Digital Content Operations: Why Most Teams Are Producing More and Achieving Less
Digital content operations is the system that governs how content gets planned, produced, published, and measured across an organisation. Done well, it turns content from a series of disconnected tasks into a repeatable, scalable function that supports commercial goals. Done poorly, it produces a lot of output and very little impact.
Most marketing teams sit closer to the second description than they’d like to admit.
Key Takeaways
- Content operations is a system, not a workflow. The difference matters: a workflow describes steps, a system connects output to outcomes.
- Most content bottlenecks are governance problems dressed up as resource problems. Adding headcount without fixing process rarely solves them.
- Content velocity without a quality threshold is a liability. Publishing more lowers average quality unless you have standards that hold the floor.
- Measurement should be built into the operating model from day one, not retrofitted after the fact when someone asks what all this content is actually doing.
- The teams producing the most effective content are not the biggest. They are the most operationally disciplined.
In This Article
- Why Content Operations Fails Before It Starts
- What a Content Operating Model Actually Looks Like
- The Velocity Trap
- Governance Is Not Bureaucracy
- How Technology Fits Into Content Operations
- The Brief Is the Most Underrated Document in Content Marketing
- Distribution Is Part of Operations, Not an Afterthought
- Measuring What Matters Without Fooling Yourself
- Building an Operations Function That Scales
Why Content Operations Fails Before It Starts
I’ve walked into a lot of marketing departments over the years. The pattern is remarkably consistent. There’s a content calendar, usually managed in a spreadsheet or a project management tool that nobody fully uses. There are people producing content, people approving content, and people publishing content. What there isn’t is a shared understanding of what the content is supposed to do, who owns the outcome, or how success gets measured.
When I took on a turnaround at an agency that had been losing money for several years, one of the first things I noticed was how much internal content activity there was. Blog posts, case studies, social updates, newsletters. A lot of motion. Almost no commercial traction. The problem wasn’t effort. It was that no one had ever connected the content programme to a business objective. It existed because it was supposed to exist, not because it was doing anything specific.
That’s not a content problem. That’s an operations problem. And fixing it requires thinking about content the way you’d think about any other business function: with clear inputs, defined processes, measurable outputs, and someone accountable for the result.
If you’re working through how content fits into a broader commercial strategy, the thinking I cover in Go-To-Market and Growth Strategy provides useful context for positioning content operations within a wider market approach.
What a Content Operating Model Actually Looks Like
An operating model for content has five components. Not all of them are glamorous. Most of the important ones aren’t.
1. Strategic intent
This is the answer to the question: what is this content programme trying to achieve, for whom, and by when? It sounds obvious. It almost never gets written down in a way that the whole team can act on. “Build brand awareness” is not strategic intent. “Generate 300 qualified inbound leads per quarter from mid-market SaaS buyers” is strategic intent. The specificity is what makes it operational.
2. Content architecture
This covers what types of content you produce, at what frequency, for which audiences, and across which channels. It also covers the relationship between content types: how a pillar article connects to supporting pieces, how a video connects to a written summary, how a newsletter connects to a campaign. Without architecture, teams produce content in isolation and wonder why nothing compounds.
3. Production workflow
This is where most teams spend all their time and where most of the dysfunction lives. Who briefs? Who writes? Who reviews? Who approves? Who publishes? Each of those handoffs is a potential bottleneck. The goal is to make each handoff explicit, time-boxed, and owned by a named person. Not a team. A person.
4. Quality standards
Every content operation needs a floor. A minimum standard below which nothing gets published. This sounds like a creative restriction. It’s actually a commercial protection. Publishing weak content doesn’t just fail to drive results. It actively undermines the credibility of the content that does the work. I’ve seen strong-performing articles buried by surrounding mediocrity because the overall site quality signal was poor.
5. Measurement framework
What gets measured, how often, by whom, and what decisions does it drive? This is not the same as having a dashboard. Dashboards are outputs. A measurement framework is a decision-making tool. If the data you’re collecting doesn’t change what you do next, you’re measuring for reporting purposes, not for improvement.
