Install
openclaw skills install cb-global-content-strategyBuild a localized content engine for any market — editorial calendars, SEO keyword maps, platform-native content templates, and translation-quality frameworks. Stop translating your English blog and start creating content that ranks and converts locally.
openclaw skills install cb-global-content-strategyThis skill helps content, brand, and marketing teams design a content strategy that balances global brand consistency with meaningful local relevance. It guides you through defining what brand content elements are non-negotiable globally versus what can flex locally, mapping content pillars to specific market contexts, deciding when to translate versus localize versus transcreate, building a regional event and seasonality calendar, adapting content formats and tone, setting up a local creator workflow, and defining performance benchmarks that account for market maturity differences.
The framework is designed for teams launching or managing content programs in multiple international markets simultaneously.
Try these real-world scenarios to see what this skill can produce:
Prompt 1: Content Strategy for Market Entry
"We're a B2B HR software company entering the French market. Our US content strategy is blog + LinkedIn + webinars. For France, we know: French HR buyers read different publications, LinkedIn usage is lower, and they expect content in French. Build our French content strategy." → Output: French HR-content landscape scan (top 5 publications, key influencers, competitor content audit), localized content pillars (adapt US pillars + add FR-specific: Code du Travail compliance, French work-council dynamics), channel strategy (Viadeo vs LinkedIn, French HR conferences, YouTube in FR), 6-month editorial calendar (24 blog topics, 12 LinkedIn/Viadeo posts, 6 webinar topics — all localized, not translated), SEO keyword map (FR keyword research — not just Google Translate), content-localization quality framework (translation vs transcreation criteria, review checklist)
Prompt 2: Ecommerce Content Engine
"We sell handmade jewelry on Shopify. We want to create content that drives organic traffic in 3 markets: US (English), Mexico (Spanish), and Japan (Japanese). We don't have budget for 3 content teams. Build a lean content engine that works across all 3 markets." → Output: Content hub architecture (global brand content + market-specific content), content-type matrix (what to create centrally vs locally), lean production workflow (AI-assisted first draft → local freelancer review → publish), market-specific keyword clusters (top 10 keywords per market with search volume and competition), 90-day content calendar (staggered across markets for production efficiency), repurposing rules (what translates, what needs original creation)
Prompt 3: Social Media Localization
"We're a beauty brand with strong TikTok presence in the US. We're entering Indonesia and need a TikTok-first content strategy. US content is creator-led tutorials; we know Indonesian TikTok is different — more entertainment-driven, faster pace, Bahasa Indonesia + English mix. Build the local social strategy." → Output: Indonesian TikTok landscape analysis (trend formats, top creators in beauty, content consumption patterns), content pillars adapted for ID market (entertainment-first tutorials, local beauty standards, halal beauty angle), creator partnership framework (tiered: mega, macro, micro), content calendar (30-day posting plan with format specs), localization guidelines (language mix rules, cultural do's and don'ts, music/hashtag strategy), performance benchmark targets
👋 cb-global-content-strategy installed!
I build content strategies that actually work in local markets — keyword research in local languages, platform-native formats, and editorial calendars you can execute.
Try this:
"Build a content strategy for [brand] in [market]. Our current content works in [home market] through [channels]. We need content that resonates locally."
Tell me your brand and target market — I'll give you a complete content playbook.
Sensitive cultural, religious, political, or historical content topics require expert local review before publication, as misinterpretation can cause serious reputational or legal harm in foreign markets. Content that touches regulated claims (health, financial, food, cosmetics) must comply with local advertising and marketing laws. This framework provides strategic and operational guidance; it does not substitute for local legal or cultural expert review.