SEO content is content designed to rank on search engines. So an SEO content strategy is your plan on how you’ll use that content to support your business goals.

At Ahrefs, SEO-driven content marketing is our main marketing type. And it’s been hugely successful for us, helping us grow our ARR consistently over the years.

This is a guide on how we’ve done it. Hopefully, you’ll be able to use our SEO content strategy as inspiration to create your own. 

The Ahrefs’ SEO content strategy

Our SEO content strategy can be summarized into one sentence:

We create and maintain high-quality, search-focused content about topics with business potential, search traffic potential, and ranking potential.

We’ve carefully crafted this sentence. Each word has earned its way in. If you remove any one of them, everything falls apart.

Let’s look at how our content strategy works. 

1. Find topics with search traffic potential

The goal of creating SEO content is to rank high on Google. That means you’ll need to target topics your potential customers are searching for. 

Here’s the quickest way to find keywords with search traffic potential:

  1. Go to Ahrefs’ Keywords Explorer
  2. Enter a few broad keywords related to your site or niche (for e.g., we can look for keywords like marketing, seo, keyword, and keywords for our blog)
  3. Go to the Matching terms report
  4. Filter for keywords with Traffic Potential (TP)
The Matching terms report, via Ahrefs' Keywords Explorer

From here, you’ll want to eyeball the report to find keywords your potential customers are searching for.

Sidenote.

Traffic Potential is the estimated monthly organic search traffic to the top-ranking page for a keyword. Since pages tend to rank for many keywords and not just one, Traffic Potential is a more reliable estimate than search volume.

PRO TIP

If your competitor is getting a lot of search traffic and it’s not from branded keywords, chances are you could target those keywords too. 

Here’s how to find them:

  1. Go to Ahrefs’ Site Explorer
  2. Enter your competitor’s domain
  3. Go to the Top pages report

This report shows you a website’s top pages by estimated organic traffic and the keyword sending the most traffic to each page. So using our blog as an example, we can potentially analyze moz.com:

The Top pages report for moz.com, via Ahrefs' Site Explorer

Learn more: Keyword Research: The Beginner’s Guide by Ahrefs 

2. Check their business value

A keyword’s business value, or business potential, is how easy it will be to pitch your product while covering a given keyword.

For example, if you own an online store selling coffee equipment, it’ll be much easier to pitch your own product for a topic like best coffee machines versus why does coffee make me sleepy. 

The keywords with higher business potential are the ones you should prioritize in your SEO content strategy. 

Here’s a cheat sheet for scoring the “business potential” of keywords:

A table showing how to score a topic's business potential

Scoring a keyword depends on how valuable it is for your business. So there’s no right way of scoring it—a “3” for you may be a “1” for others. 

3. Analyze ranking potential

Due to a variety of reasons, some keywords are harder to rank than others. So while that doesn’t mean you completely avoid difficult keywords (especially if they have business value), you should take ranking difficulty into account when targeting them.

At Ahrefs, ranking potential means it’s viable for us to rank in the top three with our available resources.

But how do we know we’ll be able to rank in the top three? We do this by assessing four things.

Backlinks

Backlinks are one of Google’s top ranking factors. It has even said this itself

Which means that the more high-quality backlinks the current top-ranking pages have, the harder it’ll be to compete with them.

To see roughly how many backlinks you’ll need to rank in the top 10 search results, check the Keyword Difficulty (KD) score in Ahrefs’ Keywords Explorer. For example, if we want to rank for the keyword how to make kimchi, it’s estimated that we’ll need backlinks from ~77 websites.

The Keyword Difficulty for the topic "how to make kimchi," via Ahrefs' Keywords Explorer

For a more thorough assessment, scroll to the SERP overview and check the Domains column to see the number of linking websites to each page.

The SERP overview for "how to make kimchi," via Ahrefs' Keywords Explorer

These numbers, however, only tell you about the quantity of backlinks. Quality matters too. So to understand link quality, you’ll need to review each page’s backlink profile. You can do this by clicking the number in the Backlinks column.

The Backlinks report, via Ahrefs' Site Explorer

Learn more: How to Do a Basic Backlink Audit (In Under 30 Minutes) 

Authority

Google representatives have said that Google doesn’t evaluate a site’s authority. Still, many SEOs believe that authoritative websites have an easier time ranking on Google and, thus, typically take a website authority metric—e.g., Domain Rating (DR)—into account when assessing ranking difficulty. 

The skepticism arises because SEOs believe that even if Google doesn’t have an internal website authority metric, website authority can still impact rankings:

  1. High-DR sites tend to have more high-authority pages (from backlinks) and, thus, internal links from those pages may help other pages rank higher.
  2. Searchers prefer seeing trusted brands for some queries.

If you think this makes sense and want to evaluate website authority, then you can check the top-ranking pages’ DR scores in the SERP overview section in Keywords Explorer. 

The Domain Rating for the top-ranking pages for the query "how to make kimchi," via Ahrefs' Keywords Explorer

If they are all much higher than your own DR, you may want to prioritize other keywords.

