{"id":680,"date":"2026-05-23T08:23:27","date_gmt":"2026-05-23T08:23:27","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/reach.cat\/blog\/brand-manager-daily-clipping-workflow-2026\/"},"modified":"2026-05-23T08:23:27","modified_gmt":"2026-05-23T08:23:27","slug":"brand-manager-daily-clipping-workflow-2026","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/reach.cat\/blog\/brand-manager-daily-clipping-workflow-2026\/","title":{"rendered":"The Brand Manager’s Daily Clipping Workflow in 2026"},"content":{"rendered":"
Launching a clipping campaign takes 30 minutes. Running it well takes 75 minutes per day. Most brand managers know how to launch \u2014 they have read the launch guide<\/a> and the briefing template<\/a>. What very few have is the operational rhythm that turns a launched campaign into one that delivers in the upper quartile of submission volume, approval speed, and view-per-clip averages. This article is that rhythm: the specific daily, weekly, and monthly tasks that separate a campaign that performs from one that limps. Total time investment: 75 minutes per day, 4 hours per week, 6 hours per month. The output: a campaign that runs in the top 20% of Reach.cat performance metrics regardless of budget size.<\/p>\n Model your campaign budget around this workflow. Use the clipping fee calculator<\/a>.<\/p>\n The morning block is approval-focused. Reach.cat’s data shows clipper submissions are heaviest in the 6pm to 11pm window of the clipper’s local timezone. For a US-based brand running global campaigns, that means submissions accumulate overnight. The morning is when those submissions get reviewed and the queue gets cleared before the next wave arrives.<\/p>\n\n
The 30-Minute Morning Routine<\/h2>\n