Monthly Archives: January 2020

How to Use an Editorial Calendar to Improve Social Media Management

editorial calendar
Amanda Dodge Content Creation, Social Media January 28, 2020

One of the biggest challenges that companies have with social media marketing is maintaining a consistent presence. They will go through periods where they post daily and work to engage with other accounts, only to go dark for a month or longer. Because social media is a top-funnel marketing tactic, it is rarely attributed to direct sales. This means it is often one of the first things to get cut from the budget or from your team’s to-do list. 

Burnout is also a real issue for social media managers. Coming up with creative content day-in and day-out can exhaust anyone, causing marketing managers to post fewer updates and skip days here or there. 

Fewer social media updates mean lower engagement rates. Social media algorithms use the snowball effect to promote brands. I’ve worked with clients where their posts received unprecedented engagement rates on an average post just because an image or video shared a few days prior went viral. Brands with high engagement rates will continue to get the exposure they want while inconsistent brands will start back at the beginning every time they take a break.

Fortunately, you don’t have to constantly fight burnout and dedicate several hours per week to social media content creation. With a clear editorial calendar, you can quickly fill up your work and ensure that you have content even during the busiest times in your office.

This guide will walk you through the editorial calendar creation process and provide tips for easier management and delegation.

1. Find an Editorial Calendar that Works for You

There are dozens of companies that are dying to give you an editorial calendar template. You can download these for free and use them at face value, or you can modify the templates for your own needs. You can find two popular editorial calendar tools at HubSpot and CoSchedule

Decide what kind of template works for your brand. Some people will embrace a clean spreadsheet while others will want a more traditional calendar view. A calendar view will also give you visual cues to make sure that your content isn’t too cluttered together or certain themes aren’t posted too far apart. Personally, I prefer a hybrid. I am a visual learner, so I prefer to have a calendar that I can glance at to see what content is going live and when. However, I also use a spreadsheet to reduce clutter, make it easy to grab information and allow multiple people to collaborate at once. 

Below is the calendar view that we will work with throughout this article, using September 2019 as the sample month:

editorial calendar example

2. Look for Major Holidays and Events

Once you have an editorial calendar, start with the easy days. Block out Christmas, Thanksgiving, Memorial Day, or whatever major holidays fall on that month. What posts will you need for these days – both before and during the holiday? Will the office be closed? Would you like to honor the holiday?

Below is an example of a content note for Labor Day, which falls on the first Monday of September.

social media calendar example

Outside of national holidays (where banks and schools are closed), there are also lesser holidays that many companies celebrate on social media. IHOP promotes Pancake Day while Dunkin lures customers in on National Donut Day. Even if your company doesn’t offer a special deal based on a holiday, you can still use these minor events to create quick, image-heavy social media content. Below are a few holiday examples for September.

social media calendar

You can take these holidays as lightly or as seriously as you want. For a cheeky post, you can encourage employees to leave the office and take a long lunch on National Cheeseburger Day, or you can use an event like Business Women’s Day to highlight unequal pay in the workplace.

3. Promote Your Blog Content

As a copywriter, I am always begging my clients to promote their blog content on social media. This is a great way to drive traffic to your website and share the content that your team worked so hard to create. Plus, if you create blog content consistently, then you should always have something to share on social media. 

As you can see, our editorial calendar example is updated to share blog content that is published twice per month.

editorial calendar

You have two options when reposting blog content on social media. First, you can post your top posts. These pages have a history of success and will likely generate higher engagement rates. However, you can also repost content that wasn’t as successful when it went live. This can give it fresh life and drive new people to read it. You work hard to create your blog content – don’t waste it.

If you focus on evergreen blog post ideas, then you can continue to share blog content several months after it goes live.

editorial calendar example

4. Schedule Throwback Days

There’s a reason why #ThrowbackThursday has more than 49 million tags on Instagram. Looking back on where you came from compared to where you are now is exciting – in both your personal life and as a brand. You can apply the principles of Throwback Thursday to your social media calendar – even if you’re not posting on a Thursday. 