The Velocity Trap
There is a persistent belief in content marketing that more is better. Publish more often. Cover more topics. Reach more platforms. It’s understandable. Volume feels like progress. It’s visible, it’s trackable, and it gives everyone something to point to in a review meeting.
The problem is that content velocity without quality control is one of the fastest ways to damage a content programme. Search engines have become increasingly sophisticated at assessing content quality at a domain level, not just a page level. A site that publishes 50 thin articles to chase traffic will often find that its stronger, more considered content performs worse as a result.
I spent time early in my career at lastminute.com, where speed was everything. The commercial pressure to move fast was real and legitimate. But even in that environment, the campaigns that performed best weren’t the ones produced quickest. They were the ones where someone had thought clearly about the audience, the offer, and the message before touching a keyboard. When I ran a paid search campaign for a music festival and saw six figures of revenue come in within roughly a day, it wasn’t because we’d moved fast. It was because the brief was tight, the targeting was right, and the offer was genuinely compelling. Speed without those foundations would have produced nothing.
Content operations should set a sustainable cadence, not a maximum one. The right publishing frequency is the one your team can maintain without compromising quality. For most teams, that’s lower than they think.
Governance Is Not Bureaucracy
One of the most common objections to formalising content operations is that it slows things down. More process, more approvals, more friction. The counter-argument is simple: the absence of governance doesn’t make things faster. It makes them chaotic in a way that looks like speed.
When I grew an agency from around 20 people to over 100, one of the hardest transitions was moving from informal coordination to structured process. At 20 people, everyone knows what everyone else is doing. At 50, they don’t. At 100, the informal systems that worked at 20 are actively causing problems. The same principle applies to content operations. What works for a two-person content team breaks at ten people. What works at ten breaks at thirty.
Good governance is not about adding approvals. It’s about removing ambiguity. When everyone knows who owns what decision, content moves faster, not slower, because there’s no waiting to find out who needs to sign off.
The BCG framework on commercial transformation makes a point that applies directly here: operational clarity at the team level is a prerequisite for growth, not a consequence of it. You don’t get organised after you scale. You get organised so that you can.
How Technology Fits Into Content Operations
There is no shortage of tools for content operations. Project management platforms, content management systems, editorial calendars, AI writing assistants, distribution tools, analytics platforms. The market is enormous and growing.
The mistake most teams make is buying tools before defining the process the tools are supposed to support. A project management platform won’t fix a broken briefing process. An AI writing tool won’t compensate for a team that doesn’t know what it’s trying to say. Technology should systematise a process that already works, not substitute for one that doesn’t.
My first proper marketing role taught me this lesson early. I wanted a budget to build a new website. The answer was no. So I taught myself to code and built it anyway. That experience shaped how I think about tools: they’re a means to an end, not the end itself. The outcome I needed was a functional website. The tool I used to get there was whatever I could learn quickly enough to make it happen. The same logic applies to content operations technology. Start with the outcome. Work backwards to the tool.
That said, there are categories of tooling that genuinely improve content operations when the underlying process is sound. Video content platforms like Vidyard have documented how go-to-market complexity is increasing, which makes the case for operational infrastructure that can handle content at scale across multiple formats and channels. Behaviour analytics tools help teams understand how content is actually being consumed, not just whether it was clicked. SEMrush’s work on market penetration strategy also illustrates how content performance data can feed directly into market positioning decisions, which is where content operations and growth strategy properly connect.
The Brief Is the Most Underrated Document in Content Marketing
If I had to identify the single point of failure in most content operations, it would be the brief. Or more precisely, the absence of one.
A content brief is not a title and a keyword. It’s a document that answers: who is this for, what do they already know, what do we want them to think or do after reading it, what’s the one thing this piece needs to communicate, and what does success look like? A brief that answers those questions takes twenty minutes to write and saves hours of revision. A brief that doesn’t usually produces content that needs to be completely rewritten after the first draft.
