How to Use Trello to Create a Content Calendar
How to Use Trello to Create a Content Calendar
Ever wonder how major news sites like Mashable, ReadWrite, and The Changelog keep their content pipeline flowing behind the scenes? News flash: They use Trello. Whether it's a blog run by an individual or a humongous site with many contributors, Trello remains one of the easiest go-to tools for strategizing, planning, scheduling, and publishing blog content. In what should come as a surprise to absolutely no one, we use Trello at Trello to manage our own extensive editorial calendar. We welcome more than 750,000 unique readers to our blog each month and collaborate with many internal and external superstars to produce top-quality content on a weekly basis. There are a lot of moving parts when managing a blog editorial calendar—due dates, author communication, SEO strategy, asset design, and more. So it's of the utmost importance to develop a clear strategy and workflow to safeguard your editorial calendar from fire drills and chaos. In this article, we're giving you an inside look at our editorial calendar workflow in Trello. Follow this guide to create your own custom editorial calendar in a few easy steps so you can take any idea from potential pitch to successful, published blog post in style. Before we dive into the details, let's review our editorial calendar workflow. Our editorial calendar Trello board follows a kanban workflow. Blog post ideas are added as cards to the Incoming list and journey through development stages from left to right across the board until they are published on the blog. These are the lists on the board and their purpose: Now that you understand the high-level workflow of our own content calendar, let's take a deeper look at the process and requirements at each stage of the process. Any blogger will admit that creating valuable content at a regular interval is difficult. Sometimes it's hard to find the words to say… well, anything. This type of brain fog necessitates the need for an organized plan to hold writers accountable, centralize and flesh out ideas, as well as keep the content flowing at a steady clip. Creating a Trello board for an Editorial Calendar is an intuitive and visual way to store, overview, and organize content. Content travels from left to right across countless lists, gradually being poked and prodded through the pipeline until it reaches its final destination: The "Published" list. As outlined above, our Editorial Calendar lists are as follows, from left to right: This list is the start of our blog editorial workflow and where blog posts ideas are submitted for consideration from our freelancers and team members. We like to encourage everyone at Trello to come into the board and submit ideas! Each idea is its own card, and on the back is a description of the potential idea. This is also where one (or three) labels get added, to further distinguish what type of content this article is categorized as, helping us ensure we have a balanced collection of topics and types of content each month. ✨Fun Fact: The Trello Editorial Calendar was one of the first boards to test the unlimited labels feature. We also find it to be extremely helpful to provide guidelines to authors who want to pitch an idea. In the card at the top of the list (which stays there permanently), we have the following instructions listed for Incoming: We take advantage of the Custom Fields Power-Up to standardize the information that we need for each pitch, including due dates, keywords for SEO, and the author. When a blog post card is moved to this list, it means it is approved and the author can begin researching and writing the blog post (if they haven't already!). At this stage of the process, we make it a requirement to have a keyword for the blog post before it can move along the content creation pipeline. ✨ Pro Tip: Remember those Custom Fields ? They provide key info on the front of cards about the author, keyword, due date, editing due date, and more. Usually these cards have a working draft attached, or at the very least a detailed outline. They also most certainly have a due date by now, as we schedule content at least a month in advance. When deciding on a due date, it's easy to visualize the content landscape in calendar view, thanks to the Calendar Power-Up. By selecting "Calendar" at the top right side of our board, we are able to see a breakdown of which cards are already scheduled and on which day. We typically aim to schedule 2-3 posts per week. Also, if the author of the post has any questions for our team while they are writing, this is a great time to utilize the Comments feature in the card to chat about the draft so that everything is kept in one place. Cards move here when it's time for the resident grammar stickler (ahem, me) to look over the piece. We integrate with Google Drive to attach article drafts to our cards. This is also the point in the process when we encourage the author to write several options for the title of the article and to assign the creation of the blog illustration to the Design team. One of the most important and time sensitive elements of content management is ensuring that content gets in front of a designer with enough time for them to create graphics. This isn't always easy since there are far, far more graphics requests than there is time to complete them. Having a dedicated place where designers are notified there is a draft or outline ready for them to review is crucial to ensuring that graphics are thought out and complement the text nicely. In other words, clear communication with other team members involved in the process is crucial to its success so make sure to give your Design team enough time to get their creative juices flowing! ✨ Pro Tip: Add screenshots, images, and GIFs as attachments to the card to save time and avoid scrambling later in the process when you're uploading your blog post in your CMS system. When the card is moved to this list, the author needs to be notified that any edits are ready to accept, and it's finalize the draft. Make sure all images, screenshots, and GIFs are attached to the card. We like the look of our editorial calendar when blog illustrations are set as the card cover. Make the blog illustration the cover of the card. When a blog post is finalized (woo!), it's ready to be uploaded to your website or CMS. At Trello, we use Hubspot, but you may use another platform like WordPress or Medium. Regardless of the platform you use, we highly recommend writing out instructions for your team to follow when uploading blog posts so it's completed properly. ✨ Pro Tip: Clunky images can slow down your page load speed and impact your search ranking ability. Before adding your images to the blog post, use www.tinyjpg.com to compress their size. We use Checklist templates that are automatically added to the card thanks to some fun Butler rules when they are added to this list. As we are uploading blog posts and before we publish, we make sure that all items are checked off the list. Once a blog post is uploaded to Hubspot, we perform a final SEO review before scheduling and publishing the article. Here are a few things we check during our audit: These articles are polished and ready to launch! Schedule the blog post according to your editorial calendar. Cue the confetti—The blog post is published! 🎉This list becomes a great repository of the research, drafts, files, and conversations behind every piece you ever publish. You can even use the Trello app for Slack to send a notification to your editorial channel once the due date has been marked as done, to let your whole team know the post is now live. So there you have it: an extremely straightforward, visual way to organize an inordinate amount of content. There can be hundreds of cards in an Editorial Calendar, but having lists dedicated to each phase of the blog writing process deters feeling overwhelmed, and prevents content from getting lost in cluttered back and forth email correspondence. The calendar view provides a visual overview of the content timeline, which means that every piece of the content management pipeline can live entirely on a Trello board. A few pro tips are sprinkled throughout this article so you can add some excitement, and even ease, to your editorial calendar in Trello. Here are some more Trello tricks to add onto your board: The hood is pulled back and now you have an inside look as to how blog posts are ideated and produced here at Trello. Copy the board below and make this workflow your own: Editor's Note: This article was originally published in January, 2015 but has been updated with a whole heap of new information and ideas. Good or bad, we'd love to hear your thoughts. Find us on Twitter (@trello) or write in to support@trello.com. Next: Level Up: Pro Tips For You To Maximize Trello
The Editorial Calendar Workflow At A Glance
Dive Into The Editorial Calendar Details
Incoming
Forming
Writing
Editing
Final Edits
Ready To Upload
SEO Audit
Scheduled
Published
A Few More Trello Features And Tricks That Add Delight To Your Editorial Calendar
Source: https://blog.trello.com/moved-to-published-using-trello-as-an-editorial-calendar
Posted by: wagersull1991.blogspot.com
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