When people find out I work as a freelance writer, they inevitable ask, where do you get story ideas?
It’s a simple question, but not a simple answer. The fact is, I get ideas for stories everywhere, too many places to explain in a quick soundbite for a new acquaintance.
During any given week, I’ll find ideas for stories in the local newspaper, talking to a friend or in a trade magazine. I’ve added a few resources to my idea bag of tricks over the years, thanks mainly to Twitter, Facebook and other social media. And I’m happy to share.
Sources for Story Ideas
Here, in no particular order, and my 10 favorite sources of story ideas:
1. Breaking news.
This is a daily reporter’s bread and butter. Not so much for magazine feature writers. But even feature writers are called upon occasionally to attend town meetings, trials, games, press conferences or other impromptu or staged public or private gatherings to do interviews, witness something first hand or gather color for a piece they’re working on. Breaking news can be a good source of follow-up stories too.
2. Interviews.
You’re scheduled to do an interview for story A. Don’t pass up the chance to tack on a couple unrelated questions at the end that could serve as a start for story B. If you get good material, you can use it in a query on the subject, and if you get a bite, in the story too.
3. Conversations with acquaintances.
I don’t write about family and friends. But I do listen carefully when they talk about what’s going on in their personal or work lives because you never know when you might hear something that clicks. This happened to me not long ago when a friend told me that her company had curtailed flying to meetings and was having people do more teleconferencing. I used that tidbit along with a couple other examples to successfully pitch a story on the growth of teleconferencing in the wake of climbing costs for fuel and air travel.
4. Facebook and Twitter.
Social media is the 21st century equivalent of the man-on-the-street interviews I did as a newspaper reporter, where I’d hang out in a public place and listen to what people were saying, or go up to people and pose a question I needed answered for the story. Now I post questions on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn. When I do, I always make sure to identify myself as a writer working on a story, so people realize if they answer, whatever they share could end up in print.
5. Local news.
Yes, I blog, keep up with news through my RSS feeds and spend most of my working hours in front of a screen. But I’m still an avid dead-tree newspaper reader. I read the local paper every morning. Stories on the business page can introduce me to companies or people that could fit into a national trend piece. I’ve gotten assignments for business stories from ideas I pitched about personalities from the sports pages. And you never know what other gems are hidden in pages of the local news.
6. Academic journals.
I don’t write about health, nutrition or science, but I know writers who do, and they routinely read the academic journals in their area of interest for new studies and other research they can use as the basis of stories for general-interest publications.
7. Trade and industry magazines.
The trades are equivalent of academic journals for business and technology writers like me, in that they are often the first places to cover new products, services or trends. An astute writer can take stories written for a trade audience and recast them into articles that appeal to a broader audience of lay readers.
8. Trade shows and conventions.
Once upon a time, I went to the Comdex computer trade show, Consumer Electronics Show and Internet World every year. Each one was three or four days of intense information collection and I’d come back exhausted. But by sitting in on lectures and panel discussions, visiting exhibitors’ booths, collecting product literature and schmoozing at breakfast buffets and cocktail parties I had a stockpile of information to sift through back in my office for possible trend pieces, profiles and other stories.
9. Numbers.
I love digging into a good 10K or 10Q. Spreadsheets make me swoon. It’s not that I love numbers, it’s that I love figuring out what they mean, and then building stories around them. And as Mary Chapin Carpenter sang, “…the stars might lie, but the numbers never do.”
10 Press releases and PR pitches.
The stories I glean from press releases aren’t necessarily the ones the agencies are selling. But the company or product being pitched might fit into a completely different trend I’m writing about. Or if it includes a source who sounds like someone I might want to use in the future, I’ll keep tabs on them by I’ll inviting them to join my LinkedIn connections.
Where do you look for story ideas? Share your secrets by leaving a comment.
[Flickr photo by anieto2k]
Susan says
Michelle, thanks for these! Another source that I monitor regularly is my alumni publications. Often there are interesting stories that haven’t been picked up by mainstream media yet. Scanning my class notes also gives me ideas on people who might be useful contacts. In fact, I just read that one of my old classmates is now editing a magazine in San Fran…
Martha Spizziri says
Michelle,
In this time when the economy is under such and intense spotlight, trade and business-to-business (B2B) publications are an especially great place to get information on specific niche markets — construction, farming, manufacturing, the supply chain, etc. — that might be relevant to your local area or have a significant impact the economy as a whole. As it happens, the ASBPE National Blog had a blog post on that topic today:
Credit Crisis May Be Good and Bad for B2B Journalists
Martha Spizziri
Web Editor
American Society of Business Publication Editors
Michelle Rafter says
Martha: Thanks for weighing in on this. As a long time trade magazine writer, and former trade magazine editor, I have a great deal of respect for business-to-business publications.
Michelle Rafter
Nadine says
Thanks for publishing this very informative post.
I saw your “status update” on LinkedIn and tried to use the accompanying URL to read this post, but ended up lost in cyberspace. Fortunately, I was able to click through on the “My Blog” link on your profile page. Methinks perhaps that URL needs a bit of tweaking.
Michelle Rafter says
Thanks Nadine. I used the Tiny URL service to make the original URL smaller. It worked for me just now, but it did take a long time to load.
Michelle R.
Katrina says
How/where does one sign up to receive press releases and PR pitches?
Clarence Giles says
Timeless, timely (planning my return to freelancing) and unselfish advice, Michelle. Thanks, too much!
Clarence Giles
Danette says
I usually don’t have a hard time coming up with ideas and have tapped into a few of your pointers here.
Like you, I read (skim) 2 papers a day, my local paper and the St. Louis Mo. paper. Not a day goes by when I don’t find something of interest in one of them – an article/example I can use for my class, a comic to send my kids, an article to share with someone, a coupon, or an ad that prompts an idea. There have been many serendipitous finds that never would have happened online.
Michelle V. Rafter says
Thanks Danette:
I’m a huge believer in serendipity, but I disagree that it doesn’t happen online. I constantly come across material as I wander online through my workday that sparks story ideas, or that I squirrel away for something I’m already working on. That’s what makes Evernote so great — I installed the Web Clipper app on Chrome, so when I see something, I copy it into a folder on Evernote for when I’m working on story pitches.
Michelle
Kathy Widenhouse says
Sometimes a story idea is right in my mailbox. I write for nonprofits and naturally, when it comes to appeal letters my antennae are up. I wrote an article comparing two different envelopes that came in my mail one day — and why one was the stronger format to use. (You can read “A Tale of Two Envelope Carriers” here: http://www.nonprofitcopywriter.com/envelope-carriers.html). Thanks for the great info!
Wendy Bottrell says
Good ideas and will bookmark this. Thanks for the resource. Best Regards, Wendy http://wendybottrell.com 2013 Wordcount Blogathon