Every writer eventually accumulates a graveyard of half-finished drafts, and the hardest skill in content writing isn’t drafting, it’s deciding which of those drafts deserve a burial instead of a publish button. Most people only think about quality after they’ve already committed to shipping something. The better habit is to interrogate a post at the idea stage, the draft stage, and the pre-publish stage, because each of those moments asks a different question, and answering them honestly saves you from publishing work that quietly erodes your credibility or wastes your time.
The quality question
The first and most obvious filter is simply whether the writing is good. But “good” is vague enough to be useless unless you define it for yourself. A useful test is to ask whether the post says something a reasonably informed reader couldn’t have guessed on their own. If you’re restating common knowledge in slightly different words, the post isn’t bad, it’s just redundant, and redundant content rarely earns trust or shares. Another version of this test is to read the piece as if you were a skeptical stranger rather than the person who spent three hours writing it. Writers are notoriously bad judges of their own work in the moment they finish it, because relief at finishing gets mistaken for satisfaction with the result. Letting a draft sit for even a day before the final read often reveals weaknesses that were invisible the night before.If after an honest read the piece still feels thin, vague, or like it’s circling an idea without landing on one, that’s a signal to either rewrite the core argument or shelve it. Thin writing is rarely fixed by adding more words. It’s almost always fixed by sharpening the one idea that matters and cutting everything that doesn’t serve it.
The relevance question
A post can be well written and still be wrong for the moment or wrong for the audience. Relevance has two dimensions worth separating: timeliness and fit. Timeliness asks whether anyone will care about this topic by the time it’s published, and whether the conversation around it has already moved on. Fit asks something different: does this post actually serve the people who already read your work, or is it a tangent that happens to interest you personally. Writers conflate these two, and the result is either a post that’s stale on arrival or a post that’s perfectly timely but alienates the audience that took the trouble to subscribe.A simple way to check fit is to imagine your last five readers and ask whether this specific post is the kind of thing that made them subscribe in the first place. If you can’t picture why they’d care, that’s not necessarily a reason to never write it, but it might be a reason to publish it somewhere else, or to wait until you can frame it in a way that connects to what your audience actually showed up for.
The lucrative question
Not every post needs to make money, and plenty of valuable writing exists purely to build reputation, document thinking, or just because the writer wanted to write it. But if part of your reason for writing is that the post should eventually pay off, whether through traffic, leads, or direct sales, it’s worth being honest about whether this particular piece has a plausible path to doing that. A post can be excellent and still go nowhere commercially because it targets a topic nobody searches for, solves a problem nobody pays to solve, or sits so far outside your existing audience’s interests that it can’t be discovered by the people who’d value it.
The trap here is sunk cost. Writers often keep pushing a post toward publication because they’ve already invested hours in it, even after realizing partway through that it has no real audience or commercial angle. The hours spent writing don’t change whether the topic was a good bet. If a post was a bad bet from the start, finishing it doesn’t make it a good one, it just means you’ve spent more time confirming the original instinct was right.
Knowing the difference between fixing and killing
The instinct when a draft underperforms on any of these three counts is often to try to save it through editing. Sometimes that works. A weak post with a strong idea buried inside it can usually be rescued by cutting and restructuring. But a post that fails on relevance, where the topic simply isn’t one your audience wants, usually can’t be rescued by better sentences. And a post that fails on commercial potential because the topic has no real demand can’t be rescued by adding a stronger call to action at the end.
The honest version of this practice means asking, before you spend more time editing, which kind of problem you’re actually looking at. Is the writing weak but the idea strong? Edit it. Is the idea weak but the writing competent? That’s usually a sign to set it aside rather than force it. And if you find yourself making excuses for why a post deserves to exist despite failing two of the three tests, that defensiveness is itself useful information. The posts worth publishing are rarely the ones you have to argue yourself into.