Keyword-First SEO vs. Topic-First SEO: Two Roads to Relevance [flowcharts]

By Andy Crestodina

I’m an SEO.
I have been since the early days of search.

I’m also a content marketer.
I have been since the early days of blogging.

After thousands of hours spent writing hundreds of articles, I see a clear distinction between two approaches to content marketing and SEO.

topic-first content (focus on readers)
keyword-first content (focus on rankings)

Here I’m going to break down that difference into simple terms with no judgment. Then we’ll share an SEO framework for each approach.

I’ll also use some little flowcharts. Each of these flowcharts has steps and you’ll notice that some of the steps are common across all three. Below, I’ve listed the most common and effective approaches for each step.

Topic-first content development

“That’s a great idea!”

It’s the moment you have an insight that your readers may find interesting. Maybe you thought of it at breakfast. Or during a conversation with a client. Dots connected. This could be a good article.

You can already imagine the conversation and comments it will trigger.

These topics come from within. Some of them are keyword opportunities and they deserve special love and attention. Others are not. But which ones are which?

Follow the flow and find out if your idea is also an SEO opportunity.

Lidia Infante, SurveyMonkey

“Do all pieces of content need keyword research? No, but they all need user research.”

Each step in the process has been labeled with a letter A through E. Each of those is outlined below. We’ve also estimated the time required for the two parts of the SEO process: keyword research and SEO copy edits. The time for writing isn’t included here, but most articles take around 4 hours to write.

Pros: Content is more audience focused. Better chance of thought leadership, opinions and counter-narratives. More traction in social and email channels. Content is more likely to be memorable and aligned with sales.
Cons: Lower overall traffic levels. Smaller audience and lower overall brand awareness.

Amanda Natividad, SparkToro

“I’ve built my audience exclusively on topic-first content creation. This audience-driven approach tends to result in novel and/or emotionally-resonant pieces — which essentially optimizes itself for social media. People scrolling by want their dopamine hit. They won’t get that from a social media post that says, “How to do content marketing.”

Next we’ll break down the other approach to SEO and content marketing:

Keyword-first content development

“That’s a great keyphrase!”

Every SEO has started here. You spot the keyword. Maybe it was trending. Or a tool recommended it. Or maybe you spotted it during competitive analysis. It fits somewhere in your buyer’s journey. Next you check the competition. This could work. Your heart rate picks up. The battlefield lies before you.

You can already imagine the rankings, the traffic and the glory.

Keyword-first SEO means starting with search in mind. So this is channel-specific marketing. A keyword caught your eye and you craft the content specifically for relevance and rankings.

Here’s what that process looks like in a flowchart form:

Notice that this process shares some of the steps (and letters) from the first flowchart. That’s because there’s overlap. The process for those steps are the same. We’ll go through them in a moment.

Pros: Traffic. Content is built for promotion. Over time, stronger SEO skills can be applied to sales-focused pages.
Cons: Over reliance on Google. Vulnerable to algorithm changes. Top-of-funnel metrics become a distraction. Content may not align with sales. Risk of losing focus on the target audience through the buyer journey.

Too much focus on SEO can distort a content strategy. Recently, I was visiting a blog and noticed a lot of keyword-first content. One week they published “SEO for coaches” and the next week they published “How to start a self storage business.” I get it, but it’s kinda weird.

Also notice, the time required was different for the two strategies.

For keyword-first SEO, you are spending more time doing keyword research. You may consider dozens of phrases, checking search volume, keyword difficulty and SERP features for each. But after all that research, SEO copy edits come naturally.

For topic-first content, you’ll know quickly if there is or isn’t a keyword opportunity. If there is, SEO copy edits may be tricky. It may feel unnatural to add depth to a tight, structured piece. Or working in the subtopics is awkward. It takes time to think through and adapt.

Now we’ll break down those steps in detail…

A. Are people searching for this topic?

Estimated Time: This step should take five minutes tops.

People search for all kinds of things, but not everything. There are many topics that really no one is searching for. In fact, many content formats are not usually SEO opportunities. Consider the following formats. Imagine any topics in any of these formats.

News, announcements
Opinion, editorial, thought leadership
Interviews, roundups

Can you imagine your audience going to Google to find these? Is someone searching for this? If they did, what keyphrase might they use? Often, you quickly realize that there simply isn’t an SEO opportunity.

Other content is searched for all day, everyday. They are evergreen topics. For these, a high ranking URL can attract a steady stream of new visitors over long durations of time. Content in these formats are often SEO opportunities:

How-to articles, best practices (instructions)
Answers to common questions (information)
Strategies, benefits, comparisons, examples (investigation)

Validating the demand for a topic/keyphrase in search is the first step in keyword research. There are two main ways to do it: with SEO tools and with Google itself.

