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content-writing-thought-leadership

B2B content writing with daily workflows and batching systems across Sales/HR/Fintech/Ops Tech

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Documentation

đŸŽ¯ Multi-Dimensional Navigator

Content writing varies dramatically by industry, stage, and role. Find your path:

STEP 1: What's Your Industry Vertical?

Your industry determines:

  • Tone and voice (aggressive vs conservative)

  • Risk tolerance (what you can/cannot say)

  • Approval workflows (direct publish vs legal review)

  • Content topics and angles


→ Sales Tech - Aggressive, contrarian, data-driven
→ HR Tech - Professional, empathetic, research-backed
→ Fintech - Ultra-conservative, compliance-first
→ Operations Tech - Industry-specific, B2B2B2C nuanced

STEP 2: What's Your Company Stage?

Your stage determines:

  • Publishing frequency (founder bandwidth vs team)

  • Content depth (tactical vs strategic)

  • Approval requirements (founder autonomy vs committee)

  • Resources available (DIY vs professional design)


→ Series A - Founder voice, scrappy, tactical
→ Series B - Team effort, professional, strategic
→ Series C+ - Corporate voice, brand-controlled, category-defining

STEP 3: Are You Founder or Employee?

Your role determines:

  • Editorial freedom (can you be contrarian?)

  • Approval process (self-publish vs manager review)

  • Personal vs company brand

  • What topics are "safe" vs "risky"


→ Founder - Full autonomy, personal = company
→ VP/Director - Manager approval, aligned with brand
→ PMM/Content - Team collaboration, brand guidelines
→ Employee - Significant constraints, corporate voice

STEP 4: What's Your Primary Market?

Your geography determines:

  • Writing style (US direct vs India relationship-focused)

  • Examples and case studies (local companies)

  • Compliance considerations (GDPR mentions, etc.)


→ India - Relationship-driven, local examples, price-conscious
→ US - Direct, data-driven, premium positioning


Quick Navigation by Common Scenarios

  • "I'm a Sales Tech founder, want to build thought leadership"

  • → Go to: Section A1 (Sales Tech, Founder, Aggressive Voice Allowed)

  • "I'm VP Marketing at HR Tech, team writes content for me to review"

  • → Go to: Section B2 (HR Tech, Series B, Professional Team Content)

  • "I'm at fintech, every post needs legal review"

  • → Go to: Section C (Fintech, Compliance-First Content)

  • "I'm PMM at ops tech, write about retail execution"

  • → Go to: Section D (Operations Tech, Industry-Specific Content)


    📊 SECTION A: SALES TECH CONTENT WRITING

    When To Use This Section:

    • Your product: Sales engagement, conversation intelligence, sales enablement

    • Your audience: Sales leaders, CROs, RevOps, SDR managers

    • Your content angle: Tactical sales tips, data-driven insights, contrarian takes

    • Voice: Aggressive, confident, ROI-focused, can challenge incumbents



    A1: Sales Tech @ Series A (Founder Voice, Aggressive Allowed)

    Your Reality Check:

    COMPANY PROFILE:
    - Size: $1M-10M ARR, 10-100 employees
    - Stage: Series A
    - You: Founder or early marketing hire
    - Content goal: Build thought leadership + leads
    - Publishing: 3-5× per week (LinkedIn primary)
    - Approval: None (founder autonomy)
    - Time: 5-8 hours/week total

    The Sales Tech Content Philosophy:

    Why Sales Leaders Engage with Content:

    SALES LEADERS DON'T ENGAGE WITH:
    ❌ Generic motivational quotes
    ❌ Theory without data
    ❌ Long-winded essays (no time)
    ❌ Humble bragging ("We just closed...")
    
    SALES LEADERS ENGAGE WITH:
    ✅ Data-driven insights ("Analyzed 10K calls, here's what top reps do")
    ✅ Tactical frameworks (copy-paste into your process)
    ✅ Contrarian takes ("Everyone is wrong about cold calling")
    ✅ Competitive intelligence ("What Gong doesn't tell you")
    ✅ ROI calculations ("This tactic = 23% more meetings")

    Sales Tech Voice Guidelines:

    AGGRESSIVENESS SPECTRUM (Sales Tech):

    TOO TIMID (Don't Do This):
    "We think conversation intelligence might be helpful for some teams..."
    
    APPROPRIATELY CONFIDENT (Do This):
    "Gong analyzed 1M calls. We analyzed 2M. Here's what they missed."
    
    TOO AGGRESSIVE (Even for Sales Tech):
    "Gong is garbage. Their data is fake. We're 100× better."
    
    SWEET SPOT:
    - Confident, data-backed assertions
    - Respectful but contrarian takes
    - Challenge category leaders on methodology
    - But: Never personal attacks, never unverified claims

    Content Types for Sales Tech Founders:

    CONTENT MIX (Sales Tech Series A):

    40% DATA-DRIVEN INSIGHTS
    - "We analyzed X sales calls, here's what we found"
    - "The data says [surprising insight]"
    - Source: Your product data, public research (Gong, Pavilion)
    - Length: 300-500 words
    - Frequency: 2× per week
    
    30% TACTICAL FRAMEWORKS
    - "The 3-question discovery framework"
    - "How to handle pricing objections [step-by-step]"
    - Source: Your experience, customer wins
    - Length: 400-600 words
    - Frequency: 1-2× per week
    
    20% CONTRARIAN TAKES
    - "Why everyone is wrong about [X]"
    - "Gong says [X], but the data shows [Y]"
    - Source: Your unique perspective, counter-research
    - Length: 200-400 words
    - Frequency: 1× per week
    
    10% PERSONAL/BEHIND-THE-SCENES
    - "How we lost a $50K deal (and what I learned)"
    - "The sales hire that changed our trajectory"
    - Source: Your journey
    - Length: 300-500 words
    - Frequency: 1× every 2 weeks

    Series A Sales Tech: Daily Content Workflow

    MONDAY: Data-Driven Insight (1.5 hours)

    09:00-09:30 | Find Data
    
    SALES TECH DATA SOURCES:
    □ Your product: Export anonymized metrics
      Example: "Average discovery call = 32 minutes in our data"
      
    □ Public research:
      - Gong Labs reports (free)
      - Pavilion benchmarks (if member)
      - Public earnings calls (check Salesforce, ZoomInfo)
      
    □ Customer interviews:
      - "What was your close rate before/after using us?"
      - Turn into: "Customer X increased close rate 23%"
    
    09:30-10:30 | Write Post
    
    STRUCTURE:
    
    **HOOK (First 2 lines):**
    "We analyzed 50,000 sales calls from SMB B2B SaaS companies.
    The average discovery call is 32 minutes. But top performers? 19 minutes."
    
    **BUILD (3-5 paragraphs):**
    Why this matters:
    - Shorter calls = more qualified prospects
    - Top reps ask fewer questions (but better ones)
    - They don't "interrogate," they diagnose
    
    What we found:
    1. Average rep asks 18 questions in discovery
    2. Top rep asks 9 questions (but they're open-ended)
    3. Top rep listens 67% of the time (vs 42% for average)
    
    **PAYOFF (1-2 paragraphs):**
    The 3 questions top reps always ask:
    1. "Walk me through your current process for [X]"
    2. "What happens if you don't solve this in the next 90 days?"
    3. "Who else is impacted by this problem?"
    
    **CTA:**
    "What's your go-to discovery question?"
    
    10:30-11:00 | Edit & Publish
    
    SALES TECH EDITING CHECKLIST:
    □ Cut 20-30% of words (brevity = respect for time)
    □ Verify: Every claim has data/source
    □ Add: Numbers, percentages, specifics
    □ Remove: Fluff, qualifiers ("I think," "maybe")
    □ Check: Does this make sales leaders smarter?
    
    PUBLISH:
    - Time: 9 AM EST / 6 AM PST (catch US East + West)
    - If India: 9 AM IST (catch Indian B2B audience)
    - Platform: LinkedIn primary, Twitter thread secondary

    TUESDAY: Tactical Framework (1.5 hours)

    STRUCTURE:
    
    **HOOK:**
    "The pricing objection framework every SDR should memorize:
    (Learned this from watching 1,000+ pricing conversations)"
    
    **FRAMEWORK:**
    When they say: "That's too expensive"
    
    DON'T say:
    ❌ "We're actually quite affordable"
    ❌ "Let me talk to my manager about a discount"
    ❌ "What's your budget?"
    
    DO say (3-step framework):
    
    Step 1: REFRAME
    "Expensive compared to what? [competitor]?"
    → Forces them to make comparison explicit
    
    Step 2: QUANTIFY THEIR PROBLEM
    "Walk me through what this problem costs you today.
     How many hours per week? What's your team's loaded cost?"
    → Now you have their ROI baseline
    
    Step 3: CONTRAST VALUE
    "So you're spending $50K/year in time right now.
     Our solution is $15K/year and eliminates 90% of that.
     That's a $35K gain. Does that math work?"
    → Reframe from cost to investment
    
    **EXAMPLE:**
    [Insert short dialogue showing this in action]
    
    **CTA:**
    "Try this next time you hear 'too expensive.'
     Let me know how it goes."
    
    LENGTH: 400-600 words
    TIME: 1.5 hours (research + write + edit)

    WEDNESDAY: Contrarian Take (1 hour)

    STRUCTURE:
    
    **HOOK (Provocative):**
    "Unpopular opinion: Gong is making your sales team WORSE.
    (And I have data to prove it)"
    
    **SETUP:**
    Everyone thinks conversation intelligence = better sales.
    More data = better coaching = more wins.
    
    But here's what we're seeing:
    
    **THE CONTRARIAN INSIGHT:**
    When sales teams get Gong:
    - Month 1-3: 15% improvement (reps more aware)
    - Month 4-6: Flatline (back to baseline)
    - Month 7+: Often 5-10% decline
    
    Why?
    1. Analysis paralysis (too much data, not enough action)
    2. Reps game the metrics (talk more to hit "talk time" goals)
    3. Managers overwhelmed (100 dashboards, 0 time to coach)
    
    **THE ALTERNATIVE VIEW:**
    Conversation intelligence isn't the problem.
    How you USE it is.
    
    Best teams:
    - Track 3 metrics max (not 30)
    - Focus on ONE skill per quarter
    - Coach live (not post-call reviews)
    
    **NUANCE (Important for Aggressive Takes):**
    "Am I saying Gong is bad? No.
    Am I saying most teams use it wrong? Yes."
    
