skills/meta-analytics-ops/meta-content-repurposing/SKILL.md
Generates a content repurposing plan to maximise output from each piece of content the client produces. Covers the Content Factory model, a platform repurposing matrix, 10 worked repurposing chains, a weekly workflow for social media managers, and guidance on what not to repurpose. Invoke this skill when a client has limited content production capacity, when building a content calendar with a small team, or when a client asks how to get more mileage from content they already create.
npx skillsauth add peterbamuhigire/social-media-skills meta-content-repurposingInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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SKILL.md; do not skip mandatory steps or required fields.references/ directory is added later, treat its files as the deeper source material and keep this SKILL.md execution-focused.references/repurposing-for-launch-and-clusters.md when the repurposing plan must support a launch, campaign, funnel, or topic cluster rather than volume alone.Before generating the repurposing plan, collect the following from the consultant:
Repurposing reduces content production costs by 60–70% compared to creating original content for every platform. One well-planned piece of source content can fill 7–10 platform slots across the publishing schedule. The goal is not to flood platforms with the same post — it is to extract the maximum number of relevant, platform-native outputs from a single investment of research, filming, or writing.
The Repurposing Chain (Nemo, 2017): A single video recording produces: 1 YouTube video → 1 podcast episode (audio extracted) → 1 transcript → 1 blog post → 1 email newsletter section → 3–5 social posts (quotes, tips, highlights)
This is content currency: one investment, multiple returns. Clients with limited production time should always begin with a video or audio recording, because it generates the widest downstream content tree.
The 1-7-30-4-2-1 Publishing Cadence (Handley, 2012): A framework for publishing rhythm:
Apply this cadence to set realistic output targets with clients who ask "how much should we be posting?"
The principle: Create one substantial piece of long-form content (Tier 1), then systematically derive shorter, platform-specific content from it (Tier 2 and Tier 3). Each tier requires progressively less production effort because the research, argument, and raw material already exist.
Content hierarchy:
Tier 1 — Source content (create once) The anchor piece. Requires the most effort but funds everything below it.
Tier 2 — Derived content (extract and adapt) Takes the substance of the Tier 1 piece and reformats it for individual platforms. Each requires 20–45 minutes of adaptation work.
Tier 3 — Micro-content (extract and publish quickly) Short-form, low-effort assets extracted from Tier 1 or Tier 2. Each requires 10–20 minutes to produce.
Content Factory diagram (replicate this in Canva or on a whiteboard):
[TIER 1: Source Content]
|
├── [TIER 2: Instagram carousel]
├── [TIER 2: TikTok video]
├── [TIER 2: Twitter/X thread]
├── [TIER 2: Email newsletter section]
└── [TIER 2: Facebook post]
|
├── [TIER 3: Quote graphic]
├── [TIER 3: 15-second clip]
├── [TIER 3: WhatsApp snippet]
└── [TIER 3: Instagram Story]
One Tier 1 piece → 5 Tier 2 pieces → 4 Tier 3 pieces = 10 platform slots from a single source.
Use this matrix to determine what each source content type can produce. ✅ = viable repurpose. ❌ = not appropriate (either technically impossible or would perform poorly).
| Source content | YouTube Short | TikTok | Instagram Reel | LinkedIn post | Blog summary | WhatsApp broadcast | X/Twitter thread | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | YouTube video (5–10 min) | ✅ 60s clip | ✅ hook clip | ✅ clip | ✅ key insight post | ✅ summary post | ✅ tip snippet | ✅ thread | | Blog post (1,200+ words) | ❌ | ✅ visual explainer | ✅ carousel slides | ✅ insight post | ❌ (it is the blog) | ✅ key tip | ✅ thread | | LinkedIn article | ❌ | ✅ key insight video | ✅ carousel | ❌ (it is the post) | ✅ expanded version | ✅ snippet | ✅ thread | | Instagram Reel | ✅ repost | ✅ repost/adapt | ❌ (it is the Reel) | ✅ link post with commentary | ❌ | ✅ teaser | ✅ commentary post | | Podcast / audio | ✅ audiogram | ✅ audiogram | ✅ audiogram | ✅ transcript excerpt | ✅ show notes summary | ✅ key quote | ✅ thread | | Webinar recording | ✅ highlight clip | ✅ key moment clip | ✅ clip | ✅ key insight post | ✅ summary with CTA | ✅ one takeaway | ✅ thread |
Audiogram: A static or animated image with an audio waveform overlay, used to share podcast or spoken-word content on visual platforms. Tools: Headliner (free tier), Canva (audio visualiser). Effective on Instagram and TikTok for podcast content.
