Whenever you haven't sent an email in more than 45 days, Buttondown sends a friendly little reminder (just one — we're not monsters!) that ends with a call-to-action: if there's anything we can do to help alleviate your writer's block, reply and let us know!
A customer wrote in with a common question:
Hey Justin — I love Buttondown the tool but I must confess that I've come down with a serious case of writer's block, as you say. It was very easy to send out the first few editions of the newsletter but as I got further and further down the line it became increasingly difficult to come up with new ideas about what to write. How do you find topics?
There's one word that I lasered in on there — can you guess what it is?
It's new. New ideas about what to write.
I am sure there is a cute term for this fallacy, but I don't know what it is, so I'm going to call it the writer-audience context gap. (Okay, that's not a cute term at all.)
The writer-audience context gap refers to a simple fallacy:
Here's the big secret: most of the best content writing and marketing can sound like screaming into the void over and over, like a radio tower not quite sure of who's picking up on the broadcast.
Lean into this! Whenever you're feeling at wit's end about what to write, pore through your archives — on Buttondown and otherwise — to see what can be revisited or upcycled. The best writers have a handful of messages that their entire audience knows well, not dozens of messages that are lightly diffused across their audience.