Tiny Marketing: Marketing strategies and systems for B2B service business founders.

Ep 93: Behind the Scenes Building a 4-hour Content Creation Camp

Sarah Noel Block Season 3 Episode 93

Send us a text

Ever wonder how to keep a room full of people engaged for four hours straight? This episode uncovers the secrets behind planning and executing an interactive content creation workshop for the state of Illinois, designed by yours truly, Sarah Noelle Block, and my husband. We kick things off with a dynamic introduction and goal-setting session, followed by engaging activities like a four-corner question round and group content calendar planning. Our strategic breaks and hands-on learning approach kept participants energized and focused throughout the event.

In our recap, we dive into the art of maximizing the value of your content through effective repurposing. Discover how tools like Opus, Canva, and CapCut can revolutionize your content strategy, making repurposing effortless. I also shared practical ChatGPT prompts to ignite fresh content ideas and demonstrated how to organize a seasonally segmented content calendar. By the end, our participants walked away with a comprehensive plan for a year’s worth of content, freeing them from the constant grind of content creation. Tune in for actionable advice and practical tips to streamline your content strategy!

Join my events community for FREE monthly events.

I offer free events each month to help you master your business's growth through marketing, sales, systems, and offer strategy.

Join the community here!

Support the show



Come tour my digital home :) >>>Website
Wanna be friends? >>> LinkedIn
Let's chat every Tuesday! >>> Newsletter


Speaker 1:

Hey, hey, hey. This is Sarah Noelle Block and you are listening to Tiny Marketing. This is the uncut summer series where you are getting the raw, unfiltered, unedited recordings from our interviews, webinars and workshops. So sit back, relax and enjoy the ridiculousness. I am taking you behind the scenes on creating my long, four-hour in-person content creation party workshop for the entire state of Illinois. So let's get to it.

Speaker 1:

I worked with my husband, who is in leadership, to design a workshop that would keep people engaged because, let's be real, four hours is a really, really long time. So I needed to make sure that this workshop was extremely, extremely, extremely engaging and kept people interested the whole time. So he helped me develop the agenda that would facilitate that. So the first 15 minutes of it is introducing the event myself and starting a discussion on what people really want from the event, so we can sort of set the stage on what a win would be by the end of the workshop. Next thing is the teaching element of it. So I am going to teach them how to do content planning and introduce a content calendar and how they can use it most effectively. After this teaching moment, which would be about 45 minutes to an hour, we'll take a break so people can step away, get a little mind break and have some time to adjust. Next up, we're going to come together and do something physical to get people on their toes, physical to get people on their toes. So we're going to do a four corner question and with this I'm asking them two to three questions that will get them moving into different corners of the room to get them, you know, energized. So they're moving, they're thinking, they're talking, and then the final question will get them into their final groups for the activity that will come. So the next piece of it is explaining the activity. So I'm going to take just five minutes to set the stage on what the activity will look like, how they can complete it and say okay, these are your groups, these four corners are the groups. Then we'll go into the activity.

Speaker 1:

The first one is a content calendar planning activity. So they're going to spend about 45 minutes working together to create one season of content. The objective by the end of the workshop is to be able to have an entire year's worth of content. So this first section is breaking up into those four quarters and each quarter is going to be assigned the content calendar for that quarter and then they're going to share it, so they'll have a full year. So that's what they'll be doing for the next 45 minutes. What do we need to talk about for this season? Then we will get back together and we'll start sharing out what are things that we added to our content calendar, and does anybody else have ideas on what we should include in the content calendar for that season? So we'll be able to talk to the larger group during this next part.

Speaker 1:

We'll take another break, move people away, get them moving again, and then we're going to come back to another teaching moment where I will teach them how to use AI and repurpose the B-roll, the videography, the photos that they did earlier, before my session started. So I'm going to teach them for about 30 minutes how to use chat, gpt, how to use repurposing and AI tools to do it really quickly. Then we're going to do a group activity where I walk them through how to do this for one particular project. Then they'll be able to see what it looks like in real life. And then they are going to go back to their groups and they will complete their own activity where they will repurpose, use AI in order to create the content. Last, after they created their thing, they will share out their project and share it with the room and we'll wrap up the workshop. So that is what a four-hour workshop looks like agenda-wise.

Speaker 1:

Now let's get into the content of it. The first thing that I need to teach in this workshop is content planning and calendar creation. So the first thing I do is explain what on earth is content planning. No one attending this workshop is a marketer, so they're not going to know. So we want to define your goals for the quarter.

Speaker 1:

What programs or events do you need to promote? Audit existing content Is there anything that you can repurpose that you've already created? Assess the competition. Do you have any ideas that would work for you, based off of what the competition has done in previous seasons? Scan through their socials, scan through their websites what works. Build an editorial calendar. Create three to five pieces of content for every piece of content. Repurpose to high heaven. Create engagement points within your content. So how do we get people to engage with your content and plan for that ahead of time?

Speaker 1:

And then, last is pre-repurpose.

Speaker 1:

So understanding what content that you've created this season.

Speaker 1:

Is there any of it that you can use for next year at the same time. Who's going to remember? All right, and then the last bit of the workshop was around repurposing an AI. So I put together slides and prompts to show them how they can repurpose their content super easily using tools like Opus, canva, capcut. And then I taught them ChatGPT prompts to help them come up with content ideas and repurpose the content that they've created. Last things last, I put together a comprehensive workbook that they would be able to use, and it is broken down by season, so each will have four groups working on content creation for their season. So every group will have all four seasons. By the end of the four hours they will have an entire year of content created for their group. It should be amazing and so beneficial they won't have to think about content again.

Speaker 1:

So that is the behind the scenes of my workshop. If you have questions, go down and to the fan mail and send me a message. I am happy, happy, happy to answer it for you. Okay, bye, be happy to answer it for you, okay bye. If you enjoyed this episode, please, please, please, remember to subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts and rate and review, but, most importantly, tell your friends, share this episode with a friend, so other people know about Tiny Marketing and our Uncut Summer Series. I will see you next week with another great one.

People on this episode