You're drowning in content submissions. How do you handle urgent approvals without sacrificing quality?
In the deluge of content submissions, maintaining quality while managing urgent approvals is key. To stay afloat:
- Implement a triage system to prioritize content based on urgency and impact.
- Utilize quick review checklists that cover the essentials without getting bogged down in details.
- Empower trusted team members to make decisions on straightforward submissions.
How do you balance quick turnarounds with maintaining high standards?
You're drowning in content submissions. How do you handle urgent approvals without sacrificing quality?
In the deluge of content submissions, maintaining quality while managing urgent approvals is key. To stay afloat:
- Implement a triage system to prioritize content based on urgency and impact.
- Utilize quick review checklists that cover the essentials without getting bogged down in details.
- Empower trusted team members to make decisions on straightforward submissions.
How do you balance quick turnarounds with maintaining high standards?
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I’m not. I don’t. I never have been. I represent musicians, artistes and businesses. LinkedIn : please can somebody please stop sending me irrelevant nonsense. The positive direct result will be me stopping taking the piss when I’m bored.
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First, prioritise contributions based on their urgency and significance. Implement a tier-based review process, with first evaluations delegated to trusted team members. Use project management tools to keep track of your work and deadlines. Establish certain standards and procedures to maintain consistency and quality. Schedule regular check-ins to identify bottlenecks and sustain communication. Streamline the review process by concentrating on essential points and delivering short remarks. Allocate time for urgent approvals while balancing the total workload. Even when faced with tight deadlines, emphasise the significance of quality.
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The key here is to have a calendar for content. Thus, it's important to have lots of content to consider. Quality is essential. Perhaps even just as important, the submissions must understand your focus. It is pretty obvious when submissions are the same over and over for multiple outlets. Avoid those. A cursory look helps to find the gem that stands out. No matter how inundated you are with submissions, set aside a little time to find the diamond in the rough.
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You're getting a ton of content submissions. That's okay. That's a good thing. It sucks when there are no content submissions. Relax. First thing you do – declutter. Remove the garbage. Anything that doesn't nail the brief? Out. Bad grammar? Seeya. Too much GPT? Outtahere. No formatting, visual element? Byeee. Now, you're left with 10% of the content. That's progress. Next – focus on the writing. Has this person really understood the topic? Is the content justifying the content? Remove another 9%. From the 1% – it's all about how captivating the article is. If it makes you wanna read, read it. And that's the submission you should be going for. Hope this helps. If not, stop reading. Start writing.
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- feed them to your content organizing bear ?? - hire a travel agent to send you on a vacation because you probably need it - unplug your computer - forward them all to Elon musk - get in your car and keep driving and don’t stop until you get to the bobs big boy spaceship
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