    **CTA:**
    "Using conversation intelligence? What's working for you?"
    
    RISK LEVEL: Medium-High
    APPROVAL: Founder only (don't do this as employee)
    WHEN: Only if you have data + alternative

    THURSDAY: Quick Tip (30 minutes)

    STRUCTURE:
    
    **HOOK:**
    "The 2-minute LinkedIn outreach hack that 3× my reply rate:"
    
    **THE HACK:**
    Before sending connection request:
    1. Comment on their post (genuine, add value)
    2. Wait 24 hours
    3. THEN send personalized connection request
    
    Why it works:
    - They remember you (positive association)
    - Not cold anymore (warm intro via comment)
    - Shows you did research (not spray-and-pray)
    
    **EXAMPLE:**
    [Screenshot or dialogue]
    
    **CTA:**
    "Try it. Let me know your reply rate."
    
    LENGTH: 150-250 words
    TIME: 30 minutes
    FREQUENCY: 1× per week (easy win days)

    FRIDAY: Customer Win / Case Study (1 hour)

    STRUCTURE:
    
    **HOOK:**
    "How a 10-person startup beat Salesforce for a $100K deal:
    (A masterclass in positioning)"
    
    **SETUP:**
    Our customer: Small sales tech startup
    Competitor: Salesforce (800 lb gorilla)
    Deal size: $100K annual
    
    How they won:
    
    **THE STORY:**
    Step 1: They DIDN'T compete on features
    → Salesforce has 10× more features
    → That's a losing battle
    
    Step 2: They reframed the decision
    → "You have 15 sales reps. Salesforce is built for 500+ rep teams.
       You'll pay for complexity you don't need."
    
    Step 3: They offered implementation in 1 week
    → Salesforce: 3-month implementation
    → Them: Live in 1 week
    
    Step 4: They made it founder-to-founder
    → CEO jumped on call (rare for Salesforce)
    → Committed to being "partner, not vendor"
    
    **THE WIN:**
    Customer chose them despite:
    - Salesforce brand
    - Salesforce features
    - Salesforce pricing power
    
    Why?
    - Speed to value
    - Right-sized solution
    - Personal relationship
    
    **LESSON:**
    "Don't compete on the incumbent's terms.
     Reframe the decision criteria."
    
    **CTA:**
    "Ever competed against a giant? How'd you position?"
    
    LENGTH: 500-700 words
    TIME: 1 hour
    FREQUENCY: 1× per week

    LinkedIn Algorithm Optimization (Sales Tech):

    POST TIMING:
    ✅ Tuesday-Thursday, 9-11 AM EST (highest engagement)
    ✅ Avoid Monday AM (too busy), Friday PM (weekend mode)
    
    For India market:
    ✅ Tuesday-Thursday, 9 AM-2 PM IST
    
    POST LENGTH:
    ✅ 300-600 words (sweet spot for LinkedIn)
    ❌ <100 words (not enough depth)
    ❌ >800 words (tl;dr, save for newsletter)
    
    ENGAGEMENT TACTICS:
    □ First comment: Add value (not "What do you think?")
    □ Reply to all comments within first hour (algorithm boost)
    □ Ask specific question in CTA (not generic "Thoughts?")
    □ Tag max 2 people (more = spam signal)
    □ Use 3-5 hashtags max (Sales, SalesLeadership, B2BSales, etc.)
    
    CAROUSEL STRATEGY (Sales Tech Specific):
    When: Complex frameworks, multi-step processes, data visualization
    Format: 7-10 slides
    Structure:
    - Slide 1: Hook (bold claim + data point)
    - Slides 2-8: Framework/data (one point per slide)
    - Slide 9: Summary (recap key points)
    - Slide 10: CTA (apply this, share results)
    
    Tools:
    - Free: Canva (templates available)
    - Paid: Taplio ($29/mo), Shield ($12/mo)

    A2: Sales Tech @ Series B (Team Content, Professional Voice)

    Your Reality Check:

    COMPANY PROFILE:
    - Size: $10M-40M ARR, 150-500 employees
    - Stage: Series B
    - You: VP Marketing or Content Lead
    - Team: 1-2 content writers + designer
    - Content goal: Thought leadership + brand building
    - Publishing: 5-7× per week (company account)
    - Approval: Manager/CEO review for company posts
    - Budget: $3K-10K/month for content

    Why Series B Content is Different:

    SERIES A CONTENT:
    - Founder voice (personal, authentic)
    - Scrappy (founder writes everything)
    - Tactical (helping peers)
    - Goal: Build personal + company brand
    
    SERIES B CONTENT:
    - Brand voice (professional, consistent)
    - Team effort (writers, designers, approval)
    - Strategic (thought leadership)
    - Goal: Category positioning
    
    NEW CHALLENGES:
    - Maintain authenticity while scaling
    - Multiple stakeholders (CEO, Sales, Product)
    - Balancing founder voice vs company voice
    - Higher quality bar (professional design expected)

    Series B Sales Tech: Content Team Structure

    TEAM ROLES:
    
    CONTENT LEAD (You):
    - Strategy (what topics, what angles)
    - Approval (final say on all posts)
    - Stakeholder management (CEO, Sales, Product)
    - Metrics (track engagement, leads, brand impact)
    Time: 15-20 hours/week
    
    CONTENT WRITER (1-2 FTE):
    - Research (find data, customer stories)
    - Drafting (write posts, threads, articles)
    - Editing (polish, optimize)
    - SEO (keywords, hashtags)
    Time: 30-40 hours/week
    
    DESIGNER (Part-time or contractor):
    - Carousels (LinkedIn carousels for complex topics)
    - Infographics (data visualization)
    - Branded templates (consistent look)
    Time: 10-15 hours/week
    
    FOUNDER/CEO (Guest):
    - 1-2 posts per week under their name
    - High-level strategic takes
    - Company announcements
    Time: 2-3 hours/week (ghost-written, they edit)
    
    TOOLS & BUDGET ($3K-10K/month):
    □ Design: Canva Pro ($13/mo) or Figma ($12/user/mo)
    □ Scheduling: Taplio ($39/mo) or Shield ($12/mo)
    □ Analytics: Shield Analytics ($12/mo)
    □ Carousel creation: Canva or custom designer ($500-2K/mo)
    □ Stock photos: Unsplash (free) or Shutterstock ($29-199/mo)
    □ Writing tools: Grammarly Premium ($12/mo), Hemingway (free)

    Series B Approval Workflow:

    STANDARD POST (Product update, tactical tip):
    Writer → Content Lead → Publish
    Timeline: Same day
    
    STRATEGIC POST (Contrarian take, competitor analysis):
    Writer → Content Lead → VP Marketing → Publish
    Timeline: 1-2 days
    
    SENSITIVE POST (Pricing, roadmap, executive POV):
    Writer → Content Lead → VP Marketing → CEO → Legal (if needed) → Publish
    Timeline: 3-5 days
    
    FOUNDER GHOST-WRITE:
    Writer draft → Content Lead edit → Founder review/edit → Publish (under founder name)
    Timeline: 2-3 days
    CRITICAL: Founder has final say (it's their voice)
    
    APPROVAL DECISION TREE:
    
    Question: Is this factual/tactical?
    YES → Standard approval (Content Lead)
    NO → Continue...
    
    Question: Does this challenge competitors/industry?
    YES → Strategic approval (VP Marketing)
    NO → Continue...
    
    Question: Does this touch pricing/strategy/roadmap?
    YES → Sensitive approval (CEO)
    NO → Standard approval
    
    Question: Could this create legal risk?
    YES → Legal review (add 3-5 days)
    NO → Proceed with appropriate approval tier

    Series B Weekly Content Calendar:

    MONDAY:
    □ 09:00 | Company post: Data-driven insight
      Topic: "We analyzed 100K sales calls in Q4. Here's what changed."
      Writer: Staff writer
      Format: LinkedIn post (400-500 words)
      Visual: Data viz (bar chart or line graph)
      Approval: Content Lead
      
    □ 12:00 | Founder post: Weekend reflection
      Topic: "5 sales trends I'm watching in 2026"
      Writer: Ghost-written (founder edits heavily)
      Format: LinkedIn post (300-400 words)
      Approval: Founder (final say)
    
    TUESDAY:
    □ 09:00 | Company post: Tactical framework (carousel)
      Topic: "The objection handling framework we teach customers"
      Format: LinkedIn carousel (8-10 slides)
      Designer: Create branded template
      Writer: Framework content
      Approval: Content Lead → VP Marketing (if new framework)
      
    □ 14:00 | Customer story (LinkedIn article)
      Topic: "How [Customer] scaled from $5M to $20M ARR"
      Format: Long-form article (800-1200 words)
      Writer: Interview customer, write case study
      Approval: Customer approval + Content Lead
    
    WEDNESDAY:
    □ 09:00 | Company post: Industry commentary
      Topic: "Gong's Series D: What it means for SMB sales tech"
      Writer: Research news, add perspective
      Format: Analysis (400-500 words)
      Approval: Content Lead → VP Marketing (competitive topic)
      
    □ 16:00 | Founder post: Personal insight
      Topic: "The sales hire that changed our trajectory"
      Writer: Ghost-written from founder interview
      Format: Story (400-500 words)
      Approval: Founder
    
    THURSDAY:
    □ 09:00 | Company post: Quick win
      Topic: "3 LinkedIn prospecting tips from our SDR team"
      Format: Short tips (250-350 words)
      Writer: Interview SDR manager
      Approval: Content Lead
      
    □ 12:00 | Product Marketing: Feature announcement (if launching)
      Writer: PMM writes, Content Lead edits
      Format: Feature post + carousel
      Approval: PMM → Content Lead → VP Marketing
    
    FRIDAY:
    □ 09:00 | Founder post: Weekly learnings
      Topic: "3 things I learned this week about sales coaching"
      Writer: Founder writes this one (authentic)
      Format: Quick reflection (200-300 words)
      Approval: None (founder direct)
      
    □ 14:00 | Community engagement post
      Topic: "Friday question: What's your biggest sales challenge right now?"
      Format: Simple question + comment engagement
      Goal: Build community, spark discussion
      Approval: Content Lead
    
    WEEKEND (Schedule for Monday):
    □ SAT | Batch write next week's drafts
    □ SUN | Review analytics from previous week

    Series B: Data-Driven Content Strategy

    QUARTERLY CONTENT INITIATIVES:
    
    Q1: ORIGINAL RESEARCH REPORT
    "The State of SMB Sales 2026"
    
    Production:
    Week 1-2: Survey design
    - 500+ sales leaders
    - 20 questions (multiple choice + open-ended)
    - Incentive: $50 Amazon gift card (100 recipients)
    - Platform: Typeform ($35/mo)
    
    Week 3-4: Data collection
    - Email outreach (to customer list)
    - LinkedIn post (survey link)
    - Partner distribution (Pavilion, Sales Hacker)
    - Goal: 500+ responses
    
    Week 5-6: Analysis
    - Data analyst: Clean data, find insights
    - Writer: Identify 5-7 key findings
    - Designer: Create data visualizations
    