SEO tools
The big SEO tools show monthly search volume for specific phrases. This number is actually an huge underestimate of real interest in the topic. That’s because it is an estimate for that one specific phrase. But there are no pages that rank for only one phrase. Any page that ranks high for that one phrase will often rank for dozens or hundreds of closely related phrases.But since we’re just confirming that someone is searching, any amount of search volume checks the box.
Google Suggest
No SEO tool? No problem. If Google suggests the phrase, probably someone is searching for it. So just start searching and if Google recommends the phrase right away, there’s likely some search demand.
Google Trends
Here’s another clue for search volume. Google Trends gets data from the primary source (Google itself) to show both if there is demand and how it has changed over time.Just enter a phrase. If there isn’t a flatline, then you have validated that there is some demand for the topic. Enter two or more phrases to see the relative demand. If you use just one keyphrase, the Glimpse Chrome extension will add a bit of data and a trendline to the report.

B. What clues can we find from the search engine results page?

Estimated Time: It may take up to 30 minutes to evaluate variations of potential target keyphrases.

A careful examination of the search results gives us deep insights into what content Google is matching to the query. Does the search engine results page (“SERP”) show videos, images, a map, ads, AI overviews, knowledge panels, people also ask boxes?

These SERP features are powerful clues that can confirm our keyword targeting …or dissuade us from targeting the phrase.

Search for the keyphrase. It takes only a few minutes. If you’re a keyword-first SEO, this may send you back to the drawing board. If you’re a topic-first marketer, you might take one look and forget about search, but write the piece anyway.

Here’s what you’ll see and what you might learn.

Content formats
Does the visitor want a quick answer? Are they looking for a detailed article? Or are they looking for a service? Do they want video or images? And ultimately, is this a neighborhood that our content should live in?
AI overviews and featured snippets
If there are quick answers high on the page that seem to satisfy the information needs of the visitor, then it is likely that this is a low clickthrough rate (or zero click) keyphrase. We should consider targeting a different phrase. Target this phrase and you’re competing with Google itself
Questions and answers
Do you see the “People Also Ask” box? If so, you are likely looking at a phrase for which Google believes there is information intent. Also, are looking at a list of questions that a well optimized page should probably answer.
Video
Does Google think video is a good format for this keyphrase? If there is a large video carousel in the SERP, set lower expectations for clicks to articles …but set higher expectations for clicks to videos. Target this phrase with a video.
Visual noise
How far down the page is the #1 ranked page? The #2 ranked page? Are they buried under a lot of SERP features? Is there a lot of visual noise at the top of the page that might reduce the clickthrough rate to the traditional organic rankings? If so, consider targeting a different phrase, or at least don’t have high expectations for organic traffic.

This is a key step in SEO, regardless of where the process began. You haven’t researched a keyphrase until you’ve searched for it and looked closely at search results.

C. Do we have sufficient authority to rank for this phrase?

Estimated Time: 30+ minutes of looking up keyphrases, checking difficulty and reviewing SERP analysis reports.

Evaluating the chance of ranking for a given phrase is one of the more difficult SEO skills. It’s a matter of comparing the authority of your website and webpage to the difficulty of the keyphrase. It requires the use of SEO tools.

Authority is a function of links to your website. More links (especially links from sites that have high authority themselves) means higher authority, for your page and your domain as a whole.
Keyword difficulty is just the average level of authority of the other pages that rank for the phrase. Really, a keyword is only difficult or easy based on the authority of the page that targets them.

Here’s what the comparison looks like in Moz. The webpage authority is on the left. The keyword difficulty is on the right. So really you’re just checking to see if your site’s authority is in the same range as the authority of the other pages that rank for the phrase.

Remember, these are not official Google metrics. Every SEO tool has its own metric and they are all just estimates of Google’s. They aren’t perfect but they’re close enough. If your authority is as high or higher as the keyword difficulty, you should have a chance.

To look closer, use the “SERP Analysis” report in your favorite SEO tool. It will show you how many websites are linking to each of the high-ranking URLs in search results. If each rival has lots of links to it, the road to ranking may be long.

What if you don’t have sufficient authority?

That depends on the approach. Go back and look at the flowcharts.

The content strategist, using a topic-first approach, sets SEO aside and writes the page anyway. .
The SEO strategist, using a keyword-first approach, will go back and find a different phrase to target.

The shortest path to search rankings and organic traffic is to choose a less competitive phrase, which is typically a more specific phrase with more words in it. A so-called “long tail keyphrase.”

Veteran SEOs know that not only are these phrases easier and faster to rank for, the visitors who search for these phrases are more likely to act. They know what they want and they know it when they see it. In other words, search volume (quantity of visitors) is lower but conversion rates (quality of visitors) is higher.

