Content Strategy Skill
Mandatory Content Standards
- Match output length to the skill, request, and deliverable type. Use concise answers for quick checks, structured detail for audits and plans, and full-length output only when the user asks for a complete deliverable.
- Write in a way that sounds like a knowledgeable human wrote it. No robotic or templated phrasing.
- Use short sentences. One idea per sentence. One focus per paragraph.
- Use active voice. Never passive constructions.
- Address the reader directly using "you" and "your."
- Use bullet points only when they genuinely improve readability.
- Replace all em dashes with commas, parentheses, semicolons, or a new sentence. No hidden Unicode characters.
- End every sentence with a period.
- No hashtags, emojis, or asterisks.
- No introductory or closing filler phrases such as "in conclusion," "in summary," or "in a world where."
- No warnings, notes, or disclaimers. Stick to requested output.
- No AI cliches: no "game-changer," "unlock," "leverage," "dive into," "delve," "cutting-edge," "transformative," "revolutionize."
- No excessive adjectives or adverbs. Let specifics do the work.
- No broad generalizations. Every claim tied to specific context.
- Use specific examples, data, and scenarios.
- Pose at least one thought-provoking question per skill.
- Mobile-friendly: short paragraphs, clear headers, scannable.
- Practical and actionable. Every section connects to a next step.
What This Skill Does
This skill builds content strategies. A content strategy is a plan for what content to create, for whom, in what format, published where, and measured how. It is the document that prevents a marketing team from writing random blog posts and hoping something sticks.
The outputs include content pillars, topic cluster maps, editorial calendars, distribution frameworks, and measurement plans. This skill plans content. The other skills in this package write it.
Before building a strategy, gather:
- The product, its audience, and the primary business goal for content (pipeline, SEO traffic, brand awareness, retention)
- Whether a content archive exists and if so, what is in it
- The team size and publishing capacity (one post per week? Four? One per month?)
- Any existing SEO data, competitor content analysis, or keyword research
- The primary channels the audience uses to discover content
What a Content Strategy Is Not
A content strategy is not a content calendar. A calendar lists what to publish when. A strategy explains why those pieces, in that order, for that audience, through those channels.
A content strategy is not a topic list. Topics are inputs to a strategy. A strategy connects those topics to specific business outcomes and specific audience needs.
A content strategy is not "we should post on LinkedIn more." That is a distribution tactic. A strategy starts with the audience and works outward to channels, not the other way around.
Here is the question that separates strategy from activity: if you stopped publishing tomorrow, would your audience notice, and what would they miss? If you cannot answer that concretely, you do not have a content strategy yet.
Step 1: Define the Strategic Foundation
Before choosing a topic or format, establish four things.
The primary audience. Be specific. "Marketing professionals" is not specific enough. "Marketing managers at B2B SaaS companies with 50 to 300 employees who own the demand generation function" is specific. The more specific you are, the easier every subsequent decision becomes.
The problem the audience is trying to solve. What does your audience search for? What questions do they ask in communities? What keeps them up at night? What do they read to get better at their job? Your content strategy should be built around those problems, not around your product features.
The business goal. Content can serve different goals. SEO traffic builds audience and pipeline over time. Thought leadership builds trust and brand authority. Retention content reduces churn and increases product usage. Sales enablement content closes deals. Choose the primary goal. It affects every format and channel decision.
The unique point of view. What does your company believe about your category that others do not say? What perspective does your team hold that is distinct from the standard advice? Companies without a point of view produce generic content. Companies with one produce content that people remember and share.
Step 2: Build Content Pillars
A content pillar is a broad theme that captures a major area of interest for your audience, connects to your product or category, and has enough depth to support multiple content pieces over time.
Most content strategies work best with three to five pillars. Too few and the content becomes repetitive. Too many and the strategy loses focus.
How to identify pillars:
List every topic your ideal customer thinks about in the context of their job. Then group related topics into themes. The themes that appear most consistently, connect most directly to the problem your product solves, and have demonstrable search or community interest become your pillars.
Example for a project management tool targeting engineering leaders:
Pillar 1: Engineering team productivity (how to run sprints, manage technical debt, reduce meeting overhead)
Pillar 2: Engineering and product alignment (how to structure roadmaps, communicate with non-technical stakeholders, manage scope)
Pillar 3: Hiring and scaling engineering teams (interview processes, onboarding, growing from 5 to 50 engineers)
Pillar 4: Technical leadership and management (moving from IC to manager, building team culture, managing remote engineers)
Notice that only some of these topics directly connect to the product. That is intentional. Content pillars serve the audience, not the product catalog. The product's role is to help with these problems, not to be the topic of every post.
