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We live in an age where everyone is chasing innovation and creativity. While this goal sounds noble on paper, in reality, the rush often turns into an endless search for the next breakthrough, while content gets produced and published without delivering any impact.
Imagine creating step-by-step guides, articles in collaboration with subject matter experts, and in-depth long reads — only for them never to be used again. This pursuit of “perfect” content often leads to significant expenses and a lot of time wasted, which not every company can afford. By contrast, reusable content offers evergreen value — saving time, reducing production effort, and enabling repeated use across multiple channels. Valuable insights reach wider audiences, and strong content gains more visibility and appreciation from prospects. How do you achieve this? Learn more in our guide on content reuse.
A content reuse strategy is an approach to content creation that involves breaking content down into smaller components that can be reused later. The goal of a content reuse strategy is to reduce production costs by repurposing previously created content, while also ensuring consistent messaging across different channels and making sure all content assets are used effectively.
Many companies are already sharing their success stories from repurposing content. For example, one of Adobe’s clients reported a 147% content reuse rate across its flagship product line, resulting in significant cost savings and faster time to market. Businesses of all sizes are repurposing content into smaller, more customizable pieces that can be reused when needed.
Content repurposing plays a critical role in helping pharma and life sciences teams scale content efficiently. Let’s look at the core benefits.
When you create an engaging article, a blog post filled with insights, or an e-book detailing all the important topics about your work, this piece of content must reach as wide an audience as possible. However, when it’s posted once, the chances of it actually gaining a lot of attention are very low. All that effort is put into creating new content, only for it to be forgotten after a few days. To avoid that outcome, consider repurposing content, breathing new life into your old blog posts and articles.
Creating new content assets from scratch can require significant resources. It’s not just about production costs — it’s also about the time needed to create them. On average, a blog post takes 10–15 hours to write, and that’s only for the written content. Visual assets can take several additional hours, while video content may require several days to produce.
Content recycling helps save both time and money on new content production while keeping existing assets relevant and valuable. If you focus on combining new and old materials, you will be able to create more content in shorter periods of time, while using the same resources or even fewer.
Creating different content for multiple channels means that even if you consistently follow the same messaging, some content pieces may have a slightly different tone of voice than others. When content marketers have to create multiple posts, they have less time to proofread the materials and ensure that they follow the right structure, tone of voice, and brand messaging. However, with reusable components, it’s much easier to maintain consistency. Combined with AI and data analysis, it’s possible to create reusable components that can be personalized to every audience with ease.
Not all content can be easily reused. While some content formats can be repurposed, not all are suitable for reuse. Here are some of the content types that are best for reuse:
The best candidates for content reuse are evergreen, high-value assets that can be adapted into different types of content without losing relevance. Overall, we recommend that you reuse any high-value content piece as much as possible. An in-depth research paper can go a long way, as much as a good case study, or even a social media post.
If you decide to start reusing your current content, there are a couple of things you need to keep in mind: modular content and integration with your existing tools. Let’s break down each for a better understanding of how content reuse works.
Modular content is what makes reuse possible. Instead of creating one-time-use assets, teams can design content as flexible building blocks that can stand alone or be combined. In the life sciences industry, modules can be utilized in an even more versatile manner, dividing content into distinct elements such as scientific claims, supporting data, visuals, safety information, and other components as separate modules. Once approved, these modules can be reused across multiple channels and markets, while still leaving enough room for customization.
Content reuse reaches its full potential when connected to the content creation tools teams already use. Integration with different systems ensures that reusable components flow seamlessly from creation to delivery. Modular content can be stored in libraries that can be automatically delivered to platforms where content is created. With the right metadata, teams can locate the approved content tailored to each audience and channel within seconds, transforming fragmented workflows into an end-to-end content creation engine.
