How do you handle content repurposing as an agency ?

These last few months I was talking to many newsletter creators and agencies about their process to repurpose content for themselves or their clients, so today I am discussing with agency owners that do this.

I would love to hear from you if content repurposing is still a time sink, and if yes, what is the missed opportunity you lose with not having optimized processes. I am also super curious to hear about your current bottlenecks when repurposing content.

If no, I would love to know how you handle this today in your day-to-day workflow.

Comments

Outrageous_Wait_2265about 2 months ago2

Honestly the bottleneck usually isn’t “turning one piece into many formats” anymore — AI already helps with that.

The real bottleneck is preserving platform-native feel after repurposing.

A LinkedIn post pasted onto IG feels dead.
A newsletter thread pasted onto X feels robotic.

Most agencies lose time rewriting tone/hooks/context per platform, not extracting the content itself.

ABDULKALAM_497about 2 months ago2

The bottleneck usually isn’t ideas anymore, it’s turning one good piece into platform-specific formats fast enough.

Prasanth7799about 2 months ago1

A lot of stronger workflows now combine AI for first-pass extraction and formatting, then human editors refine tone, hooks, pacing, and platform fit afterward.

Hrushikesh_1187about 2 months ago1

Repurposing used to eat way more time than it should. What helped was giving each format its own tool — Descript for clips, Runable for carousels and graphics, Buffer to schedule. Once each step had a home it stopped feeling like one giant task.

Biggest bottleneck still is clients who can't articulate what should get repurposed vs what stays long-form. That part's still a manual conversation every time.

contentstudiohqabout 2 months ago1

the biggest bottleneck for most agencies is the per platform adaptation step.. the raw content exists but making it feel native on each channel takes time.. linkedin needs a different angle than instagram, tiktok needs a different hook than youtube.. if ur doing that manualy for every client every week it compounds fast

the workflow that cuts it down is creating one strong version of the content then using ai to adapt the tone and format per platform in the same window.. no copy pasting between tools

contentstudio handles the per platform caption customization and ai rewriting in one window.. write once, fork per platform, ai adapts the tone.. the rss automation covers blog to social distribution too.. cuts the manual repurposing work significantly

sienna-marchettiabout 2 months ago1

I'm not an agency but I've been doing this for myself for a while and the bottleneck was never the tools — it was that everything I ran through GPT sounded like a corporate ghost wrote it. like, technically correct but no one wanted to read it. what actually moved the needle for me was building a small voice doc first — examples of my own posts that landed, what phrases I'd never say, my actual cadence — and pasting that into every prompt. cuts editing time in half. tools matter way less than people think — the missing piece is usually 'how do I keep this from sounding like everyone else's AI slop.'

No-Marzipan2839about 2 months ago1

The bottleneck usually is not repurposing the content.
It is preserving the point of view while changing the format.

A newsletter can become 10 posts pretty easily. But if those 10 posts all sound generic, the agency still has to rewrite everything.

The workflow I’d use:
- pull the strongest opinion from the original piece
- decide which platform that opinion fits
- rewrite around the client’s voice, not the source format
- keep one “do not sound like this” example per client

That last part saves a lot of cleanup time.

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Sakaala_Bryneirosabout 2 months ago1

The missed opportunity is usually slower learning, not just slower production. If repurposing takes too long, agencies end up publishing fewer format-specific tests, so they never learn which hook, structure, or channel actually carries the idea best.

HitxLerrabout 2 months ago1

The biggest repurposing mistake agencies make is treating short-form content like an afterthought haha. If you only start thinking about clips after the long-form content is finished, the pacing usually feels awkward and the editing workload doubles fr. The smarter approach is planning the repurposing during the scripting stage itself lol. We started building scripts with clearly marked hooks, quote moments, punchlines, and standalone insights before recording even starts haha. Tbh, once creators know exactly where the short-form moments are supposed to happen, the production team can slice content way faster without digging through hours of footage trying to find usable clips fr.

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