Weekend Website Bootcamp

Creating a Content Plan

10 minutes

The number one reason websites get delayed? Content. People often underestimate how long it takes to write what actually goes on the site. Design can’t move forward without words — and your words are what connect, guide, and convert your visitors.

Creating a content plan helps you avoid last-minute scrambling and makes the website-building process smoother, faster, and more intentional. It also helps you speak clearly to your ideal audience and stay focused on your message.

Step 1: Know Your Core Message

Before you write a single sentence, get clear on what you want to say and who you’re saying it to.

Ask yourself:

  • What does my ideal client need to hear from me?

  • What’s the main message I want them to take away?

  • What do I want them to do on each page?

Your message should feel aligned with your brand voice and values. Think of it as your through-line — the thing that connects all your pages.

Step 2: Outline Your Pages

Using your site map (from the previous lesson), write out each page your website will include. Then, make space under each one to jot down ideas.

Example:

  • Home

    • Quick intro to who you are + what you do

    • Brief overview of services

    • Call to action

  • About

    • Personal story or business journey

    • Why you do what you do

    • Your values

    • Bio and photo

  • Services

    • Name and description of each offer

    • Benefits, process, and pricing

    • CTA to book a call or purchase

Step 3: Break It Into Bite-Sized Pieces

Website content can feel overwhelming because you’re trying to write everything at once. Instead, break it down by page and section.

Create a checklist:

  • Home – Headline

  • Home – Subheadline

  • Home – CTA

  • About – Intro paragraph

  • About – Personal story

  • About – Values section …and so on.

This turns a giant task into a list of small wins.

Step 4: Write With Purpose

Each section on each page should have a job. Whether it’s building trust, showing expertise, or prompting action, every word should serve a purpose.

Use this mini-framework:

  • Hook – Grab attention with a headline or opening line.

  • Heart – Share the “why” or story behind it.

  • Help – Explain how you solve a problem or offer value.

  • Handoff – Invite them to take action (click, contact, book, etc.).

Keep your tone friendly and aligned with how you speak in real life — this helps people connect more easily.

Step 5: Plan for Future Content, Too

Your website isn’t a one-time thing — especially if you’re including a blog or resources section. Create a running list of content ideas that support your goals and speak to your audience’s needs.

Start with 3–5 pieces:

  • FAQs your clients always ask

  • Behind-the-scenes of your process

  • Tips, how-to guides, or personal insights

  • Case studies or before-and-after transformations

You don’t need to launch with a full library — just be consistent and intentional.

Homework & Action Items

  • Outline all your website pages using your sitemap.
  • List the key sections you want to include under each page.
  • Start writing content for one page at a time, using the Hook → Heart → Help → Handoff framework.
  • Create a short list of blog or resource ideas if you plan to have that section on your site.
  • Set realistic writing goals — aim to complete 1–2 sections per day or week.

You did great.

We can take it from here.

Thanks for purchasing the course and giving it a try! As a thank you, we’re offering you 20% off a 10-page website build. We’ll get it up for you within a week. Let’s chat about it!