ right now?
  • What do you want readers to take away from your writing?
  • What do you want readers to do with your writing?
  • Do you want to write fiction?
  • Look at your other posts to see if you can go into details about something you previously covered broadly
  • If you already have a following, have you asked them what they want to hear about?
  • Have you used Quora?
  • Have you checked Twitter?
  • Have you written about a time you failed?
  • Take one of your popular posts and write about it from a different angle.
  • Check the comment sections of other bloggers and influencers in your niche.
  • Can you write about a mentor and how they helped your business succeed?
  • Have you written an income report to let your readers in on what’s really working and what’s not for your business?
  • Have you written about your readers’ problems and how to solve them?
  • Have you shared with your readers your writing routine and detailed the different aspects of how you work through a blog post from start to finish?
  • Have you written about a problem you are in the middle of discovering for yourself?
  • Have you shared about a negative comment you received and how you turned it into a good thing?
  • Have you shared with your readers a recent time you were personally refreshed by a blog post you recently read?

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What Should I Write About: 22 Writing Prompts to Give You BIG IDEAS

1. Start Simple. What are you passionate about?

When you are asking yourself the question, “What should I write about?” the easiest writing prompts to write about is to share about things that you are most passionate about.

Something that you are either very knowledgeable because of experience is easier to write about than something you have to spend hours and hours researching.

On the flip side, you can choose a topic or subject that you know little about but may find interesting to write about and do the research knowing that you are going to enjoy it compared to looking into a subject you care little about.

Another convenience of writing about what you are passionate about is that it’s easier to write about things you care a lot about and have enjoyed thinking about.

Try this little writing exercise:

  • Focus on: describing your passion.
  • Try to write this: I love [your passion]. I love doing this because [talk about what excites you and what you find rewarding about it]. Or I love thinking about [your passion] because [talk about why you like it.]
  • Example: I love writing because the English language and the art of storytelling is fascinating.
  • Now go deeper.
  • Google: [your passion]
  • Read an article or 3 that pop out to you.
  • As you are reading pause and write down facts, opinions, quotes, etc, that stick out to you as things that will be important to others as you read them.

If you do just this one exercise you will have enough information and inspiration to write a blog, journal, essay, project, etc.

Just this one writing exercise can take you far if you use it well when you are wondering, “What should I write about?”


2. What should I write about: What do you already know a lot about?

Going back to the first point, it’s easiest to start with something you already know a lot about. Choosing a topic that you already have a great knowledge base on is simpler to share than something you have to go out of your way to find out about. So, when you are having trouble knowing what to write about start with topics you already have a large base knowledge with.

It will take less time, to begin with. You won’t have to take long research breaks and you’ll enjoy writing about something you know very well and have put a good amount of personal time into.

When you’re thinking, “what should I write about?” try this simple exercise:

What do I know about already that I have spent hours learning how to do?

Make a list:

  • Exercise
  • Health
  • Fitness
  • Music
  • Art
  • Your profession
  • Supplements
  • Finance
  • Tech
  • Gluten free
  • writing
  • Research
  • At home recipes
  • How to get your kids to sleep
  • How to get your kids to eat strange foods
  • How to get more readers to your blog
  • How to potty train your pet
  • How to get stains out of shirts
  • Etc

You can see in this list that nothing is off limits when it comes to knowing a lot about something.

No matter who you are, you may know something more than someone else about a given subject

  • How to get my little brother to stop sneaking in my room
  • How to get my kids to get along on a car ride
  • What movies are family friendly
  • What are star constelation names
  • What are some ways I can save money grocery shopping
  • How can I save time grocery shopping
  • How do I relieve back pain

If you have done something and figured out how to do it its worth writing about because someone else is going to be looking to do that same thing eventually.

