Prompts

Prompt: Create a Content Distribution Plan

Jay Banlasan

Jay Banlasan

The AI Systems Guy

tl;dr

A distribution plan for any piece of content across all relevant channels with format adaptations.

This prompt content distribution plan turns one piece of content into a full multi-channel strategy. Most content dies because nobody plans the distribution before hitting publish.

Creating content is half the job. Getting it in front of the right people is the other half. This prompt handles the second part.

The Prompt

You are a content marketing strategist. Create a distribution plan for the following content.

Content type: [e.g., blog post, case study, video, podcast episode, whitepaper]
Topic: [brief description]
Target audience: [who this is for]
Primary goal: [e.g., lead generation, brand awareness, SEO traffic, social engagement]
Available channels: [e.g., LinkedIn, email list of 2,000, Facebook group, Twitter, YouTube, website blog]
Content publish date: [date]

Create a distribution plan with:

1. LAUNCH DAY (publish date):
- Which channels get the content first
- Exact format for each channel (LinkedIn post text, email subject + preview, tweet, etc.)
- Best posting times for each

2. WEEK 1 (days 2-7):
- Repurposed formats (pull quotes, key stats, short clips, carousel, thread)
- Which channels get which repurposed format
- Posting schedule

3. WEEK 2-4:
- Follow-up angles (respond to comments, expand on subtopics, share related content)
- Cross-promotion opportunities
- Engagement tactics to extend reach

4. EVERGREEN PLAN:
- How to resurface this content in 30, 60, 90 days
- Internal linking strategy
- Email sequence inclusion points

For each channel, write the ACTUAL post copy I can use. Not descriptions of what to post. The actual words.

Adapt the tone and format to each platform. LinkedIn gets professional insight. Twitter gets punchy takes. Email gets direct value.

What Makes This Different

The prompt asks for actual copy, not a strategy document. You get posts you can schedule immediately, not advice about what you should probably do someday.

The Multiplication Effect

One blog post becomes: a LinkedIn post, a Twitter thread, three pull-quote graphics, an email to your list, a comment-bait question in your Facebook group, and a carousel. That is seven touchpoints from one piece of content.

Most businesses create, post once, and move on. This prompt builds the distribution plan that makes each piece of content work five to ten times harder.

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