NEWS STORY
Building a Content Strategy From the Ground Up: How Lehigh University Aligned Storytelling Across a Decentralized Structure
May 12, 2026
Carina Sitkus, Associate Vice President, Content, Lehigh University
Audra Berner, Executive Director of Content Distribution, Lehigh University
Kristen DiPrinzio, Director of University Communications, Lehigh University
Lindsay Lebresco, Executive Director of Content Creation, Lehigh University
Launching a brand is a pivotal moment for any institution—but the real work begins when teams across campus bring that brand to life consistently and collaboratively. For our content team within University Communications and Public Affairs at Lehigh University, that meant developing a content strategy in alignment with Lehigh’s new brand that could unite more than 100 communicators and marketers around a shared approach to storytelling.
A core part of that strategy was the introduction of annual content themes: strategic story lenses designed to guide narrative priorities across the university. These themes help ensure our audiences walk away with the understanding of who Lehigh is and what differentiates us, while giving creators across campus a common framework to work from.
Below are the key considerations incorporated into the strategy we created and the lessons we believe other institutions can apply to their own work.
1. Framing the Strategy: Creating a Shared Narrative Framework
Why Themes Became the Foundation
We developed a set of annual themes designed to flex with emerging institutional priorities, key initiatives, and societal conversations. They are refreshed every year. Together with our brand pillars, which are evergreen and speak to topics such as academic excellence and student success, these themes (contact communications@lehigh.edu for the annual themes) keep our storytelling aligned across the university while still allowing for creative variation and timely content.
Building Governance That Could Scale
- To make the strategy operational, we knew governance had to be built in from the start. Our approach included:
- Cross-functional planning groups between central communications and advancement
- Regular collaborative meetings with colleges and key offices
- A two-way system for content sharing and amplification
- A shared vocabulary that allows teams to quickly align on audience, purpose, and thematic fit
The result is a repeatable process where content creators and strategic leaders can decide together: What story should we tell? Who should tell it? And for which audience?
For institutions with decentralized communications teams, this type of structure is essential. It provides clarity without limiting creativity, and it ensures that the symphony of storytelling across the university is aligned and can scale into institutional impact.
2. Using Analytics to Inform Decisions and Improve Outcomes
Building Our First Thematic Analytics Framework
One of the biggest challenges in higher ed content strategy is connecting strategic intent with real performance data. To address this, we implemented a new analytics framework that ties every piece of content to its associated theme and/or brand pillar.
This allows us to measure:
- Volume of content produced per theme/pillar
- Views, engaged sessions, and engagement rate
- Comparative performance between themed content and all content
- Which themes/pillars resonate most strongly with audiences
- Gaps where strategy and content output aren’t yet aligned
Key Insights From Our First Benchmark Year
Several insights emerged that changed how we think about content alignment:
- High-performing stories often aligned with brand pillars, even when they weren’t intentionally crafted with strategy in mind.
- Only a fraction of stories aligned with annual themes—an indicator that editorial habits take time to evolve.
- Some stories performed exceptionally well because of SEO and topical relevance rather than strategic alignment—reinforcing the need for early integration of search strategy.
- Analytics surfaced opportunities to standardize tagging across decentralized websites so performance data can be aggregated more effectively.
For others building a content strategy, your first year of analytics isn’t about perfection; it’s about building a baseline that allows for smarter decisions next year.
3. Opening the Strategy to the Full MarComm Community
A University-Wide Co-Creation Model
Once the initial governance structures were in place, we expanded theme development into a university-wide collaborative process.
We began with a seed set of ideas from our central content team, then invited communicators across admissions, colleges, advancement, and other units to submit their own theme concepts. A cross-functional leadership group synthesized these submissions and moved forward a refined set of themes for broader input and selection.
This process had two goals:
- Shared ownership: ensuring this was the university’s content strategy, not just one office’s.
- Collective clarity: enabling communicators to see how their work fits into a larger narrative.
4. Lessons Learned: What Others Can Apply to Their Strategy Work
1. Governance is the unsung hero of strategic storytelling. Without a shared structure, even the best strategy struggles to take hold.
2. Analytics must evolve with the strategy. Your first year of measurement won’t answer every question, but it will illuminate the right next questions and guide future actions.
3. Co-creation builds commitment. When communicators across the institution help define the strategy, they naturally help implement and advance it.
4. Themes are guides, not constraints; they are intentionally flexible umbrellas designed to encompass a wide range of topics that reflect institutional priorities. The goal isn’t uniformity, but clarity: themes provide direction to creators while still allowing room for creativity and innovation.
5. Distribution is as strategic as creation. A strong story with weak distribution rarely achieves institutional impact. Teams must think end-to-end.
The success of a content strategy is not defined by its documents, frameworks, or dashboards—it’s defined by how well people across an institution can activate it together.
For us, building our content strategy from scratch was as much a culture project as it was a content project. The frameworks, governance, and analytics helped. But the real momentum came from inviting our full communications community into the process and empowering them to shape the storytelling future of the institution.
For institutions looking to build or refine their content strategy, our encouragement is simple: Start with alignment, build structures that last, and trust your community to bring the strategy to life.



