6 AI Content Skills That Can Plan Your Week in 30 Minutes
Stop asking AI for random post ideas. Build a small content team that passes work from one step to the next.
I saw a smart guide this week about using Claude Skills to run a content system. The big idea was right: one prompt is not enough. A real content workflow needs a few small roles that hand work to each other.
That is the part most beginners miss.
They save one prompt for ideas. One prompt for scripts. One prompt for carousels. Then each prompt starts from zero every time. No voice memory. No comment data. No post history. No clear handoff.
That is why the output feels random.
Your AI content system should work more like a tiny team. One skill finds the signal. One skill listens to your audience. One skill turns the idea into a clear promise. One skill writes the script. One skill turns it into a carousel. One skill looks at the numbers and tells the rest of the team what to do next.
You do not need a fancy stack to start. You need clean inputs, clear roles, and a weekly rhythm.
This article gives you the build.
It is for you if:
You make content for Instagram, TikTok, Substack, YouTube, or a small business.
You use AI, but your content still feels scattered.
You want better ideas without staring at a blank page.
You want prompts that behave like saved workers, not one-off chats.
I am not teaching this like a guru who posts about systems but runs everything in vibes. My whole business runs on content systems now: Substack articles, social posts, SaaS content, product education, support replies, and research flows. The lesson is simple. AI gets better when each part has a job.
Behind the paywall, you get:
The exact six-skill content system.
The setup checklist before you build anything.
A better prompt for each skill.
The weekly run order.
The quality checklist I would use before posting.
Paid readers also get the full archive of AI business workflows, prompt systems, Substack playbooks, and the behind-the-scenes builds I do while running Liz on the Web.
The rest is for paid readers: the prompts, the checklists, and the weekly content run sheet.
The full walkthrough is below the paywall.
Click the button, subscribe, and the locked section below opens right away. You get this article now.