Step 3: Build Topic Clusters
A topic cluster is a group of content pieces organized around one core topic (the pillar page) and a set of related subtopics (the cluster content).
The pillar page covers a broad topic comprehensively. It targets a high-volume, competitive keyword and links to all the cluster content. The cluster pages cover specific subtopics in more depth. Each one targets a more specific keyword and links back to the pillar page.
This structure signals topical authority to search engines. A site that has one article about project management is less authoritative than one that has a pillar page on engineering productivity, plus 12 supporting articles on sprints, retrospectives, standups, technical debt, and meeting management, all internally linked to each other.
How to build a cluster:
Start with the pillar keyword. Use keyword research tools (Ahrefs, Semrush, or Google Search Console if you have historical data) to find related search queries. Group them by intent: informational (how-to questions), navigational (product comparisons), and transactional (ready to try something).
Assign each keyword to a content type. A high-volume informational query gets a long-form guide. A specific comparison query gets a comparison page. A "how to use" query gets a tutorial or case study.
Map internal links before writing. Know which pages link to which before anyone writes a word. Internal linking is structural, not an afterthought.
Step 4: Map Content to the Funnel
Different content formats serve different stages of the buyer journey. A strategy that only creates top-of-funnel awareness content will not close deals. One that only creates bottom-of-funnel comparison content will not build an audience.
Top of funnel (awareness and education): The reader does not know your product exists. They are searching for information about a problem or category.
Best formats: long-form guides, research reports, data-driven articles, opinion pieces, podcast episodes, video tutorials on general topics.
Goal: be found by the right people and establish credibility.
Middle of funnel (consideration and evaluation): The reader knows solutions like yours exist and is researching options.
Best formats: case studies, comparison pages, use case content, webinars, feature breakdowns, customer stories.
Goal: demonstrate that your product solves their specific problem better than alternatives.
Bottom of funnel (decision): The reader is ready to choose and needs confirmation.
Best formats: ROI calculators, detailed pricing explainers, migration guides, implementation guides, competitor vs comparison pages.
Goal: remove the last objections and make it easy to commit.
Post-purchase (retention and expansion): The reader is already a customer and needs help getting value.
Best formats: product tutorials, use case inspiration, customer community content, onboarding guides, advanced feature guides.
Goal: increase product usage, reduce churn, and create advocates.
A complete content strategy covers all four stages. The ratio of investment across stages depends on your business goal. A company focused on pipeline growth puts more weight on middle and bottom of funnel. A company building brand and audience puts more weight on top of funnel.
Step 5: Build the Editorial Calendar
An editorial calendar is the operational plan that turns a content strategy into a publishing schedule.
The calendar should include:
- The working title of each piece
- The primary keyword being targeted
- The pillar it belongs to
- The funnel stage it addresses
- The primary format (blog post, video, case study, landing page)
- The primary distribution channel
- The assigned author
- The target publish date
- The current status (brief, in progress, in review, published)
How to plan the calendar:
Work backward from your publishing capacity. If you can publish two pieces per week, you have roughly eight pieces per month to allocate across pillars and funnel stages. Do not plan more than capacity can produce. An aspirational calendar that is half-executed is worse than a realistic calendar that runs on schedule.
Sequence content intentionally. Publish the pillar page before the cluster content, so the internal links exist when the cluster pages go live. Plan complementary pieces close together so you can cross-promote. Time evergreen content to give it runway, and time trend-dependent content to hit when the trend is peaking.
Mix evergreen and timely content. Evergreen content (how-to guides, frameworks, definitive resources) compounds over time because it stays relevant. Timely content (takes on recent news, data reports, reactions to industry events) generates spikes of traffic and shares. Both serve a strategy. Pure evergreen misses cultural moments. Pure timely content builds no compounding asset.
Step 6: Plan Distribution
Creating content without a distribution plan is a common and costly mistake. Publishing a blog post and waiting for traffic is not a strategy. It is hope.
Distribution channels and how to use them:
Organic search: Covered by the topic cluster methodology above. The strategy is to build topical authority and earn rankings over time.
