

Table of Contents:
- Talk to Your Readers
- Send a Quick Email Survey
- Dive Into Blog Comment Sections
- Mine Amazon Reviews
- Explore Feedback on Niche Review Sites
- Participate in Online Professional Communities
- Listen In On Reddit Conversations
- Check Popular Questions on Google
- See What People Are Asking on Quora
- Review Online Tables of Contents
- Do a Competitor Content Scan
- Research Industry Trends
- Brainstorm for Better Content Ideas

Download This Report for Research Inspiration
Download this State of Marketing Strategy and Management Report to learn what successful marketers do to generate big results. This report is custom, proprietary research conducted and compiled by CoSchedule and can serve as a great example to review as you begin your own research processes. [Cookie "Get Your State of Marketing Report || https://media.coschedule.com/uploads/Blog_13-Research-Strategies-07.png || Download Now || https://media.coschedule.com/uploads/CoSchedule_State_Of_Marketing_2019_Full_Report-1.pdf"]Talk to Your Readers
The best way to learn what matters to your readers is simple: talk to them. Sure, one-on-one conversations take time -- but they enable you to have real, authentic interactions with your readers. You can engage participants with open-ended questions, ask follow-ups, and gain insights you might not have expected. When Groove CEO Alex Turnbull wanted to learn more about his customers' pain points, he personally reached out to set up conversations — with more than 2,000 customers.
- What are the main challenges you're facing in your business right now?
- What do you like about our content? What don't you like?
- What kind of content would you like to see more of?


Send a Quick Email Survey
Sending out an email survey is the easiest way to learn more about your readers, particularly if you have a highly engaged list. But remember, your readers are busy. 52% won't spend more than three minutes on a survey, according to a study by OpinionLab. Limit your survey to just one or two open-ended questions to boost your response rates and ensure useful feedback. You can easily create simple surveys with tools like Typeform that you can share with your readers by email.

Dive Into Blog Comment Sections
The same readers you're talking to are also hanging out in online communities, sharing their challenges and questions. Here at CoSchedule, we've used blog comments to focus articles on the questions readers are interested in. When we published an article on how to create an effective blog schedule, we got a terrific question from reader Ella Vinni.


Mine Amazon Reviews
With 47% of online sales, Amazon dominates the U.S. retail market, making it a great place to learn about consumer attitudes on nearly any topic. Browse through product listings, and you'll often find super-detailed, informative reviews that give a terrific glimpse into your readers' frame of mind. To get started, search for books on your topic:


Explore Feedback on Niche Review Sites
For thoughtful, detailed reviews, Amazon is just the beginning. Capterra and G2 are two of my favorite review sites. They're perfect if you're writing in the SaaS niche. Customers on these sites leave some of the most detailed feedback you'll find anywhere, giving you a clear picture of their experiences and challenges. Search for your topic on Capterra or G2. Check out some of the companies that come up, and read through their reviews:
- TripAdvisor: Great for reviews of restaurant, hotel, airline, or entertainment businesses.
- Angie's List: Go-to site for in-depth reviews of service-based businesses.
- Influenster: Popular site for detailed reviews of consumer products.
- Google My Business: Terrific for general reviews, especially of local businesses.
Participate in Online Professional Communities
By now, you're probably seeing a trend. Your best content ideas resolve your readers' pain points. And the easiest way to discover your readers' pain points is by listening in on them, in the places where they hang out online. Social platforms like Facebook and Slack are home to some of the most engaged professional communities around. Some boast tens of thousands of members. They're an ideal way to learn more about your audience's challenges -- and keep an eye on what's trending in your niche. On Facebook, search for your topic. Choose Groups to find active groups in your niche:
- "[your niche] + Slack channels"
- "[your niche] + Slack communities"

Listen In On Reddit Conversations
Before I got into content strategy, I was never really into reddit. But since then, I've come to love it. It's one of the best ways to get a read on your target audience's problems and challenges. Hop on over to reddit and search for your topic to find relevant subreddits:

- A how-to article on getting into a productive flow when writing
- A checklist for taking a content marketing project from start to finish
- A list of the best content marketing courses
- A list of examples of content marketing mistakes -- and how to fix them
- A guide to the most useful tools for content marketers
Check Popular Questions on Google
With Google gobbling up over 92% of all search traffic worldwide, it only makes sense to find out what questions users are asking when they search. And finding out is a snap. Search for your topic on Google.


