Self-Review Template
Content Strategist Self-Review
A self-review for a Content Strategist is calibration on the judgment behind the editorial calendar. The traffic numbers and the published pieces are visible to anyone; what your manager wants from you is the strategic bets you placed (which cluster to build, which pieces to kill before publish), the editorial craft you raised, and the production-system improvements that gave the team leverage. The template below structures that case.
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Content Strategist Self-Review
What to include
Lead with traffic and conversion outcomes. Then name the strategic bets that produced those numbers. Be specific about pieces, clusters, and the editorial decisions you owned. Honesty about content that did not perform reads as senior; pretending everything worked does not.
Personalize
Optional · Appears in downloadThe template
Top Outcomes
The traffic, pipeline, and ranking moves that defined the period.
- ·Which 3-5 content outcomes had the most impact?
- ·Which one would your manager pick if they could only mention one?
- ·What piece or cluster surprised you (positively or negatively) and what did you learn?
- (no entries)
Strategic Judgment
Editorial calendar bets that proved right.
- ·What content bet did you fund that paid off this period?
- ·What piece did you kill before publish and why?
- ·What pillar or cluster strategy did you commit to and how did it land?
- (no entries)
Multiplier Effect
How other writers and teams operate differently because of you.
- ·What editorial standard or template did you raise that the team adopted?
- ·What writer or freelancer did you coach into stronger work?
- ·What process improvement compounded across the team's output?
- (no entries)
Priorities for the Next Period
Strategic commitments.
- ·What is the next content bet you want to make?
- ·What part of the role do you want to stretch into?
- ·What manager support do you need to do this well?
- (no entries)
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Generated via Bloom, a career journal for iPhone. Bloom writes this document for you from your daily entries; the template is the manual version. Bloomjournal.cc
Weak vs. Strong bullets
The format does the easy part. The bullets carry the weight. A few examples to set the bar.
Weak
Grew traffic.
Strong
Organic traffic moved from 12K to 87K monthly sessions (7x). Pipeline attributed moved $80K to $620K SQL ARR. The strongest single driver was the brag-doc cluster I committed to in Q1 (1 pillar + 9 spokes); it now produces 38% of organic-attributed pipeline despite being 19% of total content.
Weak
Killed some content ideas.
Strong
Killed the 'AI for X' content series in week 3 of Q2 after a content-fit analysis. The series would have produced volume but not pipeline (no commercial intent in the keywords). Reallocated the writer-quarters to the brag-doc cluster, which produced the pipeline lift above.
Weak
Coached writers.
Strong
Two writers leveled this period. Maya from junior to mid-level: I gave her the lead on 2 spokes in the brag-doc cluster, both shipped and one ranked top-5 within 8 weeks. Sarah from mid to senior: I built her case with the manager around the editorial-system work she shipped (brief template adoption, calendar redesign).
Manual template vs. Bloom generated report
Manual self-review
- Works when you already remember the right examples.
- Requires manual sorting, rewriting, and evidence cleanup.
- Best for a one-time draft or printable structure.
Bloom performance report
- Starts from the work you captured when it happened.
- Organizes entries by goals, skills, impact, and review period.
- Turns daily evidence into shareable summaries and PDF reports.
You don't write the self-review. Bloom does.
Bloom's Performance Report IS the self-review, generated. Thirty seconds when something good happens (speak it or type it) and at review season the full narrative is ready: accomplishments, growth, multiplier effect, next-period priorities. Your numbers, your names, your dates. Already calibrated.
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Build the evidence before you need the template
Templates help with format. A career journal helps with memory. Use these pages together: learn the structure, generate a quick outline, then keep the source material current in Bloom.
Frequently asked questions
Can I use this as a Content Strategist performance review tracker?▾
Yes. Use the template as the final review structure, then keep a running weekly career journal so the examples, metrics, and feedback are ready before review season.
Is Bloom a performance review tracker?▾
Yes. Bloom tracks work entries over time and turns them into performance reports, period recaps, and review-ready summaries.
How does a career journal app help with self-reviews?▾
A career journal app keeps dated wins, goals, skills, and examples close to the moment they happen. That makes the self-review less dependent on memory.