RANDOM ACTIONS:
Spoke
Bottle
Measured
Confused
Scraped
Presuppose
Transport

RANDOM STARTERS:
get out of
how to easily
respond
Isn't
half priced
where will
free shipping

RANDOM TRAITS:
Residential
Skilful
Moral
Nosy
Philosophical
Splendid
Wonderful
Stale

# The Seasonal Article Template

If you check Google Trends, you’ll notice a lot of searches for “Christmas” in November and December; for Valentine’s Day in February; for Yom Kippur in the Autumn; and so on.

In other words: Holidays are popular. And the best thing is that they keep coming back.

If you write an article about Hanukkah this year, it could still be read ten years or even more from now.

When you write an article, using the Seasonal Article Template, you write an evergreen piece of work.

This is how you do:

1: Pick your holiday, and find an angle that relates to your field.

2: Come up with an intriguing headline that includes the holiday’s name.

Example:

“10 Ways Christmas Can Help Your Online Business”

“Fact: 90% of Married Couples Argue Over Valentine’s Day Dinner”

3: Write an introduction to your article.

4: Write the content. If your headline includes a “10 steps” or “12 ways”, use bulleted lists, and elaborate on each bullet. If your headline is of a more general nature, then write 3-4 paragraphs of content.

5: 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?