Structured GO/NO-GO framework for validating content topics before you script or record anything. Runs audience segmentation, adoption research, saturation c...
--- name: content-channel-research emoji: ๐ฌ category: Creator & Marketing tags: [youtube, content-strategy, topic-validation, go-no-go, saturation-check, audience-research] description: > Structured GO/NO-GO framework for validating content topics before you script or record anything. Runs audience segmentation, adoption research, saturation check, and competitive differentiation analysis to tell you if a topic is worth producing and EXACTLY what angle to take. Use when asking "should I make a video about X?", "is this topic saturated?", "what angle should I take?", or any time a content creator is validating an idea. Prevents wasted production effort on topics that are already saturated or that your audience doesn't actually need. author: Kenneth Kim (KK_HoldCo) version: 1.0.0 --- # Content Channel Research Skill **Bottom line:** Before scripting or recording anything, run this 5-phase validation. It takes ~50 minutes and saves 40+ hours of production time on topics that would get 200 views. --- ## When to Invoke **Mandatory before:** - Writing any new video script - Planning a new content series - Validating whether a trending topic is worth your time - Pivoting a channel's focus **Trigger phrases:** - "Should I make a video about X?" - "Is this topic saturated?" - "Does my audience already know this?" - "What angle should I take on X?" - "Content research for [channel]" - "Would [profession] already know how to do this?" --- ## Phase 1 โ Audience Segmentation (5 min) Before researching adoption, define WHO you're trying to reach. Not all sub-segments have the same problem. **Steps:** 1. List the **primary intended audience** (e.g., "investment analysts", "e-commerce founders", "freelance designers") 2. Break into **3-5 specific sub-segments** (e.g., by firm size, seniority, geography, tool access) 3. For EACH sub-segment, identify: - What tools/knowledge do they already have access to? - What are they blocked from using (policies, budget, awareness)? - What's their financial or career incentive to learn this topic? **Output:** Audience breakdown table with segments, access levels, pain points, and who is most underserved. --- ## Phase 2 โ Adoption Research (15 min) For each sub-segment: How aware are they? How many actually use the tools? What's their sophistication level? **Searches to run:** 1. "[Segment] [tool] adoption [year]" 2. "[Segment] using [tool] in [context]" 3. "[Tool] policies [segment]" (what are the institutional/organizational barriers?) 4. "[Segment] [tool] workflow" 5. Reddit/forums: "how [segment] use [tool]" **For each result, note:** - Are they **aware** of the tool? (Yes/No/Rumored) - Do they **actually use** it? (Confirmed / Shadow-use / Policy-blocked / No access) - **Sophistication level:** Beginner (basic summaries) / Intermediate (custom workflows) / Advanced (API, automation, fine-tuning) **Output:** Adoption matrix โ awareness vs actual usage vs sophistication by segment. **Key insight:** "Awareness" โ "Capability." People can know a tool exists and still have zero ability to use it for your specific use case. That gap IS your content opportunity. --- ## Phase 3 โ Content Saturation Check (15 min) Search YouTube, web, and industry content for existing coverage of this EXACT topic + angle. **Searches to run:** 1. "[topic]" on YouTube โ how many videos? View counts? When posted? 2. "[segment] + [topic]" โ niche-specific coverage? 3. "[tool] [topic] tutorial" โ existing tutorials? 4. "[topic] guide" + "[topic] step-by-step" on web 5. "[segment] [topic]" on web and LinkedIn **For each result, assess:** - Production quality (rough notes / polished / enterprise) - Depth (surface tip vs full 20-min deep dive) - Audience fit (generic vs niche to your specific segment) - Recency (2024 advice that's already outdated = opportunity) - Engagement signal (views relative to channel size โ high ratio = audience cares) **Output:** "X videos exist on this topic. Quality tier is [low/medium/high]. Most recent is [date]. The gap is: [specific description of what's missing]." **Key insight:** High view count on a "generic" topic does NOT mean the niche-specific version is saturated. 10M views on "ChatGPT basics" doesn't mean "ChatGPT for [your specific industry workflow]" is covered. Serve the underserved segment. --- ## Phase 4 โ Competitive Differentiation (10 min) What angle does NO ONE cover? Where is your authentic voice a multiplier? **Steps:** 1. Find the top 3 existing videos/content on this topic 2. For each, identify: - What's their angle? (Beginner tutorial? Advanced workflow? Tool comparison? Generic tips?) - Who's the creator? (Tech generalist? Industry practitioner? Course platform?) - What's missing? (Depth? Segment specificity? Hands-on demo? Real professional walk-through?) 3. Ask: **Where do I have authentic advantage that these competitors don't?** - Your professional background, specific industry experience, or unique access to tools/workflows - Example: A 20-year industry veteran can teach the REAL workflow, not the theoretical tutorial version 4. Define the **specific angle you should own** โ not just "tutorials" but "this exact sub-skill that only someone with your background can credibly teach" **Output:** "Competitors cover [X]. Your advantage is [Y]. Own the angle: [specific framing]." --- ## Phase 5 โ Positioning Synthesis (5 min) Synthesize everything into a GO/NO-GO verdict and positioning statement. **Output format:** ``` ## CONTENT RESEARCH: [Topic Name] ### VERDICT: [GO / NO-GO / GO WITH MODIFICATIONS] ### Audience Breakdown [Table or summary: segments, access, pain points, most underserved segment] ### Adoption Status [Awareness vs actual usage vs sophistication โ where is the capability gap?] ### Content Saturation [Videos found, quality tier, dates, gaps. Oversaturated or underserved?] ### Competitive Differentiation - Existing content angle: [what others do] - Your unique angle: [what only you can credibly do] - Authenticity multiplier: [why your background wins here] - Target segment: [the most underserved audience] ### Recommended Positioning **Title framing:** [Specific, benefit-driven title. Not "ChatGPT tips" but "How to do [X task] in 90 seconds with Claude"] **Opening hook:** [The pain point specific to your target segment that others don't address] **Channel positioning note:** [Who is this EXACTLY for โ be specific] ### Confidence Level [High / Medium / Low โ based on research depth and market signal strength] ### Next Steps - GO: "Script immediately, record this week" - NO-GO: "Park for X months, revisit after [specific market change]" - MODIFICATIONS: "Narrow to [segment], change angle to [Y], then proceed" ``` --- ## Common Failure Modes (avoid these) 1. **Skipping segmentation.** "My audience" is too broad. Different sub-segments have different access, awareness, and pain. Always segment first. 2. **Confusing "I haven't seen it" with "No one has made it."** Do real searches before concluding a topic is uncovered. 3. **Mistaking awareness for capability.** "Everyone knows about [tool]" โ "Everyone knows how to use [tool] for [specific use case]." The capability gap IS the content opportunity. 4. **Optimizing for view count instead of differentiation.** A 10M-view generic video doesn't mean that topic is saturated FOR YOU if your angle is the niche-specific professional version. 5. **Producing without running this research.** If you skip this, you risk 40 hours of production for 200 views on something 5,000 creators already made. --- ## Time Budget - Phase 1 Segmentation: 5 min - Phase 2 Adoption research: 15 min (3-5 searches + synthesis) - Phase 3 Saturation check: 15 min (6-8 YouTube/web searches) - Phase 4 Differentiation: 10 min (review top 3 pieces, identify gap) - Phase 5 Synthesis: 5 min **Total:** ~50 minutes. Saves 40+ hours of wasted production.
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