3. More Factions
Factions, much like two-person tag teams, have been a staple of high-quality entertainment throughout Pro Wrestling history. From the early days of the Freebirds and Four Horsemen to modern day examples like the Shield and the Wyatt Family, factions offer you something that even traditional tag teams cannot.
You can build an entire backstory around why the faction exists. You can place younger talent with legends in a co-beneficial relationship. You can put two factions together and get months of matches out of just one feud (see DX vs. The Nation in the 90s).
WWE's women's division has so far flirted with the idea of factions but never really went all in. The Women's revolution itself arguably started when three factions were formed in PCB, B.A.D and Team Bella but this soon dissipated into some fabulous singles careers instead.
Today we have the likes of the Riott Squad and, until recently, Absolution. If more time and effort were put into promoting these women to the same degree as the main event talent who knows where these groups could have ended up.
Splitting the women over two brands is not a conducive environment for factions at the moment, but with all of them on the one show you would soon see some formidable groups forming and the overall entertainment would surely be the better for it.