Viseven helps businesses of different sizes leverage a modular content reuse strategy to ensure they save time, effort, and energy, while still providing content of the highest quality to their target audience. Here is what we offer.
eWizard is a content authoring platform that can help you streamline modular content creation by centralizing workflows in one system that aligns global and local teams around shared goals. It enables easy collaboration with both technical and non-technical colleagues, while providing tools to plan campaigns, assign tasks, set deadlines, and coordinate work through integrated calendars and dashboards. By turning content into reusable modules, eWizard accelerates production, simplifies approvals, and ensures consistent, scalable content delivery across markets and channels.
AI tools for content production and delivery are on the rise, with around 80% of content creators using AI for at least some of their tasks.
To assist marketers in creating on-brand content, our team developed the eVa AI agent, capable of generating a variety of content assets in just a few minutes. Integrated into eWizard, eVa supports your workflows within the content experience platform without the need to switch tools.
At Viseven, we also build AI-powered auto-tagging solutions that organize and structure content. For one of our projects, we delivered an AI-powered auto-tagging engine seamlessly integrated with the client’s DAM. We trained the model on the client’s taxonomy and curated datasets to enable strategic tagging, fine-tuned an LLM for contextual tagging, and connected the engine to automatically enrich content assets with accurate metadata. The Viseven team can help you integrate auto-tagging into your system or assist you in setting it up as part of the eWizard platform.
Translation of original content has always been a challenging task, especially for smaller marketing teams. Despite the growing need to enter global markets, what often slows this process down is not only translating materials but also adapting them to local culture. With built-in AI-powered translation tools, you can adapt content for different markets in just a few seconds and focus on ensuring cultural and legal accuracy first. Thanks to this, you can reduce translation costs and speed up time to market, shortening the time needed to launch campaigns from months to weeks.
Although content reuse strategies are not yet widely adopted, businesses that ignore them are already experiencing avoidable inefficiencies. Without repurposing content, companies risk taking on unnecessary costs.
Many content assets remain relevant long after launch. All it takes is a bit of care for them. Although it may seem like a hassle at first to save every piece of content created, in the long run, it is guaranteed to pay off. Without reuse, your content might disappear. However, with content repurposing, valuable knowledge will never get buried.
Long-form content requires significant time and effort to create, and using it only once makes little sense from a cost-efficiency perspective. If you don’t break this type of content down for reuse, you are underutilizing your highest-value assets.
If you focus on content creation for every campaign, you will use all the resources that could have been used for other tasks. There is no need to craft brand-new content for every launch. A reuse content strategy lets you move faster by adapting existing assets instead of starting from a blank page every time.
High-quality content is expensive. Research, interviews, writing, design, and approvals all require significant investment. Even though a single article may seem inexpensive at first, especially when produced in-house, once you account for all the associated costs, such as employee time, required software, and additional resources, it adds up to a hefty price. When the results of this hard work are only used once, you’re essentially paying a lot for just a fraction of the content’s potential.
Without reusable content, teams recreate the same content without letting each other know, which inevitably leads to the creation of very similar materials and inconsistent messages. Sales create their own slides without knowing that what they need might already exist and sit with the marketing department. Marketers, on the flip side of that same coin, develop content that sales reps might never need.
For many years, we have relied on traditional content creation as the most effective approach to content marketing. Although this strategy allowed us to create unique and customizable content for every channel for a long time, it proved to be very inefficient in terms of costs, time savings, and effort. Here is how the content reuse strategy differs, and why it matters so much:
Some might think that content reuse kills creativity, but the truth is that it frees teams from repetitive production and unnecessary workflows, allowing them to focus on creative ideas and more strategic goals.
A content reuse strategy begins with meticulous planning and research. It won’t be enough to simply save a new publication somewhere, hoping to use it again someday. Here are some tips on how to not just create structured content but also ensure that your content reuse strategy is as effective as it can be.
Content that stands the test of time is content that consistently delivers real value. Content reuse is only effective when the original asset is evergreen at its core. When creating new pieces, ensure they offer genuine value and remain relevant over time. It’s far more effective to invest in a strong, high-quality asset that can be adapted for multiple languages and audiences than to produce content tied to a single audience or a short-lived trend.
