Do you know what you’re posting, sharing, and blogging this Thursday?
How about two Thursdays from now? Thursday of next month? Thursday of next year?
We don’t have things figured out quite to that extreme here at Buffer, but we do have some idea of what’s ahead. (Those of you who are yearly planners, our hat’s off to you!) Planning content far into the future is a common element of many marketing strategies, and the erstwhile content calendar—in its many shapes and forms—fits this role perfectly.
What calendar do you use for your social media marketing and content creation?
We hear a lot of interest in calendars from our community, so I dug around to find some of the best tools and templates for premium and free content calendars, as well as the
elements that make a good one—the who, what, when, where, and why of planning out content a week-at-a-time, month-at-a-time, or year-at-a-time. Here’s what I discovered.
We recently held a webinar with the team at Twitter, and included in the webinar slidedeck was a slide of a content calendar. This slide was a big hit with everyone who saw it, and our community wanted to know: What is this calendar and where can I find it?
Turns out, the calendar was just a graphic. Nevertheless, the magnetism of that graphic got us to thinking: What made the calendar slide so attractive?
I found a couple psychological theories that might explain why.
1. Calendars work as mental models, showing us something familiar to help us comprehend something hard.
Now, I’m not saying that blogging or tweeting is hard, per se. But psychologically, we have a much easier time thinking about content when it’s pitched to us as a calendar. When we see our work laid out in a calendar, we find it to be much more manageable. The familiarity of the calendar minimizes the difficulty of our work and instead makes it exciting and fresh and fun—and we’re enthused to keep at it.
2. A simple, visual calendar greatly lowers its perceived difficulty.
Cost-benefit analysis says that our behavior is influenced by how easy or difficult we perceive an action to be. An easy-looking calendar is more likely to gain a positive, visceral reaction—as we experienced when we showed everyone the calendar graphic in the webinar.
Hick’s Law is similar. According to this law, we take longer to come to a decision when we are faced with more options. The Twitter calendar was simple, clean, and gave off the appearance of few options, which could explain its popularity.
These theories might be helpful to keep in mind when you’re choosing a content calendar of your own. Find one that is familiar, simple, and easy-to-use, and you’ll be more likely to stick with it.
We use a type of content calendar here at Buffer, and based on conversations with other content creators and social media marketers, it’s plain to see why thinking in calendar terms can be so helpful and why writing down your plan can be beneficial. Here are three of the benefits:
A content calendar gives you new perspective both in the way you think about your content and in the way you see your content. You get to examine your updates, sharing, and blog posts from a 10,000-foot view, where you can’t help but notice the big picture. It’s easy to get lost in details when you’re in the heads-down process of content creation, so having a larger visioning session to create the calendar plus taking regular peeks at the calendar once it’s made can help bring your work into context.
Have you ever had an event sneak up on you? I’ve been there before, and in the mad rush to produce content for the event, I kinda wished I had written it down on a calendar. When you plan your content well in advance, you can prep and organize around the key dates that could influence your content. As you’ll see below, many big brands plan out far ahead to cover the recurring events and important dates that seem to crop up at the same time every year.
Working ahead on blog posts is my guilty pleasure. (I don’t know why I need to feel guilty about it, but I do.) Calendars help me see what’s coming up so I can carve out time in my schedule to get ahead. Pam Moore calls this the drumbeat approach to content development. Jamie Griffiths, writing at Convince and Convert, describes the effect this has on consistency and expertise:
In general the further ahead you plan your digital content publishing the better placed you are to produce a consistent flow of content that builds your brand’s perceived expertise in your chosen subject areas.
CoSchedule, makers of a handy-dandy WordPress editorial calendar plugin, advise that a good calendar creation process include a handful of different timeframes. Their three-step process goes like this:
The purpose of the process is to think big-picture about the content you create and share. It’s similar to the heads-up/heads-down approach I mentioned above. You need to pick your head up every now and again to see where you’re headed.
There is no wrong way to build a content calendar.
As you’ll see in the tools below, some calendars include both blog posts and social media updates. Depending on the way your marketing team is set up, you can approach calendars from any number of different ways.
