Even well-crafted content themes sometimes need adjustment to generate the best possible ideas and posts. This tactical guide will help you diagnose common issues, make targeted improvements, and optimize your content theme for maximum effectiveness.
What You'll Learn
How to diagnose specific problems with your content theme
Tactical adjustments to improve idea quality and relevance
Troubleshooting techniques for common theme issues
Advanced optimization strategies for experienced users
Diagnosing Theme Performance Issues
Before making changes to your content theme, it's important to identify exactly where the problem lies. Here are the most common issues users encounter:
Issue #1: Profile-Theme Misalignment
Symptoms:
Content references experiences or credentials you don't have
Ideas seem disconnected from your actual professional background
Posts reference industries or roles not relevant to your expertise
Important Note: LiGo uses a 'memories' feature that analyzes your LinkedIn profile data to understand key facts about your professional background. This information works alongside your content theme to generate relevant content. If your LinkedIn profile doesn't match the theme you're creating (for example, if you're creating a theme for a client while using your own LinkedIn profile), this misalignment can result in confused or inaccurate content generation. Always ensure the LinkedIn profile connected to your LiGo account matches the theme you're working with.
Issue #2: Ideas are too generic or basic
Symptoms:
Ideas lack specificity or unique perspective
Topics feel like they could apply to anyone in your industry
Ideas don't reflect your unique expertise
Issue #3: Ideas are too repetitive
Symptoms:
Multiple ideas that feel like slight variations of the same topic
Limited range of topics despite a broad expertise area
Ideas that loop back to the same few concepts
Issue #4: Ideas aren't aligned with your business goals
Symptoms:
Ideas don't naturally lead to your services/offerings
Topics feel disconnected from what you actually do
Content doesn't position you as an expert in your specific niche
Issue #5: Ideas are too complex or too simple
Symptoms:
Ideas are too technical for your audience
Ideas are too basic for your expertise level
Topics don't match the sophistication level of your ideal clients
Issue #6: Ideas don't feel authentic to your voice
Symptoms:
Topics don't match your natural interests or perspective
Ideas feel forced or inauthentic to your experience
Content doesn't reflect your unique approach or methodology
Component-by-Component Optimization Techniques
Once you've identified the issue, use these tactical adjustments to optimize specific components of your content theme:
Optimizing the "Background & Offering" Section
Problem: Ideas don't reflect your unique experience or expertise
Tactical Solutions:
Add specific credentials: Include certifications, years of experience, and specific accomplishments
Highlight unique career path: Emphasize unusual aspects of your journey that inform your perspective
Include transformation stories: Add brief examples of problems you've solved for clients
Mention methodologies: Name any proprietary processes or frameworks you've developed
Specify industries: List specific sectors where you have deep expertise
Before (Too Vague):
I'm a marketing consultant who helps businesses grow through digital strategies.
After (Specific and Unique):
As a former e-commerce CMO who scaled three DTC brands past $10M in revenue, I now help product-focused founders implement the retention-first marketing systems I developed during my in-house career. My methodology combines customer research techniques from my psychology background with the growth metrics I tracked across 400+ campaigns, giving me a unique approach that prioritizes customer lifetime value over acquisition at all costs.
Optimizing the "Purpose" Section
Problem: Ideas lack a compelling angle or unique perspective
Tactical Solutions:
Identify contrarian views: Add perspectives where you disagree with industry consensus
Specify transformation goals: Clarify exactly what change you're trying to create
Add mission language: Include emotional drivers behind your content
Name specific problems: Identify exact pain points you're addressing
Include "gap statements": Describe what's missing in typical industry advice
Before (Too Generic):
I share content to help people improve their LinkedIn strategy.
After (Mission-Driven and Specific):
I'm on a mission to challenge the "hustle culture" approach to LinkedIn that burns out creators and produces inauthentic content. My purpose is to show busy professionals that strategic, focused content-even just once weekly-outperforms daily posting of generic advice. I aim to fill the gap between generic "post more often" advice and the reality that quality positioning and authentic expertise demonstration drive actual business results. Having seen countless agency owners waste thousands on scattered LinkedIn activity, I'm committed to showing them how a systematic, sustainable approach leads to qualified leads without consuming their limited time.
