RANDOM ACTIONS:
Dive
Decorated
Whisper
Furnished
Sponge
Slapped
Compressed

RANDOM STARTERS:
fight
where can
how to keep
how to settle
inexpensive
where should
why couldn't

RANDOM TRAITS:
Classical
Swollen
Wonderful
Sideways Adverb
Cooperative
Racist
Typical
Oval

The Ask Dr. X Content Template

One of the best ways to get familiar with the problems of your target audience is by offering a form where they can ask you questions.

You get a second advantage by doing so: You’ll never run out of ideas for articles or podcasts.

Assuming that you have received a question in some way or another, this is how to use the Ask Dr. X Content Template:

1: Pick a question about your topic.

2: Write a headline that summons up the question and invites people to read your article.

Examples:

“”I’m almost starving every day, yet I cannot lose weight,” – How to Solve This Common Problem”

“Does This Look Familiar: “My Teenager Kid Will Not Listen” – 12 Ways to Make Your Children Listen”

3: Write a short introduction to the question you’re going to bring up in the article, and let your readers know that they’ll also get a possible solution.

4: Quote the question you’ve received. You should correct grammar and spelling errors, but besides that don’t edit too much. The question should be understandable, but leave it with the questioners personal style. Sign the question with a pseudonym.

5: Answer the questioner personally. Literally. Start out with “Dear Pseudo”, and then write a direct answer to the question.

6: Are there any other related questions you can come up with, or that others have asked, Then summon them up in your own words, add them to the article, and answer them as well.

7: Summon up your article in the conclusion, and lead into your resource box, if you’re writing for article syndication, traffic or back links.

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BASIC QUESTIONS:
Who
What
Why
Where
When
How

JOURNALIST QUESTIONS:
Who did that?
What happened?
Where did it take place?
When did it take place?
Why did that happen?
How did it happen?

FURTHER QUESTIONS:
Whom?
Which?
Whose?
How far? 
How long? 
How much? 
How many?
How come?
Why not?
Why didn't?