Content research

Content research: find the topics your audience already asks about

The blank calendar is a guessing game you don’t need to play. Your audience has already written it — in the questions they ask, over and over, where you can read them.

The blank-calendar problem

Staring at an empty content calendar, most people brainstorm — they list topics that sound interesting to them and hope some land. It’s a guessing game, and the guesses are biased toward what the writer finds interesting rather than what the audience is actually searching for.

There’s a better starting point: the questions your audience already asks in public, unprompted, on repeat. You’re not inventing topics — you’re reading the ones they’ve already told you matter.

Your audience already wrote the calendar

Every community has a set of questions that come up again and again — the ones regulars are tired of answering. Each recurring question is a piece of content with proven demand: people are actively looking for the answer, in their own words, often enough that it repeats.

The phrasing matters as much as the topic. The exact words people use to ask are the exact words they’ll later type into a search box — so a question mined from a thread is both your headline and your keyword research in one.

What to mine for a calendar

Reading a community for content ideas, you’re collecting five things:

  • Recurring questions — the ones asked weekly, each a proven-demand topic
  • The exact phrasing — how they ask, which becomes your title and your keyword
  • The “nobody talks about…” gaps — under-served topics with an audience waiting
  • The debates — recurring disagreements that make for high-engagement pieces
  • What gets upvoted — the answers the community already rewards, worth expanding

From threads to a calendar

The pipeline turns this into a repeatable step rather than a manual skim. Search queries are built from the actual title phrases people post in your chosen communities, with frequency counts — so you see which questions recur most, not just which ones you happened to read. Content ideation is a first-class use-case the classifier tags for, so topic-shaped threads surface instead of getting lost.

The output is a ranked list of real questions with real frequency behind them — a calendar sourced from demand, not from a brainstorm.

See the full workflow

Mining an audience for content ideas is a use-case the pipeline is built around end to end.

Audience & content research

Validate what people actually say, not what you wish they would.