Content Marketing
Scope
Covers
-
Content market fit (treat content like a product; audience anxieties + needs)
-
SEO-led content (validate search demand before writing)
-
Founder/executive-led thought leadership with a human voice
-
Blog-as-press-release announcements (shareable, SEO-friendly)
-
AI-assisted content workflows with human-in-the-loop quality controls
-
Backlog, editorial calendar, content briefs, distribution, and measurement
When to use
-
“Create a content strategy / content marketing plan.”
-
“Build an SEO plan + editorial calendar.”
-
“We need founder-led thought leadership; pick a channel + voice.”
-
“Turn an announcement into a blog post instead of a press release.”
-
“Create content briefs and a repeatable content production system.”
When NOT to use
-
You still need to define positioning/ICP (use positioning-messaging or problem-definition ).
-
You need a technical SEO audit (crawl/indexing, performance, schema, internal linking) more than a content program.
-
You need a paid acquisition strategy (ads, bidding, creative testing) rather than owned content.
-
You cannot publish without a review process and cannot provide one (this skill requires a compliant workflow).
Inputs
Minimum required
-
Product: what it is + who it’s for (ICP/audience)
-
Goals + timebox (e.g., pipeline, awareness, signups, recruiting) and 1 primary metric
-
Primary offer(s) and CTA(s) (demo, trial, newsletter, download)
-
Constraints: team capacity, SME availability, brand/compliance guardrails, regions/languages
-
Spokesperson options (founder/executive/PM/other) and preferred channels (blog, LinkedIn, YouTube, podcast, newsletter)
Missing-info strategy
-
Ask up to 5 questions from references/INTAKE.md, then proceed with explicit assumptions.
-
If SEO demand data is unavailable, produce keyword/topic hypotheses with confidence labels and a demand-validation to-do list (no credentials required).
-
Never request secrets or credentials; accept redacted exports/screenshots if offered.
Outputs (deliverables)
Produce a Content Marketing Plan Pack (Markdown in-chat; or as files if requested) containing:
-
Context snapshot (ICP, goal, metric, timebox, constraints)
-
Content market fit brief (audience anxieties, jobs-to-be-done, “why now”)
-
Channel + voice strategy (human spokesperson, primary channel focus, tone rules, repurposing plan)
-
SEO demand-validated topic map (topics/keywords, intent, proof of demand, SERP angle)
-
Backlog + editorial calendar (4–8 weeks, prioritized)
-
3 content briefs (ready for writing) + per-piece distribution plan
-
Announcement blog post template (press-release alternative) + 1 outline/draft (if relevant)
-
AI-assisted content SOP (AI roles + human review + “information gain” rules)
-
Measurement plan (leading indicators, dashboards, iteration cadence)
-
Risks / Open questions / Next steps (always included)
Templates and checklists:
-
references/TEMPLATES.md
-
references/WORKFLOW.md
-
references/CHECKLISTS.md
-
references/RUBRIC.md
Workflow (8 steps)
- Intake + success definition
-
Inputs: User prompt; references/INTAKE.md.
-
Actions: Confirm the business goal, ICP, primary CTA, and timebox. Define one primary success metric and 2–3 leading indicators. Confirm constraints (capacity, compliance, languages, distribution).
-
Outputs: Context snapshot (v1).
-
Checks: Goal is measurable and timebound (e.g., “Increase qualified demo requests from SEO by 25% in 8 weeks”).
- Define content market fit (audience anxieties → promises)
-
Inputs: ICP/audience, pains/goals, buying context, objections.
-
Actions: Treat content as a product: define audience segment(s), top anxieties (career, risk, status, time), and the “promotion narrative” (how content helps them win). Identify 3–5 core “promises” your content should consistently deliver.
-
Outputs: Content market fit brief.
-
Checks: Each promise is specific and maps to a content type (how-to, teardown, case study, POV, template).
- Validate demand + pick topic themes (SEO + non-SEO)
-
Inputs: Product surfaces, promises, known customer questions, any keyword data.