  • How do I level up faster in this game
  • How do I get my boss to treat me with respect
  • How do I make friends
  • How can I get my brother in law to think I’m cool
  • How do I learn to type faster
  • How do I sleep better
  • I hope the point 🙂

Any topic is up for grabs and you might just be surprised to find out what you know how to do very well that others are looking to read about 🙂

So the next time you are thinking, “what should I write about?” think about anything in your life that you know how to do or know a lot about. And write as if you were telling someone else how to do that thing.


3. What relevant events are going on?

Another great thing that can be very interesting to write about depending on the day would be an event that is relevant.

This could be carried out in three ways.

  1. You can write about a worldwide event that everyone is thinking about and talking about.

For instance, the world pandemic.

2. The other path to carrying this out is to find a relevant event in your specific niche.

Maybe you want to write about fashion and it’s fashion week.

Maybe you want to write about marine life and it’s shark week.

Whatever your niche may be there are almost always big events going on that have to do with your main ideas or relevant ideas.

3. You could write about a specific event in your life that is relevant to your subject.

If you write about fashion you can write about what got you started in your love of fashion.

Or you could write about a controversial situation that happened to you and your fashion. Maybe your friend said your outfit was ugly behind your back and you found out about it?

If you are going to write about an event try to include these tips:

Make the title short and powerful

2 title examples:

Bad- This week is fashion week and we are so excited to see all the different colorful items that the designers will be showing us.

Good- 7 Outfits From Fashion Week That You Will 100% Regret Not Seeing

Or

9 Outfits From Fashion Week that Will Shock Your Socks Off

A little over the top, but it tends to work and I think you can see the difference.

Give tasty info at the start but don’t give away everything

If you are going to write about the event give a few exciting details away at the start but don’t give away the entire cake in the first 3 paragraphs.

Give them something enjoyable to latch onto but save something delicious for the end.

Stick to the facts Jack

Make sure to give your reader really good information and facts not JUST opinions.

We can most certainly include our opinions about the event but make it in small fun doses that give extra personality to your writing.

Name drop

If you can drop important famous heavy hitting names into the writing, don’t be afraid to do so and if it happens to have fun information about the person feel free to add that as well. Personally I would say stick to the facts and don’t let it turn into gossip or slander.

You most certainly don’t have to use all these tips, but use the ones that you think are relevant to the type of event you are writing about.

If you are trying to figure out, “what should I write about?” a great angle to go from would be to consider what relevant events are occurring.

4. What do you have strong opinions about?

If you are still wondering, “what should I write about?” it is easy to find many words when you think of ideas you have strong opinions about.

Sometimes it is easy to punch out a quick article when you have a strong opinion compared to trying to write about things you have no opinion about or haven’t thought about at all.

The stronger your opinion the better and if it is about controversial topics, that’s okay!

It’s okay to have a strong opinion about something and share that opinion knowing that in the comment section you might have people agreeing and disagreeing with you.

The fact that it’s controversial might make your writing have more reaction.

Here’s an exercise to try:

Make a list of topics you would rant about with a close friend or at the dinner table

  • Religion
  • Politics
  • Healthcare
  • Equality and inequality
  • Things at work
  • Things at home
  • Dating habits and practices
  • Movies
  • TV Shows

I’m sure that even in this list you may have seen a topic that you feel like it would be easy to rant and rave about.

Go ahead and write about it in your journal. On your blog. Maybe you have a story you could share with your readers about any of these topics.


If you are looking for something to write about today consider writing about a topic that you have strong opinions about.

5. Is there a controversial topic that’s ‘hot’ right now?

If you are wondering, “what should I write about?” controversy is great for storytelling and marketing.

If you have an opinion about a topic that is a hot button for a lot of people, write about it.

If you have a blog, make a post. It’ll be a great way to get some good comments and conversations rolling.

If you have an essay due and you think that something controversial going on in the world today could be an interesting topic for you to dive into then write about it.

Don’t wait for inspiration to come smack you upside the head if you are thinking, “what should I write about?” go find that inspiration and write about it.

6. What do you want readers to take away from your writing?

When you’re thinking, “what should I write about?” a great and effective tool is to put yourself in your potential reader’s shoes for a moment.