Optimizing the "I Write About" Section
Problem: Ideas are too repetitive or lack variety
Tactical Solutions:
Use categorized topic clusters: Group topics into 4-5 main categories
Balance tactical and strategic topics: Ensure you cover both how-to and why-it-matters angles
Include contrasting topic pairs: Add both problems and solutions, beginnings and advanced stages
Vary content formats: Specify topics that work well as stories, how-tos, myths, case studies, etc.
Use specific, detailed topics: Replace general topics with highly specific versions
Before (Too Broad):
LinkedIn strategy, content creation, personal branding, engagement tactics, and growth hacking.
After (Specific and Varied):
Strategic topics: - How positioning clarity eliminates content creation anxiety - Why most agency LinkedIn strategies fail despite high posting frequency - The psychology behind why certain clients respond to thought leadership - Common positioning mistakes that make content creation exhausting - When to pivot your content theme vs. when to stay consistent Tactical execution: - Conducting a LinkedIn content audit to identify your highest-performing topics - Converting client questions into a month's worth of strategic content - Designing a minimal-viable LinkedIn routine for time-strapped founders - Creating topic clusters that establish authority in specific service areas - Repurposing client deliverables into thought leadership without breaching confidentiality Agency-specific challenges: - Managing both personal and company LinkedIn presences without diluting either - Navigating the shift from founder-led to team-driven LinkedIn strategy - Building LinkedIn systems that scale as your agency grows - Converting LinkedIn connections into actual sales conversations without being pushy - Using LinkedIn to validate new service offerings before full launch
Optimizing the "I Write For" Section
Problem: Ideas don't resonate with your specific target audience
Tactical Solutions:
Add psycho graphic details: Include attitudes, values, and beliefs
Specify audience sophistication: Clarify their knowledge level
Include situation triggers: Describe events that would make your content relevant
Add aspiration language: Describe what your audience wants to achieve
Include frustration points: Mention what's not working for them currently
Before (Too Generic):
Marketing agency owners and consultants who want more clients.
After (Detailed and Specific):
I write for: - Independent agency founders (1-10 employees) who are technically skilled but struggle with consistent business development - Agency owners caught in the feast-or-famine cycle who realize referrals alone aren't sustainable - Consultants who have tried "posting daily" LinkedIn advice but found it impossible to maintain with client workloads - Technical founders who understand they need to build authority but resist "thought leadership" that feels inauthentic - Service business owners who have plateaued between $250K-$1M and know they need a systematic client attraction approach - Former corporate professionals in years 1-3 of their consulting business who are excellent practitioners but uncomfortable with self-promotion - Agency leaders who have tried hiring marketers to manage their LinkedIn but were disappointed with generic content that didn't capture their expertise
Optimizing Your Example Posts
Problem: Generated content doesn't match your writing style or voice
Tactical Solutions:
Select diverse formats: Include different post structures in your examples
Match theme topics: Choose examples that demonstrate your theme topics
Use high-performing posts: Select examples that resonated with your audience
Include authentic elements: Choose posts that showcase your unique voice
Remove generic examples: Replace any examples that feel like generic LinkedIn content
Pro Tip: If you don't have existing posts that match your desired theme, consider writing 2-3 "ideal" examples specifically for LiGo to learn from.
Troubleshooting Specific Theme Issues
Problem #1: Ideas Are Too Basic or Generic
This typically happens when your theme lacks specificity or unique perspective.
Tactical Solutions:
Audit your I write about section: Are your topics specific enough? Replace general topics like "marketing strategy" with specific ones like "adapting enterprise marketing frameworks for small business budgets"
Check your complexity level: If ideas are too basic, consider changing from Beginner to Medium or Hard
Add contrarian views: Include specific industry practices you disagree with and why
Incorporate methodologies: Add any frameworks, processes, or systems you've developed
Review example posts: Ensure they demonstrate depth and unique perspective
Problem #2: Ideas Are Too Repetitive
This happens when your theme lacks topic variety or has too much overlap in your topic areas.
Tactical Solutions:
Create distinct topic categories: Organize your I write about section into 4-5 distinct categories
Audit for synonyms: Look for topics that essentially cover the same ground with different wording
Add dimension pairs: For each topic area, include both problems and solutions, beginners and advanced concepts
Expand your topic range: Add adjacent areas that still connect to your core expertise
Use the "trim and expand" technique: Remove repetitive topics and replace them with more specific variations
Problem #3: Ideas Don't Connect to Your Business Objectives
This happens when your theme isn't aligned with your actual services or offerings, or when there's a mismatch between your LinkedIn profile and your theme.
