How to Build a Simple, Effective Content Calendar
John Boitnott
Helping entrepreneurs and business leaders boost visibility through strategic content creation, expert storytelling, and effective digital marketing. Delivering increased brand authority and business growth
If you're a?content marketer, you need to maintain a steady stream of fresh, reliable content that’s targeted to your audience at each point of the buyer’s journey. What you might not have discovered yet is the busy content marketer’s secret: Keeping your content production process organized is essential to ensuring that content continues to arrive on time and within budget.
The answer is straightforward, a content calendar. This document (or app workflow, spreadsheet, or whatever other format you choose) provides a single source of data that governs every aspect of the content production, publication, and promotion process. Its consistent use can help you address many?problems with your content marketing. A working content calendar becomes your content bible, the same way long-running TV shows develop show bibles to track all the data points for each episode. One look tells you what you need to know and keeps you on schedule.
A workable content calendar (sometimes called an “editorial calendar”) can take any one of a number of forms. Examples range from simple lists in a plain document to complex databases or spreadsheets. The right content calendar for your needs is the one that provides the info you need, in a format you can access and use simply, without adding unnecessary data.
Diving into the process of creating a content calendar from scratch can be overwhelming. That’s especially true if you’re managing a team of more than a few freelance or in-house creatives. In fact, the bigger your team and the more narrowly functions are sliced between them, the more complex your calendar can get. How can you create a workable process to track your team’s content production efforts without getting overwhelmed?
Why Do You Need a Content Calendar in the First Place?
First, let’s examine the “why.” Let’s say you consider yourself to be an organized kind of person. You’ve got a task app, a paper-and-pen system for brainstorming, Google docs, searchable email—do you really need a formal content calendar?
Well, maybe not. If you’re a team of one, and the only person producing a small amount of content (a few posts a month), a full-fledged content calendar might not be necessary, strictly speaking. However, a simplified format might provide just the boost you need to take your content marketing to the next level. Here are just a few reasons why:
Work Out Your Data Needs
Before you do anything else, decide:?What do you need to see in your content calendar??Your specific needs will inform how you create the calendar, so it’s a good idea to at least start outlining a strategy before you start analyzing examples from other brands.
The specific fields or components of your calendar depend wholly on your strategy. Generally, however, you’ll want to address the following four questions:
You may also want to include space to track other data points, such as primary and secondary keywords, goals and metrics, published URL, document URL for the content itself, and the current status of each piece. If you’re running paid ad campaigns that involve a specific piece of content, you might want to note that in the calendar as well.
Examples of Content Calendars
Now that you have an idea of the kinds of data points you want to track in your calendar, use Google to search for, collect and analyze examples and templates of content calendars. Prioritize documents that come from brands of similar size with roughly similar audiences. After all, if you’re managing a team of three for a consumer brand, a calendar designed for a large B2B corporation won’t be the best role model to follow.
It’s best to do this after you’ve outlined your brand’s calendar strategy to avoid getting overwhelmed with possibilities that may or may not suit your needs. Additionally, restrict the number of examples you choose to analyze. Too many options will overly complicate things and can potentially lead to “analysis paralysis,” making it tough to nail down your own calendar’s features.
Once you’ve collected a handful of examples and templates, carefully review each for ideas that will benefit your content strategy and production workflows. However, resist the temptation to adopt another brand’s calendar template wholesale; the value of the calendar lies in how well it advances your brand’s specific goals and objectives.
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Choose Your Platform
As you’re analyzing calendar examples from other brands, pay attention to the platform they use. In the early days of content marketing, brands often used simple document and spreadsheet templates. This approach can still work quite well for smaller teams, for which collaboration and access may be more important than user management.
More recently, marketing managers and editors choose task and project management apps such as Monday, Asana or Trello as their content calendars. This is especially useful for larger groups that need to be able to assign tasks to various team members and track large amounts of data over a long period of time. Of course, if you’re managing a team with several members, you’ll probably need an enterprise license for the app. That can significantly add to your costs, as both licensing and training costs can be considerably higher for more complex platforms.
Create Your Content Workflow
With this step, you move from calendar conceptualizing into creation. One effective way to approach this step is to take one theoretical piece of content from conception to post-publication promotion and analysis of metrics. This helps illuminate three key factors that will help you improve both the calendar and your content production system itself:
Consider your content process as a single workflow from ideation to the final review. This helps you improve that process by ensuring the right person is handling each discrete task, for example, or streamlining the collaboration process to save time.
It’s also the right time to add steps that you’ve glossed over or neglected back into the mix. If your team has been solid on brainstorming topics but not that great on adding and optimizing images, you can add in a specific set of tasks aimed at improving and speeding up that aspect of content creation.
After you’ve outlined your new process in detail, assign each task to the right member of your team. You may also want to add a calendar-year preview of holidays and events so that you can align your content schedule accordingly.
Tips for Working With Your New Content Calendar
Creating your content calendar is the first and probably the most complex step. However, in order to reap the benefits discussed above, it’s equally important to figure out in advance how you’re going to work with and maintain your calendar. These tips can help you make the most out of your results:
Experiment to Refine Your Calendar
Above all, just dive in. Try something. If creating your own brand calendar seems overwhelming, use another brand’s approach as a cookie-cutter template. You can always refine, streamline and improve as you and your team work with it over time. Start simply, then grow from there.
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John Boitnott?is a journalist and digital consultant who has worked at media companies for 25 years. He writes about startups, marketing and leadership at?Entrepreneur, the?Motley Fool,?Readwrite.com,?JotForm.com, and?his blog.
This article appeared on?Clearvoice.com.?