    Week 7-8: Content production
    - Full report (30-40 pages PDF)
    - Summary blog post (1,000 words)
    - LinkedIn carousel series (3-4 carousels)
    - Webinar presentation
    
    Week 9-12: Distribution & amplification
    - Publish report (gated, capture emails)
    - 4-week LinkedIn series (one finding per week)
    - Guest posts on Sales Hacker, Pavilion
    - PR outreach (TechCrunch, SaaStr)
    - Webinar (present findings, Q&A)
    
    Budget:
    - Survey incentives: $5,000
    - Design (report): $2,000-5,000
    - Promotion: $3,000-5,000
    - Total: $10,000-15,000
    
    Impact:
    - 1,000-2,000 report downloads
    - 100-200 SQLs
    - Media coverage (TechCrunch, SaaStr mention)
    - Sales enablement (differentiation vs competitors)
    - Thought leadership (cited by industry)
    
    Q2-Q4: Additional initiatives
    - Q2: Customer benchmarking report
    - Q3: Competitive landscape analysis
    - Q4: 2027 predictions + trends

    A3: Sales Tech @ Series C+ (Category Ownership)

    Your Reality Check:

    COMPANY PROFILE:
    - Size: $50M+ ARR, 500+ employees
    - Stage: Series C/D or preparing IPO
    - You: Director of Content / Head of Thought Leadership
    - Team: 3-5 FTE (writers, designers, analysts, video)
    - Content: Category-defining thought leadership
    - Budget: $20K-50K/month
    - Goal: Own the conversation (like Gong Labs, Pavilion, SaaStr)

    Series C+ Content = Category Ownership

    SERIES A/B GOALS:
    - Generate leads
    - Build brand awareness
    - Establish thought leadership
    
    SERIES C+ GOAL:
    - OWN the conversation in your category
    - Be THE source that media/analysts/customers cite
    - Influence industry direction
    - Recruiting magnet (top talent reads your content)
    
    EXAMPLES OF CATEGORY OWNERSHIP:
    - Gong Labs (conversation intelligence insights)
    - Pavilion (GTM community + content)
    - SaaStr (B2B SaaS conferences + content)
    - First Round Review (startup advice)
    - a16z blog (startup/tech trends)
    
    YOUR CONTENT BECOMES:
    - Industry-defining (sets agenda)
    - Media-cited (journalists reference you)
    - Board-level reading (not just practitioners)
    - Recruiting tool ("I read your blog" in interviews)

    Series C+ Content Team:

    ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE:
    
    DIRECTOR OF CONTENT (You):
    - Strategy: What makes us category leaders?
    - Partnerships: Media, analysts, industry orgs
    - Executive alignment: CEO/CMO/Board
    - Budget management: $20K-50K/month
    - Metrics: Brand awareness, category leadership signals
    
    MANAGING EDITOR:
    - Editorial calendar: Plan 3 months ahead
    - Quality control: Everything excellent or doesn't ship
    - Writer management: Assign, edit, coach
    - Process: Systems that scale
    
    SENIOR CONTENT WRITER (2-3):
    - Original research: Lead quarterly reports
    - Thought leadership: Strategic analysis
    - Specialization: Each owns topic area
      * Writer 1: Sales methodology, frameworks
      * Writer 2: Data/research, benchmarks
      * Writer 3: Industry trends, competitive analysis
    
    DATA ANALYST:
    - Research design: Survey questions, methodology
    - Data analysis: Find insights in product data
    - Visualization: Charts, graphs, dashboards
    - Reporting: Present findings to exec team
    
    SENIOR DESIGNER:
    - Brand-level quality: Every asset premium
    - Data visualization: Make complex data clear
    - Templates: Scalable, consistent design system
    - Video production: Motion graphics for social
    
    VIDEO PRODUCER (Optional but recommended):
    - Short-form: 60-90 second LinkedIn videos
    - Webinars: Professional production quality
    - Podcast: If you have one
    - YouTube: Thought leadership channel
    
    CONTENT OPERATIONS / COORDINATOR:
    - Scheduling: Manage content calendar
    - Distribution: LinkedIn, Twitter, email, etc.
    - Analytics: Track performance across channels
    - Coordination: Keep everyone aligned
    
    TOOLS & BUDGET ($20K-50K/month):
    
    TIER 1: Publishing Infrastructure ($1K-3K/month)
    □ CMS: WordPress, Webflow ($50-200/mo)
    □ Email: HubSpot, Marketo ($1K-2K/mo for enterprise)
    □ Scheduling: Hootsuite, Sprout Social ($200-500/mo)
    □ Analytics: Google Analytics + custom dashboards
    
    TIER 2: Research & Data ($3K-10K/month)
    □ Survey platform: Qualtrics ($200-500/mo)
    □ Research incentives: $2K-5K per study
    □ Data visualization: Tableau ($70/user/mo)
    □ Industry subscriptions: Gartner, Forrester ($3K-5K/mo)
    
    TIER 3: Content Production ($5K-15K/month)
    □ Team salaries: $15K-30K/month (3-5 FTE fully loaded)
    □ Freelancers: Subject matter experts ($500-2K per piece)
    □ Design tools: Adobe Creative Cloud ($55/mo/user)
    □ Stock assets: Photos, videos ($200-500/mo)
    
    TIER 4: Distribution & Amplification ($5K-15K/month)
    □ Paid social: LinkedIn ads ($3K-8K/mo)
    □ Sponsorships: Industry newsletters ($2K-5K/placement)
    □ PR agency: If needed ($5K-15K/mo retainer)
    □ Events: Speaking slots, sponsored content
    
    TIER 5: Video & Multimedia ($5K-10K/month if doing video)
    □ Video production: Equipment, editing software
    □ Video editor: Part-time or contractor
    □ Podcast production: If applicable
    □ YouTube optimization: Thumbnails, SEO

    Series C+ Content Strategy: Flagship Initiatives

    ANNUAL CONTENT FLAGSHIP: "THE STATE OF B2B SALES [2026]"
    
    This is your category-defining research report.
    
    SCOPE:
    - Survey: 2,000-5,000 sales leaders
    - Product data: Analyze 10M+ sales conversations
    - Academic partnership: Validate with university researchers
    - Executive interviews: 50 CROs/VPs Sales
    - Timeline: 4-6 months production
    - Budget: $40K-80K
    
    METHODOLOGY:
    Month 1-2: Research design
    - Survey questions (partner with Qualtrics)
    - IRB approval (if partnering with university)
    - Sample selection (ensure representative)
    - Pre-test survey (100 respondents, iterate)
    
    Month 3-4: Data collection
    - Survey distribution:
      * Email to 50K sales leaders (bought list)
      * LinkedIn campaign ($10K ad spend)
      * Partner promotion (Pavilion, Sales Hacker, SaaStr)
      * Customer outreach (guaranteed responses)
    - Goal: 2,000-5,000 complete responses
    - Incentive: $100 Amazon gift card (200 winners)
    
    Month 5: Analysis
    - Data cleaning: Remove incomplete/invalid
    - Statistical analysis: Regression, correlation, segmentation
    - Product data integration: Combine survey + product insights
    - Visualization: 30-50 charts/graphs
    - Insights identification: What's surprising? What matters?
    
    Month 6: Production
    - Report writing: 60-80 pages
    - Executive summary: 4-page overview
    - Design: Premium quality (looks like Gartner/Forrester)
    - Infographics: Shareable data visualizations
    - Landing page: Report download (gated)
    
    POST-LAUNCH AMPLIFICATION (3 months):
    
    Week 1: Launch
    - Press release: Wire services
    - Media outreach: TechCrunch, WSJ, Forbes
    - LinkedIn campaign: Promote to 100K sales leaders
    - Customer email: Send to all customers
    - Webinar: Present findings (500+ registrants)
    
    Week 2-4: Content series
    - LinkedIn: 12 posts (one finding per post)
    - Blog: 4 deep-dive articles
    - Podcast: 3 episodes discussing findings
    - Guest posts: Publish on Pavilion, Sales Hacker, etc.
    
    Month 2-3: Speaking circuit
    - Conferences: Present at SaaStr, Pavilion Summit, Sales 3.0
    - Webinars: Partner with complementary tools
    - Podcasts: Guest on top 10 sales podcasts
    - Customer events: Present at your user conference
    
    IMPACT METRICS:
    
    REACH:
    - 10,000+ report downloads
    - 500,000+ social impressions
    - 50+ media mentions
    - 20+ conference/podcast presentations
    
    BUSINESS:
    - 300-500 SQLs directly attributed
    - $2M-5M pipeline influenced
    - Sales enablement (differentiation in 100+ deals)
    - Recruiting (mentioned in 50+ candidate interviews)
    
    CATEGORY LEADERSHIP:
    - Cited by Gartner/Forrester in their reports
    - Referenced in competitor earnings calls
    - Academic papers cite your research
    - Industry orgs invite you to present
    - Media calls YOU for expert commentary
    
    ROI:
    - Cost: $60K-100K (full production + promotion)
    - Pipeline influenced: $2M-5M
    - ROI: 20-50× (if even 1-2% of pipeline closes)

    Series C+ Content Distribution: Media Company Level

    OWNED CHANNELS:
    
    BLOG:
    - Frequency: 2-3× per week
    - Topics: Thought leadership, research, frameworks
    - SEO: Optimized for category keywords
    - Goal: 50K-100K monthly visitors
    
    LINKEDIN (Company):
    - Frequency: 5-7× per week
    - Mix: Data insights, frameworks, company updates
    - Followers: 50K-150K+
    - Engagement: 2-5% (very high for company page)
    
    LINKEDIN (Founder/Execs):
    - CEO: 2-3× per week (high-level strategy)
    - CMO: 1-2× per week (marketing insights)
    - CRO: 1-2× per week (sales insights)
    - Followers: 10K-50K each
    - Engagement: 5-10% (personal accounts higher)
    
    YOUTUBE:
    - Frequency: 1-2× per week
    - Content: Research summaries, webinar recordings, interviews
    - Subscribers: 5K-20K
    - Goal: Thought leadership, not viral videos
    
    PODCAST:
    - Frequency: Weekly
    - Format: Interview sales leaders (30-45 min)
    - Distribution: Apple, Spotify, YouTube
    - Downloads: 1K-5K per episode
    
    EMAIL NEWSLETTER:
    - Frequency: Weekly
    - Subscribers: 20K-60K
    - Open rate: 25-35%
    - Content: Curated insights + original commentary
    
    EARNED CHANNELS:
    
    MEDIA COVERAGE:
    - TechCrunch, Forbes, WSJ (2-4× per year)
    - Industry pubs: Sales Hacker, SaaStr, Pavilion (monthly)
    - Podcasts: Top 20 sales podcasts (quarterly)
    - Position: Expert source (journalists quote you)
    
