skills/playbooks/playbook-viral-content-design/SKILL.md
Guides a consultant in designing content with high share potential — content engineered through structural principles from social science and content research to increase organic reach. Applies named viral structures, platform-specific virality mechanics, and Uganda/East Africa emotional triggers. Invoke this skill when a client wants to increase organic reach, improve share rates, or build a content format system designed to spread without paid amplification.
npx skillsauth add peterbamuhigire/social-media-skills playbook-viral-content-designInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Content that spreads is not accidental. It is structured. This playbook applies social science and platform mechanics to help consultants design content that travels — organically, ethically, and in the Uganda/East Africa context.
This is not about manufactured virality or paid amplification. It is about earned reach through content that people genuinely want to share. Paid distribution sits outside this playbook; see the POEM model (Paid/Owned/Earned) for how organic content fits within a broader channel mix (Chaffey, 2024).
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.Ask the client for all of the following before producing any deliverable:
People share content that makes them look good to their network. Before creating any piece of content, ask: "Why would someone share this? What does sharing this say about the person who shares it?" Content shared on Facebook or WhatsApp is a social signal — it communicates the sharer's values, identity, and affiliations. Content that makes the sharer look informed, generous, funny, or caring travels further than content that presents them as forwarding an advertisement. Design every piece of content with the sharer — not the brand — as the beneficiary of the share.
Content spreads when it triggers a strong emotional response. The emotions most associated with sharing are: awe, amusement, inspiration, righteous anger, and anxiety (fear of missing out or of a genuine threat). Neutral content does not travel. Mildly interesting content does not travel. Content that produces a visceral "I need to send this to someone" reaction does. In Uganda and East Africa, communal values and family/community bonds are powerful triggers — content that resonates with shared cultural identity, collective aspiration, or community pride travels particularly well. Apply this knowledge deliberately: identify the specific emotion before writing the first word.
Practical utility content has long-term share potential in EA markets. "How to do X in Uganda" content gets saved and reshared over months, not hours. This is slower virality but more valuable — it builds authority while generating ongoing organic reach. A "how to register a business in Uganda 2026" post shared in professional WhatsApp groups can generate thousands of views with zero ad spend. Under the Hero/Hub/Hygiene content model, utility content sits in the Hygiene tier — always-on, always findable, always shareable (Bodnar and Cohen, 2012).
Apply one structure per piece of content. Do not blend structures in a single post.
Formula: Set up a widely held expectation → reverse it sharply → deliver the insight.
Template:
"Everyone says [common belief]. We [did the opposite / found the opposite]. Here is exactly what happened."
EA Example:
"Everyone says you need a big budget to market in Uganda. We spent UGX 0 on ads last month and got 40 new customers. Here is exactly how."
Works because: Interrupts pattern recognition. The audience expects confirmation of the belief; the reversal creates cognitive tension that demands resolution. The promise of a revealed method drives saves and shares.
Formula: "[Precise number] [specific things] that [defined audience] should know about [specific topic]"
Template:
"7 things [audience] in [location] should know before [action]"
EA Example:
"7 things Kampala restaurant owners should know before opening a social media account"
Works because: Specificity signals genuine expertise rather than generic advice. Numbered lists are easy to skim on mobile, easy to save, and easy to forward. The defined audience makes the content feel written for one person — the sharer — not for everyone.
Formula: Describe a frustration the target audience experiences exactly — in their own language, from their perspective. Offer no immediate solution in the first post.
Template:
"[Describe the exact painful situation in first or second person]. Sound familiar?"
EA Example:
"You post on Facebook every day. You get 12 likes — 11 of them from your colleagues. Nobody buys. Sound familiar?"
Works because: Recognition triggers the "this is me" response — the strongest share trigger on Facebook in EA. The audience tags someone who shares the struggle or forwards the post to a WhatsApp group. Withholding the solution in the first post drives comments and return visits.
Formula: Show something the audience believes they could never see — the process, the numbers, the reality behind a polished exterior.
Template:
"We charged [specific amount] for [specific service]. Here is exactly what we delivered and whether the client got value."
EA Example:
"We charged UGX 4.5 million for a 3-month social media retainer. Here is exactly what we delivered and whether the client got value."
Works because: Transparency is rare in EA professional services markets. Audiences reward honesty with trust and shares. Price transparency in particular is a high-share trigger — see Section 5 for more on price reveals.
Formula: State a clear, arguable position that challenges conventional wisdom in the client's industry. Make it falsifiable — someone must be able to disagree with it.
Template:
"[Accepted wisdom] is [wrong / dead / overrated] in [market/year]. Here is what to do instead."
EA Example:
"Facebook Pages are dying in Uganda. Here is what to do instead."
Works because: Disagreement drives comments. Comments drive algorithmic reach. The comments section generates secondary shares as people defend positions on both sides. A post that generates 100 comments — even divided — outperforms a post that generates 500 passive likes.
Formula: A saveable, screenshotable, or forwardable resource — a checklist, a template, a price list, a step-by-step guide. Design it to be useful without additional context.
Template:
"Here is the exact [template / checklist / script] we use to [achieve outcome]. Screenshot this."
EA Example:
"Here is the exact WhatsApp message template we use to get Google reviews from clients. Screenshot this."
Works because: High utility produces a high save rate. Saved posts and forwards signal content quality to platform algorithms. Practical toolkits are reshared in WhatsApp groups repeatedly — a single post can circulate for months.
Complete this brief in full before producing any content. Do not begin writing without it.
Client: [business name and industry]
Target audience: [who specifically — age, location, aspiration, daily frustration]
Platform: [primary platform]
Content type: [video / image / carousel / text post / infographic]
Structure: [which of the 6 viral structures — name it]
Hook (first line / first frame):
[write it out in full — no placeholders]
Core tension or trigger:
[what emotion or utility drives the share?]
Share trigger: [complete this sentence: "Someone shares this because it makes
them look/feel ___"]
CTA or comment trigger:[what do you want the audience to do or say?]
Character/word count: [appropriate for platform — e.g., Facebook: 40–80 words for
maximum reach; TikTok caption: under 150 characters]
EA cultural hook: [local reference, seasonal moment, or community theme — if applicable]
Apply these themes when they fit the client's content objectives. Each is consistently high-performing in the Uganda/East Africa context.
11-content-calendar/SKILL.md.Engineered virality is not the same as manipulative virality. Apply these boundaries without exception.
Good output from this skill meets all of the following standards:
Read these skills before producing platform-specific output or integrating this playbook into a broader content programme:
11-content-calendar/SKILL.md — for scheduling viral content across a monthly programme and
aligning with EA seasonal triggerscaption-writer/SKILL.md — for executing the hook, body, and CTA of individual posts once
the viral structure is chosenplatform-tiktok/SKILL.md — for detailed TikTok-specific execution guidance beyond the
virality mechanics covered heremeta-testing-framework/SKILL.md — for measuring whether content engineered for virality is
actually performing — reach, share rate, save rate, and comment velocityAcademic references:
tools
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tools
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tools
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tools
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