Keyword Research & Content Strategy

Stop Guessing. Start Ranking for the Right Keywords.

Most content fails because it targets the wrong keywords, ignores search intent, or has no strategy behind it. This service builds a data-driven content roadmap based on exactly what the target audience is searching for — and maps every piece of content to a clear business outcome.

Content-Driven Growth

+140%

Organic traffic growth from strategic content

Keyword Targets

Mapped

Every page has a purpose

Search Intent

Matched

Content fits what Google rewards

The Content Problem

Why Most Business Content Doesn't Generate Traffic or Leads

Businesses publish blog posts, add service pages, and write about what they think customers care about — but traffic stays flat, pages don’t rank, and the content doesn’t bring in any leads. The problem is rarely the writing itself. The problem is what they chose to write about.

Without keyword research, content creation is a guessing game. Without a strategy, every piece exists in isolation — no internal linking plan, no topic clusters, no alignment with search intent. Google rewards websites that demonstrate topical authority through organized, interconnected content — not scattered blog posts published whenever inspiration strikes.

This service replaces guesswork with data. It identifies the exact terms customers are searching for, maps those terms to specific pages, and builds a content roadmap that drives traffic, builds authority, and converts visitors — month after month.

Targeting keywords nobody searches for

Content that ranks for terms with zero search volume. Perfectly written, perfectly invisible.

Competing against impossible keywords

Going after ultra-competitive head terms that require years of authority to rank for, while ignoring winnable opportunities.

Publishing without a plan

Random blog posts with no topic structure, no internal linking logic, and no connection to the buyer’s journey.

Ignoring search intent completely

A sales page ranking for an informational query, or a blog post that should be a comparison guide. Mismatched intent = no ranking.

Cannibalizing their own pages

Multiple pages targeting the same keyword, splitting authority and confusing Google about which one to rank.

What's Included

Everything That Goes Into a Keyword Research & Content Strategy

This isn’t a keyword list in a spreadsheet. It’s a complete content system — research, mapping, planning, and prioritization — ready for execution.

In-Depth Keyword Research

Comprehensive research across the business’s services, audience questions, and competitive landscape. Every keyword evaluated by search volume, keyword difficulty, search intent, and business relevance — not just volume alone.

Keyword-to-Page Mapping

Every target keyword assigned to a specific existing page or a new page recommendation. No two pages compete for the same term. The result is a clean keyword map that eliminates cannibalization and gives every page a clear ranking target.

Search Intent Analysis

Every keyword classified by intent — informational, navigational, commercial, or transactional. Content format recommendations matched to what Google is actually rewarding for each query: blog post, service page, comparison guide, FAQ, or landing page.

Topic Cluster Architecture

Content organized into topic clusters — pillar pages supported by related subtopic content, all interconnected through strategic internal linking. This structure builds topical authority and signals expertise to search engines.

Competitor Content Analysis

Deep analysis of what top-ranking competitors are publishing — which keywords they rank for, what content gaps exist, how their site architecture supports topical authority, and where the real opportunities are to outperform them.

Content Calendar & Roadmap

A prioritized publishing plan organized by quarter — with specific topics, target keywords, content formats, and recommended word counts for each piece. Ordered by impact so the most valuable content gets produced first.

Content Briefs

For each planned piece of content, a detailed brief covering the target keyword, secondary keywords, search intent, recommended structure (headings/sections), competing pages to beat, and internal linking targets. Ready to hand to a writer or execute in-house.

Internal Linking Strategy

A plan for how every page connects to every other relevant page — distributing authority, guiding users through the site, and helping Google understand the topic relationships between pages.

Existing Content Audit

Review of all current content — identifying pages worth optimizing, pages to consolidate, thin content to improve or remove, and keyword cannibalization issues to resolve. Not everything needs to be created from scratch.

The Process

How Keyword Research & Content Strategy Gets Built — Step by Step

A systematic approach that turns raw data into a publishing plan that drives traffic and supports business goals.

1

Discovery & Business Understanding

Before touching a keyword tool, the process starts with understanding the business — who the ideal customers are, what services or products matter most, what questions prospects ask before buying, and what the competitive landscape looks like.