Email: Your email list is the highest-intent audience you have. Every piece of content should have a path to the email newsletter. Some teams send a full newsletter. Others send a brief update with links. Either works. The discipline is consistency.
LinkedIn: B2B content travels further on LinkedIn than on any other social platform. But the content form that performs on LinkedIn is not a link to your blog post. It is the insight from the blog post, written natively as a LinkedIn post, with the link buried in the comments. LinkedIn's algorithm reduces distribution for posts that send people off the platform. Work with that reality.
Twitter/X: Still useful for developer, startup, and creator audiences. Works best for concise takes and threads that demonstrate thinking.
Community distribution: Share content in the communities your audience uses. Discord servers, Slack groups, Reddit, Indie Hackers, Hacker News. The rules here are the same as with subreddits: contribute value first, share content in context, do not blast links.
Paid amplification: Use paid social to amplify content that has already proven it resonates organically. Do not pay to distribute content that has not yet shown organic engagement. The organic signal tells you what is worth amplifying.
Content repurposing: A long-form guide becomes a series of LinkedIn posts. A webinar becomes a blog post. A blog post becomes an email sequence. A podcast episode becomes a short video clip. Plan repurposing into the editorial calendar, not as an afterthought.
Syndication: Some platforms will republish your content with a canonical link back to the original. Medium, Dev.to, and industry publications sometimes syndicate relevant content. This extends reach without building new content.
Step 7: Measure Content ROI
The way you measure content determines how you invest in it. Measure the wrong things and you build the wrong content.
Metrics that matter:
Organic traffic growth: Are more people finding your content through search over time? Track at the pillar level and the individual page level.
Keyword rankings: Track rankings for target keywords, not just traffic. Rankings tell you where you are gaining and losing ground before traffic changes reflect it.
Conversion rate from content: What percentage of readers take a desired next step? This could be subscribing to an email list, starting a trial, or requesting a demo. Install tracking that can attribute these conversions to the content that referred the user.
Pipeline from content: What percentage of your pipeline touched a piece of content before converting? This requires proper attribution setup in your CRM. First-touch, last-touch, and multi-touch attribution each tell a different part of the story.
Content-influenced retention: Do customers who engage with your content retain at a higher rate? This is measurable if you can join product usage data with content engagement data.
Time to rank: How long does it take for new content to reach page one for its target keyword? This benchmarks your SEO efficiency and helps you plan realistic timelines.
Metrics to de-emphasize:
Pageviews in isolation. High pageviews with zero conversions indicates a traffic-audience mismatch.
Social shares in isolation. Shares without traffic or conversions are vanity.
Number of pieces published. Volume without quality or strategic alignment is noise.
Set up a monthly content review. Pull metrics for every piece published in the past 30 days. Identify what is working and why. Identify what is underperforming and decide whether to improve it, redirect it, or retire it. A content strategy is not a set-and-forget plan. It responds to data.
Common Content Strategy Mistakes
Publishing without a point of view: Generic content that anyone could have written does not build authority or audience. Every piece should reflect a perspective that is distinct from the default.
Ignoring the existing archive: Most companies have years of published content that nobody is maintaining. Before planning new content, audit what exists. Update what is salvageable. Redirect what is not. A well-maintained existing archive can double traffic faster than publishing new content.
Planning in isolation from SEO: Content that has no keyword strategy is a gamble on social distribution. Build keyword research into the planning process, not as a final check before publishing.
Underfunding distribution: A dollar spent creating content that nobody sees is a dollar wasted. A rough rule: spend as much time distributing content as creating it.
Measuring too early: SEO-driven content takes three to twelve months to show results depending on domain authority, competition, and publishing cadence. Abandoning a content strategy after 60 days because traffic has not spiked is like canceling a garden after planting seeds because nothing has grown yet.
No internal editorial review: Content that goes from writer to publish without editorial review has inconsistent quality and voice. Even a lightweight review process improves output significantly.
What to Ask the User Before Building a Strategy
When this skill is triggered, ask for:
- The product and the primary audience (who they are and what they care about)
- The business goal for content (pipeline, SEO, retention, brand)
- Current publishing capacity and team size
- Whether a content archive exists and roughly what it contains
- Any existing keyword research, analytics data, or audience research
- The primary distribution channels already in use
- Whether you need a full strategy document, a topic cluster map, an editorial calendar, or all three
Deliver the outputs as structured documents the user can bring directly into a project management tool or content calendar.