July 17, 2015- Ant-Man
May 6, 2016- Captain America 3
July 8, 2016- Dr. Strange
May 5, 2017- Thor 3
July 28, 2017- Black Panther
November, 2017- Indestructible Hulk
May 4, 2018- Iron Man 4
July 6, 2018- The Inhumans
November 2, 2018- Guardians of the Galaxy 2
May 3, 2019- The Avengers 3
This schedule hits a couple of check marks:
- The Big 3 and Avengers get the May date, ensuring maximum box office receipts (I imagine $800 M for Thor and Cap, $1.3 for Iron Man, and up to $2 Billion for Avengers 2 with the expanding Chinese Market.)
- All six phase 1-2 properties get sequels.
- Each year gets a new property (Ant-Man, Doctor Strange, Black Panther, The Inhumans.)
- The Last 3 films can link together into a giant cosmic storyline of sorts.
Final notes: If Downey can't be cajoled into Iron Man 4, Indestructible Hulk to 2018, and put a Captain Marvel or Black Widow movie in November 2017.
The article in question listed Iron Man 4 after Avengers 3. I see Iron Man skipping a phase like Hulk did. Feige also stated that Black Widow isn't happening until Captain Marvel has already hit theaters. I don't see either of of these in Phase 3 but Iron Man 4 will certainly be part of Phase 4 and a Black Widow film or TV show will also be an obvious choice for Phase 4.
Now if you want a schedule for Phase 4, here's what I'd do
2019
Ghost Rider (since he wasn't part of Avengers 3)
Darkhawk (since he wasn't in Avengers 3 either)
2020
Iron Man 4
Inhumans 2
Blade
2021
Thor 4
Captain America 4
Black Widow
Doctor Strange 2
2022
Hulk 3
Captain Marvel 2
Ant-Man 2
Black Panther 2
2023
Guardians of the Galaxy 3 (since they won't cross over with the Avengers in this phase)
Avengers 4
Feige said the plan was to get up to four films a year. Phase 1 started at 1 film per year but moved up to 2 in 2011. Phase 2 stuck with 2 the whole way. Phase 3 is giving us three films halfway through. Phase 4 would realistically move up to four films by it's halfway point. Keep in mind that Avengers 4 may even split into two films with the Mighty Avengers fighting Namor and the West Coast Avengers handling Kang. This is also every single bankable property that Marvel has that needs more than a TV budget.
As far as what can be done on TV, Runaways, She-Hulk, Moon Knight, Punisher and Hawkeye can all be made into TV series. More importantly, these properties are all incredibly different from one another. She-Hulk would be a comedy. Runaways would be a teen drama like the OC. Moon Knight would be a show like Twin Peaks or The Leftovers that has a mindbending cliffhanger at the end of every episode. Punisher would just be all out action. Finally, Hawkeye would be an Avenger with his own TV show that would mix the action of Moon Knight and Punisher with the humor of She-Hulk. These five shows would be able to run concurrently with Daredevil, Agents of Shield and Heroes for Hire. (It just makes sense to put Luke Cage, Jessica Jones and Iron Fist together in one show after the first season.)
Power Pack would also be a Disney animated film that would tie into whatever cartoons are being aired at the time.
So by 2024, the House of Ideas will have run out of ideas with the only bankable property left being Thunderbolts. Keep in mind that by this time, I can see Marvel buying back the Fantastic Four and Spider-Man since people will either get tired of CBMs which will only leave Marvel Studios making them or Marvel Studios will have more money than they know what to do with so they'll buy both of these back because they can and then launch a Spider-Man TV show set in the MCU along with a Fantastic Four film reboot. That along with making a trade for Fox to have the live-action X-Men TV rights in exchange for the Shi'Ar since I feel like Fox won't sell the X-Men back until the mid-2030s since I posted in the X-Men forums that Fox's new timeline can have them making X-Men and X-Force films along with Wolverine and Deadpool films for another two decades before they've run out of storylines, none of which involve the Shi'Ar.
So ten years from now, buy back two of the three properties you lease. Then if Fox's X-Men movies start sucking again, try to buy them back as well or see if there's a way to get both studios to collaborate with a Secret Wars film that would bring the X-Men into the MCU continuity.