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Interest to Content Topics

Turn your genuine interests into practical content topics people actually want to follow.
Content Creators - Getting Started - Interest to Content Topics

Who it's for

New creators, Personal brands, Freelancers, Coaches, Educators

Get Ready

Prepare the Required Inputs listed in the Workflow Prompt. Use as much detail as necessary.

How to use this prompt

1. Copy the Workflow Prompt.
2. Paste it into your AI tool.
3. Replace the "Required Inputs"
4. Run the prompt.

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Workflow Prompt

				
					You are a creator positioning strategist helping someone turn their interests into content topics that are useful, sustainable, and audience-friendly. Your task is to identify which interests have the strongest potential for consistent content creation and audience growth.

### Required Input
- Interests: [List hobbies, experiences, industries, skills, obsessions, or topics you naturally spend time on]
- Experience Level Per Interest: [Beginner, intermediate, advanced, professional, or lived experience]
- Audience You Enjoy Helping: [Who you like talking to or helping]
- Preferred Content Style: [Educational, entertaining, opinion-based, storytelling, behind-the-scenes, practical]
- Platforms You Want to Use: [LinkedIn, TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, newsletter, etc.]
- Topics You Do NOT Want to Create About: [Optional boundaries]

### Input Validation
Review all inputs before generating recommendations. If the interests are too broad, unclear, or disconnected from audience value, ask specific clarification questions and wait before continuing.

### Instructions
Analyse which interests have enough depth, personal energy, and audience relevance to support ongoing content creation. Avoid suggesting topics purely because they are trendy.

Look for intersections between curiosity, credibility, audience usefulness, and long-term sustainability. Separate interests that are enjoyable privately from interests that can realistically become repeatable content.

Recommend content directions that feel natural to the creator rather than forcing an artificial personal brand. Include beginner-friendly angles if the creator lacks formal expertise.

### Output
1. Strongest Content Topic Opportunities
2. Why Each Topic Has Potential
3. Audience Fit Analysis
4. Risks or Limitations to Consider
5. Best Topic Combination to Start With
6. 15 Starter Topic Ideas

Keep recommendations practical, specific, and realistic for a beginner creator.
				
			

Optional advanced instructions

				
					Prioritise topics that are easiest to stay consistent with long term.
				
			

Example output

1. Strongest Content Topic Opportunities

  • The “Unfiltered Beginner” Journey (Chronicle): Documenting the raw, unpolished reality of learning golf from scratch. This means showing the air-swings, the lost balls, and the small wins without editing out the frustration.
  • The Beginner Equipment & App Reality Check: Testing golf gear, training aids, and golf apps from a complete novice’s perspective. It answers: Is this tool actually helpful, or does it just make me look ridiculous?
  • Deciphering Golf Culture & Etiquette: Exploring the unspoken rules, confusing terminology, and intimidating social aspects of visiting a driving range or golf course for the first time.

2. Why Each Topic Has Potential

  • The Journey: Traditional golf content is dominated by pros giving technical advice. A beginner documenting their actual struggles is highly relatable because 90% of amateur golfers struggle with the exact same frustrations.
  • The Reality Check: Most gear reviews are done by high-swing-speed experts. Beginners want to know if a budget package set or a swing-trainer aid actually works for someone who can barely make contact.
  • Culture & Etiquette: Golf is notoriously intimidating for newcomers. Approaching golf etiquette with humor removes the pretension and breaks down barriers for other beginners who are terrified of looking foolish on the first tee.

3. Audience Fit Analysis

  • Target Audience Alignment: High. Fellow beginners and “casual/weekend” golfers do not want to be lectured about wrist angles or ground force mechanics. They want to laugh, feel validated in their own struggles, and see someone else making mistakes.
  • Platform Suitability (TikTok, Shorts, Reels): Perfect. Short-form video thrives on fast pacing, authentic reactions, humor, and clear visual hooks (like hitting a ball directly into a lake). It allows you to build a tight-knit, highly engaged community quickly.

4. Risks or Limitations to Consider

  • The “Imposter Syndrome” Trap: Because you are a beginner, viewers may try to coach you in the comments. Lean heavily into your boundary of “not pretending to know better” to turn unsolicited advice into community engagement rather than an argument.
  • Skill Progression vs. Brand Identity: As you naturally get better over time, your “from scratch” angle will evolve. Keep the content focused on the honesty of the process so the audience stays loyal even when you start breaking 90.
  • Burnout from Public Mistakes: Bad days on the course can be demoralizing. Frame your worst golfing days as your funniest content pieces so that a terrible scorecard still equals a great video.

5. Best Topic Combination to Start With

The optimal blend for your channel launch is “The Humorous Progress Log” mixed with “The Beginner’s Guide to Not Looking Stupid.” This pairing allows you to post consistent progress loops while creating highly shareable, relatable skits and observations about golf culture.


6. 15 Starter Topic Ideas

The Journey & Progress (Short-Form Format)

  1. Idea: “Day 1 of trying to hit a golf ball straight.” (Show 5 completely different miss-hits in a row, ending with one decent shot and an over-the-top celebration).
  2. Idea: “What my swing looks like vs. what it feels like.” (Side-by-side comparison of your mental image of a Tiger Woods swing vs. your actual raw video footage).
  3. Idea: “Buying my first set of clubs on a budget.” (A chaotic vlog at a thrift store or discount shop figuring out what clubs you actually need).
  4. Idea: “Tracking how many golf balls I lose in 9 holes.” (A running counter on screen that ticks up every time you hit a ball into the woods).
  5. Idea: “My first time trying to use a driver.” (The pure terror and comedy of swinging the biggest club in the bag for the first time).

Humorous Etiquette & Culture

  1. Idea: “Things nobody tells you about your first time at the driving range.” (Anxious inner-monologue about where to get the balls, how to set up the tee, and trying not to hit the ball picker tractor).
  2. Idea: “A beginner tries to decode golf terms.” (Reacting to words like ‘bogie’, ‘fringe’, ‘shanks’, and ‘mulligan’ with honest confusion).
  3. Idea: “The terror of the 1st tee box when people are watching.” (A comedic skit about the pressure of swinging when the group behind you is waiting).
  4. Idea: “What to do when you hit a ball toward another group.” (A funny tutorial on the panic of shouting ‘FORE!’ for the first time).
  5. Idea: “Golf dress codes vs. what I actually own.” (Trying on various outfits to see if they pass the country club test).

Beginner Product & Hack Reviews

  1. Idea: “Testing a viral golf training aid from TikTok.” (An honest, funny review of whether a cheap swing gadget actually fixes your swing or just confuses you).
  2. Idea: “Are expensive golf balls worth it for a beginner?” (Testing a $5 ball vs. a $1 ball, showing that you lose both of them exactly the same way).
  3. Idea: “Using a golf GPS app for the first time.” (The app telling you that you are 300 yards away from the green, while you are currently standing in a bunker on a completely different hole).
  4. Idea: “The cheapest golf gear upgrade that actually made me happy.” (A simple, honest review of a cheap item like a cool towel or a nice glove).
  5. Idea: “Asking a golf pro one stupid question so you don’t have to.” (A quick clip asking a local coach a basic question you’re embarrassed to look up).

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Existing Content Improvement

Improve an existing post, script, caption, or article while preserving the original intent and voice.

Comment to Content Ideas

Turn audience comments, replies, and questions into useful new content ideas.

Relatable Content Improvement

Make content feel more human, specific, and audience-aware without losing credibility.

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