I’ve judged the Effie Awards, which recognise marketing effectiveness. The campaigns that win are almost always built on an insight so clearly articulated that the creative execution feels inevitable. The brief is where that clarity gets established. Content marketing is no different. The work that performs is the work where someone thought hard about the audience and the message before anyone started writing.
Building a strong brief template and making it non-negotiable is one of the highest-return investments a content operation can make. It costs nothing. It changes everything about the quality of what gets produced.
Distribution Is Part of Operations, Not an Afterthought
Content operations often stops at publication. The piece goes live, a social post goes out, and the team moves on to the next piece. This is a structural mistake.
Distribution is not a promotional add-on. It’s an operational function that should be planned before the content is written, not after it’s published. Which channels will carry this? Who are the specific audiences on each channel? What format works on each? What’s the distribution timeline? Who owns each channel relationship?
Creator partnerships have become a meaningful distribution channel for many brands, and the operational implications are significant. Later’s research on go-to-market with creators highlights how the planning and briefing process for creator-led distribution requires the same operational rigour as any other content channel. Treating it as informal or ad hoc produces inconsistent results.
The ratio of production effort to distribution effort in most content operations is heavily skewed toward production. Flipping that ratio, or at least rebalancing it, is one of the fastest ways to improve content performance without producing more content.
Measuring What Matters Without Fooling Yourself
Content measurement is one of the most reliably dishonest areas of marketing. Not because people are lying, but because the metrics that are easiest to track are rarely the ones that matter most.
Page views are easy to measure. Whether those page views contributed to a commercial outcome is harder. Social impressions are easy to measure. Whether the content changed how the audience thinks about the brand is harder. The temptation is to report the easy metrics and imply they connect to the hard outcomes. They often don’t.
A content measurement framework should start with the commercial objective and work backwards. If the objective is pipeline generation, the metrics should track content’s contribution to pipeline: assisted conversions, content interactions among accounts that converted, time-to-close for leads that engaged with content versus those that didn’t. These are harder to pull together. They require coordination with sales and CRM data. But they’re the metrics that connect content operations to business results.
Vidyard’s Future Revenue Report makes a useful point about the gap between pipeline potential and actual revenue capture in go-to-market teams. Content is one of the primary levers for closing that gap, but only when it’s measured in terms of revenue contribution rather than engagement proxies.
I’ve always been cautious about analytics as a source of truth. Tools give you a perspective on what happened. They don’t give you the whole picture, and they certainly don’t tell you why. Building honest approximation into a measurement framework, acknowledging what you can and can’t know, is more useful than false precision.
Content operations sits at the intersection of creative production and commercial strategy. If you want to understand how it connects to the broader question of how businesses grow, the articles in Go-To-Market and Growth Strategy cover the strategic layer that content operations should be serving.
Building an Operations Function That Scales
Scaling content operations is not the same as scaling content volume. A function that scales is one where adding capacity, whether people, tools, or budget, produces proportionally better outcomes. A function that doesn’t scale is one where adding capacity just adds complexity.
The difference usually comes down to documentation. Processes that live in people’s heads don’t scale. Processes that are written down, tested, and refined do. This means investing in documentation that most marketing teams consider boring: style guides, brief templates, approval protocols, channel-specific publishing standards, measurement reporting templates. None of it is exciting. All of it is what separates a content operation that performs consistently from one that depends on the right people being in the right place at the right time.
The teams I’ve seen produce the most effective content over sustained periods are not the ones with the biggest budgets or the most creative talent. They’re the ones that have built operational discipline into how they work. They brief well, they review honestly, they measure what matters, and they improve systematically. That’s not a creative limitation. That’s what makes creative work commercially effective.
About the Author
Keith Lacy is a marketing strategist and former agency CEO with 20+ years of experience across agency leadership, performance marketing, and commercial strategy. He writes The Marketing Juice to cut through the noise and share what works.
