To avoid running out of material, dedicate a few moments each day to a simple exercise: ask, "If I had to tell a story from today, what would it be?" Documenting the answer in a spreadsheet creates a searchable, ever-growing database of personal anecdotes, ensuring you always have a fresh story to tell.
The pressure of a "weekly series" can be paralyzing. Instead, view it as building a library of evergreen assets. The effort diminishes over time as the library grows, and you can leverage and repurpose your best content "reruns" to generate leads.
Instead of using AI to generate generic text, leverage it as a partner to enhance your unique voice. A powerful technique is to have AI interview you to create a "story log"—a database of your personal anecdotes and experiences. This provides authentic, non-replicable material for future content.
Amy Porterfield dictates her personal stories to ChatGPT, then prompts it to extract the key parts into a concise draft. This uses AI as a partner for clarity and structure while preserving her authentic voice, avoiding soulless, AI-generated content.
Instead of inventing ideas, 'snatch' them from real-life observations. The power lies in using concrete, specific details from these moments—like an overheard conversation. This makes content more original, relatable, and emotionally compelling than generic advice, fostering a deeper audience connection.
To maintain a high creative output, Savannah Bananas founder Jesse Cole writes 10 new ideas every day. Crucially, he often focuses these sessions on a specific "idea bucket" or theme, such as developing characters for a new team. This transforms creativity from a sporadic event into a consistent, directed practice.
Instead of ad-hoc brainstorming, implement a structured weekly meeting to review an ideation backlog. Explicitly separate ideas into "relevancy-based" (e.g., Super Bowl) and "evergreen" categories. This ensures you capitalize on timely trends while consistently building a bank of long-lasting content.
Create a dedicated GPT and feed it all your content (podcasts, newsletters, courses). Prompt it to extract and categorize your personal stories. This creates a searchable database, ensuring you can always find the perfect narrative to connect with your audience and make your lessons memorable.
Instead of struggling to 'create' content from scratch, simply document your daily activities, meetings, and processes. This vlogging-style approach provides a wealth of authentic material without the pressure of constant ideation, turning your work itself into content.
The primary obstacle to generating content is the limiting belief that ideas are finite. By adopting an abundance mindset—the conviction that ideas are infinite—you create a self-fulfilling prophecy that keeps your creative channels open, ensuring new concepts continuously flow.
Don't rely on recalling the right story in the moment. Proactively build and maintain a "story library" with dozens of categorized examples. While you may only use a few core stories regularly, having a deep, accessible catalog ensures you have a relevant narrative for any customer situation.