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Bedrock, Clay, and Soil

A thought leader’s content library is the material they can pull off the shelf and use again — a second time, a tenth, a hundredth. Most libraries sprawl uncontrolled: folders of powerpoint decks, half-remembered stories, forgotten handouts.

Three functional layers (bedrock, clay, and soil) tame an unruly content library and organize it by reusability and stability.

The Bedrock, Clay, and Soil framework: three layers of a thought leader's content library

Bedrock

What It Looks Like

Stable frameworks, models, processes, and principles. Bedrock assets explain why your core ideas matter and how they work.

How to Use It

Every talk, workshop, article, and podcast appearance rests on the same underlying structure. Once you can draw it on a napkin and defend it, it’s load-bearing for everything you build on top.

Its Lifespan in Your Thought Leadership

Years to decades, revised rarely.

Clay

What It Looks Like

Reusable stories, examples, and data that illustrate your bedrock. Examples include client case studies, survey results, podcast quotes, and phrases you’ve earned over years on stages.

How to Use It

Clay is moldable. Reshape these assets for different audiences and modalities. The same great story shortens for a keynote, deepens for a workshop, shifts register for a boardroom.

Its Lifespan in Your Thought Leadership

Months to years.

Soil

What It Looks Like

Single-use, audience-specific material you create for one presentation or client. A client-specific quote, their language tied to this year’s initiatives, the statistics from their own survey.

How to Use It

Soil creates relevance for a specific audience at a specific point in time. Don’t catalog soil assets for your content library.

Its Lifespan in Your Thought Leadership

One use; compost after.

Why You Need All Three Types

Your content library (one of the Four Elements of Thought Leadership) requires a curated collection of carefully chosen bedrock, clay, and soil. Make conscious choices around what you use a second time, a tenth, or a hundredth.

  • Bedrock without clay offers theory no one believes.
  • Clay without bedrock offers examples without creating meaning.
  • Bedrock and clay without soil never lands in the room you’re actually in.

Buy The Thought Leadership Handbook (July 2026)