How often do you ask yourself questions like these before writing:,

  • What do I want my readers to learn from this?
  • What do I want my audience to run away with?
  • Did I do a good job of delivering great information that helps them?
  • What will they say to others about what I wrote for them?

Writing is a great way to give back to people. If you have figured something out or had some great success with a particular field, a good place to share with people how they can better their lives is in your writing.

Did you write a personal note to someone to say thank you?

Will your professor appreciate what you put into your writing?

Will your blog readers really enjoy the way you put together your post?

When you are wondering, “what should I write about?” think about the end person who will be reading it?

7. What do you want readers to do with your writing?

When you are pondering, “what should I write about?” thinking about what you want your reader to do (if anything) will really help start you writing on the right track.

Figuring out what you want to say in your writing is paramount, but figuring out what you want your readers ‘to do’ is a key piece of the puzzle.

Do you have a “call to action?”

Do you have a plan for what you want your readers ‘to do’ next after they are done reading or do you have links to other pertinent information you want them to find next?

If you are writing a book, do you want them to search for the next book?

If you are writing an essay, do you want to get a good grade?

If you are writing a blog, what do you want them to click on next?

Do you want them to tell people about it or share it on social media?

An easy way to do this successfully on a blog is to say something like:

If you’d like to learn more about “topic” you can see my detailed post here: “Post Link”

Example: If you want to learn more in-depth about becoming a blogger in 2019, you can check out this post right now: 11 Easy Steps To Becoming a Blogger in 2019.

If on another hand you want your friend to mention your wedding card you sent them, be sure to include a meaningful quote and some personal thoughtful sentiments in it.

Depending on what your medium is will determine how you go about getting the person reading to action.

When the question pops up, “what should I write about?” decide on what you want your reader to do when they are done reading.

8. Do you want to write fiction?

When you are wondering, “what should I write about?” it’s important to note what style of writing you are doing.

It is good to know if you want fiction or nonfiction. Do you want your writing to be about inspiring poems? Or do you want it to be factual information?

Do you like teaching? Or do you like creating?

If you enjoy teaching than it might be a good idea to write blog posts about stuff you’re learning and enjoying yourself, whereas if you like creating characters and a story you might enjoy creating a blog that is a bunch of riveting short stories or poems or whatever writing style you’re passionate about.

If you are thinking, “what should I write about?” know what your writing style is that you are getting into.

9. Look at your other writing to see if you can go into specific detail about something you previously covered broadly.

When you are wondering, “what should I write about?” you can sometimes look no further than your own writing.

You can find a good amount of writing prompts directly in posts you have already written.

If you have a blog or social presence you can even look in your comments to see if commentators have left you details you can write about. Whether it is in the comment section where you have answered some questions that could be turned into blogs or you can scan your major points of a broader post topic to see if there is a major point that you can write another 600 to 1,000 words on.

If you are thinking, “what should I write about?” look at your past writing and see if inspiration has been staring you right in the face.

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What Should I Write About: 22 Writing Prompts to Give You BIG IDEAS

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10. If you already have a following, have you asked them what they want to hear about?

When you’re thinking, “what should I write about?” have you ever considered straight asking your followers, “Hey! What should I write about?”

Have you made your readers feel comfortable enough that they know they can ask questions and receive answers from you?

Have you asked them directly in the posts or in the comments what your followers are interested in hearing about next?

When you are thinking, “what should I write about?” look no further than your peeps.

11. Have you used Quora?

Thinking, “what should I write about?” consider looking at the questions people are asking on Quora and how many answers they’ve received.

Quora is a great site to be a part of the conversation.

What makes Quora great about getting superb writing prompts is that people are literally just asking questions there.

They go to this site to find answers. So make sure you are there and ready to help out and answer their questions.

All you have to do is just browse through the most popular questions related to your niche and presto! You’ve got great material that you know people all over the world are interested in.

