MC-Guide
Content Writing
Process 1: Strategy & Goals
This Process 1 going to help you in building your strategy brief.
This process contains strategy brief builder which can automatically generate pitch and brief for you. Access that by scrolling to The Strategy Brief Builder Section.
Process 1: Strategy & Goals (Professional Hero)
You want to write for strong magazines and high-quality sites (WIRED-style) and get paid decently. Your fastest path is not “write everything first.” Your fastest path is: make a Strategy Brief that an editor can scan in 20 seconds and immediately understand what you will deliver.
Your first “success metric” is: reply → questions → assignment → fee → deadline.
What you’ll build in Process 1
You will create a one-page Strategy Brief that answers the editor’s biggest questions: Who is it for? What’s the problem? Why now? What’s your angle? How will you prove it? What will you deliver?
This is the difference between a beginner pitch and a professional pitch: professionals remove confusion for the editor.
The beginner approach (6 building blocks)
Build your Strategy Brief using these blocks. Write in simple words. You can polish later.
Pick one clear goal
- Pitch goal: reply → assignment → fee → deadline.
- Reader goal: after reading, the reader can do one useful thing.
- Keep one main goal. Too many goals = confusion.
Choose one reader (not “everyone”)
- Use: “A reader who is [role] and wants to [goal] but struggles because [block].”
- One reader makes your pitch sharper and easier to assign.
Explain the pain and the real cost
- Problem: what is broken, risky, expensive, confusing, or wasting time?
- Stakes: what happens if the reader ignores it?
- Avoid buzzwords. Use human language.
Choose a simple “fresh” angle
- Test: you try a method/tool and report what happened.
- Compare: A vs B vs C with tradeoffs and a checklist.
- Explain: simplify a confusing thing with examples.
- Risk: “Most people miss this and it causes problems.”
List 2–4 proof items (editor safety)
- Official sources (docs, policies, standards)
- Reports/data (numbers + trends)
- Expert quote (short interview / email)
- Your small honest test (easy + believable)
Define the size so you don’t burn out
- Word count range (example: 1,200–1,600)
- Format (explainer / how-to / comparison / reported feature)
- Assets (1 diagram + 1 checklist, etc.)
- Timeline (outline in X days, draft in Y weeks)
Strategy Brief Builder (copy-paste ready)
Fill this in simple words. It generates a pitch line + a mini brief you can paste into your email.
Pitch line: I’m pitching a story for [Publication] ([Section]) that helps [Ideal Reader] solve [Problem] with [Angle], backed by [Proof], because [Stakes].
Mini brief:
• Reader: [Ideal Reader]
• Problem: [Problem]
• Stakes: [Stakes]
• Angle: [Angle]
• Proof: [Proof]
• Scope: [Scope]
• Reader outcome: [Reader outcome]
Filled example (copy the pattern)
Replace [bracketed text] for your story idea.
Example Strategy Brief
Idea type: beginner explainer + checklist (easy to commission)
Publication: [Tech / business site]
Section: [AI / Work / Security]
Reader: A team lead who wants to use AI tools at work but struggles because they don’t know what is safe to share.
Problem: People paste private info into AI tools without understanding the risks.
Stakes: A small mistake can leak client data, break policy, or create legal trouble — and many companies still don’t have clear rules.
Angle: A simple “do / don’t” policy checklist with safe prompt examples and red-flag examples.
Proof: Company policy examples, security guidance, and one short expert quote (or IT manager interview).
Scope: 1,200–1,600 words + 1 diagram + printable checklist. Outline in 3 days, draft in 2 weeks.
Reader outcome: After reading, the reader can write a 10-line internal checklist and train the team in 15 minutes.
Common beginner mistakes (and the simple fix)
“I want to write about cybersecurity.”
Fix: add one reader + one problem + one outcome.
“This is important and people should know.”
Fix: use an angle: test, compare, explain, or risk.
“Trust me, it’s true.”
Fix: list 2–4 proof items: docs, data, expert quote, small test, examples.
“I will cover everything.”
Fix: set a word count, format, and one deliverable. Make it finishable.
Checklist: are you ready to move to research?
Say “Continue” only after you can answer these quickly.