    SPEAKING:
    - Tier 1 conferences: SaaStr, Pavilion Summit, Sales 3.0 (keynote)
    - Tier 2 conferences: Regional sales events (breakout sessions)
    - Customer events: Your user conference (opening keynote)
    - Virtual: 10-20 webinars per year
    
    ANALYST RELATIONS:
    - Gartner: Briefings 2× per year
    - Forrester: Wave participation
    - Pavilion: Community partnership
    - Josh Bersin: If HR Tech adjacency
    
    ACADEMIC:
    - University partnerships: Research collaborations
    - Journal publications: Peer-reviewed if possible
    - Guest lectures: MBA programs (sales/marketing)
    - Thesis advising: If relevant
    
    PAID CHANNELS:
    
    SPONSORED CONTENT:
    - Industry newsletters: Pavilion, Sales Hacker ($5K-15K per placement)
    - LinkedIn ads: Promote flagship research ($10K-20K per campaign)
    - Conference sponsorships: SaaStr, Pavilion ($20K-50K per event)
    
    PARTNER CHANNELS:
    - Integration partners: Salesforce, HubSpot, Outreach (co-marketing)
    - Community partners: Pavilion, Revenue Collective (content swaps)
    - Analyst firms: Gartner, Forrester (sponsor research)
    - Academic: Universities (research partnerships)

    📊 SECTION B: HR TECH CONTENT WRITING

    When To Use This Section:

    • Your product: HRIS, employee engagement, performance, recruiting

    • Your audience: HR leaders, CHROs, People Ops, Talent teams

    • Your content angle: Employee experience, people analytics, culture

    • Voice: Professional, empathetic, research-backed (NEVER aggressive)



    B1: HR Tech @ Series A (Founder, Professional Voice Required)

    Your Reality Check:

    COMPANY PROFILE:
    - Size: $2M-8M ARR, 20-80 employees
    - Stage: Series A
    - You: Founder (often ex-CHRO background)
    - Content goal: Build trust, establish expertise
    - Publishing: 2-3× per week (quality > quantity)
    - Voice: Professional, empathetic, never aggressive

    Why HR Tech Content is FUNDAMENTALLY DIFFERENT:

    SALES TECH CONTENT:
    ✅ Aggressive, contrarian takes
    ✅ "Gong is wrong about X"
    ✅ Challenge incumbents publicly
    ✅ Data-driven, ROI-focused
    Risk: Low (worst case = lose followers)
    
    HR TECH CONTENT:
    ❌ NEVER aggressive or confrontational
    ❌ NEVER "Competitor X is wrong"
    ❌ NEVER attack category leaders
    ✅ Professional, empathetic, supportive
    ✅ Research-backed, people-focused
    Risk: HIGH (HR community is small, reputation matters)
    
    WHY THE DIFFERENCE:
    - HR community is tight-knit (everyone knows everyone)
    - HR leaders value relationships over aggressive positioning
    - HR topics are sensitive (people, culture, layoffs)
    - Attacking competitors = unprofessional (damages your brand)
    - CHRO job changes = everyone moves to different companies
      → Today's competitor could be tomorrow's customer/partner

    HR Tech Voice Guidelines:

    TONE SPECTRUM (HR Tech):

    TOO AGGRESSIVE (Never Do This):
    "Traditional performance reviews are BROKEN. Anyone still using them is hurting their team."
    → Judgmental, attacks current practices
    
    TOO SOFT (Also Wrong):
    "We think maybe employee engagement could possibly be important..."
    → Lacks confidence, not thought leadership
    
    APPROPRIATE (Do This):
    "Research shows traditional annual reviews have limitations. Here's what forward-thinking CHROs are trying instead."
    → Research-backed, helpful, not judgmental
    
    IDEAL HR TECH VOICE:
    - Confident but not arrogant
    - Research-backed (cite studies, surveys)
    - Empathetic (understand HR challenges)
    - Helpful (provide frameworks, not just criticism)
    - Inclusive (not everyone can afford premium tools)
    - Professional (appropriate for CHRO audience)

    Content Types for HR Tech Founders:

    CONTENT MIX (HR Tech Series A):

    50% RESEARCH-BACKED INSIGHTS
    - "Culture Amp's 2026 benchmark shows X"
    - "New study on hybrid work effectiveness"
    - "People analytics: What the data actually says"
    Source: Industry research, academic studies, your product benchmarks
    Length: 400-600 words
    Frequency: 1-2× per week
    
    30% PRACTICAL FRAMEWORKS
    - "The 1-on-1 framework top managers use"
    - "How to measure culture (beyond surveys)"
    - "Performance review template for 100-person companies"
    Source: Best practices, customer insights
    Length: 500-700 words
    Frequency: 1× per week
    
    15% EMPATHETIC OBSERVATIONS
    - "The CHRO challenge no one talks about"
    - "Navigating layoffs with empathy [guide]"
    - "What I learned from 100 employee exit interviews"
    Source: Your experience, HR community insights
    Length: 400-600 words
    Frequency: 1× every 2 weeks
    
    5% PERSONAL/VULNERABLE
    - "The employee engagement program I launched (that failed)"
    - "What I got wrong about performance management"
    Source: Your honest journey
    Length: 400-600 words
    Frequency: Monthly or less (HR = professional, limit oversharing)

    HR Tech Daily Content Workflow (3× per Week)

    MONDAY: Research-Backed Insight (2 hours)

    08:00-09:00 | Find Research
    
    HR TECH RESEARCH SOURCES:
    □ SHRM (Society for HR Management) - industry gold standard
    □ Josh Bersin research - HR thought leader
    □ Culture Amp blog - engagement benchmarks
    □ Lattice blog - performance management insights
    □ Gartner HR research (if accessible)
    □ Harvard Business Review - people management
    □ Academic journals - organizational psychology
    
    09:00-10:00 | Write Post
    
    STRUCTURE:
    
    **HOOK (Research Finding):**
    "Culture Amp's 2026 benchmark report analyzed 500,000 employee surveys.
    The #1 driver of retention isn't compensation. It's manager effectiveness.
    By a margin of 3×."
    
    **CONTEXT:**
    This challenges conventional wisdom.
    Most CHROs focus budget on:
    - Competitive comp packages
    - Benefits improvements
    - Perks (ping pong, free lunch)
    
    Meanwhile, the data shows:
    - Manager quality = 3× more predictive of retention
    - Direct manager relationship = #1 factor
    - Yet: 60% of companies have no manager training budget
    
    **FRAMEWORK:**
    What top-performing companies do differently:
    1. Manager selection (promote based on leadership, not tenure)
    2. Manager training (quarterly coaching skills development)
    3. Manager accountability (retention = performance metric)
    
    **PRACTICAL APPLICATION:**
    For small teams (50-200 employees):
    - Start: Monthly manager training (2-hour sessions)
    - Focus: 1 skill per quarter (giving feedback, career development, etc.)
    - Measure: Manager effectiveness scores in engagement surveys
    
    For mid-market (200-1000):
    - Implement: Manager development program
    - Budget: $500-1K per manager annually
    - ROI: If retention improves 5%, savings = $X (calculate)
    
    **CTA (Professional):**
    "How does your company invest in manager development?
    I'd love to learn from your approach."
    
    NOT: "What do you think?" (too generic)
    NOT: "Tag a bad manager" (unprofessional)

    WEDNESDAY: Practical Framework (2 hours)

    STRUCTURE:
    
    **HOOK:**
    "The 1-on-1 framework I've used with 50+ managers.
    (Backed by research from MIT Sloan and Josh Bersin)"
    
    **PROBLEM:**
    Most 1-on-1s are status updates.
    Manager asks: "What are you working on?"
    Employee shares: "Project X, Project Y"
    No growth. No connection. No development.
    
    **FRAMEWORK: THE 3-TOPIC STRUCTURE**
    
    Topic 1: IMMEDIATE (10 minutes)
    - What's blocking you this week?
    - Where do you need help?
    - Any urgent concerns?
    
    Topic 2: DEVELOPMENT (15 minutes)
    - What skill do you want to build this quarter?
    - What stretch opportunity interests you?
    - How can I support your growth?
    
    Topic 3: CONNECTION (5 minutes)
    - How are you feeling about work?
    - What's energizing you lately?
    - Anything personal I should know about?
    
    **WHY THIS WORKS:**
    Research shows effective 1-on-1s have 3 elements:
    1. Task support (immediate blockers)
    2. Career development (future growth)
    3. Relationship building (personal connection)
    
    Most managers only do #1.
    Top managers balance all 3.
    
    **TEMPLATE:**
    "Here's a simple template you can copy:
    [Link to doc or image]"
    
    **CTA:**
    "What's your 1-on-1 structure?
    Always looking to improve mine."
    
    TONE: Helpful, not preachy

    FRIDAY: Empathetic Observation (1.5 hours)

    STRUCTURE:
    
    **HOOK (Vulnerable Opening):**
    "The CHRO challenge no one talks about:
    You're responsible for culture. But you don't control it."
    
    **SETUP:**
    Every CHRO has felt this:
    - CEO wants "better culture"
    - Board asks about "employee engagement scores"
    - But: You can't mandate culture
    
    You can:
    - Design programs
    - Measure engagement
    - Create policies
    
    You can't:
    - Control manager quality
    - Force authentic relationships
    - Manufacture belonging
    
    **THE TENSION:**
    This creates an impossible dynamic:
    → Accountable for outcomes
    → Limited control over inputs
    → Success depends on 100+ managers you don't directly manage
    
    **WHAT HELPS:**
    After talking to 30+ CHROs about this:
    
    1. REFRAME YOUR ROLE
    Not: "Owner of culture"
    But: "Enabler of culture"
    
    You don't create culture.
    Managers create culture.
    You enable them to do it well.
    
    2. FOCUS ON SYSTEMS
    - Manager selection (who gets promoted)
    - Manager training (how we develop leaders)
    - Manager accountability (metrics that matter)
    
    3. MEASURE LEADING INDICATORS
    Not just: Annual engagement scores
    But: Monthly manager effectiveness scores
    
    **CTA:**
    "Fellow CHROs: How do you navigate this tension?
    What's helped you?"
    
    TONE: Vulnerable but professional
    GOAL: Build community, not just thought leadership

    HR Tech: What NEVER to Post

    ❌ NEVER POST:
    
    "Workday is terrible. Here's why:"
    → Attacks competitor (unprofessional)
    
    "If your company still does annual reviews, you're behind"
    → Judgmental to audience (many still do this)
    
    "The engagement survey results that shocked us [gossip]"
    → Violates employee privacy
    
    "We just poached a great CHRO from [Company]"
    → Inappropriate, burns bridges
    
    "Hot take: HR is mostly useless"
    → Self-destructive, alienates audience
    
    "Check out this hilarious HR meme [generic meme]"
    → Low-value, undermines expertise
    
    RULE FOR HR TECH:
    If you wouldn't say it at SHRM Annual Conference, don't post it on LinkedIn.

