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For a long time, when someone asked to “pick my brain,” I felt a real responsibility to answer.

For a long time, when someone asked to “pick my brain,” I felt a real responsibility to answer.

Because behind every question is a real person.
Someone trying to solve something.
Someone hoping one answer might help.

So I tried to respond to everything.

DMs.
Emails.
Voice notes.
Comments.

And for a while, that felt like the right thing to do.

But over time it started to pile up in a way I didn’t expect. Even when each question only takes a few minutes, hundreds of them quietly add up. And I realized I needed a way to be helpful without getting overwhelmed.

So I built a simple system.

I bought an easy-to-remember domain: pickrachelsbrain.com and pointed it to a Typeform.

When people go there, there’s a short pre-frame and then they can submit a question. No email gate, no complicated funnel. Just a place to ask.

And they can submit one question a month.

Now when people ask to pick my brain, I just send them there.

It created a boundary, but it also created something really helpful.

Because now I have a running library of real questions from real people. And that has turned into one of the best sources of content ideas I’ve found.

Instead of guessing what to post, I can look at what people actually want to understand.

Sometimes the best content strategy isn’t brainstorming harder.

It’s listening better. ❤️

If you get a lot of “can I pick your brain?” messages, this little system might save you a lot of time.

#creatorbusiness #contentstrategy #socialmediatips #businesstips #marketingideas

Charlie Page

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