There are other nuances in keyword research that SEO tools don’t factor in. You can set ranking expectations higher for any of the following:

Content that is published on URLs that already have some links and authority (recycled URLs)
Content that is likely to attract links from other websites (original research reports, content with charts)
Content that sits in the center of other closely related, interlinked pages (pillar or cornerstone content)
Content that is more detailed and comprehensive than the other pages that rank for the phrase
Content that you mention and link to when you write for other websites (citations in guest posts)

You can also target out-of-reach phrases, but keep working on them over time. Commit to the topic and update the page again and again, year after year, sometimes with minor edits, sometimes with major rewrites, until you win.

Never surrender!

D. Let’s create a keyphrase-focused page

You’ve confirmed that there’s demand.
You’ve scrutinized the search results.
You’ve checked your chance of ranking.

Everything looks good. It’s time to build the search-optimized page.

Above all, we will focus on the reader. Optimizing for search does not mean sacrificing quality. We’ll maintain editorial standards and stay focused on quality. There’s no point in ranking if the visitor lands in a big bowl of copypasta, stuffed with keywords.

We are not keyword spammers.

We are simply taking steps to indicate the relevance for our target keyphrase in the usual ways. Then we may expand the topic a bit (semantic SEO) and adjust the formatting to make sure the search visitor sticks around (dwell time)

Here are the first and most fundamental ways to optimize a page for search. These are just some of the elements from our big 17-point web marketing checklist.

The title
The title of the page includes the target keyphrase. The title is no longer than 60 characters.
The <h1> Header
The header at the top of the article includes the target keyphrase. The header isn’t necessarily the title tag. It can be longer and more descriptive. Review our headline best practices for tips and examples.
The body text
Naturally, the article body includes the target keyphrase a time or two.
The meta description
Although the meta description isn’t in the article itself and doesn’t impact your search rankings, it usually appears in the snippet if the page ranks, therefore it can affect clickthrough rates. Write a simple, plain English meta description that uses the keyphrase at least once and doesn’t exceed 155 characters.

The semantically related phrases
Beyond those basics, a well-optimized article goes beyond the target keyphrase. It incorporates the closely related keyphrases. It covers the adjacent subtopics. It answers the related questions.This is known as semantic SEO. It’s how it all works.Many of the semantically related phrases popped up during your keyword research in Step A. There are many sources of semantically related phrases. SEO tools can help (examples: MarketMuse, Semrush SEO Writing Assistant, etc.) And AI can help. But start here and you’ll find a bunch.Google Suggest
Google Trends
“People Also Ask” questions
Competitive analysis (what other phrases does the top ranked page rank for?)Don’t just shove these phrases in here and there. Go deeper into the topics, adding paragraphs with related phrases in the <h2> subheads. Expand the content until it includes many of these semantic keyphrases. In other words, target the topic, not just the keyphrase.
Length
Few SEOs believe that word count is a ranking factor, but many studies have shown a correlation between length and rankings. It’s no surprise. Longer, in-depth articles have more opportunities to indicate relevance and cover those semantically related phrases.
The URL
The actual address of the page should be short, sweet and use the target keyphrase. Avoid using numbers and formats in your URLs. This makes them easier to recycle later.In other words, avoid URLs such as…
https://www.website.com/resources/12-user-experience-tips-webinar…and instead use URLs such as…
https://www.website.com/resources/user-experience-tips

E. Write the article anyway!

You’ve arrived at this step if you’ve given up on SEO. You’re focused on the reader. You feel strongly about the topic. And you know that beyond search, there are 75 other ways to promote an article. Here are just a few…

You’ll promote your article on social media.
You’ll send it to your email list.
You’ll collaborate with influencers who may share.
You’ll add it to your nurture sequences.
You’ll link to it from related articles.
You’ll talk about it in webinars, guest posts, presentations, podcasts, etc.

And best of all, without the extra SEO considerations in the back of your mind, you are free to write anything you’d like. Forget about keywords. Turn off the tools. Stop counting phrases. Just write what you feel should be written.

This is what some writers don’t yet know about search: it’s an all-or-nothing game.

Articles are search optimized or they are not. You can’t “lightly optimize” a page and expect to rank. There’s no point in sprinkling a few phrases around. Search is hypercompetitive. It’s a bloodsport out there. If you’re serious about search, you have to go all in on that URL. You need to go big. Only a strong competitor will have any chance.

…or forget about SEO completely and just enjoy the writing process.

Imagine the delight of your reader.

Colophon: this article was created using a topic-first approach. Following the flowchart above, during Step A, we checked the phrase “keyword first SEO” and determined that there really isn’t any demand for the phrase. So we abandoned SEO and wrote the article anyway. Yes, it incorporated a lot of semantically related phrases, but that happened naturally. We made no effort to check keyphrase usage. It is not search optimized. Our only consideration was you, dear reader.

Andy Crestodina

Andy Crestodina is the Co-Founder and CMO of Orbit Media. He’s an international top-rated keynote speaker and the author of Content Chemistry: The Illustrated Guide to Content Marketing. You can find Andy on LinkedIn and Twitter.

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