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Marketing & Strategy

How to Build a Content Strategy for Your Personal Brand

March 30, 2026

A content strategy for your personal brand is not built through random posts. It grows when your ideas, experiences and perspective are communicated consistently and intentionally.

A content strategy helps you clarify what you want to be known for, communicate your expertise and ideas and attract the right audience, opportunities and relationships. 

Without a content strategy, your content can easily become scattered, reactive or inconsistent. 

When you have a content strategy, every piece of content starts to compound because you’re building a body of work that establishes trust, authority and momentum. 

In this article, I’ll walk through the key components of building a content strategy for a personal brand.

Person creating a content strategy for their personal brand on a laptop

What Is a Personal Brand Content Strategy?

A personal brand content strategy is the foundation for how you show up online. It outlines the key elements of your brand such as your goals, audience, messaging, content pillars, brand voice and platform strategy. 

Think of this as your long-term blueprint for how you communicate your value, perspective and personality online. 

Overview of What a Strategy Includes 

At a high level, your content strategy for your personal brand should document the key details that help you show up online with purpose, clarity and consistency. 

Some of the key elements of your content strategy will include:

  • Your goal: Clarifying your personal brand goals helps you create content that directly supports what you’re trying to achieve.
  • KPIs: Once you have a clear goal, identify the key performance indicators (KPIs) that you’ll track on a weekly, monthly, quarterly or annual basis.
  • Target audience: Identify who you’re trying to reach, including their needs, values, desires and pain points. This will influence your positioning, messaging and the platforms you prioritize. 
  • Priority platforms: Knowing your audience will help you determine which platforms they are most active on. Use this information to determine which platforms you should prioritize. Depending on your skill set, you might also evaluate your strengths to determine which formats and platforms are best suited to your brand.
  • Content pillars: These are 3-5 categories you consistently discuss in your content. These content pillars should complement your audience and naturally support your products and services.
  • Topics and Themes: These are recurring ideas, subtopics, conversations or angles of your content pillars that you’ll want to discuss.
  • Brand voice: Establishing and defining your brand voice and tone is important so that you can consistently show up online and convey your message with ease. Your brand voice should reflect your mission, values and natural communication style. 
  • Content Calendar: Your content strategy should identify your publishing cadence, formats and distribution strategy. This will help you ensure you maintain a consistent publishing schedule so that you establish a presence, trust and authority online with your audience. 
How to Build a Content Strategy for Your Personal Brand Share on X

Step-by-Step Guide to Creating Your Content Strategy 

1. Establish Your Content Pillars:

Your content pillars are 3-5 core topics that you consistently discuss in depth. Your content pillars give you clarity on your niche, messaging and target audience. Your pillars complement your expertise, support your offers and align with your broader brand goals. 

A simple way to identify your content pillars is through your audience, your expertise or your offers. 

Let’s break this down: 

Through your audience: 
Start by considering who you’re trying to reach. What do they care about? What are they struggling with? What are they trying to learn, solve or become? Your content pillars should feel relevant to their needs, interests and values. 

Through your expertise: 
Another way to identify your content pillars is by looking at your strengths, specialties and lived experience. Try a quick 2-3 minute brain dump: write down topics you could talk about for hours, teach in different ways or naturally return to in a conversation. The topics that energize you often point to strong content pillars. 

Through your offers: 
Your content pillars should also connect back to the products, services or opportunities you want your brand to support. For example, if you’re a realtor, your pillars might include personal finance, home buying and local housing market education. If you’re a hair colorist, your pillars might include hair health, color maintenance and hair treatment education. 

Examples: 

If you’re building a personal brand as a graphic designer, your pillars might be:

  • Design process
  • Workflows
  • Tools and techniques 
  • Creative process 

If you’re building a personal brand as a service provider, your pillars might be: 

  • Client transformations 
  • How to work with you 
  • Process and scope of support 
  • Your offers and services 

💡Remember: Content pillars help prevent random posting and make it easier to create content that feels aligned with your brand, audience and goals. 

