what to do when you donât know what to write about
â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â Â I just bumped 194 words of so-so copy to the âcutting room floorâ that I keep at the bottom of every Google doc. Thatâs where copy goes when itâs not totally awful, but itâs also not really working. This way I still have it in case I need it later. [Screenshot of a Google doc with the headline "cutting room floor" then an short email about amanita mushrooms is pasted below, on the left column there's a table of contents with the dates of all the emails Tarzan has written or planned that month] Hat tip to Sage Polaris who taught me the cutting room floor trick.
Itâs much easier to save something for later than admit that it isnât working and throw it in the garbage. Itâs like the expired food in your fridge: you know youâre never going to eat it, but you spent good money on it so youâd better leave it there in case an unexpected guest turns up with a taste for mouldy applesauce. I had an idea I was trying out but it really wasnât working, even after Iâd let it sit for 24 hours. Very quickly I started falling into a deep black hole of self-doubt. Itâs too hard.
I donât feel inspired right now.
Maybe I used up all my inspiration and this is it.
My latest emails were so good; A disappointing one is basically inevitable.
What is life even for, anyway? My therapist marvels at how quickly a basic inquiry can make a hairpin curve to â...and I will be alone forever.â I was just on the cusp of being alone forever when my seven-and-a-half years of email copywriting experience kicked in and I said to myself, Tarzan, your idea isnât working. Put that mouldy applesauce on the bottom shelf and try something else. So I did. And here we are, 249 words and 19 minutes later, and, not sure yet, but I think I might be back on track. You tell me. Is this email working for you? Subscribers consistently say they like having a sneak peek into my writing process. (See [the bottom of this email]( for a minute-by-minute breakdown of a recent email.) So far I only checked my phone once to listen to a 1m7s voice note from a loverâ¦for the eighteenth time. Plus I âaccidentallyâ checked my email once. If youâre an email marketer like me, you probably get stuck all the time. Probably a lot more often than me. Hereâs what I suggest you do when that happens. Move your crappy copy to the cutting room floor and start over.
Most writers have a warm up routine. Now you have one too. Itâs called âwriting something that sucksâ and it is the first step to writing something good. Congratulations. Youâre halfway there. Have a backlog of ideas to pull from.
If I wasnât so busy worrying about being alone forever, I wouldâve remembered that I have a spreadsheet with 43 really good questions my subscribers sent in for my Ask Me Anything a while back. ([Hereâs the replay, btw]( Just asking your subscribers, âWhatâs your #1 struggle when it comes to [problem you solve]?â is a great way to get material. Ask your IG followers if you donât have enough subscribers for that to work. Even easier, ask ChatGPT â For best results, prompt it to phrase those struggles with dialogue that uses concrete examples and vivid detail. The answer is almost never in the fridge, but going outside helps.
My best ideas for emails often come to me when Iâm brave enough to take a quick jaunt through the forest before sitting down at my desk. I usually get like three great ideas without even trying. This only works if I donât have my phone with me (no Spotify or podcasts!), so the hardest part is retaining them. Itâs also fun to check if the answer is in the fridge, just in case. In this case it actually kind of was. Okay, weâre now at the 611 word mark so itâs time to wrap up. Thatâs another question people ask me a lot. How long should my emails be? Now you have the short answer. The long answer is a lot less satisfying, trust me. The good news is that Iâm actually kind of obsessed with this topic and once I get going (i.e. once Iâve written a bunch of crappy copy) I could write about it all day. I bet youâre a little bit obsessed with your work too, which is a good thing for an email marketer to be. Just write about whatâs keeping you up at night, and at your desk after 5pm. And if you have to serve your guests expired food now and then, itâs really not that big a deal. Donât wait for every email to be perfect in order to send it. That is the highway to ghosting your list completely. Send it anyway. Your next email will be better, promise. Hopefully mine too. XOT P.S. That cutting room floor copy? It gets used only slightly more often than your expired goods get eaten. P.P.S. The idea I tried that wasnât working? I borrowed it from one of my peers, Maegan Megginson, who said to me in a Voxer note âIâm opting out of urgency.â âYou should write an email about that,â I told her. âI already did,â she said. Isnât she brilliant? Turns out I was not able to recycle her idea 🤦🏻ââï¸ P.P.P.S. Wrote that last P.S. using a scrap of copy taken from the cutting room floor. Hope you like mouldy applesauce! FINAL WORD COUNT: 896 words 😉 Want to access your fave emails on the go? Subscribe to the [Tarzan Reads Her Emails]( podcast]( to, well, hear Tarzan read her emails. 🤷ââï¸ [New recordings released every Tuesday and Friday. Exclusively for my email subscribers]( Enjoy the email? Why not share it with a friend? [Facebook]( Â
[Twitter]( Â
[Linkedin]( Â
[Email]( Inbox getting a little crowded? Looking to reduce the number of emails you receive? I hear ya, {NAME}! Simply choose how often you want to hear from me by clicking one of the links below. [Send 'em as you write 'em!](
[One a week would be perfect.](
[Can I get a monthly digest?]( This email was sent to: {EMAIL}. [Click here to update your info](. Tarzan Kay Global Inc., PO Box 1036, Fonthill, ON L0S1E0, Canada | [Unsubscribe](