RANDOM ACTIONS:
Claim
Impact
Connected
Purse
Expire
Commit
Smuggle

RANDOM STARTERS:
which aren't
top
take care of
cover
whom
how to diagnose
how to lessen

RANDOM TRAITS:
Sheer
Alphabetical
Oval
Roast
Encouraging
Countless
Daily
Incorrect

The End Is Near Content Template

You may see this as a worst-case scenario, but sometimes a tabula rasa is not that bad after all.

With the help of this article template, you can dig out some resources you might even recognize that you had.

Let us drop the atom bomb and get started. This is how to use the End Is Near Content Template:

1: Start out with some brainstorming.

You lost your computer with all your writings, and templates, and PayPal messages from previous sales.

Even worse: Your web hosting went bankrupt, and your sites are all down. You never got around to take any backup, so all your previous work is lost.

Could it get any worse, Yes, your auto-responder service ceased to exist. You lost your mailing list with all 7,476 names and addresses.

Add any other thing that would mean a disaster to you, and write about all those things.

2: Come up with an intriguing headline. With a worst-case scenario like this, you will probably find it easy.

3: Write an introduction to your article. Tell your target audience that you are making this up, but that things like that actually happen. People have gone from thousands of dollars per week in income to zero, just because of an algorithm change in a search engine.

4: In the following paragraphs, you can go into details with your ground zero plot.

5: You should not leave your reader or yourself in the dark. Do some brainstorming here and come up with solutions. You lost all, no! Not all. You never lost your experience. In fact, now that you can start from scratch, what will you do different this time,

Give your readers a short resume on how to get started again.

6: 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?