2. Determine How You Provide Value 

Once you know what you talk about, the next step is deciding how you deliver value to your audience. This shapes your content style, teaching approach and even which platforms make the most sense for your brand. 

For example, two people can talk about the same topic and still feel completely different online because of how they package and communicate their value. 

Here are some ways you might deliver value through your content: 

  • Using a framework: Breaking down complex topics into simple mental models. For example, if you’re a wellness coach, this might look like breaking down macronutrients in a framework that helps your audience better understand it. 
  • Case studies: Discussing industry case studies that you highlight, analyze or personally generate. For example, if you’re a dermatologist, this might refer to clinical studies or research on specific ingredients and their benefits for your skincare regimen. 
  • Actionable tips: Quick wins, actionable advice or tips that your audience can immediately implement. If you’re a parent who shares productivity tips, you might offer hacks or tips to help parents prepare and pack meals for kids or how to get them out the door in the mornings. 
  • Addressing myths or mistakes: Challenging or debunking common myths in your industry or niche. If you’re a jewelry store owner, you might talk about the difference between gold-plated and gold-filled jewelry. 

These are just a few examples, but there are many ways you can package your expertise and communicate your value through your content. Storytelling, teaching and delivery all play a role in how your brand comes across online.  

This might also mean incorporating different media types such as videos, graphics, infographics, photos or PDF guides. 

Over time, you can test and refine how you package and deliver your message so it feels natural, aligned and recognizable. Ideally, the way you communicate your value becomes cohesive enough that people begin to recognize your style, even when your content is shared or reposted elsewhere.  

3. Clarify Your Core Message 

Your core message is the recurring idea or belief you want your audience to associate with you. 

Write down key messages that you want to be able to repeat and create a throughline with your content and audience. 

Remember that you are the thread that ties everything together. 

Your expertise, interests, lived experience, and perspective all shape the message you communicate online.

Don’t worry if you don’t have your core messaging nailed down—even if you have 1-3 core messages—what you want to share with your audience is important.

For example:

  • A dermatologist: “Skincare begins with understanding key active ingredients.” 
  • A career coach: “You don’t need to quit your job to build a meaningful personal brand.”
  • A wellness coach: “Wellness should feel sustainable, not extreme.”
  • A content strategist: “Content should support your goals, not just fill a feed.” 

Pay attention to how your audience responds to the topics and messages you share. Over time, that feedback can help refine your messaging and your content strategy. The goal is to communicate a message that feels clear, distinct and memorable. 

Building a personal brand? Rememeber the most important thing to protect and refine over time is your perspective. Share on X

The most important thing to protect and refine over time is your perspective. Your perspective on a niche, industry, or topic is one of your strongest assets. It helps you connect with your audience in a way that feels specific, relevant and memorable. That perspective is often shaped by your background, personal experience and values and all of this is important for building a cohesive content strategy for your personal brand.  

Related: Master Your Messaging with Audience Personas

4. Tell a Story

Now that you have a clearer message, the next step is learning to communicate it through a story. 

People remember stories because stories make ideas easier to understand, relate to and retell. 

Your story doesn’t need to be dramatic to be effective. Often, the most compelling personal brand stories come from lessons learned, personal shifts or mistakes that changed how you think.

To shape your story, reflect on your journey. What motivated you? What mistakes have you made? What challenges have shaped you as a person? 

Do you have a villain in your story? Is this something that you want to anchor yourself to? 

For example, here are some ways you can work through your story and ways you can incorporate this into your messaging:

  • Hero’s journey: How you got started and your journey to get here. The pivotal moments that brought you closer to where you are now.
  • Your villain: If you had to paint a picture of your villain, who or what would that be? This is not about having a victim mentality, it’s more about identifying who your villain is and communicating this consistently to your audience. For example, a villain could be a problem in your industry, a myth you want to challenge, a mistake you once made or a frustration you previously solved.
  • The transformation: What is the journey you’ve taken that has led to you where you are now? How can you be a guide for your audience? Hint: This is where your offer, service, product or brand begins to make the most sense. 

