{"id":206526,"date":"2023-12-19T09:24:08","date_gmt":"2023-12-19T17:24:08","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.bruceclay.com\/?p=206526"},"modified":"2023-12-19T09:24:10","modified_gmt":"2023-12-19T17:24:10","slug":"evolution-of-seo-content-in-8-steps","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.bruceclay.com\/blog\/evolution-of-seo-content-in-8-steps\/","title":{"rendered":"The Evolution of SEO Content in 8 Practical Steps"},"content":{"rendered":"
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How do you go from the smallest seed of an idea to an impactful piece of content that can be repurposed for many marketing needs? Content creators use many different methods.<\/p>\n
In this article, I\u2019ll share a process for creating SEO content that you can use for your SEO program and beyond.<\/p>\n
Here are the steps we\u2019ll cover:<\/p>\n
FAQ: How do I transform an idea into impactful, repurposable SEO content?<\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n The idea for a piece of content usually sparks from a problem that your target audience is facing or a topic that you want to educate them on.<\/p>\n Ideas for content can come from anywhere. They may come from the marketing team that is working on driving conversions, the customer service rep who is intimately familiar with your customer base, or the thoughts that pop up as you live and breathe your business and your subject matter every day.<\/p>\n So as you are fishing for content topics, always be listening. Cast a wide net and invite all types of people across the company to contribute.<\/p>\n For more on where to get ideas for you content, read:<\/p>\n You can think of the work you did in the last step as the basis for a new keyword seed list. A \u201cseed list\u201d is basically just a list of topics and keywords you want to write about.<\/p>\n Once you have this list, you can use keyword research tools to refine what keywords you should target for the subject matter. These are the words, phrases and questions you will optimize the webpage content for.<\/p>\n For details on how to find and choose keywords, check out:<\/p>\n This step is all about planning where the content will go on the website.<\/p>\n Specifically, what topic silo will it be part of? And will the page live within a product or informational section on the site or on the blog? It will probably be fairly intuitive where it belongs.<\/p>\n Once you know how the new page will fit within your site structure, you\u2019ll get a better sense of how you should write the content \u2014 will it be sales copy or educational content? You\u2019ll also know what related pages on your site should be linked to in the body text.<\/p>\n To learn more about organizing your site content, read:<\/p>\n You might be surprised that we\u2019re halfway through the evolution of content and haven\u2019t even started writing yet!<\/p>\n But there\u2019s one more preparation step that we recommend performing before you start drafting a new page \u2014 analyzing the top-ranked competitors.<\/p>\n Once you have your target keywords, you can use those to analyze the competition in the search results for those key terms. Why is this important? You want to know what search engines like Google think is relevant and quality content for that keyword.<\/p>\n You can figure this out by seeing who ranks on page one for your target keyword and what they are saying about the topic and how they are saying it.<\/p>\n But it doesn\u2019t stop there. Using the right SEO tools<\/a>, you can dig deeper into the factors for the top-ranked webpages.<\/p>\n<\/a>Step 1: Idea<\/h2>\n
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<\/a>Step 2: Keywords<\/h2>\n
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<\/a>Step 3: Organization<\/h2>\n
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<\/a>Step 4: Competition Analysis<\/h2>\n