Overview
A lightweight content calendar SOP for customer success teams, covering stages, roles, notes, review rhythm, and workspace ownership. It turns the content calendar workflow into a repeatable operating habit without forcing customer success teams into a heavyweight process.
Page-specific fit
Why this resource exists
SOP audience: customer success, account management, onboarding, and support-adjacent teams.
Workflow object: content production.
Operating cadence: weekly account risk review plus daily check of urgent customer blockers.
Trust signal: follow-up completion, onboarding blockers, renewal risk review, account note freshness, and handoff quality.
Purpose of the SOP
This SOP exists to make content calendar work repeatable for customer success teams. The goal is not to document everything. The goal is to reduce the specific failure mode where ideas, briefs, drafting, review, publishing, distribution, and refresh work are stored in different places.
The SOP should help a teammate understand what stage the work is in, who owns the next move, which note explains the context, and when the next review happens.
Roles and ownership
The workspace should keep account notes, follow-up tasks, blockers, and internal handoffs readable without forcing every customer detail into a CRM. That means every SOP needs clear role boundaries without creating a governance layer nobody wants to maintain.
Use one accountable owner for each active item. Collaborators can contribute, but the workflow should never depend on a vague group owner.
- Workflow owner: maintains stages and review rhythm.
- Card owner: owns the next action and status accuracy.
- Reviewer: approves or requests changes by a visible date.
- Context owner: keeps notes, decisions, and references current.
Procedure
Start with Ideas, Brief, Drafting, Review, Scheduled, Published, Refresh. These stages are enough to describe the work without turning the board into an admin project.
The SOP should state what must be true before work enters each stage and what must be true before it leaves. If the rule cannot be explained in one sentence, simplify it.
- Ideas: define the owner, input, output, and review signal for this stage.
- Brief: define the owner, input, output, and review signal for this stage.
- Drafting: define the owner, input, output, and review signal for this stage.
- Review: define the owner, input, output, and review signal for this stage.
- Scheduled: define the owner, input, output, and review signal for this stage.
- Published: define the owner, input, output, and review signal for this stage.
- Refresh: define the owner, input, output, and review signal for this stage.
Workspace setup
In Kanvly, the board handles movement and the note layer handles durable context. Search intent, audience, owner, target date, internal links, distribution notes, and refresh learning should live beside the content card.
For customer success teams, this is especially useful because customer requests, onboarding tasks, renewal risk, product feedback, and support history need to stay connected. The SOP should tell people where to update status, where to write context, and where to review blockers.
Review and improvement
Review the SOP during weekly account risk review plus daily check of urgent customer blockers. Use the review to inspect stale work, owner gaps, blocked items, and repeated exceptions.
Measure follow-up completion, onboarding blockers, renewal risk review, account note freshness, and handoff quality. If the SOP reduces those issues, keep it. If it creates extra admin without better decisions, shorten it.
- Name the workflow owner.
- Define stage entry and exit rules.
- Clarify one owner per active item.
- Link the notes that explain decisions.
- Set a review cadence and improvement rule.