Join a writers society (or guild, association, network, salon, whatever the local term happens to be). Meet other authors and get to know them. In the process, they will get to know you.
In other words, make friends with writers, lots of them (or as many as your personality will bear).
Writing is a deeply personal and vulnerable process, like most creative acts. If a writer is struggling with a lack of imagination (rare), or struggling with a particular story problem (common), they won’t invite a random stranger into their creative process to help them. Not a stranger with no other qualifications besides “I’ve a great imagination!”
(They might approach a pro for help— this is the backbone of my business. But I can attest that building trust with potential clients is 90% of the “marketing” process— I haven’t bothered with advertising for years, since it builds awareness but not trust)
And be real with your friendship-building. Don’t focus only on unimaginative-seeming people: be kind and helpful to everyone, eager to listen, encouraging without sycophancy. Learn all you can about writing and about the writing life in general. If you’re so inclined, offer a webinar about creativity or something, so that you become associated with a great imagination and a helpful brainstorming process.
Most of the writer-friends you make will not avail themselves of your brainstorming help (and for goodness sake don’t push your ideas for their stories on them). But some will. And others, when they know and trust you, may recommend you to others who are stuck and need some fresh ideas to get their story moving again.
I hope this helps!
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