ChatGPT Monthly Content Calendar Creator Prompt
You are a content director who manages editorial calendars for brands publishing across multiple channels.
Category
📣 Marketing
Difficulty
Intermediate
Models
3
Last Updated
2026-06-28
Works with
📄 Example output
⚠️ Common Mistakes
❓ FAQ
⚙️ Fill in your variables
📋 Prompt
You are a content director who manages editorial calendars for brands publishing across multiple channels.
Brand: [brand or project]
Channels: [content channels — blog/LinkedIn/Twitter-X/Instagram/YouTube/email/podcast]
Theme: [monthly theme — seasonal/campaign/product launch/educational]
Team: [team size — solo/2-3/full team]
Task: Build a complete 30-day content calendar:
OVERVIEW:
- Monthly narrative arc (how the month's content builds a story)
- Key dates and hooks
- Content mix (%split between channels and formats)
WEEK-BY-WEEK PLAN:
For each piece of content:
- Date and channel
- Format
- Specific topic/angle (not just 'social post')
- Brief (50 words what it covers)
- CTA
- Status field: [To Create / In Review / Ready / Live]
CONTENT REPURPOSING MAP:
How 1 piece of pillar content becomes 5–10 pieces across channels
BATCH SCHEDULE: When to create what for a [team size] team
Brand: [brand or project]
Channels: [content channels — blog/LinkedIn/Twitter-X/Instagram/YouTube/email/podcast]
Theme: [monthly theme — seasonal/campaign/product launch/educational]
Team: [team size — solo/2-3/full team]
Task: Build a complete 30-day content calendar:
OVERVIEW:
- Monthly narrative arc (how the month's content builds a story)
- Key dates and hooks
- Content mix (%split between channels and formats)
WEEK-BY-WEEK PLAN:
For each piece of content:
- Date and channel
- Format
- Specific topic/angle (not just 'social post')
- Brief (50 words what it covers)
- CTA
- Status field: [To Create / In Review / Ready / Live]
CONTENT REPURPOSING MAP:
How 1 piece of pillar content becomes 5–10 pieces across channels
BATCH SCHEDULE: When to create what for a [team size] team
CONTENT CALENDAR: ToolsNova — July 2026
Theme: 'AI Prompts for Professionals'
Channels: Blog, LinkedIn, Twitter/X, Email (weekly)
MONTHLY NARRATIVE:
Week 1: Introduce the problem (bad AI prompts = bad AI output)
Week 2: The solution (specific prompt types and why they work)
Week 3: Proof (user stories, case studies, usage data)
Week 4: Action (library launch, specific CTAs, month wrap)
WEEK 1 PLAN:
Mon 1 July — Twitter/X Thread
Topic: '5 things that happen when you write a bad AI prompt (and what to do instead)'
Brief: Hook with a common bad prompt example → What actually happens inside the model → 5 specific rewrites with before/after output comparison
CTA: Link to AI Prompt Library
Status: [To Create]
Tue 2 July — Email Newsletter (3,000 subscribers)
Topic: 'The 2-minute prompt fix that changed my workflow'
Brief: Personal story of a specific workflow improvement from using a structured prompt. Lead with the result, explain the mechanics, one CTA to the library.
CTA: 'Browse the prompt library →'
Status: [To Create]
Wed 3 July — LinkedIn Post
Topic: Unpopular opinion: AI is not the productivity tool most people think it is
Brief: The reason most professionals aren't getting the AI productivity gains they expect. The one variable they're ignoring. The fix.
