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Daily Life Content Ideas

Find relatable content ideas by turning everyday experiences into useful creator topics.
Content Creators - Getting Started - Daily Life Content Ideas

Who it's for

New creators, Lifestyle creators, Personal brands, Educators, Solo founders

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 ideation strategist helping someone generate content ideas from their everyday life, routines, observations, and experiences. Your task is to identify moments, thoughts, habits, and situations that can naturally become engaging content.

### Required Input
- Daily Routine: [Describe a normal day or week]
- Work or Life Situation: [Job, studies, parenting, freelancing, fitness journey, business building, etc.]
- Recurring Thoughts or Frustrations: [Things you regularly think about or struggle with]
- Interesting Experiences or Opinions: [Personal stories, observations, lessons, mistakes, routines]
- Audience You Relate To: [People similar to you]
- Preferred Platforms and Formats

### Input Validation
Review all inputs before generating ideas. If the lifestyle details are too vague or there are not enough examples to work from, ask focused clarification questions.

### Instructions
Look for moments that contain relatability, tension, lessons, humour, mistakes, curiosity, or useful perspective. Avoid generic lifestyle content with no audience relevance.

Turn ordinary situations into audience-facing ideas by identifying what others may recognise, learn from, debate, or feel understood by.

Recommend content that feels authentic to the creator's actual life rather than forcing performative storytelling.

### Output
1. Daily Life Content Themes
2. Audience Connection Opportunities
3. 25 Content Ideas Based on Real-Life Situations
4. Best Formats for Each Idea
5. 5 Easy Posts to Create Immediately
6. Tips for Spotting Future Content Moments

Keep ideas simple, relatable, and easy to create consistently.
				
			

Optional advanced instructions

				
					Make the ideas more practical and less lifestyle-focused if the audience prefers educational content.
				
			

Example output

1. Daily Life Content Themes

  • The “Adult Beginner” Reality Check: Embracing the extreme vulnerability and humor of starting over at zero in a sport notoriously known for being expensive, rigid, and exclusive.
  • The Modern Time Crunch: Balancing a frantic everyday life schedule (work, home, family) with the absurd desire to spend 4 hours chasing a little white ball through the woods.
  • De-snobbing the Game: An honest, unpolished look at golf culture from the outside looking in, calling out the ridiculous unwritten rules and country club pretension with good-natured humor.

2. Audience Connection Opportunities

  • The Camouflage of Shared Struggle: Your audience is not looking for inspiration; they are looking for validation. When you post a video of an absolute disaster swing on TikTok, a fellow busy parent or stressed professional scrolling at 11 PM feels instantly seen and comforted by your failure.
  • The Commiseration Effect: Highlighting the financial and logistical absurdity of being a beginner (e.g., spending $50 on a round of golf just to lose $40 worth of golf balls) builds an immediate, fiercely loyal bond with people who are tired of watching flawless scratch-golfers on YouTube.

3. 25 Content Ideas Based on Real-Life Situations

The Routine & The Time Crunch (Balancing Life & Golf)

  1. The 15-Minute Backyard Grind: Trying to get a micro-practice session in while dinner is in the oven and the kids are distracted.
  2. The Office Carpet Putting Championship: Sneaking in putts on a cheap target mat between work Zoom calls.
  3. The Exhausted 6 AM Range Session: Showing up to hit balls before the rest of the house wakes up, fueled entirely by caffeine and poor life choices.
  4. The Trunk Hideaway: Showing how your golf clubs live permanently in your trunk because you never know when a 20-minute life window will open up.
  5. The Mental Escape: A video about how golf is the only time your brain stops thinking about emails, bills, and laundry—even if you’re playing terribly.

The Raw Beginner Experience (The Reality Check)

  1. The First Time on the Grid: The sheer awkwardness of checking in at the golf shop counter when you don’t know any of the terminology.
  2. The Unedited Warm-up: Recording the first 5 swings of your practice session with zero cuts—whiffs, tops, and shanks included.
  3. The Ball Hunt Chronicles: Walking into the deep brush to look for your sliced ball and walking out with 4 random balls that aren’t yours. (A net positive!).
  4. The Scorecard Confessional: Counting up every single stroke on a hole honestly, even when the final number is a traumatic 11.
  5. The Post-Round Autopsy: Sitting in your car right after a bad range session, talking to the camera about exactly what went wrong.