Modular content has grown in popularity in recent years, and although modularization has been widely discussed, many companies still don’t use it to its full potential. Content modularity is an approach to organizing and repurposing content that involves breaking content into smaller units, each of which can function as a standalone piece. Modularization allows companies to have better control of all content components that can be reused multiple times in different scenarios.
Automation can be costly. Many online services aggressively promote automation tools, which can put significant pressure on small and mid-sized businesses. As a result, many companies are unsure what to automate, how to approach it, and how much budget to allocate. This is why it’s often better to take a different route: instead of forcing automation, focus on building efficient content operations first, and only then introduce automation where it truly adds value. It’s perfectly fine to automate only parts of your processes: start by analyzing your budget and priorities, then decide what should and should not be automated.
Continuing the library analogy, there is one more important similarity to highlight. When you look for a book in a library, you don’t search randomly — books are organized by alphabet, genre, author, or a combination of these. Likewise, your content collection should be structured. Adding metadata (such as tags, content type, or format) to your existing content ensures consistency and saves time when reusing existing content and locating the right components.
It’s going to be hard to reuse old content when you don’t know exactly how and when to do it. Moreover, just saving old materials in your collection is only the first step: you should also prepare internal documentation for those who will be using the content, break down the translation costs for new audiences and how exactly to carry out those translations, and create user manuals for newcomers or people who are not very familiar with modular content and how to work with it.
Content reuse can improve user engagement, make the process of creating technical documentation much easier, and even mitigate compliance risks.
Content reuse enables pharmaceutical companies to adjust content to different markets much more swiftly compared to traditional content adaptation. Instead of creating separate materials for each region, teams can develop core content modules, such as visuals, key messages, or promo materials, that are centrally approved and ready to use.
For many life sciences companies, entering new markets and maintaining meaningful HCP engagement requires producing large volumes of high-quality, compliant content — quickly and consistently. Traditional content creation models often struggle to meet these demands without inflating costs and review workloads. A practical example of this approach can be seen in Viseven’s Digital Content Factory case study with a global biotechnology company. By introducing modular content and structured reuse, the client was able to scale content production, accelerate MLR approvals, and deliver consistent, personalized campaigns across multiple markets and channels.
In the pharma industry, a modular content approach enables teams to quickly locate approved scientific claims, safety statements, visuals, and key messages when building new materials. Instead of recreating content for every campaign or market, teams use modules to assemble compliant, consistent assets faster — whether for e-detailing, email campaigns, event materials, or web content.
Think of modules as books in a library; each can be categorized into different groups, such as genres, formats, lengths, authors, or any other category that comes to mind. Similarly, modular content can be divided in a way that works best for your organization and organized into a collection that can be easily accessed.
One of the biggest advantages of a content reuse strategy is that it doesn’t require a large budget or a long implementation timeline to get started. While it delivers the greatest impact when supported by a modular content system and integrations with existing tools, these are not prerequisites for beginning content repurposing. What truly matters is a systematic approach — not only to publishing content but to breaking it into smaller pieces, structured components that can be reused later.
If your best content is used once and forgotten, you’re losing time, budget, and impact. See how a modular approach helps you reuse what you already have and scale faster.
A content reuse strategy is an approach where content is created as modular components that can be reused, adapted, and combined across multiple channels, campaigns, and markets.
Evergreen, high-value content works best for reuse. This includes blog articles and long-reads, webinars and event recordings, white papers, e-books, reports, case studies, customer stories, and visual assets.
No. Content reuse actually enables creativity by freeing teams from repetitive production work. Instead of constantly starting from scratch, marketers can focus on strategic thinking, personalization, and campaign innovation while relying on reusable, approved building blocks.
Yes. Content reuse significantly reduces time to market by allowing teams to adapt existing, approved assets instead of creating new content from scratch.
AI supports content reuse by accelerating content creation, personalization, tagging, translation, and localization. AI-powered tools can generate new assets from existing content, automatically tag materials with metadata, and adapt content for different markets, saving time while maintaining consistency and quality.