See What People Are Asking on Quora
The question-and-answer website Quora is another great place to try the same approach. Start by searching your topic:


Review Online Tables of Contents
There's one more source for topics that are super-popular with readers, hiding in plain sight: tables of contents for books and online courses. I typically find that the best sources for online tables of contents are Udemy, Coursera, and LinkedIn Learning. Search for courses in your niche:


- How to build a content marketing funnel that converts
- Common content marketing mistakes
- What makes content valuable
- How to define goals for your content marketing strategy
- Where content marketing is heading -- and how to prepare for it
Do a Competitor Content Scan
Scanning other blogs to find the content that's performing best with your audience is one of the most powerful ways to learn what's working with them, what they're interested in, and what they want to know more about. Twitter is a great starting point. Scroll through some of your followers' feeds -- as well as people you follow that you'd consider to be in your target audience. Look at what they're sharing:


- What are the most popular topics?
- What are the typical article word counts?
- What article formats tend to perform well — how-to articles, lists, roundup posts?
- What headline formats do you notice in the most successful articles?

Research Industry Trends
Industry research is one of the most powerful ways to identify topics that readers respond to. While research-driven content builds your authority, it also helps readers validate their existing beliefs and build their own expertise on topics that interest them. For example, Elise Dopson uses data to help readers understand the dramatic effects of Google's algorithm changes in this article about the E-A-T update. Using industry data to find powerful content ideas is a lot easier than you might think. Many leading organizations publish research reports that are an unbelievable treasure trove of freely available information. Three great examples in the content marketing space are CMI's B2B Content Marketing Report, Salesforce's State of Marketing Report, and Campaign Monitor's Ultimate Email Marketing Benchmarks. All these reports offer eye-catching data that can serve as the starting point for new content:
- "[your topic] + statistics"
- "[your topic] + study"
- "[your topic] + research"
- "[your topic] + research report"
- "[your topic] + data"
- "state of + [your topic]"

Brainstorm for Better Content Ideas
In content marketing, one of the biggest challenges we face is coming up with original ideas. No matter what your topic, it always seems like someone else has already covered it. That’s what makes brainstorming such a potent strategy. Once you’ve used some of the other research strategies we’ve discussed to narrow in on a topic, brainstorming can help you come up with a creative angle that helps your content really stand out. For example, in an era when many content marketers are rushing to publish their next epic skyscraper post, Jimmy Daly’s plea for marketers to do less challenges conventional wisdom — and comes as a breath of fresh air. Whenever you're brainstorming -- on your own or in a group -- a couple of best practices can help you maximize your creative output.- Be aware of your parameters: Brainstorming is productive when it's focused. Without some parameters to guide you, your entire brainstorming session could be a huge waste of time. Set some ground rules at the beginning: the target audience you want to reach, the goal for this piece of content, and so on.
- Keep a totally open mind: Once you've set parameters, be open to all ideas, no matter how completely crazy they may seem. This is a time to get all your ideas out on the table. Putting sticky notes on the wall is a popular way to prioritize your most promising ideas.

Improve Your Content Marketing Research Now
With these simple strategies, you can ensure that you attract your target readers with topics that matter to them. And when you package your ideas in the perfect blog post template, you'll have the formula for a winning blog post every time you write. Pick just one of these strategies to use next time you’re planning a piece of content. Give it a try, and who knows? Research just might become your writing superpower!
The post 13 of the Best Research Strategies to Create Amazing Content appeared first on CoSchedule Blog.