This option is particularly popular for brands with a long history that can share old photos or companies that have grown significantly in the past few years.

social media editorial calendar

5. Develop a Content Series

As you can see, your editorial calendar is starting to fill up. Even before you create a social media post, a third of your days already have content planned out.

Your next step is to come up with a series that fits the month to develop content around. 

For example, September is Self Improvement Month, which several brands can create social media posts around. A local gym could post health tips or an office could create content focused around growing professionally. 

A few common series that brands rely on to fill their social media editorial calendars include:

  • Employee spotlights
  • Customer profiles or testimonials
  • Top tips or hacks
  • Countdowns to certain events
  • Definitions of industry jargon
  • Behind the scenes peeks

You can create a series that lasts a few weeks (like a five-day countdown), or one that lasts several months. You can also create content for the series all at once and then schedule out the posts, helping you save time over the course of the month or year.

DIY editorial calendar

6. Leave Space for Breaking News

There will be a few spaces on your calendar that you can save for last-minute posts and emergencies. There are also times when your brand shouldn’t post. As Hurricane Dorian pummeled the Bahamas in September, brands like Royal Caribbean needed to clear their social media channels so they weren’t offering cheap deals to the affected areas. They also needed to use the space to talk about their part in the relief efforts.

Leave two or three days where you can pause your content (or move it to a different day) to post relevant information as needed. You never know when a throwback post will get replaced with breaking news.

editorial calendar social media

Try to make your “free days” on less popular social days for your brand. I used the weekend as an example of when your company can afford to go dark if nothing comes up during the month.

7. Create a Spreadsheet for Industry Content

Just by following this process you can fill up the vast majority of your editorial calendar before the month even starts. From here, you only have a week or two that you need to come up with content for. Instead of using your creative energy to create 30 days of content, you only need to fill in 10 days. 

I recommend keeping a spreadsheet or Google doc with interesting content, links, images, videos, memes, or anything else that would be interesting for your brand. You can also share this document with others in your marketing team (or company as a whole) to add to. Then, you can pull from this list to create engaging content.

social media content ideas

How to Use a List-Based Editorial Calendar

At the start of the article, I mentioned how you might use a spreadsheet to create content instead of a calendar. For the sake of example, here is what a list format would look like, using the first few days of September.    

social media list calendar

Once you know what the post is going to be, you can write in the copy, start pulling relevant images, and collect necessary links to go with the post. 

Pro Tip: you can also use this list to report on the success of your social content. Create tabs listing the impressions, likes, comments, and shares for each post, which you can fill in after the content goes live. Then you can see what content your audience loves and what content they hate. This way you can always keep improving.

social media tracking

Create Content and Schedule it Ahead

Social media is (and always will be) a daily activity for your marketing team. However, you can plan ahead to limit the amount of work it takes each day. 

Following this process, you can draft 30 social media posts for the month in just a few hours. You can save the content and post it as needed, or use tools like Buffer to schedule the content out. If you choose this option, continue to monitor your posts. Check the content when it is supposed to go live, respond to comments or questions, and stay engaged on your channels. 

Just because you can create dozens of social media posts in just a few hours doesn’t mean your social media management is reduced to a monthly activity. 

An editorial calendar is meant to help you take control of your social media channels to prevent burnout and maintain consistency. When used well, it will provide you with a clear plan where you always have something in your queue to keep your audience engaged. 

Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay

How to Brainstorm 50 Blog Post Ideas in an Hour

blog post ideas
Amanda Dodge Content Creation January 15, 2020

One of the best ways to target keywords and improve your organic rankings is to create blog content. However, in my experience, convincing clients to start a blog (much less regularly maintain one) often elicits confusion and even derision. MySpace and LiveJournal still have a stronghold on what people consider a “blog”. They picture food bloggers talking about how much their hubby just loved the cauliflower mac and cheese they made and wonder how something like that could fit in with their brand. 

Your blog is one of your main platforms for communicating with your customers. You can post news updates, industry insights, success stories, and even product reviews for new items that you offer. You choose the length. You choose the frequency. You choose the keywords. 

