Batch Your Content Creation: Save 10+ Hours Per Week
By Dan — Mar 24, 2027
Batch Your Content Creation: Save 10+ Hours Per Week
For the first year of my online business, I created content every day.
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Not because I was disciplined — because I had no system. I'd sit down Monday and write a blog post. Tuesday I'd figure out the newsletter. Wednesday I'd write a social post. Thursday I'd realize I hadn't thought of Friday's content. Saturday I'd catch up.
The result was a chronic low-grade stress about content that never fully resolved. And I was spending enormous amounts of cognitive energy on the decision of what to create — not the creation itself.
Batching solved both problems. Now I create content in focused sessions, not in daily drips. My output increased, my stress decreased, and I reclaimed hours every week that were previously consumed by setup, context switching, and decisions.
Here's exactly how it works.
What Content Batching Is
Batching means grouping similar tasks together and completing them in a single focused session, rather than spreading them across many days.
Instead of writing one blog post every day, you write four blog posts on Tuesday morning. Instead of writing a newsletter every week, you write four newsletters on the first Monday of the month.
The efficiency comes from:
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Reduced context switching: Every time you shift from one task to another, there's a cognitive overhead cost — your brain has to re-orient. Batching eliminates that cost by keeping you in the same mode for longer.
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Reduced decision fatigue: Deciding what to create today, every day, consumes decision-making energy. A batched content calendar makes those decisions once per month, not once per day.
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State optimization: Creative writing requires a different mental state than editing, which requires a different state than recording. Staying in one mode (all writing, or all editing, or all recording) produces better work in less time.
The Weekly Time Savings (Real Numbers)
Before batching, my content workflow looked like:
- Daily "what should I write about" decision: 10 minutes × 5 days = 50 minutes/week
- Opening laptop, finding notes, recalling context: 15 minutes × 5 = 75 minutes/week
- Writing and editing scattered across the week: ~5 hours total, but inefficiently distributed
After batching, same weekly output:
- Monday: 20-minute content planning for the week (all decisions made at once)
- Tuesday morning (2.5 hours): Write 3 blog posts in sequence
- Thursday afternoon (1 hour): Write newsletter + schedule social posts
That's roughly 3.5 hours of content work instead of ~7 hours of scattered work for the same output. The other 3.5 hours came from eliminating context-switching overhead, decision fatigue, and the low-focus drifting that happens when you're writing one post and mentally worrying about the next.
How to Set Up a Content Batching System
Step 1: Identify all your content types
List everything you produce: blog posts, newsletter emails, social posts, short-form videos, podcast episodes. Different content types should be batched separately because they require different creative modes.
Step 2: Assign each type to a specific day or block
My current schedule:
- Tuesday morning: Long-form blog posts (3 in one session)
- Wednesday afternoon: Newsletter emails (1 per week, written on Wednesday, sent Thursday)
- Thursday morning: Social posts and short-form content for the week
These slots are protected — nothing else gets scheduled there.
Step 3: Prepare the batch in advance
The biggest enemy of productive batching is showing up to the batch session without prepared topics. Before a batch session, I spend 20 minutes the day before:
- Confirming the 3 blog post topics (from my content calendar)
- Pulling any research notes or outlines I've saved
- Setting up the writing environment so there's zero friction to start
If I show up to Tuesday's batch session with 3 prepared outlines, I can often produce all 3 posts in 2.5 hours. Without that prep, I spend 30 minutes per post just figuring out what I want to say.
Step 4: Use templates to reduce starting friction
Most content types have a consistent structure. Blog posts follow a format: intro, 4–6 H2 sections, CTA. Newsletters follow a format: hook, main point, one actionable takeaway, link.
Creating templates for each type means every batch session starts from a known structure. You're filling in the unique content, not reinventing the format every time.
Batching for Different Content Scales
If you're publishing 2–3 posts per week: One 3-hour batch session per week handles everything. Block Tuesday morning, write everything, schedule it out.
If you're publishing daily: One major batch day per week (full output for the week), plus a single 45-minute overflow session mid-week for any time-sensitive pieces.
If you're producing multiple formats (blog + email + social): Separate batch days for different formats. Blog batch and email batch can often happen the same day (morning and afternoon) because both are writing-mode. Video production should be a separate day — setup and teardown time makes mixing it with writing inefficient.
The Hardest Part of Batching
Batching fails when:
- You don't have content ideas prepared before the batch session
- You allow interruptions during the batch window
- You try to batch too many content types in one session
- You skip a session and try to "catch up" by doubling the next one
The preparation is the unlock. The 20-minute planning session the day before determines whether the 2-hour batch session is productive or frustrating. Without preparation, batching is just a longer version of your normal scattered approach.
How Batching Changed My Business Output
Before batching: 8–10 posts published per month. After batching: 12–16 posts published per month, with noticeably less stress and fewer hours worked on content.
The additional posts compound over time as SEO content. More posts mean more search rankings, which mean more traffic, which mean more product sales.
The platform I sell through — MadeThis — handles the product side so my batching sessions are entirely content-focused. I'm not context-switching between "write content" and "fix the checkout page." The platform runs itself. That clarity makes the batch sessions more productive and easier to protect. It's the platform I use and recommend for anyone who wants to spend their working hours creating, not maintaining.
Batch the content. Protect the sessions. Ship more in less time.
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