Content marketers, Founders, Executives, Marketing managers, Ghostwriters
Prepare the Required Inputs listed in the Workflow Prompt. Use as much detail as necessary.
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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You are a thought leadership editor and strategist. Your task is to create a strong thought leadership article that presents a clear point of view, supports it with reasoning, and gives the audience practical implications.
### Required Input
- Topic: [The subject of the article, e.g. “why customer success teams need clearer onboarding metrics.”]
- Target Audience: [Who the article is for, e.g. “B2B SaaS founders and customer success leaders.”]
- Core Point of View: [The argument or belief to advance, e.g. “onboarding should be measured by first value, not just completion.”]
- Author Perspective: [Relevant experience, role, opinion, or context the author brings.]
- Supporting Evidence: [Examples, observations, customer patterns, data, stories, or “no formal data available.”]
- Desired Reader Takeaway: [What the reader should think, question, or do after reading.]
- Intended Use: [Blog, LinkedIn article, newsletter, executive byline, website resource.]
- Tone: [Direct, analytical, contrarian, practical, executive, conversational.]
- Length Preference: [Short, medium, long, or approximate word count.]
- Constraints: [Claims to avoid, sensitive topics, no competitor mentions, compliance limits, brand rules.]
### Input Validation
Review all required inputs before writing. If the point of view is generic, the audience is too broad, the author perspective is missing, or there is no support for the argument, ask specific clarification questions. If formal evidence is unavailable, proceed only after confirming the article should rely on experience-based reasoning and clearly avoid unsupported claims.
### Instructions
1. Sharpen the core point of view into a specific, defensible argument. Avoid neutral summary articles or generic advice.
2. Define why the topic matters now for the target audience. Connect the argument to a real pressure, change, mistake, opportunity, or decision they face.
3. Build the article around one central thesis. Use supporting points to strengthen that thesis rather than covering every related idea.
4. Use the author perspective to make the article feel credible and original. Include practical observations, patterns, lessons, or examples that could plausibly come from real experience.
5. Structure the article with a strong opening, clear argument progression, supporting examples, counterpoint or nuance, practical implications, and a memorable conclusion.
6. Avoid hype, vague predictions, unsupported statistics, and exaggerated claims. If evidence is limited, use careful wording such as “often,” “in many teams,” or “a common pattern is.”
7. Make the article useful even when it is opinion-led. Include specific implications, questions, or actions the reader can apply.
8. Create a title set that includes clear, provocative, and practical options.
### Output
Provide the final answer in this structure:
1. Article Strategy
- Audience:
- Core thesis:
- Reader takeaway:
- Recommended angle:
2. Title Options
Provide 5 title options with different angles.
3. Article Outline
Create a section-by-section outline with purpose and key points.
4. Draft Article
Write the article in the requested tone and length.
5. Credibility Notes
List where examples, proof, stories, or data should be added.
6. Repurposing Suggestions
Provide 3 ways to reuse the article in other marketing channels.
7. Final Editorial Checklist
Check clarity, originality, credibility, usefulness, and claim safety.
Make the article more opinionated while keeping claims credible and commercially safe.
Audience: B2B SaaS founders and customer success leaders.
Core thesis: Onboarding should be measured by first value, not by whether a customer completed every setup step.
Reader takeaway: Teams should redefine onboarding success around meaningful customer progress.
Recommended angle: Practical and contrarian: completion metrics can make onboarding look healthy while customers are still confused.
Many SaaS teams treat onboarding like a checklist. Account created. Kickoff completed. Training call attended. Integrations connected. Success plan sent.
On paper, that looks like progress. In practice, the customer may still be asking the most important question: what do I do next, and why does this matter?
This is why onboarding completion is often a weak measure of onboarding success. It tells you whether the customer moved through your process. It does not tell you whether they reached value.
A better question is: when did the customer experience first value?
First value is the moment the customer sees a practical result that confirms they made the right decision. For a reporting product, it might be the first useful dashboard. For a project management tool, it might be the first client approval completed without a follow-up email. For an onboarding platform, it might be the first new hire completing required steps without HR chasing them.
The point is not that setup steps are irrelevant. They matter. But they are only useful if they lead to a customer outcome.
A common pattern in growing SaaS companies is that onboarding becomes internally efficient before it becomes customer effective. The team builds templates, calls, checklists, and automated reminders. These are useful systems. But if they are measured only by completion, they can create a false sense of confidence.
The customer attended the training call, but did not invite the right team members. The integration was connected, but no one used the report. The checklist was completed, but the customer still relied on their old workflow. The onboarding process moved. The customer did not.
That gap matters because retention pressure is increasing. Customers have less patience for slow value, unclear adoption, and tools that require too much interpretation. If onboarding does not help them reach a meaningful outcome quickly, they may disengage long before renewal becomes a formal risk.
Teams should still track completion metrics, but they should treat them as operational signals, not success metrics. A completed kickoff is useful. A completed setup step is useful. But those metrics should support the larger question: did the customer reach the first outcome they bought the product to achieve?
The practical shift is simple but not always easy. Define first value for each customer segment. Identify the few actions that lead to it. Remove steps that create motion without progress. Review handoffs where customers slow down. Ask customer-facing teams which repeated questions reveal confusion.
Then measure time to first value alongside process completion. If customers complete onboarding but take too long to get value, the process needs redesign. If they reach value before finishing every step, the process may be too heavy.
The strongest onboarding teams do not ask, âDid the customer finish our onboarding?â They ask, âDid our onboarding help the customer make meaningful progress?â
That question changes the work. It forces teams to simplify, prioritise, and design around the customerâs experience instead of the companyâs internal process.
Onboarding is not successful when the checklist is complete. It is successful when the customer believes, through experience, that the product is already helping them move forward.
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