Many content strategies begin with marketing personas, and the messages of the content align to fit different needs and customers. Identifying these different audience types will likely guide the way your calendar lays out. For example, our Buffer content might be 80 percent social media tips, 10 percent Buffer tips, and 10 percent product announcements.
The next step is deciding what types of content you can place into your calendar, including blog posts and social media updates. Here is a list of content you could consider adding:
(We have a lot of helpful posts on the optimal frequency for posting content, too.)
You can likely find even more ideas on what types of content to add when you consider all the many different ways you can repurpose content. Create slide decks from existing articles, compose e-books based on past stories, tap the expertise of your coworkers, etc.
And the calendar customizations don’t stop there. In addition to the types of content you’ll include, you may also choose to have additional information on each item. In a spreadsheet calendar, this information often appears in the columns beside the date and content. Marketing Nutz has a big list of categories to consider when you’re putting together your calendar:
Combine all these different factors, and it’s easy to see how a content calendar can take hundreds of different forms. Find the form that’s right for you—detailed or minimal, weekly or monthly, etc.—and start working it.
Many big brands use content calendars to plan out weeks, months, and a year in advance. Here are a few that make their calendars public online. Feel free to use for inspiration and ideas.
Forbes’ yearly editorial calendar includes the highlights of their 18 big recurring features and where these features land on the calendar. The list view shows when the copy and design are due (the print close), when it is delivered to print subscribers, and when it launches online.
Time magazine also plans content a year out, providing deadlines for print, online, and advertising on some of its most popular (and important) features.
Inc’s calendar highlights the most important moments on the magazine’s editorial and online schedule. Features like the “Inc. 500” and a “How I Did It” series are known a full year ahead so that content can be created and advertising can be sold.
Vogue’s editorial calendar is very similar to the others: Brief descriptions of the content with relevant publishing and print dates.
The gang at CoSchedule shared their annual calendar, which they keep with paper and pen (and color-coded stickies).
We schedule our blog posts a week at a time with a fluid to-do board in Trello. We’ve found that ideas and directions change quickly, so we try to assume a good level of flexibility with the content we plan. There are no set dates for the content on the Trello boards; we publish whenever the post is ready.
A calendar tool is a common way that content producers choose to stay organized, whether in a standalone app or an integration with a company’s content management system. When you’re choosing a tool or template to help with building a content calendar, it might be helpful to ask yourself a few questions:
Here are five tools that you might find helpful, depending on your needs.
We use this tool on our Buffer blogs for scheduling our posts for the coming weeks. The drag-and-drop interface updates both the calendar and the unpublished posts themselves, and it is a cinch to use with a WordPress blog (or two).
Gather Content, a tool for content marketers and project managers, stores files in the cloud for consistent group editing and has some neat features in terms of assigning tasks and tracking progress.
Kapost focuses directly on content marketing, with a slick calendar for writers, editors, and publishers. The calendar is one of many tools that Kapost offers, including online payments and a distribution and analysis system.
A WordPress plugin, CoSchedule synchronizes your blog posts and your social media sharing on one unified, drag-and-drop calendar interface.
For complete and total customization, you may want to just create your own calendar with a free spreadsheet. Many of the templates you’ll see below were built in Excel. The benefit of doing your calendar this way is that you have full control over what you want to plan and track, and you can do so for free.
Just like with calendar tools, any template you choose should be specific to your needs. There are lots to pick from, so if you go the template route, take care to pick one that fits you and your content strategy. (And based on the psychology of visual things, it won’t hurt to pick one that’s easy on the eyes, too.)
Here are five of our favorites.
The printable content calendar from CoSchedule, available in yearly views, monthly views, and an idea worksheet:
(CoSchedule’s instructions are to print one annual calendar and 12 monthly ones and as many idea sheets as you’d like.)
Content Marketing Institute’s content calendar template:
Convince and Convert’s content calendar template:
Hubspot’s content calendar template:
WebpageFX content calendar template:
If you’ve been creating content for long enough, you’ve likely experienced the benefits of a content calendar for your blogging and your social media updates. A strategic approach to content makes a world of difference for delivering the absolute best blogs, updates, and shares you can.
What do you use for a content calendar? Which elements of the calendar are most important to you? I’d love to hear about your experience in the comments.