When you are thinking, “what should I write about?” download the Quora app and start scrolling not trolling.

12. Have you checked Twitter?

“What should I write about?”

“Have you checked twitter?”

Check out the most popular tweets going on in your subject matter and run with it.

For any social site these things ebb and flow in popularity, so be sure to stay up to date and take advantage of when certain topics are going viral.

If you are trying to promote your blog, do your best to get into the conversation and be helpful and relevant so that when the right time comes you can drop your post into the conversation naturally to get more viewers on your page.

Thinking, “what should I write about?” a little birdie told me to check Twitter.

13. Have you written about a time you failed?

People love a great story.

And if you’re still thinking, “what should I write about?” they love a great comeback story.

We as humans eat that stuff up because we all fail and we all want to know that it is possible to succeed even though we fail. We resonate with each other and learn through others’ failures and successes.

Don’t be shy to write about a time you biffed it majorly and then how that turned into a reason for you to get back up, try again, and crush it the next time around.

When you are wondering, “what should I write about?” try writing about a failure in your life.

14. Take one of your writings and write about it from a different angle.

Wondering, “what should I write about?” try writing about something you already wrote about but from a different angle.

If you have a blog and one of your posts went viral or maybe just one that is very popular on your blog, take a moment to think about if you can write this post or story from another angle.

Seeing it from a fresh perspective might resonate with more of your followers and it might help you see things from a new light as well.

“What should I write about?” try thinking outside your own box.

15. Check the comment sections of other bloggers and influencers in your niche.

When you are concerned, “what should I write about?” check other bloggers comment sections.

You can tell if its going to be a good topic if you see it repeated by many commentators or if it’s a topic that is highly debated.

Have you perused comments to see if there may be a great comment to expound upon?

Did someone ask a great question that you can answer in a post? Or did they add some advice that makes you think about another topic you can go into even further?

An easy way to see this is to look for comments that got lots of conversation going. Find a comment that went on a little bit of a buzz or maybe started a good discussion and use that to create another amazing post.

“What should I write about?” look at the comments and reviews.

16. Can you write about a mentor?

“What should I write about?” what mentors have you had?

Maybe you took an online course that shared some information with you that really helped you succeed whereas before you were failing.

Perhaps your mentor has an affiliate program and you can add some good reviews about the product because you have used it and learned from the person and have good insight to give.

See if you can help your readers by posting a clear and concise review of the product.

Maybe you had a teacher or professor that inspired you?

Fitness instructor?

Parent?

Pastor?

Older sibling?

It could even be a book they wrote.

When you are concerned, “what should I write about?” think about people in your life that have inspired you and what that lead you to.

17. If you have a blog have you written an income report to let your readers in on what’s really working and what’s not for your business?

If you have a blog and are wondering, “what should I write about?” consider starting a monthly blogging income report.

Many bloggers feel comfortable sharing the income they are making through their blogs.

They share what they are making through sponsored links, through freelancing, and through affiliate links.

I have seen this work very well for them and their blogging business as it can be used as social proof for them for affiliate products they write about.

Can you share a report and how can you make that information benefit your readers?

“What should I write about?” consider starting a monthly blogging income report.

18. Have you written about your readers’ problems and how to solve them?

A lot of internet searching comes down to some simple user facts.

I have a problem and I am searching for an answer.

Think about how many times you’ve done that this week.

“Hey Siri, where’s a good place to eat near me?”

“Alexa, what time is it in London?”

“Hey Google, do I strain the noodles before I add the salt in?”

You may not have asked any of these exact questions, but think about the ones you did ask and think about your exact wording.

It is very common that as consumers we ask very similar questions.

Use Google’s keyword planner to see how many people are looking up what you’re wanting to write about.

So since we know people are looking up answers to their problems it should be an easy writing prompt for you to think of a common problem many consumers need help with that you have already solved for yourself.

That makes for a great writing opportunity and now you have plenty to write about since you’ve already gone through the problem yourself and came out the other side with a solution.

