Content Hub OS is the operating model behind my working app: dashboard, setup context, planning, content, images, campaigns, offers, sales, clients, tasks, assets, prompts, and AI workflows connected in one system. You get the maps, modules, playbooks, templates, and prompts to build your own version.
The reference app is mine. Your stack stays yours. Build it with any model, database, or no-code tool that fits.
Your work is good. The system around it is the problem. Ideas in one app, drafts in another, brand context somewhere else, client notes in a third, and follow-ups living in memory. You are not short on output. You are short on a system that keeps the business connected.
The decision logic behind each system, the part that usually lives in an operator's head. Why it is built this way, where it breaks, what to do instead.
The brands, personas, verticals, prompts, and chat history that make the rest of the OS useful instead of generic.
Hub pages, module specs, playbooks, and templates that turn the reference app into something you can rebuild in your own stack.
The screenshots show my reference build. The public hub pages explain what each area does; the member library teaches the private build materials.
The full system already runs as an app. The public map can show the hub structure. The member library contains the implementation, private prompts, templates, and playbooks.
I have run a marketing agency since 2009 and spent two decades building content and operations systems inside other people's businesses. Content Hub OS is the system I built for mine, refined through real client work, agency operations, and years of AI workflow experiments. The reference build already exists; here, I am teaching you how to build your own version. Not theory. The operating model behind a system I actually use.
Start with the Business OS foundation, the source context layer, and the first hub/module drops.
Checkout is handled through Substack. The member library is where the full prompts, build details, files, and playbooks live.
In your member library. This site is the free, public map of the system. The full prompts, build details, and playbooks live behind your member login, delivered when you subscribe.
Substack handles the paid subscription, receipts, and email delivery. Content Hub OS is the product; Substack is the checkout and delivery layer for now.
No. You subscribe through Substack, then use the member library for the actual Content Hub OS materials. You can also receive updates by email.
No. The app is the reference build. The membership teaches the operating model, prompts, templates, and workflows so you can build your own version in your own stack.