P.S. If you liked this post, you might also like The Ultimate Guide to Repurposing Content and The Social Media Frequency Guide: How Often to Post to Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and More.
Image credits: Enokson, CoSchedule, Twitter, Convince and Convert, The Marketing Nutz.
Is an elementary classroom really complete without a classroom calendar? 😍
With the rise in digital tools in the classroom, I’m sure there are calendars galore at your students’ fingertips.
But there is something special about having a large calendar displayed in your room.
You can bring a printable calendar into your classroom in a few simple steps!
(This post contains affiliate links for Amazon. This means that Amazon sends me a small commission, at no cost to you, if you purchase through one of these links.)
Not all classroom calendar sets are editable, but many come with some editable holiday cards.
If you are using one of my calendar sets, open PowerPoint on your computer and change the words on any of the editable squares.
You are also able to change the text into a different language or font! Below are some holiday cards in my modern calm colors calendar. Simply edit the text to customize them for your classroom!
The entire calendar is text-editable which means you can make changes as you need. It also means that I have embedded these fonts within the editable PowerPoint file for you to use!
This allows you to create the same look with your editable cards as with the pre-created cards. 🙂
Now is the time to print out all of the pieces you will need for your calendar!
My calendar set is designed not to require any special printing settings. Simply set up your printer to print out normally on 8.5×11 paper and you’re good to go! 👍
Wanting to make sure you get the BEST print job on these calendar cards? I walk you through some tips and tricks including suggestions on where to print and the type of paper to use in this blog post.
Laminating will save you from lots of extra runs to the printer to fix the torn, crinkled, unreadable cards.
Now comes the fun part – putting the classroom calendar on your wall!
There are three different methods I have found that work well for this display. This way you can choose the best option for your classroom! ✨
A pocket chart is a GREAT way to display your classroom calendar.
The main perk to using a pocket chart is the ease of changing the date cards. You don’t have to individually velcro dot or magnetic tape your date cards. You can simply slip them into the pockets.
This calendar display by @kaitlyninkinder, shows what using a pocket chart looks like.
She created her display on a bulletin board and used push pins to hang the pocket chart up on the bulletin board.
Looking for a classroom calendar display? The one shown in the picture is my Modern Calm Colors calendar set. Grab it from my TPT store here!
If you are looking for a different option, check out how @learnwithmrstk used a calendar background for her classroom calendar display.
To use this option, simply add velcro dots or strips onto each space of the calendar and the back of each date card.
Then when the month ends, you can easily remove the dates from the calendar background and restick them to reflect the new month.
You can place the calendar background on a bulletin board, as pictured above, or place it on a whiteboard using magnetic tape.
This calendar display has been created by @itsworththewade using a calendar background, but placing the display on a whiteboard.
Similarly, she used a calendar background, and then used magnetic tape to attach the calendar pieces and other items to the whiteboard!
A final method to creating your classroom calendar display is to simply attach the cards directly to a bulletin board using velcro dots!
This method doesn’t require any other background (like a pocket chart or calendar background).
All you need to do is stick a velcro dot to the back of each date card and onto your bulletin board itself. I will say- it did take some time to make the calendar straight and evenly spaced out without a guide.
I first laid all the pieces on the floor and spaced them out how I liked, measured how much space it took up, then made markings on the bulletin board where each of the 4 corners should go then hung the pieces accordingly.
The calendar sets I have created come with placeholder cards that read “The Weather Is” and “The Season Is”. I also added season and weather cards that perfectly fit inside those placeholders.
This picture from @kaitlyninkinder shows how to easily add space for the season, weather, and day of the week cards using velcro dots.
So, when creating your display, simply add a velcro dot to the inside of the placeholder cards and onto the back of each season and weather card.
Then, all you need to do is velcro on the card that fits the day’s weather and season!
Creating a colorful and functional calendar display in your classroom doesn’t have to be difficult! Once you have prepared and assembled your calendar, it is time to start using it with your students in the classroom!
Enjoy the connections, learning, and excitement this classroom calendar will bring!
P.S. – As a bonus, my Modern Calm Colors calendar set also comes with a Flip Calendar!
This blog post goes into the four steps to setting up a flip calendar in your classroom.