RANDOM ACTIONS:
Seem
Grace
Store
Arbitrate
Participated
Bored
Dismounted

RANDOM STARTERS:
which do
vs
use
cope
how to become
reviews
why shouldn't

RANDOM TRAITS:
Upper-Class
Soaked
Selective
Rewarding
Sporty
Empty
Fine
Unproductive

The Julius Caesar Content Template

Now, old Julius was well-known for all his quotes. Who does not know “I came, I saw, I conquered” or “The die is cast”,

But what does Julius Caesar have to do with article templates, you might ask,

Everything, I answer. And I will show you.

This is how to use the Julius Caesar Content Template:

1: Pick a historical person, and find quotes by this person. You can either just search for “name + quote” or go to a site like BrainyQuotes. Gather three to five quotes.

2: Time to brainstorm. What do these quotes teach you about your niche, You have to be creative here and think out of the box.

3: Craft an intriguing headline. Include the name of your historical person, e.g. “What You Can Learn from Napoleon Bonaparte about Parenting”. Your readers will be very curious to know the connection between two such non-related areas.

4: Write an introduction to your article. You could tell your readers a bit about your historical person or your relationship to him. Or slightly touch the relationship – or lack of same – between your person and your niche.

5: Use your first quote. Then explain how this relates to your niche, and what people can learn from it.

6: Use your second and third quote the same way.

7: Summon up your article in the conclusion, and lead into your resource box, if you are 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?