“What should I write about?” Solve your reader’s problems.

19. Have you shared about a negative comment you received and how you turned it into a good thing?

If you have a social presence or blog and you’re thinking “What should I write about?” consider writing about a negative thing someone commented about your post.

As humans, we love reading about a good controversy. I mentioned this before.

This is why it could be easy to take a negative comment you receive and turn it into a good thing for your writing career.

One of my email mentors does this frequently on his email list.

Someone will reply to his email negatively and say horrible things about his style, marketing tactics, and character at times.

He will almost always write about the negative feedback and spin it into a good thing he can teach his email list.

Now you could take this and retaliate and say all kinds of firey things back to this person, but I wouldn’t recommend it.

I would instead take the opportunity to thank the person and explain how they are missing out on great information or how a comment like that is completely justified and that they have valid points.

But you have to decide how you would deal with negative comments on your blog or social presence.

“What should I write about?” Write about a negative comment.

20. Have you shared with your readers your writing routine and detailed the different aspects of how you work through a writing project from start to finish?

If you’re wondering, “what should I write about?” it might be inspiring and helpful for your audience to see into how and why you write the way you do, especially if you are in the writing, freelance writing, and blogging niche.

For me, one of my key secrets is outlining.

Outlining sounds awful and boring and to be honest it is!

But once you get the hang of it and you are doing most of the foundation work in your head it becomes second nature and is extremely useful. (Thanks, Mrs. Louden! My English teacher.)

I used to think it was useless as a kid, and it was because my essay had all of 3 points, so pretty pointless as it would be hard to forget three points, but in a post like this with 22 points, it is EASY to forget where you are, where you came from, and where you’re headed next in the point.

So if you think your readers would enjoy looking into your writing process, consider blogging about how you create a brilliant blog post!

“What should I write about?” Share your writing process with you readers.

21. Have you written about a problem you are in the middle of discovering for yourself?

We already discussed writing about a problem and solution you have already found, but are you brave enough to write about a problem you are in the middle of and the fact that you haven’t found a solution yet?

Could you create a post while you’re in the midst of the problem and write the post live and update it as you solve your own problem?

There are several ways you could take this, let me know if anyone does as it sounds like an interesting writing experiment!

22. Have you shared with your readers a recent time you were personally refreshed by a blog post you just read?

Considering the question, “what should I write about?” What have you been reading lately that inspired you?

Don’t back away from paying it forward and sharing about a recent post that you read on someone else’s blog that really inspired you or helped you get out of a rough spot.

Do you have a blogging mentor of sorts?

Reach out to them and see if they don’t mind you reviewing a post that you personally found helpful.

You can even let them know about it and see if they’d like to link to your review.

Especially if you give them social proof of high praise they might be likely to send some of their readers to it so they can see how the mentor’s writing helped someone in the real world on a completely different blog.

You never know how much helping someone else out will help you.

Don’t be afraid to invite others along with you on your path to success as a writer.

Did you enjoy this post?

Did you find a prompt that helped you?

What did you end up writing about from reading the post: What Should I Write About?

If you found your prompt here, feel free to share a link to your post in the comments.

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What Should I Write About: 22 Writing Prompts to Give You BIG IDEAS

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What Should I Write About?

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5 Steps: How to Make Money Blogging with Affiliate Marketing!

How to make money as a blogger, affiliate links, affiliate marketing
How to make money as a blogger, affiliate links, affiliate marketing

Make Money Blogging with Affiliate Marketing!

You may be wondering what affiliate marketing is.

You are definitely wondering how to use affiliate marketing to make more money online.

It may sound confusing, but it is actually very very simple.

What is Affiliate Marketing?

Affiliate marketing is promoting a product, service, or company with a web link and getting paid for clicks, sign-ups, and purchases from the link they give you.

It really is as simple as that. I promise.

All you have to do is find a company that has an affiliate program, and apply to their program.

They provide the link (most of the time, Amazon actually has you pick a product and then makes the link for you) and usually have a place for you to sign in and check out how your link is working.

