I recently realized that I have been thinking about blogs in the wrong way. For most of my professional life, I assumed that writing followed a simple sequence:
Think → know → write
The purpose of a blog was to communicate something that had already been figured out. You learned something. You formed an opinion. You developed a framework. Then you wrote about it. The blog was a publishing mechanism. Nothing more.
The Reporting Blog
This is the type of blog most professionals write. Its purpose is to report existing knowledge. Examples include:
- Lessons learned from a project
- Explanations of a methodology
- Reviews of a framework
- Conference summaries
- Practical advice
The underlying assumption is: I know something that may be useful to others.
There is absolutely nothing wrong with this. In fact, most professional blogs should probably do exactly that. But recently I discovered another possibility.
The Discovery Blog
The second type of blog serves a completely different purpose. Instead of communicating conclusions, it helps generate them. The process looks more like this:
Observation → writing → reflection → insight
The author does not necessarily know where the idea will lead. Writing becomes part of the thinking process. The blog becomes a laboratory rather than a broadcasting platform. This was a surprising realization for me.
Thinking Through Dialogue
The insight became even more interesting when I connected it to something I have noticed about my own way of thinking. I have never been particularly good at sitting alone and brainstorming. Many people seem able to start with a blank page and generate ideas. My mind does not appear to work that way.
Instead, most of my useful ideas emerge through dialogue. A conversation introduces a question. An observation triggers a response. A challenge reveals an inconsistency. A pattern suddenly becomes visible. The thinking happens in the interaction. Only afterwards do I realize what I think.
This explains why some of my most valuable insights have emerged from discussions rather than solitary reflection. The dialogue itself becomes part of the reasoning process.
Writing as a Dialogue
Perhaps that is why the idea of a discovery-oriented blog feels so appealing. Writing does not have to be the final step. Writing can become another form of dialogue. Not necessarily with other people. Sometimes with oneself. Sometimes with future readers. Sometimes with an idea that has not fully formed yet.
A field note captures an observation. The act of writing clarifies the observation. New questions emerge. Those questions lead to new field notes. Over time, a line of thinking begins to develop. The blog becomes part of the conversation.
A Different Relationship with Uncertainty
The discovery blog also changes the role of uncertainty. In a reporting blog, uncertainty can feel like a weakness. The expectation is that the author knows the answer.
In a discovery blog, uncertainty is often the starting point. A good field note can begin with:
I noticed something.
Or:
I am not sure why this keeps appearing.
Or:
These two things seem related, but I do not yet understand how. The goal is not to provide closure. The goal is to make progress.
An Unexpected Possibility
The most surprising realization is that a blog may be useful long before there is anything important to report. In fact, it may be most useful before that point.
Instead of documenting finished ideas, it can help create them. A field note becomes a record of an investigation. A collection of field notes becomes a trail of reasoning. And occasionally, several observations converge into something larger. A hypothesis. A framework. Perhaps even a genuinely new idea.
I used to think that blogs existed to share what we know. I am beginning to suspect that some blogs exist to help us discover it.