August 4th | Content Challenge Day 3 Prompt
(I'm sorry in advance for the lack of formatting today - It's 4:45am, I'm going cross-eyed) 📅 Challenge Day 3: The "Behind The 'Simple' Advice" Reveal Prompt: Use a trending audio that builds anticipation or implies a straightforward process, then pivot to reveal the real, often messy or tactical steps that go into achieving what generic advice oversimplifies. This is your chance to show the how behind the "just be consistent" fluff. The goal is to expose the truth and then empower with actionable steps. Currently Trending Audios (August 2025) that work for this: - "Born Again" – Lisa ft. Doja Cat and Raye: (Still strong!) Use the empowering build-up to contrast the "simple advice" with your actual, powerful process. - "These Words" - Natasha Bedingfield (remixed/sped up): Has a slightly dreamy, reflective build that can lead into a sharp, tactical revelation. - "Deep In It" (instrumental): A calming, rhythmic beat that's great for showing a sequence of steps, or a contrast between initial calm (generic advice) and the actual focused work. - "I Like Stuff" - melissaherriott: Upbeat, slightly quirky. Good for listing out the real "stuff" that goes into a process. Examples (choose one and adapt to your niche): - Using "Born Again" (with text overlays): Visual 1 (you looking thoughtful/slightly annoyed): "Everyone says 'just be consistent' on social media." Visual 2 (quick cuts of you actually working, typing, planning, maybe a Notion dashboard, your face concentrating): "But 'consistent' actually means: Batching content on Mondays, studying algorithm updates weekly, analyzing metrics, and having 50 Reel ideas banked for when life gets crazy." - Using "These Words": Video opens with a serene shot (maybe a sunrise, or you meditating): "They told me 'passive income is easy, just set it and forget it.'" Transition to fast-paced clips: "What they didn't show you: The late nights building the funnel, the countless edits on the PLR products, the community support in Skool, and the constant optimization. It's not easy, but it's simple once you have the system."