How to Create and Use an Editorial Calendar


You realize that it is time to publish your newsletter or that your website hasn’t been updated in months, and the dread sweeps over you. “What are we going to write about this time?” you wonder.

You can take much of the anxiety out of the publishing process by creating an editorial calendar for each of your publications. You can use them for newsletters, websites, blogs and anything else that you publish regularly. An editorial calendar can also help you stay focused on your audience and your goals for the publication. As an editorial project manager for several clients and for my own publications, I simply can’t live without this tool.

It’s easy to create an editorial calendar. Create a table in a Word or Excel document. Across the top of the first row, list your newsletter publication dates. For websites, if you wanted to shoot for monthly updates, list each month. For a more frequent publication schedule (e.g. for blogs), you could list each week.

In the first column, list the categories of articles you include in each edition of your newsletter. For a website, you could list the various sections. For your blog, you can list the main categories or tags that you use.

Then start filling in the grid with a few notes on the article topics.

Here is a sample editorial calendar for a local animal shelter newsletter. I’ve only listed two issues here, but I would normally try to work on four to five issues at a time.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Article Category Spring 2007 Summer 2007
     
Program Success
Spay/Neuter campaign results How we increased our cat adoption rate
Donor or Volunteer Profile Bill Miller - How he brokered the deal for the free dog food Jane Smith - role in getting teenagers to volunteer at shelter
Adoption Profile TBD- recent dog adoption TBD - recent cat adoption
Pet Tips Preparing pets for a new baby Hot weather tips for outdoor pets
How You Can Help Dogwalking program Invite us to speak to your community group

In Every Issue: Pets Available for Adoption, In-Kind Donations Wish List, List of Donors Since Last Issue

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

You don’t need all the details worked out in advance. Notice for example how I list TBD - to be decided - in the Adoption Profile section. This would give me the flexibility to pick which family I wanted to highlight when I started to write the newsletter, while reminding me that I needed to alternate between a dog and cat adoption.

Some sections of your newsletter may be repeated with some quick and easy updates that don’t require much research or writing, so you can list those at the bottom of the chart as I have with the “In Every Issue” heading.

Charting your articles like this will also help you see where shifts are needed. For example, I can see that the Spring issue is currently “dog” heavy. I might decide to switch the order of the Adoption Profile or the Donor Profile to make it more balanced. This kind of juggling is much easier to do with an editorial calendar in front of you.

4 Responses to “How to Create and Use an Editorial Calendar”

  1. Testy Hooligans - If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than the animating contest of freedom, go home from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or your arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you. May your ch Says:

    […] Writing For Nonprofits turns the numerological calendar’s endless symbolism on its head, arguing instead for an entirely practical use: “An editorial calendar can also help you stay focused on your audience and your goals for publication”. […]

  2. Emmanuel Oluwatosin: Inspiring Excellence, Realising Ambitions » Blog Archive » 1st edition of Carnival of Personal And Company Effectiveness Says:

    […] Kivi Leroux Miller addresses How to Create and Use an Editorial Calendar. This opens my eyes to the fact that one can actually increase the effectiveness of his marketing communications by using an editorial calendar. […]

  3. Dave Prouhet Says:

    Kivi,

    Excellent article on how to organize your editorial calendar. Had to do this with the articles I publish daily, as well as, the carnivals I post to and the various other areas I post our articles to. Tell you what solid article planning is half the battle to publishing - the other is consistency.

    Dave
    http://www.BusinessAdviceDaily.com/

  4. Scrutiny Hooligans » The Tarheel Tavern #107: Count Me In Says:

    […] Writing For Nonprofits turns the numerological calendar’s endless symbolism on its head, arguing instead for an entirely practical use: “An editorial calendar can also help you stay focused on your audience and your goals for publication”. […]

Leave a Reply


 

View Kivi Leroux Miller's profile on LinkedIn

Kivi Leroux Miller's Facebook profile

Follow Kivi on Twitter


Nonprofit Marketing Guide Learning Center


Featured in Alltop

Add to Technorati Favorites


Current Poll

    Who does your nonprofit's marketing and communications?

    • Add an Answer
    View Results

Want to Reprint a Post?

    You may reprint post headlines and excerpts as long as you link back to the post's permalink. To reprint an entire post, please contact me for permission.

Link Disclosure

    I occasionally recommend products or services using affiliate links. This usually means that I get a very small commission when one of my readers ends up buying that product or service. Rest assured that I only recommend products when I have personally used them or when I have a high degree of confidence in the proprietor. If you have a bad experience with a product or service I recommended, please let me know so I can reconsider it.

Blog Admin