Why a content plan is not a table, but a solution
Most bloggers confuse a content plan with a table saying 'Monday - post, Wednesday - reel, Friday - story'. That's a calendar, not a plan. A real content plan answers 3 questions: why am I publishing this, who needs it, what will the reader do next.
Without these answers, any post becomes background noise. Algorithms react to this — engagement drops, reach shrinks, and you sit there thinking 'it didn't work again'. AI helps not to speed up the production of junk, but to create a meaningful system in an hour.
Step 1. Insight bank — your fuel
Before opening Claude, open a blank document and spend 15 minutes dumping everything you know about your topic. Don't make it pretty. Write in bullet points:
- 5 mistakes beginners make
- 3 case studies from the last month
- 2 uncomfortable truths of the industry
- 1 failure story that taught something
- Numbers you remember by heart
This file is your advantage. Without it, AI will produce average content that resembles 100 other blogs. With it, you get topics that no one else can replicate because no one has your observations.
Step 2. Topics — generation and filtering
Open Claude and paste the prompt:
'You are a content strategist for an expert in [your niche]. Here are my insights: [insert file]. Generate 30 topics for posts for the month. Each topic: title, main idea in 1 sentence, desired reader action. Topics should stem from my insights, not be generic.'
You’ll get 30 titles. Half will be average. That’s normal. Skim through and keep 20 — the ones you have something to add to. If you have nothing to say beyond what AI provides, that post won’t resonate.
Step 3. Formats — distribution across channels
Each topic can become a post, reel, newsletter, or story. Not all at once — but many in 2–3 formats. Request:
'Take these 20 topics. For each, suggest 2 formats from the list: long post, 30–60 sec reel, 7-slide carousel, newsletter, story chain. Consider: reels — short stories and mistakes, long posts — analyses and frameworks, newsletters — personal and behind-the-scenes.'
You get a matrix of 20 topics × 2 formats = 40 content pieces. For a month with posting every other day — more than enough. The surplus is good: some can be postponed or adapted to current events.
Don't want to build the system manually?
The 'AI System for Blogging' training is a ready-made methodology: content plan, prompts, templates for posts, reels, and newsletters. From note to publication — in 20 minutes per content piece.
Go to the training →Step 4. Calendar — scheduling by dates
Now you distribute 40 units across the dates. Here, AI is useful again — not for generation, but for checking balance:
“Distribute 40 units of content over 30 days. Restrictions: no more than 2 posts per day, alternate formats (no two posts in a row), balance topics — educational / personal / sales in a ratio of 60/30/10. Provide a table: date, format, topic, goal.”
You get a ready calendar. Open it and visually check: where the rhythm is uneven, where similar topics are too close together — rearrange them manually in 10 minutes. The final result is a table in Notion or Google Sheets that you work from all month.
Step 5. Review — common sense filter
Before closing the document, run through 4 questions:
- Are there topics here that I have no interest in? Remove. Without interest, you can't write engagingly.
- Are there topics I've already covered 3 months ago? Replace or give a new angle.
- Does each post lead somewhere? If there's no goal — it's noise. Clarify the goal or discard it.
- Do I have enough material? If 5 topics lack personal stories or data — it's better to have 25 strong posts than 30 average ones.
Common mistakes
Mistake 1. Asking AI to 'come up with 30 blog topics'
Without context, AI will produce a generic list from the top blogs in your niche. You'll get the same as your competitors. The remedy is the insights bank from step 1.
Mistake 2. Relying on AI for the final text
Planning — yes. Post framework — yes. Final text — no. The audience can sense inauthenticity within 2 weeks and stops engaging. AI provides a draft, you refine it with your own touch.
Mistake 3. Making a plan and not following it
The main trap. A plan works only if you open it every morning and create the next post. Without discipline, any system is just a pretty table.
Mistake 4. Not leaving room for current events
If something happens in your niche — you need to react within a day. Pre-plan 2–3 'windows' a month for current topics. The plan should be flexible, not set in stone.
What to do when the month ends
At the end of the month — spend 30 minutes on a retrospective. Open the statistics: which 5 posts performed the best? What do they have in common — format, topic, release time? These answers become inputs for the next monthly plan. This way, the system self-learns every 30 days.
After 3 months, you have a personal framework that AI can't guess from scratch — it's built on your data. This is the moment when the blog stops being a lottery and becomes a managed system.
FAQ
How much time does it really take to plan for a month?
The first time — 2 hours: you learn to formulate prompts for yourself. From the second month — 45–60 minutes.
Can you publish AI-generated texts without edits?
No. AI provides a framework. You refine the final version: personal stories, data, emotions. Otherwise, the blog loses its voice in 2 weeks.
Which AI is better — ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini?
For long tasks — Claude. It maintains context, doesn't lose the thread, writes more naturally. For quick ideas, any will do.
What to do if topics repeat?
Keep an insights bank. Feed it new observations every week. AI will apply fresh data to new angles.
Does a microblogger need a plan?
Especially needed. A small blog grows through consistency and focus. A plan removes the 'what to write today' dilemma and leaves energy for quality.
Want a ready-made system instead of trial and error?
In the training 'AI System for Blogging' — my personal framework: insights bank, prompts for Claude, calendar, templates for posts, reels, newsletters. Everything I use every day.
Get the training →