Humor, Observations & Etiquette

  1. Decoding the Dress Code: Trying to find an outfit in your current closet that satisfies golf course rules without making you look like an extra from a 90s sitcom.
  2. The “Nice Shot!” Lie: The awkward social interaction when your random playing partner complements a terrible shot just to be polite.
  3. The Unwritten Rule Panic: A comedic reenactment of trying to remember where to stand, when to walk, and when to shut up on the green.
  4. The Golf Cart Formula 1: The childish joy of driving the golf cart vs. the tragic reality of your actual golf game.
  5. The “Fore!” Reflex: Documenting the panicked instinct to duck and cover whenever you hear someone yell across the course.

Gear, Apps & Budget Realities

  1. The “Is This Broken?” App Test: Opening a golf swing analysis app, uploading your swing, and watching the AI geometry lines break trying to calculate your form.
  2. The Bargain Bin Gamble: Reviewing a $5 piece of mystery gear or a used club you found online to see if it’s a hidden gem or total trash.
  3. The Ball Budget Math: Breaking down how many minutes a $4 premium ball stays in your possession before flying into a lake.
  4. The Glove Shame: Showing your incredibly dirty, worn-out beginner glove compared to the pristine ones the pros wear.
  5. The Training Aid Roast: Buying a goofy, viral swing trainer tool and reacting honestly to how ridiculous you look using it in public.

Lessons, Small Wins & Progression

  1. The One Good Shot Delusion: Hitting 49 terrible shots at the range, nailing the 50th one, and immediately convincing yourself you’re ready for the PGA Tour.
  2. The Visual Breakthrough: Showing side-by-side footage of Week 1 vs. Week 4. Even if it’s still messy, celebrating the tiny improvements.
  3. The Dumbest Lesson I Learned This Week: Explaining a basic tip you just discovered that completely changed your perspective (e.g., “Turns out you aren’t supposed to grip the club like a baseball bat”).
  4. The “I Broke 110” Celebration: Treating a mediocre milestone scorecard like a major championship victory.
  5. The Comment Section Coach Test: Intentionally trying out one piece of conflicting advice given to you by a viewer in your previous video.

4. Best Formats for Each Idea

  • TikTok / Reels (Fast-Paced Humor & Skits): Best for Ideas 2, 11, 13, 14, and 21. Use quick cuts, funny text-on-screen overlays, and relatable background audio trends to punctuate the comedy of errors.
  • YouTube Shorts (Raw, Visual Progress Loops): Best for Ideas 7, 9, 16, 22, and 25. These thrive on satisfying (or completely unsatisfying) ball-flight tracking, raw audio of the club strike, and quick before-and-after transformations.

5. 5 Easy Posts to Create Immediately

  1. The Unedited Warm-Up (Idea 7): Set your phone up on a tripod behind you at the range. Hit your first 5 balls. Keep the audio raw. Put a text overlay that says: “Golf influencers show you their best shots. Here are my first 5 swings of the day.”
  2. The One Good Shot Delusion (Idea 21): Film a range session. Edit together a quick montage of 3 terrible, exhausting miss-hits, followed immediately by one pure shot, a slow-motion replay, and a clip of you looking dramatically into the distance.
  3. The Trunk Hideaway (Idea 4): Open your car trunk on camera. Show your messy golf bag crammed next to groceries or kids’ toys. Voiceover: “Tell me you’re a busy parent trying to learn golf without telling me.”
  4. The Office Carpet Challenge (Idea 2): Record a first-person POV shot of you trying to putt a golf ball into a coffee mug or onto a cheap mat across your office floor while a corporate audio clip plays.
  5. The Scorecard Confessional (Idea 9): Show a close-up of a horribly marked-up scorecard with 7s, 8s, and a circled 10. Talk directly to the camera for 15 seconds: “Today I played 9 holes. I lost 6 balls, broke a tee, and shot a 64. But I had fun, and that’s a lie I tell myself to sleep at night.”

6. Tips for Spotting Future Content Moments

  • The “Internal Sigh” Trigger: Whenever you are on the course or at the range and you experience a moment of internal embarrassment, frustration, or panic (e.g., a group of good golfers pulls up behind you to watch you tee off)—that is a video concept. Write it down immediately in your phone notes.
  • Log Your Language: Pay attention to the funny, self-deprecating things you say out loud to yourself when you hit a bad shot. Those exact phrases are your future video hooks and text overlays.
  • Film the Pre and Post, Not Just the Swing: The comedy and human element of golf live in the sighs, the eye-rolls, the dropping of the club, and the exhausted walk back to the golf cart. Don’t press stop on your camera the second the ball leaves the clubface!

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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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