Overview
A practical weekly planning template for marketing teams that connects stages, owners, notes, review cadence, and measurable follow-through. This page adapts the weekly planning pattern to the operational pressure of marketing teams: campaign ideas, creative review, channel deadlines, approvals, and reporting notes often drift apart.
When marketing teams need a weekly planning template
marketing teams usually search for a weekly planning template when they have outgrown ad hoc coordination but do not want a heavy implementation project. The visible problem is a missing template. The deeper problem is that teams enter the week with too many open tasks, unclear priorities, and no shared reset ritual.
The workflow needs to keep briefs, SEO intent, review status, launch dates, and distribution tasks connected to one visible production system. A strong template gives the team a starting point, but it also makes the operating rhythm explicit enough that new work does not immediately collapse back into chat and memory.
Recommended board structure
Start with a board that has clear movement and very few ambiguous stages. For this workflow, a useful first structure is Carryover, This week, Blocked, Waiting, Done, Learning.
Do not treat these stages as decoration. Each column should answer a different operational question: what is newly captured, what is ready, what is actively owned, what is waiting, and what is finished enough to learn from.
- Carryover: define what must be true before work enters or leaves this stage.
- This week: define what must be true before work enters or leaves this stage.
- Blocked: define what must be true before work enters or leaves this stage.
- Waiting: define what must be true before work enters or leaves this stage.
- Done: define what must be true before work enters or leaves this stage.
- Learning: define what must be true before work enters or leaves this stage.
Context that should live on the work
The workflow should connect capacity, priority decisions, blockers, carryover reasons, and the few outcomes that actually matter this week.
For marketing teams, that context is especially important because campaign ideas, creative review, channel deadlines, approvals, and reporting notes often drift apart. If the template only shows status, the team will still need another place to understand why the work matters. Put the brief, decision, owner, due date, and next action where the team will review them.
How to set it up in Kanvly
Create the board first, then add notes only where they remove real ambiguity. Use cards for active work, comments for short execution updates, and pages or notes for the context that should remain useful after the card moves.
If this workflow repeats, save the structure as a reusable team pattern. The goal is not to freeze the process forever; it is to give marketing teams a trusted starting point that can improve after each cycle.
- Create the board and add the recommended stages.
- Add one owner and one next action to every active card.
- Link supporting notes, briefs, decisions, and examples.
- Review stale, blocked, and waiting work during the weekly cadence.
How to measure whether it is working
The best signal is whether the template reduces coordination drag. For marketing teams, watch draft age, review latency, approval blockers, publish consistency, and refresh completion.
If those signals improve but the team still avoids the board, the template probably has too much structure or too little context. Remove fields that do not support decisions and strengthen the places where the team keeps asking the same questions.
- Use one live workflow before rolling the template out broadly.
- Keep stages readable enough for a new teammate to understand.
- Attach context to work instead of storing it in a separate archive.
- Review blocked and waiting work at least weekly.
- Turn repeated exceptions into template improvements only after they recur.