If you want to learn more about this, I recommend reading these books:

Building a Storybrand by Donald Miller 
Storyworthy by Matthew Dicks
Brand Storytelling by Miri Rodriguez

5. Choose Your Platforms Strategically 

One of the biggest mistakes people make is trying to be everywhere at once while building their brand. 

Instead, focus on one primary platform and one complementary platform. Think of your primary platform as where you build authority and deepen trust and your supporting platform as where you distribute to reinforce your message and visibility. 

One recommendation I’d consider non-negotiable for any personal brand is building an email list. It gives you a direct way to stay connected to your audience, repurpose your ideas and communicate offers, updates or events over time. 

The platform you prioritize should be influenced by where your audience spends the most time, which formats you enjoy creating and which formats highlight your strengths. 

Writers may naturally gravitate toward platforms like Substack, LinkedIn or Threads. Educators may thrive on YouTube, Instagram Reels or TikTok. Visual creators may prioritize Instagram, Pinterest or even Substack. 

Here’s what that might look like: 

Visual graphic that explains how to choose your platforms strategically. The platform you prioritize should be influenced by where your audience spends the most time, which formats you enjoy creating and which formats highlight your strengths.

Remember to start small and then you can expand into other platforms later. Trying to be everywhere at once will stress or burn you out. 

Related: Best Ways to Manage Your Content Calendar


Content Calendar Using Airtable

Get access to this course and content calendar that helps you maximize your channel distribution and helps you with your content marketing.

Content calendar template using Airtable. This calendar has the foundational elements built into it that will help you be more strategic with the content and marketing activities you’re focusing on.

This calendar has the foundational elements built into it that will help you be more strategic with the content and marketing activities you’re focusing on.


6. Develop a Repeatable Content Format

Consistency becomes easier when you develop repeatable content formats. 

Think about which formats feel most natural to you and best support the way you communicate your ideas. 

For example, if you’re a calligraphy instructor, you may opt for videos where you highlight your handwritten skills. Or if you’re an interior designer, you may want to use a green-screen commentary format to highlight design patterns and details while showing your face. 

These are some examples of formats you could try:

  • Carousel
  • Talking-head videos
  • Whiteboard explanations 
  • Green screen commentary
  • Walking or talking reflections
  • Tutorials or demonstrations 

Putting your ideas into repeatable formats makes content easier to produce, repurpose and sustain. 

For example, one email could become a Threads post, a LinkedIn post and an Instagram carousel. You could rinse and repeat this process every week. 

One idea can be turned into multiple formats:

  • Blog post
  • LinkedIn post
  • Instagram carousel
  • Threads post
  • Email newsletter 

Repeatable formats create helpful creative constraints and reduce decision fatigue. They make it easier to produce, repurpose and sustain your content without reinventing your process every time. 

Related: How to Create a Weekly Content Planning Routine

7. Show Your Personality 

Your personality is often what makes your content memorable. It’s the difference between sounding informative and sounding unmistakably like you. 

Your personality can show up through your tone of voice, humor, personal stories, reflections, opinions and perspectives. 

Think about some of your favorite creators and what makes them memorable. They naturally show their personality in how they communicate their message, what they notice and the energy they bring to their work. 

Remember to speak from experience, because your personality is a foundational detail that will help you build trust and convey your authenticity and values over time. 

8. Build Relationships in Your Industry 

Your personal brand will grow through community and relationships. Look for people who are directly in your industry, adjacent to your niche or speaking to a similar audience. 

You’re going to want to engage these people by commenting on their posts, sharing their work, participating in conversations and building genuine relationships. 

Over time, this helps position you as a part of the same ecosystem and conversation.  

Set aside 10-15 minutes each week to intentionally engage with people in your niche or adjacent spaces. This can be as simple as leaving thoughtful comments, replying to stories or sharing someone’s post with your perspective. 

