How to Repackage Your Best Stories

How to Repackage Your Best Stories

As a visual storyteller, I bet you produce a ton of content regularly you often recycle, right?

I’m talking about your original content—be it text, audio, images, or videos—that you share on your owned media channels.

Those are the channels you fully control, such as your blog, email newsletter, mobile app, white paper, webinars, courses, public talks, podcasts, and books.

Yet, when you produce hero content with well-thought-out insights that receive a strong response, it becomes part of your Thought Leadership library that builds your brand authority.

Now, you need to figure out how you can further repurpose or repackage this content.

Finding your “Thought Leadership Jewels”

If you are like me, over time, you’ve already generated what I call “Thought Leadership Jewels.”

You can be intentional from the get-go when creating comprehensive stories or assembling your past short-form content under a unified theme.

Either way, this high-value content requires more originality, complexity, and development time.

Here are some of the places I found my jewels:

My Newsletter: If you follow my newsletter long enough, you know that I often start my posts with a short story to demonstrate a point.

After the first four years of writing this newsletter, I accumulated a bunch of short stories that I repackaged into the book Total Acuity: Tales with Marketing Morals To Help You Create Richer, Visual Brand Stories.

Short stories collection coming from my newsletter, dressed up with a medieval tale theme and enhanced with practical tips (illustration: Penny Raile)

Still my newsletter: I often produce long-form and timely stories - like the recent The Landscape of AI Writing Tools, where I invested time researching and coming up with unique perspectives and practical tips.

I repackaged the story and transformed it into an e-guide on Gumroad, an e-commerce platform for creators.

A new e-guide repackaged from my newsletter

My training programs: Over the years, I’ve been providing visual storytelling training programs in various formats: corporate workshops, academic courses, webinars, and 1:1 coaching.

In my slides, I spotted those original frameworks I developed that helped solve a clear pain point for my clients or students.

For example, people have long told me, “I don’t know what stories to tell in my marketing campaigns!”

So, I created The Brand Storytelling Train, a visual e-guide designed to help marketers craft the right story to meet customers’ needs at each stage of the buyer’s journey.

For this?visual e-guide, I used the train metaphor to illustrate the different story types you can tell along the buyer’s journey

Another important handout I often share in my training programs is my “Top 10 Business Storytelling Formulas.”

If you’re a paid subscriber of this newsletter, you already received it as part of my benefit package.

Another?useful training handout?that found a secondary market, if you will :)

Short stories collection?coming from my newsletter, dressed up with a medieval tale theme and enhanced with practical tips (illustration: Penny Raile)

My public talks: I bet you get invited to give talks, and often, you need to create the content from scratch or highly customize what you have.

That’s what happened to me when I was invited to give a keynote talk about “AI for Nonprofits.”

For this talk, I also developed a useful handout called “AI Cheatsheet for Nonprofits” that gives attendees the basic workflows and AI tools they can apply for different use cases.

Instead of leaving this resource on my hard drive, I added it to my e-guide library so others could benefit.

An event handout found a new life as an e-guide

In short

I bet you’re sitting on your goldmine of “Thought Leadership Jewels,” too.

Find them, repackage them, and expand their exposure. Don’t let your tracking reports be the last evidence of their success.

Promote them on your network or use their previews as high-value magnets to capture leads.

These days, it’s easy to repurpose your greatest hits into multiple platforms, and this way, it increases your brand reach and authority.

It’s an ongoing process where you regularly prune your content’s “cream of the crop” and turn them into digital products.

Since I started a month ago, I have published five e-guides, but I already have a few ideas warming up on the sidelines.

Lastly, in this story, I focused on one type of digital product, e-guides, but there are, of course, other types:

  • Online courses
  • Webinars
  • On-demand coaching
  • eBooks
  • Newsletter or membership
  • Paid podcast episodes
  • Short or long video
  • And more

Beyond repurposing and monetizing your content with digital products, any other content you create can have a new shelf life on another platform.

It’s a multidirectional repackaging activity.

Start by knowing your audience's primary pain points, and then build your omnichannel storytelling distribution.

Leading with value is showing vs. telling people about your gifts.

See you next time!

Best,

- Shlomi?

Shlomi Ron

Chief Storytelling Officer

Visual Storytelling Institute

story > visual > emotion > experience

For more weekly visual storytelling insights, news, and interviews with experts, subscribe to my Visual Storytelling Newsletter!






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