2

Keyword Research & Opportunity Analysis

A comprehensive keyword research phase — pulling data from multiple sources, evaluating every term by volume, difficulty, intent, and business relevance. The goal is to find the keywords with the best combination of search demand and ranking feasibility.

3

Mapping, Clustering & Architecture

Keywords are grouped into topic clusters, assigned to specific pages (existing or new), and organized into a site architecture that builds topical authority. This is where the keyword list becomes a content structure.

4

Content Roadmap & Brief Creation

The final deliverable — a prioritized content calendar with detailed briefs for every planned piece. Organized by quarter, ordered by impact, and ready to execute immediately.

Content Types

Types of Content Covered by the Strategy

Not everything should be a blog post. The strategy recommends the right content format for each keyword based on what Google is actually ranking.

Service Pages

High-intent pages targeting commercial and transactional keywords — “WordPress development Philippines,” “local SEO services.” Designed to convert, not just inform.

Blog Posts & Guides

Informational content targeting how-to queries, industry questions, and top-of-funnel search terms. Builds authority, attracts traffic, and feeds the topic cluster structure.

Location Pages

Geo-targeted pages for businesses serving multiple areas — “SEO services in [city].” Unique content per location, optimized for local search visibility.

Pillar Pages

Comprehensive, long-form hub pages covering a broad topic — linking out to all related subtopic content. The anchor of each topic cluster and a primary authority signal.

Frequently Asked

Questions About Keyword Research & Content Strategy

Keyword research is the process of identifying the search terms people use. Content strategy is the plan for how to use those terms — which pages to create, what format they should take, how they connect to each other, and in what order to publish them. Keyword research is one input into the strategy, but the strategy itself is the architecture, the roadmap, and the execution plan.

This service focuses on the research, mapping, and strategic planning — not the writing itself. However, every deliverable is designed to make content creation easy: detailed briefs with target keywords, recommended headings, competing pages to beat, and word count guidance. If ongoing content writing is needed, that can be added as a separate service or handled through a content retainer.

The research typically covers hundreds of keyword opportunities — but the final strategy distills them into a focused, prioritized set of targets. Quality matters more than quantity. A strategy built around 40–60 carefully selected, properly mapped keywords will always outperform a spreadsheet of 500 random terms. The exact scope depends on the business, the number of services, and the competitive landscape.

A complete keyword research and content strategy project typically takes 2–3 weeks from kickoff to final deliverable. The discovery phase takes a few days, research and analysis takes about a week, and the mapping, clustering, and roadmap creation takes another week. Complex businesses with many service lines or locations may take slightly longer.

Absolutely. In fact, most projects start with an audit of existing content. Existing pages might be underperforming because they target the wrong keywords, are missing internal links, or cannibalize each other. The strategy identifies which existing content to optimize, which pages to consolidate, and where new content is actually needed. Not everything requires starting from scratch.

The research uses a combination of professional SEO tools for keyword data, search volume, difficulty scoring, and competitor analysis — along with Google Search Console data (if available), Google’s own search suggestions, People Also Ask analysis, and manual SERP review to validate intent. No single tool gives the full picture, so multiple sources are cross-referenced for accuracy.

The strategy includes a measurement framework — which keywords to track, which pages to monitor, and what metrics indicate progress. Key indicators include organic traffic growth to target pages, ranking improvements for mapped keywords, click-through rate changes in Search Console, and ultimately whether the content is generating leads or conversions. Results typically become visible within 3–6 months of consistent content execution.

Yes. The deliverables are designed to be usable by anyone — in-house marketing teams, freelance writers, or other agencies. The keyword map, content briefs, and publishing roadmap are all structured as standalone documents that can plug into any existing workflow. If there’s an SEO provider already in place, this service can complement their work by providing the strategic content layer.

Ready to Build a Content Strategy That Actually Drives Results?

Let’s start with a conversation about the business, the audience, and what the right content plan looks like. No obligation — just a clear discussion about how keyword research and content strategy can move the needle.

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