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The SEO Prompt Pack

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260 prompts

#001Organic Growth Strategy Operating System

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGFounders, marketers, SEO leads, content teams, and operators who need a clear organic growth plan instead of disconnected SEO tasks.

Build a complete SEO operating system that connects goals, search opportunities, content priorities, technical needs, execution rhythm, and business outcomes.

You are an SEO strategy architect. Build a complete organic growth operating system for my business. Business context: Business type: [BUSINESS TYPE] Website or product: [WEBSITE / PRODUCT] Target customers: [CUSTOMERS] Main offers: [OFFERS] Current traffic level: [TRAFFIC] Current conversions: [CONVERSIONS] Main markets or regions: [MARKETS] Current SEO work done: [CURRENT SEO] Main competitors: [COMPETITORS] Business goals: [GOALS] Timeline: [TIMELINE] Team or resources: [RESOURCES] Budget: [BUDGET] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Build the system: 1. Organic growth role Define what SEO should do for the business: - generate demand - capture existing demand - educate buyers - support sales - reduce paid acquisition dependency - improve conversion quality - build authority - protect brand visibility Explain which roles matter most for my context. 2. SEO strategy pillars Create 5 to 7 strategic pillars. For each pillar include: - objective - why it matters - target audience - search demand type - pages or assets needed - technical requirements - success metrics - execution owner - risk 3. Opportunity map Map opportunities across: - high-intent keywords - comparison searches - problem-aware searches - educational searches - brand searches - alternative searches - use-case searches - industry searches - local or regional searches, if relevant 4. Execution system Create: - monthly SEO priorities - weekly execution rhythm - content production cadence - technical review cadence - link or authority-building cadence - reporting cadence - decision checkpoints 5. First 90 days Create a 90-day roadmap with: - quick wins - foundational fixes - strategic pages - content briefs - experiments - measurement setup - review points Rules: - Do not create a generic SEO checklist. - Do not separate SEO tasks from business outcomes. - Do not recommend work that exceeds the available resources. - The final plan should make it clear what to do first, why it matters, and how success will be measured. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#002SEO-to-Business Outcome Alignment Map

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGTeams that need SEO to support revenue, pipeline, leads, signups, demos, purchases, retention, or brand authority.

Translate business goals into SEO goals, search priorities, landing pages, content assets, KPIs, and execution decisions.

Act as a business-first SEO strategist. Help me align organic search work with business outcomes instead of vanity metrics. Business goal: [BUSINESS GOAL] Context: Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Product or service: [PRODUCT / SERVICE] Revenue model: [REVENUE MODEL] Average order value or deal size: [AOV / DEAL SIZE] Sales cycle: [SALES CYCLE] Current acquisition channels: [CHANNELS] Current SEO performance: [SEO PERFORMANCE] Most valuable customer actions: [ACTIONS] Current website pages: [PAGES] Main bottleneck: [BOTTLENECK] Create the alignment map: A. Business outcome breakdown Break the business goal into measurable outcomes: - traffic quality - lead volume - conversion rate - pipeline value - purchase intent - signup intent - customer education - brand trust - sales enablement B. Search role definition For each outcome define whether SEO should: - capture existing demand - create awareness - compare solutions - answer objections - support product discovery - support sales conversations - reduce churn questions - improve trust C. Page and asset mapping Map outcomes to assets: - homepage - product pages - service pages - category pages - landing pages - comparison pages - use-case pages - guides - tools - templates - case studies - FAQs D. KPI ladder Create a KPI ladder: - input metrics - output metrics - conversion metrics - business metrics - leading indicators - lagging indicators Explain what not to over-focus on. E. Priority decisions Recommend: - what SEO work to do first - what to postpone - what to stop doing - what to measure weekly - what to measure monthly - what leadership should care about Rules: - Do not optimize for traffic alone. - Do not recommend keywords without explaining business value. - Do not use SEO metrics that cannot influence decisions. - The output should make SEO feel like a business growth system. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#003Search Opportunity Portfolio Builder

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGSEO planning, content roadmaps, growth teams, founders, agencies, and teams deciding where organic effort should go next.

Build a balanced SEO opportunity portfolio across quick wins, high-intent pages, authority content, technical improvements, experiments, and long-term growth bets.

