AI for Marketing · Part 6 — Analytics & Your Content Engine
16 min
Dashboard

6.1 — What to Measure and Why

⏱ 16 min 📝 Part 6 of 6 🎯 AI for Marketing

The metrics that matter — and the vanity metrics to ignore

Likes aren't revenue

Likes aren't revenue. Followers aren't customers. This lesson covers which metrics actually matter for each type of content — and how to use AI to help you build a simple performance tracking system tailored to your goals.

Try this prompt

Ask AI: 'I run a [business type] and my main marketing goals are [describe — e.g. leads, sales, awareness]. Help me define the 5-7 metrics I should track for each channel I use: [list your channels]. For each metric, explain why it matters and what a good benchmark looks like.'

💡 What to notice

Pay attention to how AI structures its response. Is it giving you something genuinely useful, or something generic? The difference is almost always in the specificity of your prompt — the more context you give, the better the output.

Applying this in practice

The real skill here isn't getting AI to produce something — it's knowing when the output is good enough to use and when it needs refinement. Review everything AI produces through the lens of your specific audience. If it could have been written for anyone, it needs more work.

🎯
The 80/20 rule for AI marketing content

AI handles the first 80% — structure, vocabulary, volume. You provide the remaining 20% — your specific audience insight, your brand voice, your judgment about what will land. Neither alone produces great marketing.

AI for Marketing · Part 6 — Analytics & Your Content Engine
17 min
Dashboard

6.2 — Analysing Performance with AI

⏱ 17 min 📝 Part 6 of 6 🎯 AI for Marketing

From data to insight to action

Having data is useless without interpretation

Having data is useless without interpretation. This lesson shows you how to paste performance data into AI and get genuine insight — what's working, what isn't, and what to do about it. No spreadsheet expertise required.

Try this prompt

Pull data from any platform you use — even just a screenshot description. Ask AI: 'Here is my social media performance data for the last month: [describe or paste numbers]. Analyse this and tell me: what is working, what isn't, what I should do more of, and what I should stop.'

💡 What to notice

Pay attention to how AI structures its response. Is it giving you something genuinely useful, or something generic? The difference is almost always in the specificity of your prompt — the more context you give, the better the output.

Applying this in practice

The real skill here isn't getting AI to produce something — it's knowing when the output is good enough to use and when it needs refinement. Review everything AI produces through the lens of your specific audience. If it could have been written for anyone, it needs more work.

🎯
The 80/20 rule for AI marketing content

AI handles the first 80% — structure, vocabulary, volume. You provide the remaining 20% — your specific audience insight, your brand voice, your judgment about what will land. Neither alone produces great marketing.

AI for Marketing · Part 6 — Analytics & Your Content Engine
15 min
Dashboard

6.3 — SEO Basics for Content Marketers

⏱ 15 min 📝 Part 6 of 6 🎯 AI for Marketing

Making your content findable without becoming an SEO expert

You don't need to be an SEO expert — but you do need to understand how to write content that search engines can find

You don't need to be an SEO expert — but you do need to understand how to write content that search engines can find. This lesson covers keyword thinking, on-page basics, and how to use AI to optimise existing content for search.

Try this prompt

Choose one piece of existing content — a blog post, a product page, anything. Ask AI: 'Review this content for basic SEO. Suggest: a stronger title tag, a meta description, natural keyword improvements, and any structural changes. Here is the content: [paste].'

💡 What to notice

Pay attention to how AI structures its response. Is it giving you something genuinely useful, or something generic? The difference is almost always in the specificity of your prompt — the more context you give, the better the output.

Applying this in practice

The real skill here isn't getting AI to produce something — it's knowing when the output is good enough to use and when it needs refinement. Review everything AI produces through the lens of your specific audience. If it could have been written for anyone, it needs more work.

🎯
The 80/20 rule for AI marketing content

AI handles the first 80% — structure, vocabulary, volume. You provide the remaining 20% — your specific audience insight, your brand voice, your judgment about what will land. Neither alone produces great marketing.

AI for Marketing · Part 6 — Analytics & Your Content Engine
14 min
Dashboard

6.4 — Repurposing Content at Scale

⏱ 14 min 📝 Part 6 of 6 🎯 AI for Marketing

One piece of content, everywhere

Creating from scratch every time is the biggest drain on marketing energy

Creating from scratch every time is the biggest drain on marketing energy. This lesson teaches you the repurposing workflow — how to take one piece of long-form content and systematically turn it into 10+ pieces across channels using AI.

Try this prompt

Take one blog post, podcast episode, or video you've already created. Ask AI: 'Repurpose this content into: 3 LinkedIn posts, 5 Instagram captions, 3 email newsletter sections, 1 Twitter thread, and 2 short-form video script hooks. Here is the original: [paste or describe].'

💡 What to notice

Pay attention to how AI structures its response. Is it giving you something genuinely useful, or something generic? The difference is almost always in the specificity of your prompt — the more context you give, the better the output.

Applying this in practice

The real skill here isn't getting AI to produce something — it's knowing when the output is good enough to use and when it needs refinement. Review everything AI produces through the lens of your specific audience. If it could have been written for anyone, it needs more work.

🎯
The 80/20 rule for AI marketing content

AI handles the first 80% — structure, vocabulary, volume. You provide the remaining 20% — your specific audience insight, your brand voice, your judgment about what will land. Neither alone produces great marketing.

