One prompt. Thirty days. Four deliverables. Monday morning, ready to publish..
Why this mattersA plan you cannot start tomorrow is a plan that does not exist. Module 13 takes everything from the previous twelve modules and converts it into a Monday-morning execution sequence. The 30-Day Playbook Master Prompt produces the schedule. The monthly review keeps the system compounding. The course ends here. The work starts there.
Read this once. Sit with it before you answer.
When the course ends and Monday arrives, what specifically do you do in the first 90 minutes to convert everything you have built into a 30-day execution plan that publishes itself?
Where you stand right now.
By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:
- 1Identify the four outputs the 30-Day Playbook Master Prompt produces (daily schedule, checklist table, photo guide, event guide).
- 2Apply the content distribution baked into the 30 posts (10 service, 8 education, 6 trust, 4 local, 2 timely).
- 3Run Prompt 15 (30-Day Playbook Master Prompt) using your finalized Quick Info, services, brand voice, target customer, and primary city.
- 4Schedule the first seven days of content into GBP and your HighLevel Social Planner inside the same session you run the prompt.
The whole lesson in a few points.
- 01Prompt 15 produces four outputs: 30-day daily schedule, checklist table, consolidated photo guide, and four-event guide.
- 02Cadence is fixed. Two to three Google posts per week, two photos per week, four events across the 30 days.
- 03The 30 posts follow a deliberate distribution: 10 service, 8 education, 6 trust, 4 local, 2 timely. Maps to E-E-A-T signals.
- 04The prompt needs your finalized Quick Info, your start date, and any seasonal or new-this-month context.
- 05The first week gets scheduled inside the same session you run the prompt. Otherwise "later" usually means never.
What the playbook actually produces.
When you run the 30-Day Playbook Master Prompt, it produces four outputs.
Output one. A complete day-by-day schedule for all 30 days. Every day either has an action assigned to it or is explicitly labeled "no action required." Both are intentional. The system is sustainable, which means some days are off days.
Output two. A checklist table summarizing all 30 days at a glance. Day number, week number, action type, hook or title, and a checkbox for completion. This is what you print and tape to the wall.
Output three. A consolidated photo production guide. Every photo assignment from the 30 days, grouped by type, with file names, captions, and advance notice flags. The point is to batch photography in one or two sessions instead of scrambling each day.
Output four. An event guide with four events spaced across the 30 days. Each one with a title, full description, duration, CTA, and the GBP category it reinforces.
The cadence the prompt enforces is non-negotiable for a reason. Two to three Google posts per week. Two photos per week. Four events across the 30 days. This rhythm produces consistent visibility without burning you out.
The content balance built into the 30 posts.
The 30 Google posts the prompt produces are not random. They follow a deliberate distribution that maps to E-E-A-T signals Google reads.
Ten posts showcase a specific service. These are your conversion posts from Module 12 Lesson 12.5. They tell customers what you do and what it produces for them.
Eight posts teach something genuinely useful. These are your education posts from Module 12 Lesson 12.3. Tips, mistakes to avoid, how-to guidance the customer can use whether they hire you or not.
Six posts build trust through transparency. These are your social proof and human posts from Lessons 12.4 and 12.6. Process, team, results, real-world outcomes.
Four posts tie to your primary city. These are your local relevance posts. They mention your city by name, reference local landmarks, or address neighborhood-specific context. This is where the Module 9 heat map intelligence shows up in your content.
Two posts tie to the current season or a timely reason to act. Spring tune-ups, hurricane prep, end-of-year planning. Whatever is timely in your service area.
Thirty posts. Five categories. No category overweighted. No sell-sell-sell. The goal is a feed that a potential customer scrolls through and thinks "these people actually know what they are doing."
What you need before running the prompt.
Before you open Claude, pull together your inputs.
Input one. Your complete Quick Info from Lesson 3.1. Your services, categories, target customer, brand voice, primary city, and the products of any work you completed in Modules 4, 5, 9, and 10.
Input two. Your start date for the playbook. The first day of the 30 days. Most owners pick the next Monday. The prompt assigns real calendar dates to every day in the schedule based on this start date.
Input three. Anything new or specific to the current month. Seasonal context. A new service you are launching. An event you are hosting. A geographic area you are targeting from your heat map work.
The prompt is designed to flag if any input is missing. If you have not completed an earlier module, the prompt will tell you exactly what to come back with.
How to run it.
Open your Claude Project. Run Prompt 15 (30-Day Playbook Master Prompt) from your prompt library.
Paste in your Quick Info. Add your plan start date. Submit.
The prompt produces a substantial output. Probably 5 to 8 pages of content depending on your business. Read through it. Note anything that does not match your brand voice or factual reality, since this is exactly the kind of long output that needs the Module 11 protection layer applied.
Save the full output in your workbook on the 30-Day Playbook page. Then immediately schedule the first week of content into your GBP using native scheduling and your HighLevel Social Planner from Lesson 11.4.
The first week is the most important. If you schedule week one inside the same session you ran the prompt, the momentum carries you. If you save the output and tell yourself you will get to it later, "later" usually means never.
Run the prompt now.
Run Prompt 15 today.
Save the output. Apply Prompt 13 (Fact-Check Prompt) and Prompt 14 (AI Slop Detection Add-on) to the first week of content before scheduling.
Schedule the first week of posts into your GBP. Use native scheduling and your HighLevel Social Planner. Walk away. The first seven days of content will publish themselves.
One prompt. Thirty days of content. Four supporting deliverables.
The next lesson is the photo production session that turns the playbook into reality.
The vocabulary that follows you.
- 30-Day Playbook Master Prompt
- Prompt 15. Synthesizes your Quick Info, categories, services, brand voice, target customer, and primary city into a complete 30-day execution plan with four supporting deliverables.
- Four playbook outputs
- The day-by-day schedule, the checklist table, the consolidated photo guide, and the four-event guide. Each output has a different job.
- 30-post content distribution
- The deliberate 10/8/6/4/2 split across service, education, trust, local, and timely categories. Maps to Google's E-E-A-T signals.
- First-week scheduling rule
- Schedule week one inside the same session you run the prompt. Saving the output for later is what kills the rhythm before it starts.