How Do I Actually Make Money with Affiliate Marketing?

That’s a good question.

There are many ways to go about it.

  1. You can make your own Blog and use what you write to promote affiliate products.
  2. You can promote on your social media such as Pinterest, Youtube, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter. (There are rules and restrictions to posting affiliate links on certain social channels so be sure to check with each one before posting anything they would deem against their rules.)
  3. You can build an email list of happy subscribers and tell them about products you like to use with affiliate links.
  4. You can write a blog post today and contact a well-known blogger and ask them to feature your blog post on their site.
  5. Any way you can think of getting your link in front of the eyes of internet readers and users is a way to make money with affiliate links (you have to follow the affiliate program’s rules.)

Already own a blog? Using Adsense? Use Ezoic. Make 5X – 10X more on ads with Ezoic! See for yourself. – These ads use machine learning. Set it and leave it.

How Do I Know People Will Actually Buy from my Links?

Affiliate marketing is not a get rich quick scheme.

It takes work, practice, and study. Just like anything else.

But the nice thing is, once it’s out there and in front of ongoing traffic, it’s almost passive income.

So going about it in a professional and right way can really pay off in the long run.

If you decide to build a blog and promote through your own blog you will have to build up a trusted following, but if done right, you can really make some serious money blogging.

I know of bloggers that make an extra $500- $1000 a year all the way to $50,000 a month using affiliate marketing on their own blogs.

Like most side hustles, work from home, and full-time self-employment it is very much what you make of it and how much time you want to put into it!

Why Would a Company Want to Use me as an Affiliate Marketer?

A lot of companies love using affiliates for marketing their products these days.

Back in the day before blogging and social media they had to pay BIG ADVERTISING FEES and weren’t guaranteed any return on their investment.

Whereas with you promoting a product, they don’t have to pay out the commission fee to you unless the product actually sells or they get an actual lead from your promotion. So it’s a win-win situation for them and you 🙂

Already own a blog? Using Adsense? Use Ezoic. Make 5X – 10X more on ads with Ezoic! See for yourself. – These ads use machine learning. Set it and leave it.

Side note: Something I personally love about affiliate marketing compared to making and selling your own products is you don’t have to deal with returns or customer service.

You get to make some extra cash while you’re sleeping and not worry about the customer complaints or returned items.

Sounds like the dream right?

Well…

Is affiliate marketing all fun and games?

                                                                        

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Make money blogging with affiliate marketing

Is Affiliate Marketing All Fun and Games?

Of course not!

There are ups and downs to all kinds of work.

Example: I had a friend that got paid by his company to go to theme parks regularly. I’m talking weekly getting paid to go to Busch Gardens and Scuba Diving in Florida.

I thought, “Dude! That’s amazing! What a sweet gig!”

He said, “Well yeah it would be except that I’m always going as the liaison or glorified tour guide for the company so I’m always there with people I don’t know or am working for.”

I can think of many worse ways to get paid, but the point is there are ups and downs to every job.

So in the same way, affiliate marketing can be tough and it is hard to get started, but once you wake up to check your account, or you get done watching netflix and see that you made a few bucks while you were doing it, and realize how many ways you can scale this, it can be a great side hustle or even make a living from.

See how to become a blogger.

But everyone has their ideal work environment.

For me, it’s being around friends and family more and working from my couch while watching a movie with my wife. Or quitting work at 12 pm because my friend invited me to a movie and in the back of my mind knowing that I’m making a living for my family while spending time with my friends.

Of course there are days where you feel ZERO motivation.

That happens to everyone.

You can either push yourself on days like that or say, “Hey, I’m gonna go outside and get some exercise throwing a ball with my dog and if I feel like making some post later this evening, great, no worries.”

It’s days like that I can’t believe I get to do what I am doing and I feel so grateful.

What Companies Offer Affiliate Marketing?

There are LOTS.