You are an organic growth portfolio manager. Build a portfolio of SEO opportunities and balance them by impact, effort, risk, and time horizon. Inputs: Website: [WEBSITE] Business model: [BUSINESS MODEL] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Current SEO assets: [ASSETS] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] Known keywords: [KEYWORDS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Content team capacity: [CAPACITY] Technical capacity: [TECH CAPACITY] Timeline: [TIMELINE] Risk tolerance: [RISK TOLERANCE] Build the portfolio: PORTFOLIO BUCKET 1 — Quick wins Find opportunities that can improve results fast: - pages already ranking - pages with weak titles - pages with poor internal links - pages close to page one - pages with conversion gaps - pages with outdated content PORTFOLIO BUCKET 2 — Revenue intent Find pages that target: - pricing intent - comparison intent - solution intent - category intent - purchase intent - demo or signup intent PORTFOLIO BUCKET 3 — Authority building Find content themes that build trust and topical depth. PORTFOLIO BUCKET 4 — Technical leverage Find technical improvements that unlock crawlability, indexation, speed, structure, or internal linking. PORTFOLIO BUCKET 5 — Strategic bets Identify longer-term bets such as: - topic clusters - product-led SEO - tools - templates - data studies - programmatic pages - evergreen guides For each opportunity include: - title - type - target audience - search intent - business value - expected impact - effort - time to impact - dependencies - risk - priority score - next action Then create: - conservative portfolio - balanced portfolio - aggressive portfolio - recommended portfolio for my context Rules: - Do not fill the portfolio with only blog posts. - Do not ignore technical and conversion opportunities. - Do not prioritize high-volume keywords without business value. - The final portfolio should balance fast movement and durable organic growth. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#004SEO Priority Decision Matrix

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGChoosing between content, technical work, page updates, keyword clusters, link building, conversion improvements, and experiments.

Rank SEO initiatives using a structured decision matrix based on business impact, search demand, conversion intent, difficulty, resources, confidence, and urgency.

Act as an SEO prioritization analyst. Help me rank SEO opportunities and decide what should be done first. SEO opportunities: [PASTE OPPORTUNITIES] Context: Business goal: [GOAL] Target customer: [CUSTOMER] Available resources: [RESOURCES] Timeline: [TIMELINE] Current traffic: [TRAFFIC] Current authority: [AUTHORITY] Technical limitations: [LIMITATIONS] Content capacity: [CAPACITY] Conversion goals: [CONVERSIONS] Create a priority matrix: Scoring criteria: 1. Business value 2. Search demand 3. Intent strength 4. Conversion potential 5. Competitive difficulty 6. Content effort 7. Technical effort 8. Time to impact 9. Strategic fit 10. Confidence 11. Risk 12. Dependency complexity For each opportunity provide: - opportunity name - target intent - recommended page type - score for each criterion - total priority score - reasoning - assumptions - dependency - first action - decision: do now / schedule / test / delay / reject Then create: A. Top 5 immediate priorities Explain why each deserves attention now. B. Top 5 deferred opportunities Explain what must change before they become worth doing. C. Low-value distractions Identify opportunities that look attractive but should not be prioritized. D. Execution sequence Create a logical order based on dependencies. Rules: - Do not treat search volume as the only priority signal. - Do not choose projects that the team cannot execute. - Do not hide uncertainty. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where data is missing. - The final matrix should make prioritization defendable. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#005Topical Authority Strategy Map

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGBlogs, SaaS sites, service businesses, media sites, niche websites, and brands trying to become known for specific topics in search.

Create a topical authority plan that defines core themes, supporting clusters, internal links, content depth, authority signals, and sequencing.

You are a topical authority strategist. Build a search authority map that helps my website become trusted for a defined topic area. Core topic: [CORE TOPIC] Context: Business: [BUSINESS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Current content: [CURRENT CONTENT] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Topics we already cover: [TOPICS] Topics we avoid: [AVOID] Expertise or unique data: [EXPERTISE / DATA] Conversion goals: [GOALS] Build the authority map: 1. Topic territory Define: - primary topic - adjacent topics - supporting topics - customer problems - use cases - objections - decision questions - vocabulary and terms 2. Cluster architecture Create clusters with: - pillar page - supporting articles - comparison pages - use-case pages - glossary pages - templates or tools - FAQs - case studies - data-backed assets 3. Depth requirements For each cluster define: - beginner content - intermediate content - advanced content - strategic content - tactical content - conversion-focused content - expert proof needed 4. Internal linking plan Design links between: - pillar to support pages - support pages to pillar - related clusters - conversion pages - glossary pages - comparison pages - case studies - tools or templates 5. Publishing sequence Create: - first 10 pages - next 20 pages - update plan for existing pages - link-building or authority assets - measurement plan Rules: - Do not create topic clusters that are disconnected from the offer. - Do not publish many shallow pages instead of building useful depth. - Do not ignore internal linking. - The output should show how topical authority turns into organic growth. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#006Search Intent and Buyer Journey Strategy

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGSaaS, e-commerce, services, B2B, creator businesses, marketplaces, and any business where searchers move from problem to solution to decision.