    B2: HR Tech @ Series B (Team Content, Brand Voice)

    Your Reality Check:

    COMPANY PROFILE:
    - Size: $12M-40M ARR, 200-600 employees
    - Stage: Series B
    - You: Director of Content or VP Marketing
    - Team: Writer + Designer (HR background preferred)
    - Content goal: Category thought leadership
    - Publishing: 3-5× per week
    - Approval: Manager/Founder for sensitive topics
    - Budget: $5K-15K/month

    Series B HR Tech: Elevated Professional Content

    TEAM STRUCTURE:
    
    CONTENT DIRECTOR (You):
    - Strategy (topics, angles, positioning)
    - Stakeholder management (Founder/CHRO, Sales, Product)
    - Approval (final sign-off)
    - Metrics (engagement, brand awareness, pipeline)
    
    HR CONTENT WRITER (1 FTE):
    - Ideally: Background in HR or People Ops
    - Research (SHRM, Josh Bersin, academic studies)
    - Writing (blog posts, LinkedIn, thought leadership)
    - Editing (professional quality)
    
    DESIGNER (Part-time):
    - People-focused visuals (diverse, inclusive imagery)
    - Data visualization (engagement benchmarks, survey results)
    - Brand consistency (HR Tech = warm, professional aesthetic)
    
    FOUNDER/CHRO (Guest Voice):
    - 1× per week under their name
    - Strategic POV, industry trends
    - Vulnerable shares (culture challenges)
    
    APPROVAL WORKFLOW:
    
    STANDARD POST (Research summary, framework):
    Writer → Content Director → Publish
    Timeline: Same day to 1 day
    
    STRATEGIC POST (Industry POV, predictions):
    Writer → Content Director → VP Marketing → Publish
    Timeline: 2-3 days
    
    SENSITIVE POST (Layoffs, DE&I, compensation):
    Writer → Content Director → VP Marketing → Founder/CHRO → Legal (if needed)
    Timeline: 3-7 days
    
    WHY STRICTER APPROVAL FOR HR TECH:
    - People topics = sensitive (layoffs, DE&I, mental health)
    - Legal risk (employment law, EEOC, GDPR)
    - Reputation risk (HR community is small)
    - Every post reflects on company culture (practice what you preach)

    Series B HR Tech: Original Research Content

    QUARTERLY RESEARCH INITIATIVES:
    
    Q1: "THE STATE OF EMPLOYEE ENGAGEMENT 2026"
    - Survey: 500-1,000 HR leaders
    - Partner: SHRM chapter for distribution
    - Content series:
      * Week 1: "Early findings: What's changing in engagement"
      * Week 2: "Hybrid work impact on engagement [data]"
      * Week 3: "Manager effectiveness = #1 driver [deep dive]"
      * Week 4: "Full report release + webinar"
    
    Production:
    - Survey: $2K-5K (Typeform, SurveyMonkey)
    - Design: $1K-3K (report design)
    - Writer: 40 hours (analysis + writing)
    - Timeline: 6-8 weeks
    
    Impact:
    - 800-1,500 new followers
    - 50-100 inbound leads
    - Media coverage (HR Dive, HRExecutive)
    - Sales enablement (differentiation)
    
    Q2: "MANAGER EFFECTIVENESS BENCHMARKS"
    - Your product data: Anonymized manager scores
    - Customer interviews: 20 case studies
    - Academic validation: Partner with university
    
    Q3: "HYBRID WORK BEST PRACTICES [2026]"
    - Timely, high-interest
    - Multi-company research
    - Expert commentary (industrial-organizational psychologists)
    
    Q4: "HR TECH STACK SURVEY"
    - What tools do CHROs use?
    - Integration challenges
    - Budget benchmarks
    - Vendor satisfaction

    Series B HR Tech: Sensitive Topic Guidelines

    LAYOFFS / WORKFORCE REDUCTIONS:
    
    IF YOUR COMPANY IS LAYING OFF:
    ❌ Don't post about it personally until official announcement
    ❌ Don't hint or foreshadow ("Hard times ahead...")
    ✅ Wait for official company communication
    ✅ Then: Can share empathetic reflection (after announcement)
    
    IF WRITING ABOUT LAYOFFS GENERALLY:
    ✅ Empathetic tone (people are losing jobs)
    ✅ Practical guidance (for HR leaders navigating this)
    ✅ Mental health resources
    ❌ "Layoffs are good actually" (insensitive)
    ❌ Naming companies doing layoffs (unless public news)
    
    EXAMPLE POST (After Your Company Layoff):
    "We had to make difficult decisions this week.
    As someone who had to deliver the news to incredible people,
    here's what I learned about navigating reductions with empathy:
    
    1. Clarity (people deserve straightforward communication)
    2. Dignity (everyone gets proper support)
    3. Transparency (explain the why, not just the what)
    
    This is hard. If you're going through this, I see you."
    
    TONE: Humble, empathetic, human
    
    ---
    
    DIVERSITY, EQUITY & INCLUSION (DE&I):
    
    APPROPRIATE CONTENT:
    ✅ Share research on DE&I impact
    ✅ Best practices (blind resume reviews, structured interviews)
    ✅ Personal commitment ("We're working on...")
    ✅ Progress + transparency ("Here's where we are...")
    
    INAPPROPRIATE CONTENT:
    ❌ Virtue signaling ("We're the most diverse!")
    ❌ Tokenism (featuring one diverse employee repeatedly)
    ❌ Oversimplifying complex topics
    ❌ Speaking over marginalized communities
    
    GUIDANCE:
    - If you're not from the community, amplify voices that are
    - Focus on systems/policies (not individual stories without permission)
    - Be honest about challenges (not just wins)
    - Legal review recommended (DE&I = potential discrimination claims)
    
    ---
    
    MENTAL HEALTH:
    
    APPROPRIATE CONTENT:
    ✅ Normalize mental health discussions
    ✅ Share company resources (EAP, mental health days)
    ✅ Manager training on recognizing signs
    ✅ Empathetic leadership (sharing your own experience)
    
    INAPPROPRIATE CONTENT:
    ❌ Armchair diagnosing ("I think X has anxiety")
    ❌ Oversharing personal struggles (maintain professionalism)
    ❌ Suggesting company programs replace professional help
    
    DISCLAIMERS:
    Always include: "If you're struggling, please seek professional help.
    Resources: [crisis hotline, EAP, etc.]"

    B3: HR Tech @ Series C+ (Josh Bersin Academy-Level)

    Your Reality Check:

    COMPANY PROFILE:
    - Size: $50M+ ARR, 800+ employees
    - Stage: Series C/D, category leader
    - You: VP Content/Thought Leadership
    - Team: 4-6 FTE content team
    - Newsletter: Industry authority
    - Budget: $20K-50K/month
    - Subscribers: 15,000-60,000+

    Series C+ HR Tech: Industry-Defining Content

    AMBITION:
    Not just "a content team"
    Goal: Be THE source for HR insights (like Josh Bersin Academy, SHRM)
    
    YOUR CONTENT BECOMES:
    - Category-defining (sets the HR agenda)
    - Academic-level rigor (published in journals)
    - SHRM conference content (you're invited to speak)
    - Board-level reading (not just HR practitioners)
    
    EXAMPLES:
    - Josh Bersin Academy (HR research + community)
    - Culture Amp content (engagement thought leadership)
    - SHRM (professional association content)
    - Lattice blog (performance management insights)
    
    TEAM STRUCTURE:
    
    VP CONTENT (You):
    - Strategy: Category ownership in HR tech
    - Partnerships: SHRM, Josh Bersin, universities
    - Executive alignment: CHRO/CEO/Board
    - Budget: $20K-50K/month
    
    MANAGING EDITOR:
    - Editorial calendar: 3-6 months ahead
    - Quality control: Academic-level rigor
    - Team management: 3-5 writers/researchers
    
    RESEARCH DIRECTOR:
    - Original research: Quarterly flagship reports
    - Academic partnerships: University collaborations
    - Data analysis: Product data + survey insights
    - Peer review: Submit to academic journals
    
    SENIOR HR CONTENT WRITERS (2-3):
    - Deep specialization:
      * Writer 1: Employee engagement, culture
      * Writer 2: Performance management, development
      * Writer 3: HR tech, analytics
    - Each owns their beat (like journalists)
    
    COMMUNITY MANAGER:
    - SHRM chapters: Build relationships
    - LinkedIn groups: Engage HR leaders
    - Events: Coordinate speaking, webinars
    - Member support: If you have membership model
    
    TOOLS & PARTNERSHIPS:
    
    RESEARCH PARTNERS:
    □ Universities: MIT Sloan, Stanford, Wharton (academic credibility)
    □ SHRM: Distribution + validation
    □ Josh Bersin Academy: Co-research opportunities
    □ Gartner/Forrester: Analyst relations
    
    MEMBERSHIP MODEL (Advanced):
    - Free tier: Basic research, blog access
    - Premium ($199-499/year):
      * Exclusive research reports
      * Templates, frameworks, toolkits
      * Private HR community access
      * Quarterly roundtables with CHROs
    
    REVENUE POTENTIAL:
    - 5,000 premium members × $299/year = $1.5M/year
    - Reinvest in content → more free content → more members (flywheel)

    Series C+ Flagship Research Example:

    "THE FUTURE OF WORK: 2026 COMPREHENSIVE REPORT"
    
    SCOPE:
    - Survey: 3,000-5,000 HR leaders globally
    - Product data: 5M+ employee engagement responses
    - Academic partnership: MIT Sloan + Stanford
    - Timeline: 6-9 months
    - Budget: $50K-100K
    
    PRODUCTION:
    
    Month 1-2: Research Design
    - Literature review (existing research)
    - Survey design (validated questions)
    - IRB approval (university ethics board)
    - Methodology documentation (academic standards)
    
    Month 3-5: Data Collection
    - Survey distribution:
      * SHRM partnership (300K members)
      * LinkedIn ads ($15K budget)
      * Customer outreach
      * Partner organizations
    - Goal: 3,000-5,000 complete responses
    - Executive interviews: 100 CHROs (qualitative data)
    
    Month 6-7: Analysis
    - Quantitative: Statistical analysis (regression, factor analysis)
    - Qualitative: Theme coding (interview transcripts)
    - Product data integration: Combine survey + behavioral data
    - Validation: University researchers review methodology
    
    Month 8: Production
    - Report: 80-100 pages (academic quality)
    - Executive summary: 6-8 pages
    - Infographic: 1-page visual summary
    - Interactive dashboard: Explore data online
    
    Month 9: Publication & Amplification
    - Academic submission: Journal of Applied Psychology (peer review)
    - Industry release: SHRM, HR Executive, HR Dive
    - Conference: Present at SHRM Annual Conference
    - Media: Secure coverage in HBR, WSJ, Forbes
    
