The Creator's AI Repurposing Workflow: Turn 1 Video Into 7 Pieces of Content
A practical step-by-step workflow for using AI to repurpose one YouTube video into a blog post, email, five social posts, and a thread — with prompts included.
Publishing one piece of content per platform is the slow path to burnout. The most productive content creators aren’t producing more ideas — they’re extracting more value from the ideas they already have.
This is a repeatable AI workflow that turns one YouTube video into seven pieces of content without them feeling recycled.
The Framework: One Core, Seven Surfaces
Your YouTube video is the “core” — the most developed expression of an idea. The repurposed content isn’t a copy of it; it’s a different entry point to the same value.
Here’s what you’ll create from one video:
Long-form blog post (SEO landing page)
Email newsletter (for your list)
Twitter/X thread (for discovery)
LinkedIn post (professional angle)
Instagram carousel (visual breakdown)
Instagram caption (short post)
TikTok/Reels hook scripts
Step 1: Create the Source Material
Before prompting anything, you need a raw transcript. Use YouTube’s auto-generated caption export or paste in your script.
Then run this:
Transcript Cleaner
Clean up this raw video transcript into readable text. Remove filler words (um, uh, you know), fix grammar, break into logical paragraphs, but do NOT change the phrasing, meaning, or order of ideas significantly. Keep it as close to how it was said as possible.
[PASTE TRANSCRIPT]
Save this cleaned transcript — it’s the input for every other prompt in this workflow.
Step 2: Write the Blog Post
The blog post is the most SEO-valuable piece. It’s not a transcript of the video — it’s a written version that’s independently useful.
Video-to-Blog Post
Transform this video transcript into a long-form blog post.
[PASTE CLEANED TRANSCRIPT]
Requirements:
- Target length: 1,200-1,800 words
- Add an H1 title (use this keyword: [keyword])
- Structure with H2 and H3 subheadings
- Expand on 2-3 points that were briefly mentioned in the video
- Remove verbal phrases that don't work in writing ("as you can see," "let me show you")
- Add a brief introduction that can be understood without watching the video
- Add a blog-style conclusion with one CTA
- Do NOT mention that this is based on a video
Step 3: Write the Email Newsletter
Your email subscribers want the personal version — the honest take, not the polished SEO piece.
Video-to-Email Newsletter
Using this video content as source material, write an email newsletter for my subscribers.
[PASTE CLEANED TRANSCRIPT]
The email should:
- Have a subject line suggestion
- Open with a personal observation, not a recap of the video
- Pull out the 2-3 most useful or surprising points from the video
- Link to the video once (use [VIDEO LINK] placeholder)
- Feel like a message from a person, not a content marketing email
- End with one question for readers to reply to
- Length: 250-350 words
- Tone: [your newsletter's tone]
Step 4: Write the Twitter/X Thread
Threads work because they turn one idea into a linear journey. The video itself is the journey; you’re just adapting the path.
Video-to-Twitter Thread
Turn the core ideas from this video into a Twitter/X thread of 6-8 tweets.
[PASTE CLEANED TRANSCRIPT]
Thread structure:
- Tweet 1: Hook that stands alone (no "thread" announcement in the hook itself)
- Tweets 2-6: One concrete idea, tip, or insight per tweet
- Tweet 7: Thread summary as a screenshot-worthy list (max 5 items)
- Tweet 8 (optional): CTA — reply, follow, or link to blog/video
Each tweet: under 240 characters. Punchy. No filler. No "As I mentioned before."
Step 5: Write the LinkedIn Post
LinkedIn audiences want the professional insight — frame the same content as a lesson or industry observation.
Video-to-LinkedIn Post
Extract the most professionally relevant insight from this video content and write a LinkedIn post around it.
[PASTE CLEANED TRANSCRIPT]
The post should:
- Open with a specific claim or counterintuitive observation (not a question)
- Use short paragraphs (1-2 sentences each) with line breaks
- Include 3 numbered or line-separated takeaways
- End with a question to the professional audience
- Avoid hollow phrases: "game-changer," "leverage," "moving the needle"
- Length: 200-260 words
- Tone: Direct, confident, professional but human
Step 6: Write the Instagram Carousel
Carousels get more saves and shares than any other Instagram format. They work because they deliver sequential value.
Video-to-Instagram Carousel
Turn the key points from this video into a 7-slide Instagram carousel.
[PASTE CLEANED TRANSCRIPT]
Slide format:
- Slide 1 (Cover): Punchy headline that promises the carousel's value (under 10 words)
- Slides 2-6: One main point per slide — headline + 2-3 supporting sentences
- Slide 7 (CTA): Follow for more / save for later / comment with X
Each slide: under 60 words of text. Writing style: scannable on a phone screen.
Step 7: Write TikTok/Reels Hook Scripts
You won’t use the video directly on TikTok — but you can film a new short based on the video’s best point.
Video-to-Short Hook Scripts
From this video content, identify the single most surprising or counterintuitive point.
[PASTE CLEANED TRANSCRIPT]
Write 3 different 15-second hook scripts for a TikTok/Instagram Reel about that one point.
Each script:
- 2-4 sentences maximum
- Opens with a statement that stops the scroll
- Teases that the viewer will learn something specific if they keep watching
- Sounds like natural speech, not a written ad
The Full Workflow in Practice
The first time you do this, expect to spend 2-3 hours on one video’s full repurposing. By the third or fourth time, you’ll have the prompts bookmarked and the process down to under 45 minutes.
A few things that make this workflow faster:
Keep a prompt file. Your customized versions of these prompts, with your voice notes added, should live somewhere you can copy-paste from instantly.
Do steps 2-7 in batches. Run all prompts for one video in a single session rather than spacing them out.
Schedule before editing. Draft all seven pieces before you refine any of them. Refinement mode and creation mode are different mental states.
The constraint isn’t ideas. It’s execution time. AI removes the execution bottleneck — what you do with the extra hours is up to you.