Map search intent across the buyer journey and define which pages, messages, CTAs, and content assets should exist at each stage.

Act as a search intent journey strategist. Map how my target audience searches before they become customers. Target customer: [TARGET CUSTOMER] Offer: [OFFER] Context: Customer problems: [PROBLEMS] Customer awareness level: [AWARENESS] Buying triggers: [TRIGGERS] Objections: [OBJECTIONS] Alternatives: [ALTERNATIVES] Decision criteria: [CRITERIA] Current website pages: [PAGES] Conversion action: [CONVERSION] Sales cycle: [SALES CYCLE] Build the journey: STAGE 1 — Unaware or symptom-aware Identify: - search questions - pain language - educational content needed - trust signals - CTA style - pages to create STAGE 2 — Problem-aware Identify: - comparison of approaches - guides - frameworks - mistake content - diagnostic content - CTA style STAGE 3 — Solution-aware Identify: - solution keywords - category pages - use-case pages - feature pages - examples - CTA style STAGE 4 — Product-aware Identify: - brand queries - product pages - pricing pages - case studies - demos - objection handlers - CTA style STAGE 5 — Decision-ready Identify: - alternative pages - comparison pages - reviews - implementation content - ROI content - sales enablement content - CTA style For each stage provide: - search intent - keyword themes - page types - content angle - trust proof - internal links - conversion goal - measurement metric Rules: - Do not use the same CTA for every stage. - Do not push hard sales copy at purely educational intent. - Do not create awareness content without a path to conversion. - The final journey should connect search behavior to revenue progression. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#007SEO Channel Fit Diagnostic

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGFounders, startups, new websites, agencies, growth teams, and businesses deciding how much to invest in SEO.

Determine where SEO is a strong, weak, or secondary growth channel based on demand, competition, market behavior, content economics, and conversion potential.

You are a growth channel strategist. Diagnose whether SEO is a strong channel for my business and how it should be used. Business: [BUSINESS] Context: Product or service: [PRODUCT / SERVICE] Target market: [MARKET] Customer search behavior: [SEARCH BEHAVIOR] Known keywords: [KEYWORDS] Competitors in search: [COMPETITORS] Sales cycle: [SALES CYCLE] Average deal size or order value: [VALUE] Content production capacity: [CAPACITY] Technical capacity: [TECH CAPACITY] Current brand awareness: [BRAND] Current acquisition channels: [CHANNELS] Timeline expectations: [TIMELINE] Budget: [BUDGET] Diagnose SEO fit: 1. Demand fit Evaluate: - do people search for the problem? - do people search for the solution? - do people search for alternatives? - do people search before buying? - does search language match the offer? 2. Competition fit Evaluate: - who owns the SERPs - how hard it may be to compete - whether competitors have content depth - whether there are underserved intents - whether authority gaps exist 3. Economics fit Evaluate: - likely value of organic traffic - conversion potential - content cost - technical cost - time to impact - durability of traffic - paid search replacement potential 4. Execution fit Evaluate: - internal expertise - content quality potential - technical constraints - approval speed - analytics readiness - consistency risk 5. Strategic recommendation Classify SEO as: - primary growth channel - secondary support channel - long-term brand channel - conversion support channel - not a priority right now Then recommend: - investment level - first 90-day plan - what not to do - trigger for increasing investment - trigger for reducing investment Rules: - Do not assume SEO is always the answer. - Do not ignore the time horizon. - Do not recommend heavy SEO investment if demand or economics are weak. - The output should help me decide how seriously to prioritize organic search. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#00890-Day SEO Execution Roadmap

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGSEO teams, marketing teams, agencies, founders, consultants, and content teams that need a practical execution calendar.

Turn SEO strategy into a clear 90-day execution plan with weekly priorities, deliverables, owners, milestones, and review checkpoints.