As an additional step, you could keep a list of people you want to build relationships with in a document or Excel spreadsheet, so you can be intentional about your engagement efforts. 

9. Establish a Sustainable Publishing Cadence 

You want to be consistent and show up online in a cadence that is sustainable for you. 

Showing up consistently will help you build trust and establish credibility. 

If you’re just starting out, a simple publishing cadence could look like: 

  • 1 long-form piece per week (blog post, YouTube video, podcast, newsletter)
  • 2-3 short-form posts per week (repurposed from your long-form content)

The most important thing you can do is to establish a publishing schedule that you can realistically maintain. A sustainable cadence helps your audience know what to expect. Over time, that consistency builds familiarity, trust and momentum. 

Related: Time Management Tips for Content Creation

10. Review What’s Working and Refine Your Strategy

A content strategy is not static. Regularly reviewing your content helps you understand which topics resonate, which formats perform best and which ideas lead to the most meaningful opportunities. 

Create a simple tracker in Excel, Google Sheets or Airtable to monitor the key performance indicators (KPIs) that matter to your brand, such as engagement, reach, newsletter growth, conversions, collaborations, podcast invitations or speaking opportunities. You do not need to track every possible metric. The goal is to identify the ones that are most relevant to your goals.

Your content strategy for your personal brand should evolve as your audience, goals and body of work evolve. 


Common mistakes to avoid: 

Inconsistent messaging: 
If your content feels disconnected, your audience will struggle to understand what you’re known for. Your content pillars and core message should help keep your ideas aligned.

Posting on too many platforms: 
Trying to be everywhere usually leads to burnout and inconsistency. Start with one main platform and one supporting platform, then expand from there.

Random content: 
If your content doesn’t connect back to your core message, content pillars or goals, it won’t compound over time. Remember that strategic content builds familiarity and trust.


FAQ’s about building a content strategy for your personal brand

Why do I need a content strategy for my personal brand?

A content strategy helps you avoid posting random content that doesn’t support your goals.

Instead of creating content reactively, you’re creating with more purpose. It gives you a clearer direction for your messaging, content pillars, platforms and publishing cadence so your work can build trust and momentum over time.

If you want your content to compound, you need a strategy behind it.


Which platforms should I use for my personal brand?

The best platforms for your personal brand depend on three things:

– Where your audience spends time
– Which formats you enjoy creating
– Which platforms best support your content creation strengths

In most cases, it’s best to start with one primary platform and one supporting platform rather than trying to be everywhere at once.

Your goal is to show up consistently where it matters most.


How do I know if my personal brand content strategy is working?

You’ll know your strategy is working when your content starts creating clearer results over time.

That might look like:
– Stronger engagement
– Audience growth
– More email subscribers
– Client inquiries
– Collaboration opportunities
– Speaking invitations
– More trust and recognition in your niche

The right metrics will depend on your goals, but the bigger sign will be when your content starts feeling more aligned, recognizable and effective.


Your Strategic Next Step: 

Building a content strategy for your personal brand is not about posting more just to stay visible. You must commit to creating content that consistently reinforces what you want to be known for. 

Your content should align with your goals, messaging and audience. 

When your content is grounded in clear content pillars, a strong message, repeatable formats and a sustainable strategy, it becomes easier to show up with intention. 

Over time, that consistency helps you build trust, authority and a body of work that opens doors. 

Start simple, keep your focus and let your content compound.

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How to build a content strategy for your personal brand using messaging, content pillars, formats and platform strategy.
Essential guide outlining the key elements of a personal brand content strategy, including messaging, content pillars, platforms and publishing cadence.
Step-by-step guide to building a content strategy for your personal brand.

TAGS:channel strategycontent strategypersonal brand
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Nancy Casanova

Nancy Casanova is a content marketer specializing in storytelling, workflows and brand strategy. She loves sharing content ideas, inspiration and tutorials online.

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