Today, Problogger is encouraging us to answer reader’s questions. Well, I have to say that’s a much better idea than writing by numbers. (see: top 10 reason lists are rubbish) So I thought I’d enter into the spirit and give it a go.
The first problem, as Darren predicted, is that you may not be so lucky to have a nice collection of reader’s questions to answer. So, since I’m a reader of this blog, there’s no reason why I can’t ask myself a question:
How Can I encourage Readers to ask Question?
- A Blog post and link in sidebar. see this link to add a question as a comment
- A Free Link, and free publicity in recognition of the question. E.g. Thanks to Juggling frogs for some useful questions.
- Help People pass their exams. My most popular question and answer section is at another Blog: Economics Help. Before the exam season I was getting upto 20 questions a day. It was a really good period for me.
- I was very productive in answering questions
- It helped build up the archives very quickly.
- Thinking of topics is often the most difficult challenge of writing.
- I wrote on obvious topics, so obvious I wouldn’t have thought writing about.
- The only problem was that some days were so busy, I fear the quality may have suffered a little. But, it did help them pass their exams. Also, once they have finished their exams the questions start to dry up pretty quick.
- Blog Contest. Maybe I will have a blog contest, in which the competition is to invite the most interesting, unusual questions. The best question gets a prize of a free


3 comments ↓
Hey! That’s ME! I guess I’m living proof that asking questions of Net Writing not only pays off, but it pays dividends!
I didn’t know I was asking those questions for the ‘fame’ and recognition. The real payoff was your answers.
I *love* your self-referring question! It is a great response to the Problogger challenge.
Blog contests seem to be all the rage lately. I’ll look forward to yours!
Thanks!
…of a free what?
Ah, you got me. Clever!
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