The Signal Framework: A Content Strategy Tool
Overview
The Signal Framework is a 4-quadrant model that helps you create content that cuts through the noise by mapping two critical dimensions:
- X-Axis (Science): What you’re teaching – from basic/common approaches to novel/unique methods
- Y-Axis (Art): Who you’re talking to – from surface identity to deep identity
The Four Quadrants
Bottom-Left: NOISE
Basic Science + Surface Identity
- Common how-to advice for “everyone”
- Generic tips that anyone could find anywhere
- Gets lost in the content noise
- Example: “5 Tips for Better Productivity”
Bottom-Right: ECHO
Novel Science + Surface Identity
- New methods or frameworks for “everyone”
- Catches attention with novelty but lacks deep connection
- Still competing in a crowded space
- Example: “The 3-2-1 Productivity Method”
Top-Left: WHISPER
Basic Science + Specific Identity
- Common advice targeted to a specific demographic
- Better connection but predictable content
- Incremental improvement over Noise
- Example: “Productivity Tips for Working Moms”
Top-Right: SIGNAL
Novel Science + Deep Identity
- Unique approach for people with specific beliefs/worldviews
- Creates immediate recognition and emotional connection
- Breaks through the noise completely
- Example: “Why I Stopped Trying to Fix Myself (And What Works When You Refuse to Become Someone Else)”
How to Use This Framework
Step 1: Identify Your Current Quadrant
Look at your recent content and honestly assess:
- Are you teaching something common or novel?
- Are you speaking to surface demographics or deep identity?
Step 2: Understand the Identity Spectrum
Surface Identity Examples:
- Demographics (age, gender, profession)
- Circumstances (parents, entrepreneurs, students)
- Conditions (ADHD, introverts, beginners)
Deep Identity Examples:
- Core beliefs about how the world should work
- Internal narratives about their capabilities
- Fundamental approaches to problem-solving
- Values that drive decision-making
- Self-concept and aspirational identity
Step 3: Move Toward Signal
Ask yourself:
- What unique approach do I have that others don’t teach?
- What deep belief system or internal struggle does my ideal person have?
- How can I speak to their worldview, not just their demographic?
Content Development Process
1. Start with Deep Identity
- What does your ideal person believe about themselves?
- What internal narrative drives their decisions?
- What have they tried that hasn’t worked?
- How do they see the world differently?
2. Identify Your Novel Science
- What approach do you take that’s different from conventional wisdom?
- What have you learned that contradicts popular advice?
- What method works for your specific identity type?
3. Craft Your Signal Content
Combine your unique approach with deep identity understanding:
- “Why [conventional wisdom] doesn’t work for [deep identity]”
- “What I learned when I stopped [trying to be someone else]”
- “The approach that works when you [specific worldview/belief]”
Example Breakdown: Productivity Content
Quadrant | Topic | Target | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Noise | “How to Build a Morning Routine” | Anyone who wants productivity | Generic, forgettable |
Echo | “The 3-2-1 Morning Method” | Anyone who wants productivity | Novel but not deeply connecting |
Whisper | “Morning Routines for Working Dads” | Working fathers | Better connection, still predictable |
Signal | “Why I Stopped Pretending 5 AM Would Fix My Life” | People tired of forcing themselves into others’ blueprints | Immediate recognition, emotional connection |
Quality Check Questions
Before publishing content, ask:
Science Check:
- Is this teaching something everyone already teaches the same way?
- What makes my approach different or unique?
- Am I adding genuine insight or just repackaging common advice?
Art Check:
- Am I speaking to demographics or deep identity?
- Would my ideal person think “This person gets exactly what I’m going through”?
- Does this address their worldview and internal struggles?
Signal Check:
- Would someone share this because it perfectly captures how they think?
- Does this make my ideal person want to see what else I have to say?
- Am I brave enough to exclude people who don’t share this worldview?
Common Mistakes
Staying Safe in Noise/Echo
- Trying to appeal to everyone dilutes your message
- Generic advice gets lost in the content flood
- You end up competing on novelty instead of connection
Mistaking Demographics for Deep Identity
- “For entrepreneurs” is surface identity
- “For people who refuse to sacrifice their values for growth” is deep identity
- Go beyond what they do to how they think
Forcing Novel Science
- Don’t manufacture contrarian takes just to be different
- Your unique approach should emerge from authentic experience
- Novel science without deep identity understanding is just Echo content
The Signal Advantage
Content in the Signal quadrant:
- Creates immediate recognition and emotional connection
- Builds deeper relationships with the right people
- Eliminates competition by creating your own category
- Generates natural word-of-mouth sharing
- Attracts people who become genuine advocates
- Makes sales conversations feel natural instead of pushy
Remember
Most creators stay in the bottom quadrants because they’re afraid of excluding people. But the magic happens when you’re brave enough to speak to someone specific about something different.
The goal isn’t to get everyone’s attention. It’s to get the complete attention of the right people.
That’s how you cut through the noise and create signal.