
- What makes up a good editorial workflow
- Why a strategic workflow is key to meeting your goals
- How to plan an editorial workflow that makes meeting deadlines easy

Download Your Editorial Workflow Checklist Template
Make organizing and managing editorial workflows simple with this pair of checklist templates. There are options for both Word and Excel depending on which your prefer. Download them now: [Cookie "Get Your Free Editorial Workflow || https://media.coschedule.com/uploads/Blog_How-to-Plan-an-Effective-Editorial-Workflow-02.png || Download Template || https://media.coschedule.com/uploads/Editorial_Workflow_Templates.zip"]What is an Editorial Workflow?
Simply put, an editorial workflow is the steps you take to publish a piece of content, like an article or blog post. All of the tasks, discussions, researching, writing, and more involved involved in the process, from ideation to promotion, make up your workflow. And it’s what makes your content marketing strategy actually happen and brings your editorial calendar to life. In his best-selling book, Atomic Habits, James Clear says, “You do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems.” Your editorial workflow is the system your content goals rely on.

Why Optimize Your Editorial Workflow?
Whether you realize it or not, you have an editorial workflow. It’s simply the way your content gets published. However, if you’ve never given it much thought or attention, your team’s workflow is likely undefined, unclear, and unhelpful. It probably changes from article to article, and steps are missed or completed out of order. That disorganization and lack of clarity costs your team time, energy, and results. But when you take the time to define, document, and optimize your production process:- Your team members will always know what work they’re responsible for, and when they need to complete it by.
- They don’t need to spend time figuring out the right process from scratch for each piece of content they produce.
- It becomes easier to scale editorial output without creating mass chaos and confusion.

How to Plan an Effective Editorial Workflow
Step 1: Identify Each Step of the Process
The first thing you need to do when planning your ideal workflow is to meet with your team and agree on the overall process of events. You’ll want to brainstorm and list out every task and action that’s involved in producing a piece of content, from start to finish. This should go beyond content creation itself to include steps like preparation, research, and promotion too. If it helps you wrangle a complex process, you can group the tasks into larger workflow phases, like:- Phase 1: content strategy (calendar planning, SEO keyword research, selecting a CTA)
- Phase 2: content creation (outlining, writing, graphic design)
- Phase 3: content promotion (optimization, publishing, distribution)


Recommended Reading: The Most Complete Content Marketing Process You Need to Get Organized
Step 2: Assign Ownership for Each Step
Once you’ve eliminated any uncertainty over which steps are needed to publish editorial content, it’s time to tackle any uncertainty as to who does what as well. Especially on larger teams that have more than one person in each role or position, small but important tasks like reviewing a blog post before it goes live can fall through the cracks. It’s the all-too-common problem of everyone assuming someone else “has it covered.” Never assume someone has it covered, ensure that someone does. This means assigning ownership and responsibility over each step of the editorial workflow to someone on your marketing team. Go through each task identified in step 1 and agree on which team member will be responsible for executing it. Most of it will be pretty straightforward. For example, you can easily agree that it makes sense for:- Your content strategist to perform SEO research and finalize topics, along with reviewing the writer’s drafts.
- Your content writer to write the first draft and complete revisions.
- Your graphic designer to create the post and social media graphics.
- Your social media manager to schedule the promotional posts.

Recommended Reading: The Best Way to Plan Marketing Tasks With Checklists
Step 3: Map Out Your Timeline
You’re almost done the prep work, I promise. You’re so close to having an organized, streamlined editorial workflow! You’ve now answered two of the major questions involved: the “what” and the “who.” The last thing to cover is “when.” Most marketers only have a content calendar of when new pieces are being published. And while your editorial is one of your most important assets, it only tells one part of the story. Editorial calendars show when content will be published. But as we’ve talked about, there are so many more steps involved in your workflow. You need to have deadlines and due dates for those, along with the final publish date. In this step, map out the actual flow and timeline of creating a piece of editorial, taking into account things like:- How long each step takes (some will understandably require more time than others)
- The order tasks need to be completed in
- Any dependencies (for example, can the designer start working on certain graphics while the copy is still in drafting, or do they need the full draft?)


Recommended Reading: How to Implement a Clear Creative Workflow That Actually Sticks
Step 4: Adjust and Optimize Regularly
Your first attempt at planning an organized workflow won’t be perfect. You may realize there are dependencies your team hadn’t identified yet, like that the social media manager needs finished graphics to start scheduling promotion. Or you may realize that your time estimates are off, and that your team works faster and more productively than they’d originally estimated. Workflows are like living things that you need to take care of over time. You should build them knowing that you’re going to be adjusting and optimizing them, versus treating them like “one and done” projects. Use agile marketing principles to help you maintain your workflow. For example, daily standup meetings and weekly check-in meetings can help you see how your team moves content through the editorial workflow. They’re a good chance to identify any missing gaps in the process or bottlenecks in the timeline. Your team might meet weekly to review your marketing kanban board as a group, update all the projects that have made progress, and troubleshoot those that haven’t. It serves as a useful bird’s-eye-view of everything in progress that lets you easily make updates and changes.
Recommended Reading: How to Improve Marketing Processes With Agile Sprint Retrospectives
Let the Work Flow
An ideal editorial workflow gives your team a clearer, more organized way to do the work they’re already doing. It should enable them to work quickly and efficiently and help the whole team do their best work. But remember, finding the right one is an ongoing process so the sooner you start, the sooner you can find it. Get started today with our editorial workflow checklist you can customize for your own team.
The post How to Plan an Effective Editorial Workflow in 4 Steps (Template) appeared first on CoSchedule Blog.