The Problem and the Fix
Without a skill
- You publish content without a strategy and your blog reads like random thoughts
- Competitor analysis takes a full week when you try to do it manually
- Your content pillars don't connect to what your audience searches for
With aidowith.me
- A documented strategy with audience profiles, pillars, and a 50+ topic backlog
- Competitor gap analysis done in minutes instead of a week of manual research
- Publishing cadence tied to your capacity, so the strategy survives past January
Who Builds This With AI
Marketers
Content, campaigns, and briefs done in hours instead of days.
Founders
Move fast on pitches, pages, research. AI as your first hire.
Managers & Leads
Reports, presentations, and team comms handled faster.
How It Works
Research your audience
Use AI to pull audience questions, pain points, and search patterns. Build profiles based on what your market asks for.
Define pillars and map topics
Set 3-5 content pillars that connect to business goals. Generate topic clusters for each pillar, prioritized by opportunity.
Build your calendar and strategy doc
Set a publishing cadence, assign topics to dates, and compile everything into a strategy document you can share with your team.
Build your content strategy with AI
10 steps, 90 minutes, and a strategy that turns random posting into consistent growth.
Start This Skill →What You Walk Away With
Research your audience
Define pillars and map topics
Build your calendar and strategy doc
Publishing cadence tied to your capacity, so the strategy survives past January
"Our content strategy was 'post when inspired.' Now we have a real plan, and traffic is up 40% in two months."- Head of marketing, SaaS startup
Questions
AI handles the research-heavy parts: audience analysis, keyword clustering, competitor gap identification, and topic generation. You provide the business context and make strategic decisions about positioning and priorities. The route structures this collaboration so AI does the heavy lifting and you do the thinking. The result is a strategy grounded in data, not guesswork.
A calendar tells you what to publish when. A strategy tells you why. The route builds the strategy first (audience, pillars, positioning, goals) and then creates the calendar from that foundation. This means every post connects to a business objective and an audience need, not just a slot that needed filling.
Review your strategy quarterly and adjust based on what's performing. The route produces a flexible framework, not a rigid plan. You'll update your topic backlog monthly as new opportunities come up. The audience profiles and content pillars change less often, maybe once or twice a year as your business evolves.