Tactical Solutions:
Review your "Background & Offering" section: Ensure it clearly articulates what you actually sell
Add result language: In your topic areas, include the outcomes your services provide
Include service-adjacent topics: Add topics that naturally lead to discussions about your solutions
Incorporate client journey stages: Add topics relevant to prospects at different buying stages
Check example post alignment: Ensure your examples demonstrate the connection to your services
Verify profile-theme alignment: Confirm that the LinkedIn profile connected to your LiGo account matches the business objectives in your theme
Problem #4: Ideas Don't Match Your Target Audience
This happens when your audience definition is too broad or misaligned with your actual ideal clients.
Tactical Solutions:
Hyper-specify your audience: Add industry, company size, role, and situation details
Include audience pain points: List specific challenges your ideal clients face
Add audience sophistication markers: Clarify their knowledge level and experience
Incorporate audience goals: Specify what they're trying to achieve
Reference audience context: Mention the business environment they operate in
Problem #5: Ideas Generated Are Too Abstract or Theoretical
This happens when your theme lacks practical, actionable elements.
Tactical Solutions:
Balance theory and practice: Ensure your topic list includes both conceptual and practical applications
Add how-to topics: Include specific processes, methods, and techniques
Incorporate examples language: Add phrases like "case studies," "examples," or "implementations"
Include tool-specific topics: Mention platforms, software, or tools relevant to your expertise
Add measurement topics: Include how to track, measure, or evaluate results
Advanced Theme Optimization Strategies
Once you've addressed the basics, these advanced techniques can further refine your content theme:
Strategy #1: The Topic Matrix Technique
Create a matrix that maps content topics across two dimensions:
Client journey stage (Awareness, Consideration, Decision, Implementation, Growth)
Content approach (Educational, Problem-solving, Methodology, Case Study, Opinion)
This ensures comprehensive coverage and prevents repetition.
Strategy #2: The Content Pillar Approach
Identify 3-5 core "pillars" that represent your primary expertise areas. For each pillar:
Define 3-5 sub-topics
List common questions for each sub-topic
Identify unique angles for each question
Map relevant client outcomes to each area
This creates a structured framework for diverse but connected content.
Strategy #3: The Expert Positioning Framework
For each topic area, explicitly define:
The conventional wisdom
Where you agree with convention
Where you disagree
Your unique approach
The results your approach delivers
This sharpens your positioning as a thoughtful expert with a distinct perspective.
Strategy #4: The Audience Segment Matrix
If you serve multiple audience segments, create a matrix that maps:
Each audience segment
Their specific challenges
How your expertise applies to them
The outcomes they specifically value
Then ensure your theme includes elements relevant to each segment.
Experimental Theme Adjustment Process
For methodical theme improvement, follow this process:
Document current performance: Note the current quality and relevance of ideas
Make one targeted change: Modify just one component based on the guidance above
Generate new ideas: Create a new batch of ideas with the adjusted theme
Evaluate results: Compare the new ideas to the previous set
Iterate: Keep the change if it improved results, revert if not, and try another adjustment
This systematic approach prevents overcorrection and clearly shows what changes are effective.
Common Questions
Q: How often should I update my content theme?
Review your theme quarterly, but make tactical adjustments whenever you notice idea quality declining or becoming repetitive.
Q: Why is it important that my theme aligns with my LinkedIn profile?
LiGo uses a memories feature that extracts key information from your LinkedIn profile to enhance content generation. This works alongside your content theme to create more personalized and authentic content. If there's a mismatch (for example, creating a theme for a client while using your own profile), the AI may generate confused content that mixes different professional backgrounds.
Q: Should my theme match my LinkedIn profile exactly?
Not necessarily. Your theme can (and often should) be more focused than your profile, emphasizing specific aspects of your expertise that drive business results.
Q: Can I have a theme that covers multiple areas of expertise?
Yes, but ensure they're connected by a common thread-either a shared audience, methodology, or perspective. Otherwise, consider creating separate themes.
Q: What's more important-audience definition or topic areas?
They're equally important and interconnected. Well-defined topics without a specific audience create content that doesn't resonate, while a well-defined audience without specific topics creates content that lacks substance.
Q: How can I test if my theme adjustments are working?
The most reliable test is to generate a batch of ideas before and after making changes, then compare their relevance and specificity. Also track engagement on the posts you create from those ideas.
