Content creators often worry about being repetitive, but this fear is misplaced. Audiences are constantly growing and algorithms don't show content to everyone. What feels like a repeated message to the creator is often a new, valuable insight for a large portion of their audience.
When recycling content, don't simply repost everything. Track your content's performance by metrics like impressions and engagement. Only add your highest-performing "winners" back into the content cycle to ensure your feed remains high-quality and effective.
Instead of waiting 90 days to repost the exact same content, identify the core idea or "hook" of a successful post. This hook can be repurposed into different formats (e.g., meme, quote, video) on a much shorter, two-week cycle to maximize its impact.
Marketers can save significant time by reposting successful content that is at least 90 days old. Audiences rarely remember past posts, and recycled content often performs as well as, or even better than, original pieces, while also reaching new followers.
A non-obvious way to reuse top content is to distill it into comments. When you see a relevant conversation on a platform like LinkedIn, use your proven, high-engagement ideas as comments. This gets your best material in front of new audiences without cluttering your own feed.
