Start drafting your post once you feel like you have something interesting to say, even though you aren’t that informed on the topic yet. Then either:
Publish it, with appropriate caveats. If you later learn that part of it are mistaken, that’s a good topic for a follow-up post, and you can edit your original to link to the follow-up.
Wait to publish it for a few months until you have enough experience to be sure that it’s correct. If I did this, though, I would probably never actually get around to publishing it so I do the first one.
Put yourself in situations where you find yourself explaining something about what you know well: parties, forums, commenting on misconceptions. I find these interactions are relatively easy to turn into blog posts afterwards, requiring much less effort than just thinking “here is a broad topic I know about, what should I write about?”
Here are two strategies that might work:
Start drafting your post once you feel like you have something interesting to say, even though you aren’t that informed on the topic yet. Then either:
Publish it, with appropriate caveats. If you later learn that part of it are mistaken, that’s a good topic for a follow-up post, and you can edit your original to link to the follow-up.
Wait to publish it for a few months until you have enough experience to be sure that it’s correct. If I did this, though, I would probably never actually get around to publishing it so I do the first one.
Put yourself in situations where you find yourself explaining something about what you know well: parties, forums, commenting on misconceptions. I find these interactions are relatively easy to turn into blog posts afterwards, requiring much less effort than just thinking “here is a broad topic I know about, what should I write about?”