Let me guessā¦
Youāve got ideas for days.
Half-written blog posts sitting in Google Docs.
A podcast episode you know could be repurposed into at least five pieces of content.
A Canva folder full of āalmost doneā graphics.
And a social media calendar that feels more like⦠a suggestion than a system.
Itās not that youāre not showing up.
Itās that content has quietly become this never-ending, always-lurking task that follows you from your laptop⦠to your couch⦠to your āIāll just check one thing real quickā moment at 9:42pm.
And the kicker is, you know content is how your business grows.
But youāre also starting to realizeā¦
You canāt keep being the one responsible for all of it.
Thatās where a content intern comes in.
Not as ācheap help.ā
Not as a risky hand-off.
But as a strategic, scalable support system for your marketing.
In this post, weāre pulling back the curtain on what a content intern actually does, why this model works so well for online business owners, and how it mig...
A few years ago, I found myself staring at something that should have felt like a huge winā¦
Over 100 podcast episodes published.
Thatās a lot of ideas.
A lot of teaching.
A lot of content that could help people.
But instead of feeling proud, I mostly felt⦠overwhelmed.
Because hereās the problem:
Every podcast episode was long-form content gold ā and yet none of it was making its way onto social media.
Which meant:
No repurposed graphics
No traffic back to the show
No easy way for new people to discover the work I had already created
And if youāve been running an online business for any length of time, you know the feeling.
You know social media could bring more eyeballs to your work.
But between client work, content creation, emails, launches, and the thousand other tasks on your plateā¦
You simply donāt have the time.
That was the moment I realized something important:
The problem wasnāt social media.
The problem was capacity.
So I...
50% Complete