How to Save 40 Minutes Daily Using Claude Projects for Content Production
30 de abril de 2026
0
Advertising/MarketingComments (0)
Log in to leave a comment
No posts yet
Log in to leave a comment
No posts yet
Sitting in front of a laptop after work and re-explaining your brand's identity and target audience to an AI from scratch is a chore. By the time you're exhausted from entering the same instructions over and over, important content planning often gets pushed to the back burner. Anthropic's Claude Projects feature is the perfect tool to end this draining, repetitive work.
The core of a knowledge-based business is consistency in messaging. However, human memory is limited, and typical chatbots tend to lose context as conversations grow longer. Claude Projects can remember up to 200,000 tokens of information. By pre-loading your brand assets, Claude becomes a capable assistant that accurately remembers today what you said yesterday.
First, upload core documents to the Knowledge Base section of your project. Brand guidelines that capture your tone of voice, the specific "pain points" that keep your target audience up at night, and about three of your past blog posts that performed well are sufficient. Simply upload them as PDF or Word files.
Next is setting up the Custom Instructions. This is the stage where you set specific constraints, such as "Explain things comfortably as if talking to a friend, but break down technical jargon simply," or "Never use the phrase 'In conclusion' to start a sentence." Once this foundation is laid, a simple command like "Write a post on this topic" will produce results that perfectly reflect your intent.
Managing multiple channels is undoubtedly tiring, but it's unavoidable if you want to increase brand awareness. The key is "One Source Multi-Use" (OSMU). Create instructions to instantly convert one carefully written blog post into Instagram Reels, Twitter (X) threads, and newsletters.
For Instagram Reels, instruct it to find figures from the text that can grab attention within the first 2 seconds. Have it generate a colloquial script of around 200 characters, including suggestions for on-screen text and visual b-roll.
It's the same for Twitter or newsletters. In the Twitter prompt, command it to create a thread of short sentences under 280 characters, breaking the sentences in a way that makes the reader curious about the next tweet. For newsletters, extracting one most valuable lesson into about 200 characters—rather than a full summary—is effective. Once you build this system, it isn't difficult to more than triple your weekly content output.
If the monthly subscription fees for automation tools are a burden, I recommend connecting Google Sheets with the Claude API. Rather than wasting time learning technical skills to build a real-time automation system, investing 2 hours on the weekend to produce a week's worth of content at once is far more realistic for office workers.
The method is simple. Install an extension like 'GPT for Sheets' from the Google Workspace Marketplace and link your Claude API key. If you write the topic in column A and enter a formula in column B, the body text is automatically generated.
For publishing, simply use the scheduling features of each platform. Create a routine where you focus on topic selection and draft generation on Saturday morning, and finish scheduled publishing on Sunday morning. This creates an environment where you can focus on your main job during the week while content goes out on its own according to the pre-set schedule.
Text written by AI can actually cause a sense of rejection due to its peculiar smoothness. Cliché words like 'innovation' or 'leverage' distract the reader. If the draft has completed 80%, you must fill the remaining 20% with your own voice.
First, read the sentences out loud. You must boldly fix expressions that sound awkward when explaining them to a friend. "I want to solve your concerns" sounds much more human than "We do our best for customer satisfaction."
Next, use specific examples. Instead of saying "Time management is important," include one line of actual experience, like "I wrote this post in just 30 minutes after getting home yesterday." Finally, try deleting about 30% of conjunctions like 'also' or 'furthermore.' By keeping sentences short and occasionally mixing in longer ones to create rhythm, you can escape the stiff writing style characteristic of AI.