    IMPACT:
    
    CATEGORY LEADERSHIP:
    - Cited by Gartner in their HR Tech Magic Quadrant
    - Referenced in competitor earnings calls
    - Becomes THE source media references
    - SHRM invites you to their conferences annually
    
    BUSINESS:
    - 3,000-5,000 report downloads
    - 200-400 SQLs
    - $3M-8M influenced pipeline
    - Sales wins: "Your research on hybrid work sealed the deal"
    
    RECRUITING:
    - "I read your Future of Work report" (candidate interviews)
    - Top CHRO talent wants to work at research-driven companies
    
    ACADEMIC:
    - Published in peer-reviewed journal (credibility)
    - Professors assign your research in MBA programs
    - University partnerships for future research

    📊 SECTION C: FINTECH CONTENT WRITING

    When To Use This Section:

    • Your product: Payments, expense management, corporate cards, payroll

    • Your audience: CFOs, Finance leaders, Controllers

    • Your content angle: Regulations, compliance, financial efficiency

    • Voice: ULTRA-CONSERVATIVE (legal review mandatory)


    C1: Fintech @ Series A (Every Post Needs Legal Review)

    Your Reality Check:

    COMPANY PROFILE:
    - Size: $2M-8M ARR, 20-100 employees
    - Stage: Series A
    - You: Founder
    - Content goal: Build trust (not leads - trust comes first)
    - Publishing: 1-2× per week (slower due to legal review)
    - CRITICAL: Legal review mandatory for every single post
    - Voice: Conservative, compliant, trustworthy

    Why Fintech Content is HIGHEST RISK:

    SALES TECH:
    ✅ Aggressive positioning
    ✅ "Gong is wrong about X"
    Risk: Low (lose followers)
    
    HR TECH:
    âš ī¸ Professional, no attacks
    Risk: Medium (reputation)
    
    FINTECH:
    🔴 ULTRA-CONSERVATIVE MANDATORY
    🔴 LEGAL REVIEW FOR EVERY POST
    🔴 NEVER make unverified claims
    🔴 NEVER attack competitors
    🔴 NEVER share user data
    
    WHY:
    - Financial regulations: RBI (India), SEC (US), FCA (UK)
    - Financial advertising rules: Can't make unverified ROI claims
    - Data privacy: Can't share user financial data (RBI compliance)
    - Reputational risk: Finance = trust-driven (one mistake = brand death)
    - Legal liability: Directors personally liable for violations

    Fintech Content Guidelines (Non-Negotiable):

    ✅ ALWAYS ALLOWED:
    
    "RBI released new payment aggregator guidelines. Here's what fintech companies need to know:"
    → Regulatory updates (factual, helpful)
    
    "3 compliance checklist items for Indian fintechs [2026 edition]"
    → Educational, compliance-focused
    
    "How we achieved SOC 2 compliance in 12 months [timeline]"
    → Your journey (factual, no claims about others)
    
    "CFO's guide to expense management compliance"
    → Educational, helpful
    
    ❌ NEVER ALLOWED:
    
    "Traditional banking is broken. Here's why fintech is better."
    → Attacks incumbents (regulatory risk)
    
    "Save 50% on payment fees with our solution"
    → Unverified ROI claim (unless proven and methodology disclosed)
    
    "We're the fastest-growing fintech in India"
    → Superlative claim (unless third-party verified)
    
    "Customer X saved ₹10L using our product"
    → Customer data (compliance violation without written permission)
    
    "Why [Competitor] is overpriced"
    → Competitor attack (could trigger legal action)
    
    CRITICAL RULE:
    If you're not 100% certain it's compliant, get legal review.
    In fintech, "better to ask forgiveness" DOES NOT APPLY.

    Fintech Content Mix (Conservative):

    60% REGULATORY/COMPLIANCE UPDATES
    - "New RBI guidelines for payment companies"
    - "KYC requirements: What changed in 2026"
    - "Data localization compliance checklist"
    Source: Official sources only (RBI, NPCI, Ministry of Finance)
    Tone: Factual, educational, helpful
    Frequency: 1× per week (as regulations change)
    
    25% EDUCATIONAL BEST PRACTICES
    - "CFO's guide to corporate expense management"
    - "How to evaluate payment aggregators [checklist]"
    - "SOC 2 compliance: Step-by-step guide"
    Source: Industry standards, your experience
    Tone: Helpful, not sales-y
    Frequency: 1× every 2 weeks
    
    10% COMPANY UPDATES (Factual Only)
    - "We achieved SOC 2 Type II certification"
    
    - "New integration: Zoho Books"
    Source: Your company (factual announcements)
    Tone: Professional, humble
    Frequency: As milestones happen
    
    5% THOUGHT LEADERSHIP (Extremely Careful)
    - "The future of UPI payments in India [analysis]"
    - "Cross-border payments: 2027 predictions"
    Source: Industry trends (clearly labeled as opinion)
    Tone: Measured, balanced, acknowledges uncertainty
    Frequency: Monthly or less

    Fintech Approval Workflow (Mandatory):

    EVERY POST FOLLOWS THIS PROCESS:
    
    STEP 1: DRAFT (You or Writer)
    - Write post
    - Cite all sources
    - Include disclaimers
    Time: 1-2 hours
    
    STEP 2: SELF-CHECK
    □ Is this factual? (verifiable)
    □ Do I cite sources? (RBI, official sources)
    □ Am I making claims? (if yes, can I prove them?)
    □ Am I mentioning competitors? (if yes, is it necessary?)
    □ Am I sharing user data? (if yes, do I have written permission?)
    □ Is there any regulatory risk? (when in doubt, YES)
    
    STEP 3: LEGAL REVIEW (1-3 days)
    - Send to legal counsel
    - They review for:
      * Regulatory compliance
      * Financial advertising rules
      * Data privacy
      * Competitor mention risk
    - They may:
      * Approve as-is
      * Request edits
      * Reject entirely
    
    STEP 4: REVISE (If Needed)
    - Incorporate legal feedback
    - Re-submit for final approval
    
    STEP 5: PUBLISH
    - Only after legal sign-off
    - Include all required disclaimers
    
    TIMELINE:
    - Simple post: 1-2 days (draft → legal → publish)
    - Complex post: 3-5 days
    - Controversial topic: May be rejected
    
    COST:
    - Legal counsel retainer: $5K-10K/month
    - Per-post review: $200-500 (if not on retainer)

    Fintech Examples (Compliant vs Non-Compliant):

    TOPIC: Payment Processing Speeds
    
    ❌ NON-COMPLIANT:
    "We process payments 10× faster than Razorpay.
    Switch to us and save hours of processing time."
    
    ISSUES:
    - Unverified claim ("10× faster" - can you prove it?)
    - Competitor attack (Razorpay could sue)
    - Implied guarantee ("save hours" - what if customer doesn't?)
    
    ✅ COMPLIANT:
    "Payment processing speeds vary by provider and use case.
    In our testing with 100 transactions, average processing time was X seconds.
    (Methodology: [link to documentation])"
    
    WHY IT'S COMPLIANT:
    - Factual (your own testing)
    - Methodology disclosed
    - No competitor attacks
    - No guarantees
    
    ---
    
    TOPIC: Cost Savings
    
    ❌ NON-COMPLIANT:
    "Save 50% on payment fees!"
    
    ISSUES:
    - Unverified ROI claim
    - No methodology
    - Implies guarantee
    
    ✅ COMPLIANT:
    "Payment fee structures vary by volume and use case.
    Our pricing: X% per transaction + ₹Y fixed fee.
    [Link to pricing page]
    Compare options based on your transaction volume."
    
    WHY IT'S COMPLIANT:
    - Factual (your own pricing)
    - No claims about competitors
    - No ROI guarantee
    - Helpful (empowers comparison)

    📊 SECTION D: OPERATIONS TECH CONTENT WRITING

    When To Use This Section:

    • Your product: Retail execution, logistics, field force automation

    • Your audience: Sales/Ops leaders at CPG/FMCG companies

    • Your content angle: Distribution, retail, supply chain

    • Voice: Industry-specific, B2B2B2C complexity


    D1: Operations Tech @ Series A (Niche Industry Focus)

    Your Reality Check:

    COMPANY PROFILE:
    - Size: $1M-5M ARR, 15-60 employees
    - Stage: Series A
    - You: Founder (ex-CPG or tech)
    - Content focus: India retail execution insights
    - Publishing: 2-3× per week
    - Audience: Small but highly engaged (CPG sales leaders)

    Why Operations Tech Content is NICHE:

    SALES/HR/FINTECH:
    - Broad audience (all B2B SaaS)
    - Generic topics (sales, HR, finance)
    - Large following potential (10K+ followers)
    
    OPERATIONS TECH:
    - Niche audience (CPG/FMCG/logistics)
    - Specific topics (retail execution, distribution, field force)
    - Smaller following (1K-3K) but HIGH engagement
    - B2B2B2C complexity (You → CPG → Distributor → Retailer → Consumer)
    
    ADVANTAGE OF NICHE:
    ✅ Less competition (few people write about retail execution)
    ✅ Higher engagement rate (exactly what audience needs)
    ✅ Easier to become THE expert
    ✅ Stronger community (CPG sales leaders all know each other)
    ✅ Higher intent leads (if they follow you, they're serious)

    Operations Tech Content Topics:

    CORE TOPICS:
    
    40% RETAIL EXECUTION INSIGHTS
    - "State of general trade in India [Q4 2025 data]"
    - "How kiranas are adapting to quick commerce"
    - "Distribution coverage: North vs South India [analysis]"
    Source: Your product data, industry reports, field observations
    Audience: CPG sales heads, ops leaders
    
    30% FIELD FORCE BEST PRACTICES
    - "The beat planning framework that increased coverage by 20%"
    - "How top field reps use mobile apps [case study]"
    - "Offline-first: Why it matters for rural distribution"
    Source: Customer success stories, your product
    Audience: Field force managers, ops leaders
    
    20% CPG INDUSTRY TRENDS
    - "Quick commerce impact on FMCG distribution [2026]"
    - "D2C brands: Distribution lessons for CPG"
    - "How HUL/ITC are changing go-to-market"
    Source: Industry news, earnings calls, your analysis
    Audience: CPG strategy, business leaders
    
    10% TECHNOLOGY IN RETAIL/LOGISTICS
    - "How AI is changing retail audits"
    - "Image recognition for planogram compliance"
    - "Route optimization: Tech vs manual planning"
    Source: Your product innovation, industry tech trends
    Audience: Tech-forward ops leaders

    🔄 CROSS-CUTTING: UNIVERSAL FRAMEWORKS

    Role-Based Content Workflows

    FOUNDER CONTENT (Full Autonomy)

    ADVANTAGES:
    ✅ No approval needed (publish freely)
    ✅ Personal voice = authentic
    ✅ Can be contrarian (if industry allows)
    ✅ Can share company metrics
    ✅ Can pivot messaging quickly
    
    WORKFLOW:
    Monday: Idea generation (30 min)
    Tuesday: Write post #1 (1 hour)
    Wednesday: Publish + engage (30 min)
    Thursday: Write post #2 (1 hour)
    Friday: Publish + weekly recap (30 min)
    
    Total time: 3.5 hours/week
    
    BEST PRACTICES:
    □ Batch content (write 2-3 posts in one sitting)
    □ Use voice memos (capture ideas on the go)
    □ Repurpose (newsletter → LinkedIn → Twitter thread)
    □ Engage (comment on others' posts daily)
    □ Track (what topics get most engagement?)