Search intent

Google knows why searchers are looking for a particular query and gives them what they want to see. 

For example, Google knows people looking for how to make kimchi want to learn how to make the Korean fermented dish. So the SERPs are—as expected—mostly how-to guides:

The search intent for "how to make kimchi"

To analyze each keyword’s search intent, Google your target keyword and analyze the SERPs for the three Cs:

  1. Content type – Are they blog posts, landing pages, product pages, or something else?
  2. Content format – Are they listicles, how-tos, recipes, tools, or something else?
  3. Content angle – Is there a dominant selling point, like how easy it is?

You’ll want to make sure you’re able to fulfill the search intent for the keywords you want to target. For example, if the SERPs require you to build a free backlink tool—like backlink checker—and you don’t have the capability to do so (such as a huge links database), chances are you’re not going to be able to compete for that keyword.

The SERP overview for "backlink checker," via Ahrefs' Keywords Explorer

Learn more: What Is Search Intent? A Complete Guide for Beginners 

Quality

If someone is testing 47 air purifiers just to create a blog post, chances are it’s going to be hard to beat them on content quality.

Wirecutter tested 47 different air purifiers to find the best

It’s no wonder they’re ranking #1 for a competitive query:

Wirecutter's page on best air purifier ranks number one for the keyword "best air purifier"

Therefore, to beat Wirecutter, you’ll likely have to review a similar number of air purifiers or do something unique and different. That will require a ton of time and resources. 

So for the keywords you’re targeting, you’ll want to make sure that beating the top-ranking pages on content quality is within your realm of possibility. 

After reviewing your desired keywords for the four attributes, you can give them a “ranking potential” score:

How to score a keyword's ranking potential

Learn more: Keyword Difficulty: How to Estimate Your Chances to Rank 

4. Create high-quality, search-focused content

Finding keywords that have business potential, search traffic potential, and ranking potential is the core of our entire content strategy. 

It allows us to create content that not only ranks high on Google but also directly ties into our business goals. After all, there’s no point in generating a ton of organic traffic if people don’t buy. 

When we have a list of keywords that fulfill our criteria, it’s time to create content. Specifically, high-quality, search-focused content. 

Let’s break it down. 

Search-focused means content that matches search intent for its main target keyword. You would have already analyzed search intent during the process of evaluating ranking potential. All that’s left is to match it.

For example, if you’re targeting the keyword how to drive traffic to your website, it’s likely you’ll have to create a listicle of the best ways to drive traffic. 

And that’s what we’ve done:

The SERP overview for "how to drive traffic to your website," via Ahrefs' Keywords Explorer

High-quality is subjective. Everyone’s definition will be different. At Ahrefs, we value content with R-E-A-C-H:

  • Real – Authentic and original. Brings something new to the table.
  • Experienced – Written by someone with topical knowledge and expertise.
  • Accurate – Facts backed up by trustworthy sources and opinions clearly expressed.
  • Clear – Explained well without fluff or jargon. Illustrations where needed.
  • Helpful – Truly solves the problem at hand. Not just words for the sake of words.

We try, as much as possible, to make sure all content we produce matches these criteria. (Do you think this post matches R-E-A-C-H? 😄)

If you’re looking for the exact step-by-step process on how we create SEO content, I recommend reading this post or watching this video:

Learn more: Content Creation: The Complete Guide for Beginners 

5. Maintain high-quality, search-focused content

We don’t just publish our content and forget about it. We actively maintain it. That means updating or rewriting our content often.

Why do we do this? A few reasons:

  • Your post won’t always rank on the first try.
  • Your post may decline in rankings.
  • For some keywords, search intent may change.
  • Information in your content can get outdated and, thus, affect quality.
  • The SERPs are not static, and people can one-up you. You’ll have to find out why they outrank you and beat them again. 

For example, we updated our post on free SEO tools recently. Look at how much the traffic spiked after we refreshed it:

The spike in traffic after republishing our post on free SEO tools, via Ahrefs' Site Explorer

How do we identify which content needs updating? Every quarter, each writer on the Ahrefs content team goes through their own content and identifies two types of posts:

  • Posts that need updating.
  • Posts that need to be rewritten.

Each writer then jumps on a call with Joshua Hardwick, our head of content, to discuss how these pieces of content can be improved. When the general direction is agreed upon, each writer goes back and rewrites their content. 

While this is our current process, you don’t have to do it like us. In fact, if you’re a WordPress user, the easiest way to see which content needs updating is to install our free WordPress SEO plugin. Set a target keyword for each page, and it’ll tell you if rankings start to decline.

You can then investigate and see if it’s because the content needs refreshing. 

Results from a content audit, via Ahrefs' WordPress SEO plugin

Learn more: Republishing Content: How to Update Old Blog Posts for SEO 

Final thoughts

Our SEO content strategy is not complex. In fact, I think this simplicity is deliberate. It makes it easy to follow consistently, which may help explain our success with it. 

Any questions or comments? Let me know on Twitter.





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By Ryan Bullet

I am interested in SEO and IT, launching new projects and administering a webmasters forum.

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