Act as an SEO execution planner. Create a realistic 90-day roadmap for organic growth. Context: Business: [BUSINESS] Website: [WEBSITE] SEO goal: [GOAL] Current SEO status: [STATUS] Current pages: [PAGES] Known technical issues: [TECH ISSUES] Content opportunities: [CONTENT OPPORTUNITIES] Keyword targets: [KEYWORDS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Team capacity: [CAPACITY] Budget: [BUDGET] Tools available: [TOOLS] Approval process: [APPROVAL PROCESS] Create the roadmap: MONTH 1 — Foundation and quick wins Include: - analytics and tracking checks - technical checks - indexation review - page update priorities - internal linking improvements - content refreshes - conversion fixes - first reporting baseline MONTH 2 — Strategic content and architecture Include: - topic cluster work - new page briefs - content production - information architecture updates - internal link system - authority asset planning - technical cleanup continuation MONTH 3 — Expansion and optimization Include: - publishing sequence - performance review - SERP refinement - content improvement - experiment review - conversion improvements - next-quarter strategy For every week include: - primary objective - deliverables - owner - estimated effort - dependencies - success signal - risk - review checkpoint Then add: - minimum viable version - aggressive version - contingency plan if capacity drops - reporting cadence - next 90-day planning questions Rules: - Do not overpack the roadmap. - Do not schedule content before strategy and briefs are clear. - Do not ignore measurement setup. - The roadmap should be executable by the resources available. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#009SEO Experiment Design System

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGGrowth teams, SEO teams, content teams, CRO teams, and marketers improving organic performance through controlled tests.

Create a structured system for running SEO experiments, defining hypotheses, choosing pages, measuring impact, avoiding false conclusions, and scaling winners.

You are an SEO experimentation strategist. Build an experiment system for improving organic performance. Experiment area: [EXPERIMENT AREA] Context: Website type: [WEBSITE TYPE] Current traffic: [TRAFFIC] Target pages: [PAGES] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] Current conversion goals: [CONVERSIONS] Known problems: [PROBLEMS] Available tools: [TOOLS] Team capacity: [CAPACITY] Risk tolerance: [RISK] Measurement window: [WINDOW] Design the experiment system: A. Experiment backlog Generate experiment ideas across: - title tags - meta descriptions - content structure - search intent match - internal links - schema markup - FAQ sections - content depth - page speed - UX and conversion - content freshness - comparison sections - topical links B. Hypothesis format For each experiment write: - if we change [X] - for [page or page group] - then [SEO metric] should improve - because [reason] - measured by [metric] - within [time window] C. Experiment scoring Score each experiment by: - impact potential - confidence - effort - risk - reversibility - learning value - business value D. Test plan For top experiments include: - pages included - changes to make - baseline data - implementation steps - control or comparison approach - measurement window - success criteria - failure criteria E. Scaling rules Define: - when to scale - when to revert - when to retest - when to leave unchanged - how to document learning Rules: - Do not call every SEO change an experiment if it cannot be measured. - Do not test too many variables at once. - Do not declare success too early. - The system should create learning, not random optimization. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#010Organic Growth Budget and Resource Planner

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGFounders, marketing leaders, agencies, SEO managers, and teams deciding how to allocate time and money for organic growth.

Plan SEO investment across content, technical work, tools, freelancers, agencies, internal labor, design, development, and authority-building.

Act as an SEO budget and resource planner. Help me allocate resources for organic growth in a way that matches goals, capacity, and expected return. Budget context: Monthly budget: [MONTHLY BUDGET] Internal team: [TEAM] Available hours: [HOURS] Business goal: [GOAL] Website size: [WEBSITE SIZE] Current SEO maturity: [MATURITY] Content needs: [CONTENT NEEDS] Technical needs: [TECH NEEDS] Authority or link needs: [AUTHORITY NEEDS] Tools currently used: [TOOLS] Freelancers or agencies: [EXTERNAL SUPPORT] Timeline: [TIMELINE] Plan resource allocation: 1. Work categories Break SEO work into: - strategy - keyword research - content briefs - writing - editing - design - technical SEO - development - analytics - reporting - internal linking - content refreshes - authority building - project management 2. Budget allocation Recommend percentage and amount for each category. For each include: - why it deserves budget - expected output - risk if underfunded - when to increase spend - when to decrease spend 3. Team allocation Define who should own: - strategy - research - briefs - writing - publishing - technical fixes - reporting - approvals - QA 4. Build / buy / outsource decisions For each function recommend: - do internally - hire freelancer - hire agency - use tool - delay - avoid Explain tradeoffs. 5. ROI expectations Create realistic expectations for: - first 30 days - first 90 days - first 6 months - first 12 months Rules: - Do not spend on tools before the workflow is clear. - Do not underbudget editing, publishing, and technical support. - Do not promise instant SEO returns. - The plan should show how money and time turn into organic growth assets. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#011SERP Landscape Strategy Brief

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGCreating SEO briefs, competing in difficult SERPs, refreshing pages, finding differentiation, and deciding whether a keyword is worth targeting.