AI for Marketing · Part 6 — Analytics & Your Content Engine
15 min
Dashboard

6.5 — Building Your Content Engine

⏱ 15 min 📝 Part 6 of 6 🎯 AI for Marketing

The system that keeps running without burning you out

A content engine is a documented, repeatable process that produces consistent marketing output without you having to start from scratch every week

A content engine is a documented, repeatable process that produces consistent marketing output without you having to start from scratch every week. This lesson shows you how to design yours with AI as a permanent working partner.

Try this prompt

Ask AI: 'Help me design a weekly content engine for [business type]. I can spend [X hours] on marketing per week. My channels are [list]. Build a repeatable weekly workflow that covers: planning, creation, scheduling, and review. Make it realistic and sustainable.'

💡 What to notice

Pay attention to how AI structures its response. Is it giving you something genuinely useful, or something generic? The difference is almost always in the specificity of your prompt — the more context you give, the better the output.

Applying this in practice

The real skill here isn't getting AI to produce something — it's knowing when the output is good enough to use and when it needs refinement. Review everything AI produces through the lens of your specific audience. If it could have been written for anyone, it needs more work.

🎯
The 80/20 rule for AI marketing content

AI handles the first 80% — structure, vocabulary, volume. You provide the remaining 20% — your specific audience insight, your brand voice, your judgment about what will land. Neither alone produces great marketing.

AI for Marketing · Part 6 — Analytics & Your Content Engine
17 min
Dashboard

6.6 — Your Complete AI Marketing Toolkit

⏱ 17 min 📝 Part 6 of 6 🎯 AI for Marketing

Prompt library, workflows, and what comes next

The most valuable thing you can leave this course with is a documented personal toolkit — prompts that work, workflows that save time, and a clear picture of where AI fits into your marketing

The most valuable thing you can leave this course with is a documented personal toolkit — prompts that work, workflows that save time, and a clear picture of where AI fits into your marketing. This lesson helps you build it.

Try this prompt

Ask AI: 'Based on everything I've learned about using AI for marketing, help me build a personal prompt library. Include my best prompts for: social captions, email subject lines, ad copy, brand voice, content planning, and analytics review. Format as a reference document I can reuse.'

💡 What to notice

Pay attention to how AI structures its response. Is it giving you something genuinely useful, or something generic? The difference is almost always in the specificity of your prompt — the more context you give, the better the output.

Applying this in practice

The real skill here isn't getting AI to produce something — it's knowing when the output is good enough to use and when it needs refinement. Review everything AI produces through the lens of your specific audience. If it could have been written for anyone, it needs more work.

🎯
The 80/20 rule for AI marketing content

AI handles the first 80% — structure, vocabulary, volume. You provide the remaining 20% — your specific audience insight, your brand voice, your judgment about what will land. Neither alone produces great marketing.

AI for Marketing · Part 6 — Analytics & Your Content Engine
14 min
Dashboard

6.7 — Measuring Your Results

⏱ 14 min 📝 Part 6 of 6 🎯 AI for Marketing

Tracking the impact of your AI-powered marketing

How do you know if AI is actually helping? This lesson covers how to set up simple before/after measurement for your marketing — so you can see the time saved, the output increased, and the results improved

How do you know if AI is actually helping? This lesson covers how to set up simple before/after measurement for your marketing — so you can see the time saved, the output increased, and the results improved.

Try this prompt

Ask AI: 'Help me create a simple monthly marketing dashboard. I want to track: time spent on content creation, number of pieces published, top-performing content, email open rates, and leads generated. Create a template I can fill in each month.'

💡 What to notice

Pay attention to how AI structures its response. Is it giving you something genuinely useful, or something generic? The difference is almost always in the specificity of your prompt — the more context you give, the better the output.

Applying this in practice

The real skill here isn't getting AI to produce something — it's knowing when the output is good enough to use and when it needs refinement. Review everything AI produces through the lens of your specific audience. If it could have been written for anyone, it needs more work.

🎯
The 80/20 rule for AI marketing content

AI handles the first 80% — structure, vocabulary, volume. You provide the remaining 20% — your specific audience insight, your brand voice, your judgment about what will land. Neither alone produces great marketing.

AI for Marketing · Part 6 — Analytics & Your Content Engine
20 min
Dashboard

6.8 — Final Exercise — Your Content Marketing System

⏱ 20 min 📝 Part 6 of 6 🎯 AI for Marketing

Build and document your complete AI marketing system

The capstone exercise

The capstone exercise. Document your complete content marketing system: channels, pillars, workflows, prompt library, and measurement dashboard. This is the deliverable that earns your certificate.

Try this prompt

Three-part submission: (1) Your documented brand foundation (voice guide, content pillars, brand story). (2) Your weekly content workflow covering all channels. (3) Your personal prompt library with at least 10 prompts across different marketing tasks.

💡 What to notice

Pay attention to how AI structures its response. Is it giving you something genuinely useful, or something generic? The difference is almost always in the specificity of your prompt — the more context you give, the better the output.

Applying this in practice

The real skill here isn't getting AI to produce something — it's knowing when the output is good enough to use and when it needs refinement. Review everything AI produces through the lens of your specific audience. If it could have been written for anyone, it needs more work.

🎯
The 80/20 rule for AI marketing content

AI handles the first 80% — structure, vocabulary, volume. You provide the remaining 20% — your specific audience insight, your brand voice, your judgment about what will land. Neither alone produces great marketing.

🧠 Knowledge Check
What is the most important output from this course?
A perfect social media post
A documented, repeatable content system that uses AI throughout
A large social media following
A collection of AI-generated images
🏆
Part 6 Complete!

You've completed AI for Marketing & Content Creation. You now have a complete content system covering social media, email, brand storytelling, video, advertising, and analytics — all powered by AI. Download your certificate and add it to your LinkedIn profile.

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