If you have been blogging for any length of time, you have experienced it. You sit down to write, you stare at the screen, and nothing comes. Some people call it writer's block. In the blogging world, I call it blogger's block, and it is one of the most common reasons bloggers fall off their publishing schedule.
I have dealt with this for years. The advice everyone gives is to post on a regular schedule, and that is solid advice. But when you are running an online business on the side, fitting in consistent content creation is genuinely difficult. The real problem is not time. It is that you sit down to write and cannot decide what to write about.
Here are five strategies I have used over the years to beat blogger's block and keep content flowing.
1. Keep a Running Ideas List
The single best defense against blogger's block is maintaining a running list of content ideas. Every time an idea crosses your mind, whether you are in the shower, driving, or half asleep, capture it immediately. Use your phone's notes app, a voice memo, or whatever tool you will actually use consistently. The goal is to never sit down to write without at least a dozen ideas waiting for you. In 2026, I keep my ideas in a simple Notion database, but a text file works just as well.
2. Riff on Other People's Content
One of the most productive content strategies is responding to content other people have published. When you read a blog post, listen to a podcast episode, or watch a video that makes you think, write your take on it. Share what you agree with, what you disagree with, and what you would add. The original creator gets a backlink and the recognition. Your readers get a curated pointer to valuable information plus your unique perspective. Everyone wins.
3. Write in a Series
Series content is powerful for two reasons. First, once you commit to a series, the next post practically writes itself because you already have the framework. Second, readers love following along with ongoing projects. If you are building a niche site, launching a product, or running an experiment, documenting your process step by step gives you weeks or months of content built into a single decision.
4. Create Simple How-To Posts
Did you just spend an hour figuring out how to configure a WordPress plugin, set up an email automation, or fix a technical problem? Write it up. How-to content is the backbone of search traffic for most blogs. These posts tend to rank well because they answer specific questions people are actively searching for. If you solved a problem for yourself, there are hundreds of other people searching for that same solution right now.
5. Share Something Personal
Not every post needs to be a tactical masterclass. Sometimes the best content is a personal story, a lesson learned from a failure, or something unexpected that happened in your business or life. People follow blogs because they connect with the person behind them. Sharing personal experiences builds that connection and often sparks the most engagement in comments and social media.
The Real Secret
Here is the thing about blogger's block that nobody tells you. It is almost never about a lack of ideas. It is about perfectionism. You have ideas, but none of them feel good enough. The cure is to lower your standards for the first draft and commit to publishing consistently. Not every post needs to be a masterpiece. Some of my most popular content over the years started as posts I almost did not publish because I thought they were too simple. Your readers do not need perfection. They need your perspective, delivered consistently.




Another thing you can do is save thoughts as drafts. That way when you are logged into moderate comments or tweak something you can always browse through the drafts you saved and finish a thought.
Jabna — that is an excellent idea. I actually do that occasionally, and did not even think to mention it. Thanks for the comment.