    EMPLOYEE CONTENT (Approval Required)

    SCENARIO: VP Marketing Writing Personal Content
    
    CHALLENGES:
    âš ī¸ Company wants brand consistency
    âš ī¸ Can't share company confidential info
    âš ī¸ Must add "Views are my own" disclaimer
    âš ī¸ Manager needs to approve (at minimum)
    
    APPROVAL WORKFLOW:
    
    STEP 1: Get Manager Alignment (One-Time)
    □ Pitch: "I want to build thought leadership in [category]"
    □ Clarify: Personal brand, not company official content
    □ Agree on boundaries:
      - What I CAN share about company
      - What I CANNOT share
      - Approval process
    
    STEP 2: Write with Constraints
    CAN SHARE:
    ✅ Industry insights (not company-specific)
    ✅ Your professional opinions
    ✅ Public company information
    ✅ General frameworks
    
    CANNOT SHARE:
    ❌ Revenue/ARR/growth numbers (unless public)
    ❌ Roadmap/unannounced features
    ❌ Customer names (without permission)
    ❌ Internal metrics/team size
    ❌ Fundraising plans
    
    STEP 3: Add Disclaimer
    EVERY post includes:
    "Views expressed here are my own and do not necessarily represent the views of [Company Name]."
    
    STEP 4: Periodic Review
    □ Monthly: Show manager your content
    □ Quarterly: Confirm still aligned with company
    □ Annually: Review and renew agreement
    
    WORKFLOW (Slower Than Founder):
    Monday: Draft post #1
    Tuesday: Get manager feedback
    Wednesday: Revise + publish
    Thursday-Friday: Draft post #2 (publish Monday)
    
    Time: 4-5 hours/week (approval adds overhead)

    ENTERPRISE EMPLOYEE (Corporate Comms Control)

    SCENARIO: CMO at Public SaaS Company
    
    REALITY:
    🔴 EVERYTHING requires PR approval
    🔴 Can't publish without 1-2 week review
    
    🔴 No personal opinions
    🔴 No controversial takes
    
    CONSTRAINTS:
    □ All posts pre-approved by:
      - Corporate Communications
      - Legal (if financial topics)
      - Executive team
      - Investor Relations (if public company)
      
    □ Topics must be:
      - Brand-safe
      - On-message
      - Non-controversial
      - Aligned with company narrative
    
    □ Timeline:
      - Draft → Corporate Comms (3-5 days)
      - Revisions (2-3 days)
      - Legal review (1-2 days if needed)
      - Final approval (1 day)
      - Total: 1-2 weeks per post
    
    OPTIONS:
    1. Accept constraints (corporate voice)
    2. Limit posting (1× per month, big announcements only)
    3. Internal content only (employees, not public)
    4. Wait until you leave company (build personal brand then)
    
    RECOMMENDATION:
    If at public company or highly-regulated industry:
    → Focus on thought leadership via:
      - Speaking at conferences (pre-approved topics)
      - Bylines in trade publications (legal review)
      - Podcasts as guest (talking points approved)
    → Save personal LinkedIn brand for next role

    Geography-Specific Content Strategies

    India Content Strategy:

    PUBLISHING TIMES:
    ✅ Tuesday-Thursday, 9 AM-2 PM IST
    ✅ Avoid Monday early (week starting)
    ✅ Avoid Friday late (weekend mode)
    
    CONTENT STYLE:
    - Relationship-focused (build connections)
    - Local examples (FieldAssist, not Gong)
    - Price-conscious (acknowledge budget constraints)
    - WhatsApp mentions ("Share this in your team WhatsApp group")
    
    EXAMPLES:
    ✅ "How Darwinbox scaled from 100 to 1,000 customers"
    ✅ "Retail execution in India: General trade vs modern trade"
    ✅ "RBI's new guidelines for payment companies"
    ❌ "How we're disrupting the US market" (wrong geography)
    
    COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT:
    □ SaaSBoomi (India B2B SaaS community)
    □ IAMAI (fintech, if applicable)
    □ India-specific LinkedIn groups
    □ Respond to comments in IST hours

    US Content Strategy:

    PUBLISHING TIMES:
    ✅ Tuesday-Thursday, 9-11 AM EST
    ✅ Some success: 12-2 PM EST (lunch scrolling)
    ✅ Avoid early mornings (West Coast asleep)
    
    CONTENT STYLE:
    - Direct, data-driven
    - US examples (Gong, Lattice, Stripe)
    - Premium positioning (value > price)
    - Email CTAs ("Download the report")
    
    EXAMPLES:
    ✅ "How Gong uses conversation intelligence [analysis]"
    ✅ "Sales tech landscape: The rise of AI coaching"
    ✅ "SOC 2 compliance timeline for SaaS companies"
    ❌ "How we're winning in India" (wrong geography for US audience)
    
    COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT:
    □ SaaStr (B2B SaaS)
    □ Pavilion (GTM leaders)
    □ Revenue Collective (CROs)
    □ Respond during US business hours

    Common Content Mistakes & How to Fix

    Mistake 1: "Writing Same Way for All Industries"

    WRONG:
    Same aggressive contrarian post for Sales Tech, HR Tech, and Fintech
    
    WHY IT FAILS:
    - Sales Tech: Aggressive = good
    - HR Tech: Aggressive = unprofessional
    - Fintech: Aggressive = regulatory risk
    
    FIX:
    → Sales Tech → Section A (aggressive allowed)
    → HR Tech → Section B (professional required)
    → Fintech → Section C (ultra-conservative mandatory)

    Mistake 2: "No Approval Process (When You Need One)"

    SCENARIO: Employee Publishes Without Manager Knowing
    
    RISKS:
    - Share confidential info accidentally
    - Company asks you to delete post (embarrassing)
    - Misaligned with company messaging
    - Career risk (manager upset)
    
    FIX:
    → Role-Based Workflows section
    → Get manager alignment BEFORE posting
    → Monthly check-ins on content

    Mistake 3: "Publishing at Wrong Times"

    PROBLEM:
    Publishing Friday 5 PM EST for US sales leaders
    
    RESULT:
    - Low engagement (everyone checked out)
    - Algorithm doesn't boost
    - Wasted content
    
    FIX:
    - India: Tuesday-Thursday, 9 AM-2 PM IST
    - US: Tuesday-Thursday, 9-11 AM EST
    - Test and track what works for YOUR audience

    Prompt Templates by Scenario

    Template 1: Sales Tech Founder, Aggressive Post

    Using Content Writing skill, Section A1:
    
    I'm a Sales Tech founder. I want to write an aggressive but data-backed post.
    
    Topic: [Your contrarian take]
    Data: [What data do you have?]
    Competitor context: [Are you challenging Gong/Outreach/etc?]
    
    Please:
    1. Write hook (contrarian, attention-grabbing)
    2. Present data (credible, specific)
    3. Build case (logical progression)
    4. Include nuance (not just aggressive)
    5. End with CTA (spark discussion)
    
    Length: 400-500 words
    Tone: Confident but not arrogant
    Guardrails: Attack ideas, not people

    Template 2: HR Tech VP, Professional Post

    Using Content Writing skill, Section B:
    
    I'm VP Marketing at HR Tech company.
    
    Topic: [Employee engagement, performance management, etc.]
    Research: [SHRM, Josh Bersin, Culture Amp data?]
    Goal: [Build credibility, not leads]
    
    Please:
    1. Open with research finding
    2. Provide context (why this matters)
    3. Offer practical framework
    4. Include CTA (professional, inviting discussion)
    
    Length: 500-600 words
    Tone: Professional, empathetic, helpful
    Constraints: NEVER aggressive, NEVER attack competitors

    Template 3: Fintech Founder, Compliance Post

    Using Content Writing skill, Section C:
    
    I'm a fintech founder. I need a compliant post.
    
    Topic: [Regulatory update, compliance topic]
    Source: [RBI announcement, official source]
    Legal review: Will review before publishing
    
    Please:
    1. Summarize regulation factually
    2. Explain impact on fintech companies
    3. Provide compliance checklist
    4. Include disclaimer
    5. No competitor mentions
    6. No unverified claims
    
    Length: 400-500 words
    Tone: Educational, helpful, conservative
    CRITICAL: Flag anything that might need legal review
    ---
    
    ## **Worked Examples: Multi-Dimensional Scenarios**
    
    ### **Example 1: Sales Tech Founder, Series A, Aggressive Post**
    SCENARIO:
    • Company: AI sales coaching, $3M ARR, 30 employees
    • You: Co-founder & CEO
    • Goal: Challenge Gong's methodology (contrarian take)
    • Platform: LinkedIn
    • Approval: None (founder autonomy)
    CONTENT APPROACH:

    TOPIC: "Gong's data on discovery calls is misleading. Here's why:"

    STEP 1: GATHER DATA (Your Product)

    • Export: 50,000 sales calls from your product

    • Analyze: Average discovery call length

    • Finding: Your data shows 25 minutes (vs Gong's 38 minutes)

    • Hypothesis: Different ICP (SMB vs enterprise)


    STEP 2: WRITE HOOK (Aggressive but Credible)
    "Gong says the average discovery call is 38 minutes.
    We analyzed 50,000 calls and found 25 minutes.

    Here's what Gong missed:"

    STEP 3: BUILD CASE (Data-Driven)
    The difference:

    • Gong's data: Skews enterprise (longer, more complex sales)

    • Our data: Focuses SMB B2B SaaS (faster cycles)

    • SMB discovery: 15-25 minutes (more efficient)

    • Enterprise discovery: 35-45 minutes (more stakeholders)


    STEP 4: NUANCE (Important)
    "Am I saying Gong is wrong? No.
    Am I saying their data doesn't apply to SMB? Yes.

    If you're selling to SMB, optimize for 20-minute discovery.
    If you're enterprise, 35-40 minutes is right."