Each example shows one source piece → 5+ platform outputs. Industries are drawn from Uganda / East Africa to reflect the default market context.
Example 1 — Kampala restaurant Source content: YouTube video (8 minutes) — "How we make our rolex: behind the scenes at [Restaurant Name]"
Total platform slots from 1 video: 6
Example 2 — Financial services firm (Kampala) Source content: Blog post (1,500 words) — "5 signs your business is ready for an external audit"
Total platform slots from 1 blog post: 6
Example 3 — NGO (national, Uganda) Source content: Webinar recording (45 minutes) — "Understanding NSSF contributions for small employers"
Total platform slots from 1 webinar: 6
Example 4 — Fashion retailer (Kampala) Source content: Instagram Reel (45 seconds) — a model styling three outfits using one item from the new collection
Total platform slots from 1 Reel: 6
Example 5 — Professional services consultant (B2B) Source content: LinkedIn article (1,200 words) — "Why most Ugandan SMEs fail their first bank loan application — and how to fix it"
Total platform slots from 1 LinkedIn article: 6
Examples 6–10: Apply the same chain methodology to additional source content types supplied by the consultant, covering the client's actual content as identified in the Required Input. Generate a full repurposing chain for each additional source piece provided.
A repeatable 5-step process for the social media manager to follow every week:
Step 1 — Monday morning: Identify the week's source content Confirm which Tier 1 piece is being published this week (blog post, YouTube video, or other). Review the content calendar. If no Tier 1 piece is scheduled, identify the highest-performing piece from the last 30 days and repurpose that instead.
Step 2 — Monday/Tuesday: Create Tier 2 derivatives Extract the key points from the source content. Draft:
All of these use the same research and arguments — only the format and length change.
Step 3 — Tuesday/Wednesday: Create Tier 3 micro-content Extract the single strongest quote or statistic from the source content. Brief the designer (or use Canva):
Step 4 — Thursday: Schedule all content Load all Tier 2 and Tier 3 content into the scheduling tool (Buffer, Meta Business Suite, or the client's preferred tool). Schedule for the following week. Ensure no two posts on the same platform contain identical copy — adapt each for the platform's tone and format even if the substance is the same.
Step 5 — Friday: Review and identify next cycle Review what published this week. Note the highest-performing post. Ask: could this post be the seed for a full Tier 1 piece next month? Identify any evergreen content from the archive that could be re-entered into the repurposing cycle.
Not all content transfers across platforms. Avoid repurposing the following:
Output meets the standard if it:
Apply the Hero/Hub/Hygiene model (YouTube / Google) alongside the Content Factory: Hero content maps to Tier 1 source pieces; Hub content maps to Tier 2 regular derivatives; Hygiene content maps to Tier 3 micro-content answering common questions.
Think Like a Publisher (Meerman Scott, 2022): Effective repurposing is not copy-paste — it is editorial judgement. Ask: what is the right format for this idea on this platform for this audience right now? The same insight delivered as a LinkedIn carousel, a WhatsApp broadcast, and a TikTok video will use different language, different structure, and different length — even though the underlying idea is identical.
Bodnar, K. and Cohen, J. (2012) The B2B Social Media Book. Hoboken: Wiley. Chaffey, D. (2024) Digital Marketing: Strategy, Implementation and Practice. 8th edn. Harlow: Pearson. Handley, A. and Chapman, C. (2012) Content Rules. Hoboken: Wiley. Nemo, J. (2017) Content Marketing Made Easy. Self-published. Meerman Scott, D. (2022) The New Rules of Marketing and PR. 8th edn. Hoboken: Wiley.
tools
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tools
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tools
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tools
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