From Boring to Brilliant: Writing that Transforms Your Thought Leadership into Must-Read Content

Jun 5, 2024

3 min

Peter Evans

Insights from our Webinar with Author, Rhea Wessel


Ask anyone who develops Thought Leadership programs, and they will tell you that experts are essential to a successful program. But experts are busy people. That makes expert engagement strategies a very popular topic with our Comms and Media Relations pros. That’s why we invited Rhea Wessel, Founder of The Institute for Thought Leadership, to join us last week for our ExpertFile webinar.


Rhea, a former tech and financial journalist and author of “Write Like a Thought Leader,” has worked with organizations such as Harvard, CFA Institute, Accenture and the Max Planck Institute to help their experts focus on developing unique story angles while getting high-quality work produced. Having seen her in action at last year's IABC Global Conference, speaking to a standing-room-only crowd, I was really impressed by Rhea’s approach. 



Rhea uses a system that experts and comms teams can use to brainstorm topics and craft story angles that frame expertise and research to make them more compelling. In the session, she showed us how she helps brainstorm and select the best angles for thought-leadership stories using ideas such as “origin” stories, “what if” scenarios, personal-impact stories, and opinion pieces.  Experts often have issues with the "dreaded first draft.” The frameworks Rhrea showed us from her book were clever and designed to pragmatically move experts from brainstorming into a writing mode that doesn’t feel forced.


Here are some key points I took away from Rhea’s session:


Defining Thought Leadership

An essential attribute of Thought Leaders is that they share their knowledge for free, using journalistic skills to engage their audience by articulating emerging ideas, steering conversations and influencing others.


Finding the Niche

Finding and framing thought leadership is not about covering a broad topic. The best topics are often very narrow. And they are best found at the intersection of the expert’s passion, purpose, and big ideas.


Think Like a Journalist

Write in a conversational tone and include data, quotes & statistics, but not too much. Use short sentences and paragraphs while keeping the story fast-moving. And don’t forget your sense of humor.


Spend Time on the Headlines

By “thinking like a journalist” and focusing on headlines, one can narrow the focus when examining research and insights to create more clarity. Quoting Author Sean Coyne, Rhea referred to headlines as having the benefit of being an “enabling constraint."


"One of the curses of subject matter expertise is that your experts know a lot. They tend to pack a lot [of their knowledge] in, and for a good story, you've got to slice out a narrow bit. That’s the constraint.” 
Rhea Wessel


Time & Place Matters

Stories are best anchored in time and place. When you are working with an expert and you want to enrich a story, don’t just think about how they developed their research and insights. Also, think about “where they were” and “when did it happen?” A good origin story explains why an insight is significant for the expert, creating a more emotional, relatable connection for the audience.


Frame Your Story

Keep it focused on a single yet relevant problem the audience has. Then explain why this matters to your audience and why now.


Based on the feedback we received from this session, we'll have Rhea Wessel join us for more conversations on topics related to storytelling. We'd love to know what you think. Details about this session are below:


Full Webinar Recording
bit.ly/4e9YuWb

Presentation Slides
To get a copy of the presentation & Templates, just hit the connect button on my profile and let me know.  Enjoy!








Connect with:
Peter Evans

Peter Evans

Co-Founder & CEO

Recognized speaker on expertise marketing, technology and innovation

Media TrendsThought LeadershipMarketingTechnologyInnovation
Powered by

You might also like...

Check out some other posts from ExpertFile

Tony Awards: CMU Experts Unpack Broadway’s Biggest Night featured image

1 min

Tony Awards: CMU Experts Unpack Broadway’s Biggest Night

As Broadway prepares for the 2026 Tony Awards this Sunday, Carnegie Mellon University experts are available to help media explore the stories behind the stage, from the business of Broadway and the economics of major productions to costume design, theatre history and the behind-the-scenes teams that bring performances to life. CMU’s Tony Awards expert page brings together faculty and specialists who can provide timely commentary on the artistic, cultural and economic forces shaping Broadway’s biggest night. The Business of Broadway Production costs, commercial risk, tourism, jobs, touring productions and Broadway’s wider economic impact. Behind the Scenes The directors, designers, stage managers, technicians and production teams who turn a show into a fully realized theatrical experience. Costume in Theatre How costume design shapes character, period, mood and storytelling on stage. The History of Theatre and Broadway Broadway’s evolution, cultural influence and place within the broader history of theatre. Media can visit CMU’s Tony Awards page to explore available experts and connect directly with the right source for their story.

