Every blogger we talk to has the same problem.
The list of blog ideas? Overflowing. Notes app, Notion page, sticky notes on the monitor — ideas everywhere.
The publishing calendar? Empty. Or worse, filled with dates that passed six months ago.
The gap between having an idea and publishing something isn't a motivation problem. It's a workflow problem.
Why ideas don't become posts
When you jot down a topic, it feels complete. "Write about AI tools for freelancers." Done, captured.
But when you sit down to actually write it, you realise you've captured a category, not a post. What specifically about AI tools? For which freelancers? What angle makes this different from the 400 other posts on the same topic? What's the hook?
The idea-to-draft step has a hidden cost: research, scoping, and structural thinking before you write a single word. Most of that work happens in your head, invisibly, and it drains the energy you needed for the actual writing.
So the draft never starts. The idea sits on the list. The list gets longer.
What we noticed when we built Blogboat
The team at twRty Software Services built Blogboat as an AI writing studio — give it a topic, it drafts a full post, you edit block by block, publish to 15+ platforms in one click. (Full disclosure: we built it, and we use it for exactly this problem.)
When we looked at how people actually used it, the most common starting point wasn't "I have a draft I need help with." It was "I have an idea but I don't know where to go with it."
So we built a Blog Ideas feature specifically for that moment.
How Blog Ideas works
The Blog Ideas screen shows you topics across categories — AI & Tech, Business, Health & Wellness, Finance, Productivity, Sustainability — each scored by trending velocity.
A post marked Trend 98/100 isn't just popular; it's moving fast right now. That score matters because timing is real for content: a post on a trending topic published today gets different distribution than the same post published in three months.
Each topic comes with:
- A suggested angle and hook (not just "write about X" but a specific take)
- A full suggested outline — section by section, already structured
- Tags and target audience
- Estimated read time
The outline is the key piece. You're not starting from a blank page. You're starting from a structure that's already argued the angle — and you either agree with it and run, or you reshape it before the AI drafts.
The actual workflow
- Open Blog Ideas, browse by category or search a topic
- Pick a post, read the suggested outline
- Hit "Start Writing This Blog" — the outline becomes a brief for the AI
- Review and edit the draft block by block (don't like a section? regenerate just that block)
- Publish to your platforms in one click
The step that usually stopped people — the invisible research and scoping work between "idea" and "draft" — is done before the cursor blinks.
What this actually changes
We're not arguing that AI-generated briefs are always right. You'll reshape them. Sometimes you'll throw the outline out entirely and write your own. That's fine.
What changes is the activation energy. The list of ideas stops being a backlog of tasks you've been avoiding. Each item has a next action: read the brief, agree or adjust, start the draft.
That's a different relationship with your idea list than most bloggers have.
If you're a blogger or content creator who's been sitting on ideas that never make it to drafts, Blogboat is free to start.
- Web: twrty.org/blogboat
- iOS: App Store
- Android: Play Store
twRty Software Services builds Blogboat. This post was written to share how we think about the blog idea-to-publish problem.
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