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Almost Timely News, 11 September 2022: Determining High-Value Topics (9/11) :: View in Browser

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Almost Timely News, 11 September 2022: Determining High-Value Topics

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What’s On My Mind: How To Determine High-Value Topics

Let’s say you’re getting ready to write a book or put together a big presentation. Lots of people have excellent guides about the process itself, such as my friend Tamsen Webster’s Find the Red Thread process. But relatively few tackle figuring out what the topic should be in the first place. So I thought I’d share a few different things I do to figure out topics and ideas; hopefully they’ll be helpful to you, especially if you’ve been asked to come up with a topic for a book or a conference talk.

The first step is a bit of self-awareness. What are the topics and areas where you have actual expertise of some kind to share? You can’t build with materials you don’t have, so that part comes first. The best place to figure this out? Your inbox. What are the topics and discussions you’re giving advice or perspective on all the time? What do people need your help with most frequently? At work, what do people stop by your desk to ask about all the time?

Here’s a good one: what are you really tired of answering?

The second step is to listen. A lot. Go listen to conversations in hallways at conferences. Go listen to questions and answers from others on the topic, if there are any. Go hang out on Reddit, in Discord or Slack, anywhere people can have real conversations, and listen to the questions being asked and the answers being given.

What questions do you have a better answer for?

Here’s one of my favorite secret questions I ask myself: what answers do I disagree with most, perhaps even vigorously? The more I have an emotional reaction to something, the more I know there’s something there worth exploring.

If you already do a lot of writing, check your analytics! What are the topics that have captured the attention of your audience already?

Google Analytics 4 screenshot

If you don’t have any of that, take a look at your favorite SEO tool to see what people are Googling for, and use that as a jumping off point, especially Google’s “people also ask” questions.

The third step is to extend your idea. Adjacency is one of the most power idea-growing tools we have, and it’s based on your subject matter expertise. When someone’s talking about problems they’re having, do they really have just those problems, or is there an underlying root problem? At lunch this week, a colleague asked why I thought companies had so many heterogenous data problems and I said the real problem is the people using the systems. The systems and data complexity is just a symptom of a much bigger problem.

With your topic, what’s the next logical step, the next logical magnification of the problem? How big does the impact get if you don’t address it? For example, the EU essentially ruled that the use of Google Analytics 3 within the EU is flat out illegal, and several nations have litigated cases against it, such as France’s CNIL. What are the logical consequences of this? If Google Analytics, and the fundamental technologies it is based on are illegal, what else is illegal? Your SaaS marketing automation software, if it has a similar technical architecture, probably is. So is your CRM. We’re still waiting to see if the EU agrees that Google Analytics 4 solves the problems found in Google Analytics 3 or not.

From there, you could expand the topic to compliant technologies or privacy-friendly analytics alternatives like marketing mix modeling – but the point is that adjacency is what helps you showcase your knowledge.

The fourth step is to experiment with low-risk content. Before you sacrifice 18 months of your sanity writing a book or hundreds of hours building a course, write a newsletter article. Put up a YouTube video. Conduct a webinar. Publish a short whitepaper. If your idea in a smaller form doesn’t get any traction, you can be fairly certain making it bigger won’t make it better. My friend Jay Baer does talks on a topic for a year and collects audience reactions from it – then he writes the book if there’s enough interest.

Last week I started promoting the paper on private social media communities. I had initially set out to write a book about it, but I wasn’t sure it was worth it, so I made a paper instead. And you downloaded it like crazy and replied, commented, and asked questions so… looks like a book is on the horizon for it after all.

Of course, the fifth and final step is to do it, to make the idea real. To write the book, to deliver the talk, to build the course – and then use the feedback you get to make an even better version 2.

But as with any process, skipping straight to the end probably isn’t the best idea, so take the process I’ve outlined above to identify a topic and then see how viable it is for a big project. This method will save you a lot of time and heartache!

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ICYMI: In Case You Missed it

Besides the new Google Analytics 4 course I’m relentlessly promoting (sorry not sorry), I would recommend the bit on how AI will impact SEO. It’s not a canned, easy answer.

Skill Up With Classes

These are just a few of the classes I have available over at the Trust Insights website that you can take.

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Get Back to Work!

Folks who post jobs in the free Analytics for Marketers Slack community may have those jobs shared here, too. If you’re looking for work, check out these five most recent open positions, and check out the Slack group for the comprehensive list.

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What I’m Reading: Your Stuff

Let’s look at the most interesting content from around the web on topics you care about, some of which you might have even written.

Social Media Marketing

Media and Content

SEO, Google, and Paid Media

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Tools, Machine Learning, and AI

Analytics, Stats, and Data Science

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Events I’ll Be At

Here’s where I’m speaking and attending. Say hi if you’re at an event also:

  • Content Marketing World, September 2022, Cleveland, OH
  • MarketingProfs B2B Forum, October 2022, Boston
  • Heapcon, November 2022, Belgrade, Serbia

Events marked with a physical location may become virtual if conditions and safety warrant it.

If you’re an event organizer, let me help your event shine. Visit my speaking page for more details.

Can’t be at an event? Stop by my private Slack group instead, Analytics for Marketers.

How to Stay in Touch

Let’s make sure we’re connected in the places it suits you best. Here’s where you can find different content:

Required Disclosures

Events with links have purchased sponsorships in this newsletter and as a result, I receive direct financial compensation for promoting them.

Advertisements in this newsletter have paid to be promoted, and as a result, I receive direct financial compensation for promoting them.

My company, Trust Insights, maintains business partnerships with companies including, but not limited to, IBM, Cisco Systems, Amazon, Talkwalker, MarketingProfs, MarketMuse, Agorapulse, Hubspot, Informa, Demandbase, The Marketing AI Institute, and others. While links shared from partners are not explicit endorsements, nor do they directly financially benefit Trust Insights, a commercial relationship exists for which Trust Insights may receive indirect financial benefit, and thus I may receive indirect financial benefit from them as well.

Thank You!

Thanks for subscribing and reading this far. I appreciate it. As always, thank you for your support, your attention, and your kindness.

See you next week,

Christopher S. Penn


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