You have but to only do a google search:

(product/service) affiliate program” and you will see many of great choices.

Make sure that you check out the programs for legitimacy.

And be sure to understand the program’s terms and rules so that you don’t lose your account with them prematurely.

What is the Best Way to Make the Most of Affiliate Links?

  1. Loyalty! Loyalty! Loyalty! Build a loyal following of readers by promoting things you enjoy and trust. Be honest! It’s okay to not like something, just be honest about it. Your readers will notice and they will turn to you for more things. Build loyalty by being loyal and trustworthy.
  2. Choose products that you are personally interested in. It’ll be easier to write about and it’ll be more natural. Trust me, your readers will be able to tell.
  3. Find the right products for you and your readers. Do online research. Most companies that have affiliate programs are looking for more affiliates. The cost of advertising through affiliates is low for them.
  4. Be relevant for your readership: this seems like a no-brainer, but it’s laughable the amount of weird stuff you can find blogs trying to products that have ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with what they are writing about.
  5. Be up to date: take time every so often to edit and revise your older posts.
  6. MOST IMPORTANT: I feel like this doesn’t need to be said, but bloggers everywhere prove me wrong all the time. Write about and promote what your readers want! For affiliate marketing, if you want to make money and get clicks, promote and write about things that your audience is interested in. Take time to figure this out and make it a regular priority for you.

Already own a blog? Using Adsense? Use Ezoic. Make 5X – 10X more on ads with Ezoic! See for yourself. – These ads use machine learning. Set it and leave it.

What Types of Products Sell Best?

You can do market research and find out which products are selling a lot, but that’s not the most important issue to focus on.

You could also join a site like Salehoo, where they give the best selling products that are trending. Go here to see Salehoo for yourself.

You could also join a site like Salehoo, where they give the best selling products that are trending. Go here to see Salehoo for yourself.

  • Focus on quality over quantity. Products that usually end up working out badly for others will cause your readers a bad time too and they won’t trust you for other products. So pick products that are good quality and give whoever tries them a good experience and they’ll come back to you for more and be grateful for your input.
  • Focus on products that will be interesting to your audience, not products that just sell in general.
  • Focus on products that you use and love.
  • Don’t be afraid to find products that are similar and review, compare, and contrast.
  • Find affiliate networks and look at the resources they offer to affiliates to help them get more sales and clicks.
  • Use services like Hubspot and Google Analytics to see what’s going on in your market. Facts about what your audience is looking up and reading about are more beneficial than what you imagine they want to hear.
  • Research, research, research. Do your homework.
  • Compare commission rates and talk to your affiliate managers about upping your rates when you’re doing well.
  • Talk to your affiliate managers about doing sales exclusively for your readership.
  • Keep an eye out for discount codes to share with your followers.
  • Make the best use of the available affiliate networks. Through the networks, many programs and products are available to promote. Make sure you look through these and take advantage of what they have to offer. Searching through Affiliate Networks will help give you ideas you may never have thought of.

Google search Affiliate Networks to get some good ideas.

Hope this helps!

What didn’t I cover in this post?

What other questions should I cover on Affiliate Marketing?

What questions do you still have?

Already own a blog? Using Adsense? Use Ezoic. Make 5X – 10X more on ads with Ezoic! See for yourself. – These ads use machine learning. Set it and leave it.

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4 Tips How to Write your Character Hitting Rock Bottom

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5 Tricks How to Hide Your Villain Right Before Their Eyes

How to Write From Your Villain’s Mind.

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Bluehost hosts your blog so that you can own your domain and make money blogging. Check them out only if you’re interested in making money blogging; otherwise, go for a free blog instead 🙂

Already own a blog? Monetize with Ezoic. Make 5X more on ads with Ezoic! See for yourself. – These ads use machine learning. Set it and leave it.

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How to Make Money Blogging with Affiliate Marketing

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Is Writing your craft? You might love this. Check out the 4,900+ reviews it has on Amazon to see if this might be what you’re looking for.

                                                                        

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