Expert Spotlight: Tiananmen Square -  37 Years Later, Why the World Still Remembers featured image

2 min

Expert Spotlight: Tiananmen Square - 37 Years Later, Why the World Still Remembers

Thirty-seven years after the events in Beijing's Tiananmen Square, the anniversary continues to spark global reflection on democracy, freedom of expression, state power, and the importance of preserving historical memory. While discussion of the events remains heavily restricted within China, commemorations continue around the world as scholars, journalists, policymakers, and human rights advocates examine the lasting significance of what occurred in the spring of 1989. The movement began in April 1989 following the death of reform-minded Chinese leader Hu Yaobang. What started as student-led gatherings evolved into a nationwide protest movement calling for political reform, greater transparency, accountability, and action against corruption. Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators occupied Tiananmen Square, while similar protests spread to cities across China. After weeks of escalating tensions, martial law was declared. On the night of June 3 and into June 4, Chinese troops and tanks moved into Beijing to clear the protests. The exact number of deaths remains disputed and unknown, with estimates ranging from hundreds to thousands. The Chinese government has never released a full accounting of those killed, injured, detained, or disappeared. Perhaps the most enduring image from the crackdown is that of the unidentified "Tank Man" who stood alone before a column of tanks on June 5, 1989. The photograph became a global symbol of individual courage in the face of overwhelming state power and remains one of the most recognizable images of the twentieth century. Why Tiananmen Still Matters Beyond its historical significance, Tiananmen remains relevant because it raises enduring questions about civil liberties, government accountability, censorship, collective memory, and the role of citizen activism. Researchers continue to study how societies remember contested events and how governments shape historical narratives. The anniversary also serves as a reminder of the importance of preserving documentary evidence and firsthand accounts for future generations. Today, remembrance efforts continue through archives, academic research, museums, oral histories, and public commemorations outside mainland China. Recent reports highlight ongoing attempts by scholars, journalists, and activists to preserve photographs, diaries, eyewitness accounts, and other records associated with the 1989 protests and crackdown. Expert Perspectives Available Journalists covering the Tiananmen anniversary may wish to connect with experts in: Chinese history and politics Human rights and international relations Collective memory and historical preservation Democracy movements and social protest Media censorship and information control East Asian studies and contemporary China The Tiananmen Square anniversary remains more than a historical milestone. It continues to influence conversations about freedom, political participation, historical accountability, and the power of memory in shaping the future. If you're covering - connect now! See all of our experts at www.expertfile.com

Pride Month: From Protest to Global Celebration featured image

2 min

Pride Month: From Protest to Global Celebration

Pride Month is celebrated each June to honour the 1969 Stonewall Uprising in New York City, when LGBTQ+ patrons resisted a police raid at the Stonewall Inn. The uprising lasted several days and became a defining moment in the modern LGBTQ+ rights movement. One year later, the first Pride marches were held, transforming public protest into an annual call for visibility, dignity, safety, and equality. Today, Pride is marked around the world in many different ways. In Canada, the United States, and much of Europe, celebrations often include parades, festivals, concerts, flag-raisings, community events, and public education campaigns. In places such as Brazil, Mexico, South Africa, Japan, India, and Australia, Pride can blend celebration with activism, reflecting local histories, cultures, and legal realities. In countries where LGBTQ+ rights remain restricted or unsafe, Pride may take the form of smaller gatherings, private events, online campaigns, or human-rights advocacy rather than large public parades. What makes Pride powerful is that it is both celebration and protest. It recognizes progress, honours those who fought for change, and draws attention to the discrimination, violence, and legal barriers still faced by LGBTQ+ people in many parts of the world. For journalists, Pride Month offers a timely opportunity to explore history, human rights, culture, public policy, youth identity, corporate participation, faith communities, education, health, and the changing meaning of inclusion across borders. Connect with experts who can speak to the history of Pride, LGBTQ+ rights, identity, culture, and how communities around the world continue to mark this important month. Discover all of our experts here: www.expertfile.com

View all posts