This guide will serve as a tool to show you how to develop a content plan that benefits your current marketing strategy. You don’t need to constantly feel pressure to come up with new blog post ideas. As long as you focus on your goals, you can come up with dozens of ideas in just one hour. Follow this process to create goal-driven content that drives results.

1. Use the Hub and Spoke Model

If you are looking for an organized way to develop blog post ideas, consider the hub-and-spoke model. Simply put, you start with a hub of core products, services, or goals and then expand them into spokes of keywords which then turn into ideas. You can focus on specific hubs when you need to push certain products while keeping an eye on the various keywords that you use. 

We are going to use this model as the base for the brainstorming and content creation process. For the duration of this post, we are going to use a nonprofit organization as an ideation example.

2. Identify Your Top Goals 

Start by assembling your top products or goals that you want to drive traffic to. What services need more exposure? What pages do you wish would rank higher? You can have as many hubs as you want, but your team will likely only be able to focus on one at a time. 

Below, the nonprofit that we are using as an example identified four key services that they wanted to support through their blog content:

  • Increase donated items to their main location.
  • Grow financial donations from individuals and corporations.
  • Encourage more volunteers and community participation.
  • Boost exposure of the nonprofit within the local community.

These become the key hubs.

nonprofit blog post ideas

(For another example, a bakery would develop hubs like wedding catering, corporate catering, and birthdays. A SaaS company would build ideas around different features or target audiences.)

For now, you can ignore the other hubs and focus on one core goal, then you can return to the other topic when you are ready.

3. Build Keywords Around Your Main Hubs

Once you have your hubs, it’s time to develop keywords that you can use to create blog post ideas. You can develop these in multiple ways. Some companies do keyword research through sites like SEMRush (here is a great resource list with keyword tools), but if you’re just starting out you can pick keywords that you know relate to your brand and that you want to specifically target. 

Below, we have added to the flow chart to show what these keywords look like once they are added to the main hubs. These are the spokes that you will build onto your hub. Those with a keen eye can see how these keywords will quickly become ideas for your blog.

how to blog post ideas

4. Create Blog Topics Based on Your Keywords

Now that you have your hub and spokes, you can turn your spokes into concrete ideas. (This is why keyword research is important. If you only have a few keywords and phrases, then you will likely struggle to come up with fresh blog post ideas.) 

You can also use this process to stagger your keywords to meet your SEO goals. Add long-tail, hyper-local, and competitive keywords, and then determine which ones you want to prioritize.

Below, you can see how blog topics have been added to the spokes of our chart.

blog post ideation guide

So far, this process has generated 10 unique blog topics around specific keywords that your brand would want to rank for. If you complete this process with your various other spokes, you could develop 30-50 blog ideas just within an hour of ideation. 

You can speed up this process by making it interactive. You can send out a spreadsheet and ask your coworkers to create blog content around a list of keywords. You can also meet together for a brainstorming meeting that uses this controlled method for coming up with relevant ideas.

5. Add Descriptions to Your Blog Post Ideas

Oftentimes, team members will come up with several ideas, feel excited and inspired to write about them, and then forget what various ideas meant or needed to cover by the time they return to their desks. During your ideation meeting, ask one person to take notes and fill in descriptions or ask everyone to add context to their ideas before they leave. 

I typically switch these ideas to spreadsheet form. I also use the same spreadsheet to track the keywords I have already used for a brand and to easily find similar internal links that I can add. Your content spreadsheet should include:

  • Blog title or proposed headline
  • Description of expected content
  • Examples of subheads
  • Resource links

This is what the spreadsheet would look like based on the nonprofit’s ideation.

blog content for charities

What started as a hub with four goals has developed into multiple blog topics that you can start writing today.

6. Fill In Your Editorial Calendar

The final step in this process is to add the blog topics to your editorial calendar. While you may have dozens of blog post ideas, you likely only have a small bandwidth to write about them. Consider picking a theme for each month or varying the topics each week to change up the content.

Don’t let writer’s block keep you from blogging. This process should help you come up with as many ideas as you need and show you how strategic blog content can support your marketing efforts.

Header Image by Johannes Plenio from Pixabay