CTA: Link to Thread from Monday (cross-channel)
Status: [To Create]
CONTENT REPURPOSING MAP:
Pillar piece: 'SEO Blog Post Writer Guide' (1,800 word blog post)
→ Twitter thread: 8-tweet summary of the framework (Day 5)
→ LinkedIn article: The 3 SEO prompt mistakes + solutions (Day 8)
→ Email: 'The prompt our SEO users say changed their workflow' (Day 10)
→ Instagram carousel: 5 steps, one per slide (Day 12)
→ YouTube short: 60-second screen recording of the prompt in action (Day 15)
Theme: 'AI Prompts for Professionals'
Channels: Blog, LinkedIn, Twitter/X, Email (weekly)
MONTHLY NARRATIVE:
Week 1: Introduce the problem (bad AI prompts = bad AI output)
Week 2: The solution (specific prompt types and why they work)
Week 3: Proof (user stories, case studies, usage data)
Week 4: Action (library launch, specific CTAs, month wrap)
WEEK 1 PLAN:
Mon 1 July — Twitter/X Thread
Topic: '5 things that happen when you write a bad AI prompt (and what to do instead)'
Brief: Hook with a common bad prompt example → What actually happens inside the model → 5 specific rewrites with before/after output comparison
CTA: Link to AI Prompt Library
Status: [To Create]
Tue 2 July — Email Newsletter (3,000 subscribers)
Topic: 'The 2-minute prompt fix that changed my workflow'
Brief: Personal story of a specific workflow improvement from using a structured prompt. Lead with the result, explain the mechanics, one CTA to the library.
CTA: 'Browse the prompt library →'
Status: [To Create]
Wed 3 July — LinkedIn Post
Topic: Unpopular opinion: AI is not the productivity tool most people think it is
Brief: The reason most professionals aren't getting the AI productivity gains they expect. The one variable they're ignoring. The fix.
CTA: Link to Thread from Monday (cross-channel)
Status: [To Create]
CONTENT REPURPOSING MAP:
Pillar piece: 'SEO Blog Post Writer Guide' (1,800 word blog post)
→ Twitter thread: 8-tweet summary of the framework (Day 5)
→ LinkedIn article: The 3 SEO prompt mistakes + solutions (Day 8)
→ Email: 'The prompt our SEO users say changed their workflow' (Day 10)
→ Instagram carousel: 5 steps, one per slide (Day 12)
→ YouTube short: 60-second screen recording of the prompt in action (Day 15)
🏆
💡 Pro Tips
Best model for this prompt
ChatGPT
ChatGPT (GPT-4o / GPT-5)
Plan the whole month in one session, then review each piece 48 hours before publishing — this keeps the plan strategic but the execution responsive
The content repurposing map is the highest ROI activity in content planning — one idea becoming 10 pieces is how solo creators compete with teams
Keep a 'content bank' of evergreen pieces that can fill gaps when planned content falls through
Your publishing schedule should match your creation capacity — a published calendar you abandon is worse than a realistic one you keep
Planning around what you want to say instead of what your audience wants to read — check your analytics before planning each month
Creating content in isolation for each channel — the repurposing map turns your best ideas into a system
No status tracking — a calendar without accountability is just a list of good intentions
Ignoring seasonal hooks — content tied to timely events consistently outperforms evergreen content on social platforms
- How far in advance should I plan my content calendar?Plan 4 weeks ahead for structure and themes. Finalise specific content 1–2 weeks ahead. Leave 20% of slots for reactive content (news hooks, trending topics). Planning too far in advance leads to stale content; too last-minute leads to poor quality.
- What tool should I use to manage my content calendar?For solo creators: Notion or Airtable free tier. For small teams: Asana or Monday.com. For advanced social scheduling: Buffer, Publer, or Loomly. The best tool is the one you'll actually use — simplicity beats features for most creators.
- How do I keep content consistent when I'm busy?Batch creation (one session per week for the whole week's content) and a content bank of pre-created posts for emergencies. If you fall behind, reduce quantity before reducing quality — one excellent post performs better than three mediocre ones.
- Should every channel follow the same editorial calendar?Themes and pillars should be consistent across channels, but the format and angle should be native to each platform. A LinkedIn version and an Instagram version of the same idea should feel different — same core message, platform-appropriate execution.