When you manage a personal brand for someone like Kim Butler — a financial advisor, author of 11 books, host of 600+ podcast episodes, and leader of the Prosperity Economics Movement — the first thing you need is a complete inventory of every piece of content they’ve ever created.
We call this Stage 1 of the Content Factory — the citation inventory. Without knowing what assets exist, you can’t repurpose them, optimize them, or build on them. The problem is that doing this manually takes days of tedious work: scrolling through YouTube channels, cataloging Amazon books, finding podcast appearances, tracking down third-party mentions, and organizing it all into something actionable.
So we used AI agents to do it in under an hour. Here’s exactly what we did and what we built.
The Challenge: 433 Videos, 11 Books, 600+ Podcast Episodes
Kim Butler’s YouTube channel (@KimDHButler) has 433 videos and 1.31K subscribers. Her content spans Prosperity Podcast episodes, interviews with financial experts, workshop series, FAQ shorts, book promotions, and creative content. She’s authored 11 books on Amazon including “Live Your Life Insurance,” “Perpetual Wealth,” and the entire “Busting the Lies” series. She’s been a guest on podcasts like 8020 Investors, WealthyWellthy Life, and Truth Concepts. She’s been featured in Women Leadership Magazine, has a Grokipedia page, and has a LinkedIn presence with thought leadership posts.
The challenge was to catalog all of this, categorize it, flag what can be repurposed into articles on her personal brand site (kimbutlerlife.com), and create a prioritized queue for content repurposing — all in a shareable format the whole team could use.
What the AI Agent Did: Step by Step
The agent browsed Kim’s YouTube channel, scrolling through all 433 videos to extract titles, durations, view counts, and upload dates. It identified which videos are long-form (5+ minutes), categorized each by content type (podcast episode, interview, workshop, FAQ short, book promotion, creative), and flagged every video where Kim is the host or interviewee.
Then it compiled her book catalog from Amazon, cross-referencing with her ProsperityThinkers.com book page. It found external podcast appearances, tracked down third-party mentions across the web, and audited her existing articles on both prosperitythinkers.com and kimbutlerlife.com.
Finally, it wrote a Google Apps Script to automatically create a 7-tab Google Sheet with color-coded headers, populate it with all the data, auto-resize columns, and generate a prioritized repurposing queue with 20 proposed article titles. The script ran in 4 seconds.
The 7-Tab Content Library We Built
The YouTube Videos tab catalogs 47 of her most important videos with columns for title, duration, views, age, content type, whether it’s long-form, Kim’s role (host or interviewee), whether it should be repurposed to an article, the article status, and notes. Her top-performing videos include “Money Myth #1” at 22,000 views, “The Life Insurance Song” at 6,800 views, and “Kim Butler on The Seven Principles of Prosperity” at 6,000 views.
The Books tab lists all 11 of Kim’s books with Amazon links, ratings, publish years, estimated chapter counts, and the article series potential for each. “Live Your Life Insurance” alone can generate a 12-part article series, and her newest book “Busting the Scarcity Mindset” can produce 10 articles.
The External Podcasts tab tracks 9 guest appearances across shows like 8020 Investors, WealthyWellthy Life, Truth Concepts, Cashflow Tactics, and the Prosperity Economics Advisors podcast. Each appearance is flagged for article repurposing.
The Articles tabs audit existing content on ProsperityThinkers.com (7 articles with SEO value ratings) and KimButlerLife.com (4 pages with update recommendations). The Third-Party Mentions tab catalogs 11 external references rated for entity disambiguation value — critical for separating Kim D. H. Butler from other people named Kim Butler in Google’s knowledge graph.
The Repurposing Priority Queue is the actionable output — 20 content items ranked by strategic value with proposed article titles for kimbutlerlife.com. Priority 1 is the “Seven Principles of Prosperity” video (6K views), followed by the 4-part Preparing for Prosperity Workshop series (1,736 combined views), and then the Cashflow Tactics interview with Ryan Lee.
Why This Matters for Personal Brand SEO
Most personal brands have far more content than they realize, and most of it is sitting on YouTube or podcast platforms where it gets watched once and forgotten. The content library is the foundation for everything that comes next: repurposing long-form videos into SEO-optimized articles, creating entity signals for Google’s knowledge panel, building topical authority through consistent publishing, and connecting all the dots between the person’s various online presences.
For Kim specifically, entity disambiguation is a key goal. When you search “Kim Butler,” Google needs to know you mean the Prosperity Economics leader, author, and financial advisor — not any other Kim Butler. Every article we create from her video content, every third-party mention we catalog, every consistent bio we publish across platforms strengthens Google’s understanding of who Kim D. H. Butler is.
The Repurposing Pipeline: From Video to Article
The content library identifies exactly which long-form videos should become articles. The criteria are simple: the video must be 5+ minutes long, Kim must be the host or interviewee, and the topic must have standalone value as a written article. We identified 28 Prosperity Podcast episodes, the 4-part Workshop series, several interviews, and one LinkedIn Live session that all meet these criteria.
Each book also becomes an article series. With 11 books averaging 10 chapters each, that’s roughly 100 articles waiting to be created — each one reinforcing Kim’s authority on topics like whole life insurance, prosperity economics, family banking, and financial mindset.
What You Can Learn from This
If you’re managing your own personal brand or someone else’s, the process is the same. Start with the inventory. Use AI agents to browse YouTube channels, Amazon author pages, podcast directories, and the web to compile every piece of content and every mention into one place. Then categorize, prioritize, and start repurposing.
The key insight is that you probably already have 10x more content than you think. The hard part was never creating content — it was organizing what you already have and putting it to work across channels. AI agents just removed the bottleneck.
