There were over 200 million registered websites strewn across the internet in January 2014. To save you time wading through the chaff, here are three worthwhile sites that make you think…
howstuffworks.com
From 10 reasons space exploration matters to you to the most terrifying spiders in the world, How Stuff Works offers simple explanations of everything, including elevator etiquette. The articles cover so much stuff you can wander and learn there all day. Great site for research on most topics!
big think.com
Big Think is an evolving roadmap to the best thinking on the planet — the ideas that can help you think flexibly and act decisively in a multivariate world. Read articles such as How your Body Language Alters your State of Mind and The Internet of Things will Make you Poor, Surveilled, and Alone.
And of course, the Big Daddy of make-you-think websites:
ted.com
“Ideas worth spreading” TED is a nonprofit devoted to spreading ideas, usually in the form of short, powerful talks (18 minutes or less). Short, powerful talks on science, technology, human nature, and just about any other topic you can imagine. You can also search for TED Talks on YouTube.

We call the bad things, the dysfunctional things “lemons.” We say, “When life hands you lemons, make lemonade,” meaning throw a bag of sugar over it so you don’t see the dysfunction, the mechanical failures, the sourness of your situation.
Having one of those days, darling? You know what I mean – one of those frustrating, exhausting days in which everything you had planned is blown out the window by the things you didn’t anticipate?
1) Focus on the Goal of your Blog. Is your intent simply to keep your name Top of Mind with your customers and prospects? Are you focused on Lead Generation, website traffic, or building your reputation as an information hub?
2) Remember What Drew You to Your Industry. Way back when, on the day you started your company or made the decision to take a job in your current industry, you were excited about it. There was something that thrilled you, that satisfied you beyond just the paycheck. What was it? What emotion did it trigger? Find that energy again, and write from that place. It might be helpful to create a list of the reasons you started and the dreams you had about your career.
3) Tell stories. Stories pull the reader into an experience, and the more they see themselves in that experience, the more willing they will be to keep reading and remember you when they need your product or service.