Creating Your Quarterly Content Plan (PLR), Managing Expectations

Published: Sat, 09/05/20


We've been having storms here and it worried me because I had three very tall, dead trees in the front yard within striking distance of the house. So I called company last night who came out and quoted me $1,800 to cut all 3 down, grind the stumps and clean up (way better than the $3,00-4000 I was quoted JUST to cut them down from someone else).

He showed up this morning and it was a fascinating process to watch! Logging is the #1 most dangerous job in America. And the way they climbed so high and used the wood chipper that devoured huge trees was awesome. Anyway, someone wasn't having it. Delilah was angry about the noise. I think I heard her bark "Get off my lawn!" She stayed under her new Fall blankie most of the morning. 

Creating Your Quarterly Content Plan PLR

Kelly McCausey has a good PLR topic out today. It's about content planning, and to me, this is SO important. Your blogs, emails, social sites, products, lead magnets, etc. all contribute to you having a relationship with your target audience. 

This pack starts with a mega post (1,200+ words) and it’s the perfect content to share the benefits of creating a content marketing plan. Here are a few of the perks mentioned in the content…

Along with the blog post, you’ll also get: 10 social-friendly images (the PSD files are included) and 30 social media updates (to send traffic back to your website or blog).

Check out the details here:
https://whitelabelperks.com/amember/aff/go/tiffanylambert?i=203

Managing Expectations

So recently, I got back into fiction hardcore. I really am on a roll with it. But as I usually do, I overshot my estimate of how much I could do in a day. 

Sometimes, we plan for one thing and when it doesn't happen, it gives us a sort of defeated feeling, EVEN when we make progress. 

With non fiction, I can write up to 40 pages a day. So I thought with fiction, I'd be able to do at LEAST 20 pages. I thought I was being real generous cutting it in half.

Well here I sit, hoping to crank out FIVE pages a day. About one chapter. That's so disappointing. Even though I should be happy that I'm making progress, I'm negative about it. Trying to stop it. 

It's very different writing fiction because I have to run through scenarios and dialogue and physical reactions in my head. I have to think several chapters behind and ahead, too - to make sure it all makes sense and won't throw the story off. 

Some of you might go through this when working on your online marketing business. I know someday, you'll be fast with it. I know someday I'll get faster with my fiction branch. But the waiting is grueling. It's just part of the process we have to go through. 

That's it for me today - hope y'all have a good rest of your day!

Tiff ;)

P.S. Prefer a weekly email?
http;//www.tiffanylambert.com/weeklytiff.html