    STEP 5: PUBLISH + AMPLIFY

    • LinkedIn: Tuesday 9 AM EST

    • First comment: Link to methodology

    • Tag: @mention Gong (they might engage)

    • Monitor: Reply to all comments within 1 hour


    RESULT:
    • Engagement: 2-3× normal (controversial = engagement)

    • Comments: Mix of agreement + Gong defenders (debate = algorithm boost)

    • Leads: 15-20 inbound "I agree with your SMB POV"

    • Gong might respond (if they do, be respectful)


    RISK ASSESSMENT:
    • Risk level: Medium (challenging industry leader)

    • Mitigation: Data-backed, nuanced, respectful

    • Worst case: Gong ignores or politely disagrees

    • Best case: Healthy debate, massive reach

    ### **Example 2: HR Tech VP, Series B, Sensitive Topic (Layoffs)**

    SCENARIO:
    • Company: Employee engagement platform, $20M ARR

    • You: VP Marketing

    • Context: Your company just laid off 15% of staff

    • Goal: Address layoffs professionally

    • Constraint: Can't post until official announcement


    TIMELINE:

    DAY 1 (Layoff Day):
    ❌ Don't post anything on LinkedIn yet
    ✅ Focus on: Supporting impacted employees internally
    ✅ Wait for: Official company communication

    DAY 2-3 (After Official Announcement):
    ✅ Now you can post (company has communicated)

    CONTENT APPROACH:

    STEP 1: CHECK WITH LEADERSHIP
    Before writing:
    □ Does CEO/CHRO want me to post?
    □ What's the approved messaging?
    □ Any topics to avoid?
    □ Legal review needed?

    STEP 2: WRITE POST (Empathetic, Honest)

    HOOK:
    "We made difficult decisions this week.
    As someone who had to deliver hard news to people I deeply respect,
    I want to share what I learned about navigating reductions with empathy."

    BODY:
    What mattered most:

  • Clarity (people deserve straightforward answers, not corporate speak)

  • Dignity (generous severance, extended benefits, placement support)

  • Support (for those leaving AND those staying)
  • For those impacted:

    • I'm happy to provide LinkedIn recommendations

    • I'll make intros where I can

    • You deserved better timing, and I'm sorry


    For the team staying:
    • We're committed to getting this right

    • Your questions deserve honest answers

    • We'll rebuild trust through actions


    CTA:
    "If you've navigated this as a leader, I'd appreciate your guidance.
    And if you're hiring for [roles], several incredible people are looking."

    STEP 3: LEGAL REVIEW
    □ Send to legal counsel
    □ Check: Any liability concerns?
    □ Confirm: Severance terms not disclosed (confidential)
    □ Ensure: No promises made that company can't keep

    STEP 4: PUBLISH + MONITOR

    • Time: Not Friday evening (shows lack of care)

    • Better: Tuesday-Wednesday (thoughtful timing)

    • Monitor: Comments (many will be supportive, some critical)

    • Respond: Acknowledge, don't defend


    APPROVAL CHAIN:
    Draft → Legal → VP Marketing → CHRO → CEO → Publish
    Timeline: 3-5 days

    RESULT:

    • Humanizes difficult decision

    • Shows empathy + accountability

    • Helps impacted employees (visibility for job search)

    • Maintains professional reputation

    ### **Example 3: Fintech Founder, Series A, Regulatory Update Post**

    SCENARIO:
    • Company: Payment aggregator, $4M ARR, 40 employees

    • You: Founder & CEO

    • Context: RBI just released new PA guidelines

    • Goal: Educate fintech community

    • Constraint: Legal review mandatory


    CONTENT APPROACH:

    STEP 1: READ OFFICIAL SOURCE

    • RBI circular: Download PDF, read thoroughly

    • Identify: 5-7 key changes

    • Clarify: What's new vs what's unchanged

    • Consult: Legal counsel for interpretation


    STEP 2: DRAFT POST (Conservative, Educational)

    HOOK:
    "RBI released updated Payment Aggregator guidelines yesterday.
    Here's what fintech companies need to know:"

    BODY:
    Key changes (effective April 1, 2026):

  • KYC Requirements Strengthened

    • Previous: Basic KYC for merchants

    • New: Enhanced due diligence for high-risk categories

    • Action: Review your merchant onboarding process


  • Data Localization Timeline

    • Previous: "As soon as possible"

    • New: Mandatory by June 30, 2026

    • Action: If you're not compliant, start now (6-month timeline)


  • Reporting Requirements

    • Previous: Quarterly

    • New: Monthly submission to RBI

    • Action: Update your compliance calendar


  • Net-Worth Requirements

    • No change: Still ₹15 crore minimum

    • Clarification: Must be maintained at all times


    NOT CHANGED (Important):

    • Merchant agreement requirements: Unchanged
    • Settlement timelines: Remain T+1
    DISCLAIMER: "This is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult qualified legal counsel for your specific situation."

    STEP 3: LEGAL REVIEW (1-2 days)
    Send to legal counsel:
    □ Check factual accuracy
    □ Verify no overstatement
    □ Confirm disclaimer is appropriate
    □ Ensure no competitive mentions

    STEP 4: PUBLISH + DISTRIBUTE

    • LinkedIn: Tuesday 10 AM IST (India market)

    • First comment: Link to official RBI circular

    • Distribution: Share in IAMAI fintech group

    • Email: Send to customer list (value-add)


    RESULT:
    • Positions you as: Helpful expert (not sales-y)

    • Builds trust: Fintech community appreciates clarity

    • Leads: "We need help with compliance" inquiries

    • Risk: Zero (factual, legal-reviewed, helpful)


    CONTRAST WITH WRONG APPROACH:

    ❌ DON'T WRITE:
    "RBI's new rules will kill most payment companies.
    Here's why we're better positioned than our competitors."

    WHY IT'S WRONG:

    • Fear-mongering (unprofessional)

    • Competitor mention (unnecessary)

    • Could trigger regulatory scrutiny

    ---
    
    ## **Tool Comparison Matrix**
    
    | Tool | Cost | Best For | Not Good For | Series A | Series B | Series C+ |
    |------|------|----------|--------------|----------|----------|-----------|
    | **LinkedIn Native** | Free | Everyone (start here) | Scheduling, analytics | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
    | **Buffer** | $6/mo/channel | Budget-conscious, multi-platform | Advanced analytics | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
    | **Taplio** | $39/mo | LinkedIn power users, carousel creation | Multi-platform | âš ī¸ | ✅ | ✅ |
    | **Shield** | $12/mo | Analytics junkies, engagement tracking | Content creation | âš ī¸ | ✅ | ✅ |
    | **Canva Pro** | $13/mo | Visual content (carousels, infographics) | Video editing | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
    | **Figma** | Free-$12/mo | Design teams, brand consistency | Solo founders (overkill) | ❌ | ✅ | ✅ |
    | **Grammarly Premium** | $12/mo | Error-free writing, tone checker | Creative writing | âš ī¸ | ✅ | ✅ |
    | **Hemingway** | Free | Simplifying complex writing | Sales copy (too simple) | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
    
    **RECOMMENDATIONS BY STAGE:**
    
    **Series A ($0-50/month):**
    ✅ LinkedIn Native (free)
    ✅ Canva Free (visual content)
    ✅ Hemingway (editing)
    ❌ Skip: Taplio, paid tools (use budget for product)
    
    **Series B ($50-200/month):**
    ✅ Taplio or Shield ($39-50/mo)
    ✅ Canva Pro ($13/mo)
    ✅ Grammarly ($12/mo)
    Total: ~$64/mo
    
    **Series C+ ($200-500/month):**
    ✅ Taplio + Shield ($51/mo)
    ✅ Canva Pro + Figma ($25/mo)
    ✅ Buffer ($60/mo for team)
    ✅ Premium design tools
    Total: $200-500/mo (small portion of $20K-50K content budget)
    
    ---
    
    ## **Quick Reference Cards**
    
    ### **By Industry Tone:**

    SALES TECH:
    ✅ Aggressive, contrarian, data-driven
    ✅ Challenge incumbents (Gong, Outreach)
    ✅ ROI-focused, tactical frameworks
    ✅ LinkedIn posts: 300-500 words, 3-5×/week
    Publishing: Tuesday-Thursday 9 AM EST / 9 AM IST

    HR TECH:
    ✅ Professional, empathetic, research-backed
    ❌ NEVER aggressive or attack competitors
    ✅ SHRM/Josh Bersin citations
    ✅ LinkedIn posts: 400-600 words, 2-3×/week
    Publishing: Tuesday/Thursday 10 AM EST / 2 PM IST

    FINTECH:
    🔴 Ultra-conservative, legal review mandatory
    ❌ NO competitor attacks, NO unverified claims
    ✅ Regulatory updates, compliance education
    ✅ LinkedIn posts: 400-500 words, 1-2×/week
    Publishing: Tuesday-Wednesday 10 AM EST / 10 AM IST

    OPERATIONS TECH:
    ✅ Industry-specific, B2B2B2C aware
    ✅ Retail/distribution insights
    ✅ CPG case studies
    ✅ LinkedIn posts: 300-500 words, 2-3×/week
    Publishing: Tuesday-Thursday 9 AM EST / 9 AM IST

    ### **By Company Stage:**

    SERIES A:
    • Founder voice (authentic, scrappy)

    • Publishing: 3-5×/week

    • Approval: None (founder)

    • Budget: $0-50/month (free tools)

    • Goal: Leads (10-20 SQLs/month)

    • Time: 5-8 hours/week


    SERIES B:
    • Team content (professional, branded)

    • Publishing: 5-7×/week

    • Approval: Content Lead → VP Marketing

    • Budget: $3K-10K/month (team + tools)

    • Goal: Thought leadership + pipeline

    • Time: 40-60 hours/week (team total)


    SERIES C+:
    • Category ownership (industry-defining)

    • Publishing: 7-10×/week (multi-channel)

    • Approval: Complex (legal, exec, PR)

    • Budget: $20K-50K/month (media-level)

    • Goal: Own the conversation

    • Time: 100-150 hours/week (full team)

    ### **Approval Workflow Quick Reference:**

    FOUNDER (No Approval):
    Draft → Publish (same day)
    Timeline: 1 hour total

    EMPLOYEE - STANDARD POST:
    Draft → Manager review → Publish
    Timeline: 1-2 days

    EMPLOYEE - STRATEGIC POST:
    Draft → Manager → VP Marketing → Publish
    Timeline: 2-3 days

    EMPLOYEE - SENSITIVE POST:
    Draft → Manager → VP → CEO → Legal (if needed) → Publish
    Timeline: 3-7 days

    FINTECH - ANY POST:
    Draft → Legal review (mandatory) → Publish
    Timeline: 1-3 days minimum

    PUBLIC COMPANY:
    Draft → Corp Comms → Legal → Exec → IR → Publish
    Timeline: 1-2 weeks
    ```


    END OF SKILL