-
Actions: Build a topic universe, then split into:
-
SEO topics: only keep topics with evidence of search demand.
-
Thought leadership topics: publish for trust/brand even without search demand, but tie to distribution plan and spokesperson voice. Document “evidence of demand” (Search Console, autocomplete, competitor pages ranking, keyword tools, internal tickets).
-
Outputs: Topic map (with demand evidence + confidence labels).
-
Checks: No SEO topic is approved without a demand signal; every non-SEO topic has a distribution owner + channel.
- Choose the human voice + primary channel
-
Inputs: Spokesperson options, team strengths, audience media habits.
-
Actions: Pick one primary channel that matches the spokesperson’s natural style (long-form writing, short-form posts, video, audio). Define voice rules (first-person, specific opinions, vulnerability/honesty) and what to avoid (corporate ghost tone, generic platitudes). Decide how content will be repurposed across secondary channels.
-
Outputs: Channel + voice strategy (including “say this / not that”).
-
Checks: There is a single primary channel for the next 4–8 weeks; repurposing does not create new work without owners.
- Build the backlog + editorial calendar
-
Inputs: Topic map, capacity, seasonality, launches/announcements.
-
Actions: Prioritize using a simple score (Impact × Confidence ÷ Effort). Create a 4–8 week editorial calendar with owners, publish dates, review checkpoints, and CTAs.
-
Outputs: Prioritized backlog + editorial calendar.
-
Checks: Calendar is feasible (no hidden approvals), and every item has an owner and a distribution plan.
- Create content briefs (make writing easy)
-
Inputs: Top topics, voice rules, CTA, distribution channels.
-
Actions: Write 3 briefs using references/TEMPLATES.md: target query/intent, angle (“information gain”), outline, proof assets needed (SME quotes/data), CTA, internal/external links, distribution checklist.
-
Outputs: 3 content briefs (ready to draft).
-
Checks: A writer can draft without additional meetings; each brief includes what must be uniquely true (not generic).
- Draft one flagship asset (blog post or announcement)
-
Inputs: One brief (or announcement context), references/TEMPLATES.md, references/WORKFLOW.md.
-
Actions: Draft an outline or first draft. If it’s an announcement, use a blog-post format with all “news” elements included. Use AI only per the SOP; add human insight, examples, and original framing.
-
Outputs: 1 draft outline/first draft + a “fact/claim check” list.
-
Checks: Draft has a clear POV, concrete examples, and avoids “100% AI-generated” sameness.
- Measurement + quality gate + finalize
-
Inputs: Draft pack; references/CHECKLISTS.md and references/RUBRIC.md.
-
Actions: Define measurement cadence (weekly review) and iteration loop (what you’ll change based on signals). Run checklist and score rubric. Always include Risks / Open questions / Next steps.
-
Outputs: Final Content Marketing Plan Pack.
-
Checks: Next 2 weeks of execution are unblocked; assumptions and demand validation gaps are explicit.
Quality gate (required)
-
Use references/CHECKLISTS.md and references/RUBRIC.md.
-
Always include: Risks, Open questions, Next steps.
Examples
Example 1 (B2B SaaS, SEO + pipeline):
“Use content-marketing . Product: AI note-taking for sales calls. ICP: SDR managers at 50–500 person SaaS. Goal: increase qualified demo requests; timebox: 8 weeks; constraints: 1 marketer + 2 SMEs, compliance review required. Output: a Content Marketing Plan Pack with demand-validated SEO topics, an editorial calendar, 3 briefs, and one drafted flagship post.”
Example 2 (Founder-led thought leadership):
“Our founder wants to become the face of the brand on LinkedIn. Pick a primary format, define voice rules, build a 6-week content calendar, and create 3 briefs that address our audience’s career anxieties.”
Boundary example (upstream missing ICP):
“We don’t know who we’re for yet. Create a content strategy anyway.”
Response: pause and recommend defining ICP/positioning first; offer a minimal discovery sprint and then return to content planning.