Analyze a search results landscape and define how to differentiate pages by intent, format, angle, proof, depth, and user experience.

You are a SERP strategy analyst. Build a strategic brief for winning or differentiating in this search results landscape. Target keyword or query: [KEYWORD] SERP observations: [PASTE SERP NOTES / TOP RESULTS / PAGE TYPES] Context: Business: [BUSINESS] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Current page, if any: [CURRENT PAGE] Competitors ranking: [COMPETITORS] Search intent hypothesis: [INTENT] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Content resources: [RESOURCES] Create the SERP brief: A. SERP pattern diagnosis Identify: - dominant page types - content formats - search intent signals - common angles - common sections - trust signals - media types - freshness expectations - commercial intensity B. Differentiation gap Find what the SERP lacks: - clearer explanation - better examples - stronger data - better UX - original insight - practical tools - comparison table - expert perspective - templates - visual structure - stronger proof C. Page strategy Recommend: - page type - title angle - primary promise - outline - sections to include - sections to avoid - proof needed - CTA strategy - internal links D. Winning conditions Define what must be true to compete: - content quality - topical authority - backlinks or mentions - technical performance - brand trust - search intent match - freshness E. Target decision Classify keyword as: - target now - target later - support page only - not worth targeting - needs different angle Rules: - Do not copy the SERP. - Do not create a page that only repeats what already ranks. - Do not ignore whether the business can actually satisfy the intent. - The strategy should explain how to be more useful, not just longer. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#012Product-Led SEO Growth Plan

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGSaaS, marketplaces, directories, apps, AI tools, templates, calculators, databases, creator tools, and product-led growth teams.

Build an SEO strategy where product features, templates, tools, data, examples, integrations, or user-generated pages create scalable organic growth.

Act as a product-led SEO strategist. Design an organic growth plan where the product itself creates searchable pages or assets. Product: [PRODUCT] Context: Target users: [USERS] Product features: [FEATURES] Searchable use cases: [USE CASES] Data available: [DATA] Templates or examples available: [TEMPLATES / EXAMPLES] Current website structure: [STRUCTURE] Technical resources: [TECH RESOURCES] Content resources: [CONTENT RESOURCES] Conversion goal: [CONVERSION] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Risks: [RISKS] Design the product-led SEO plan: 1. Searchable asset inventory Identify assets the product can generate or support: - templates - examples - tools - calculators - directories - integrations pages - use-case pages - comparison pages - data pages - glossary pages - industry pages - location pages, if relevant 2. Page pattern design For each scalable page type define: - target intent - page purpose - required fields - unique content requirements - user value - conversion path - internal links - indexation rule - quality threshold 3. Programmatic SEO safety Define rules for: - avoiding thin pages - avoiding duplicate pages - ensuring unique value - handling noindex decisions - canonical rules - content quality checks - crawl management - template quality 4. Conversion strategy Create CTA logic for: - free users - paid users - trial signup - template download - demo request - tool usage - email capture 5. Roadmap Create: - first page pattern to launch - minimum viable template - quality checklist - technical requirements - launch sequence - measurement plan - scaling decision rules Rules: - Do not recommend programmatic pages without unique value. - Do not create pages only for search engines. - Do not ignore indexation and quality risks. - The plan should make organic search part of the product growth loop. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#013SEO Information Architecture Planner

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGNew websites, website redesigns, content hubs, SaaS sites, e-commerce sites, service businesses, and SEO architecture projects.

Design a search-friendly website structure that connects pages, categories, topic clusters, navigation, internal links, and conversion paths.

You are an SEO information architecture planner. Design a website structure that helps users and search engines understand the site. Website context: Business: [BUSINESS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offers: [OFFERS] Current website structure: [CURRENT STRUCTURE] Important pages: [IMPORTANT PAGES] Content library: [CONTENT] Target topics: [TOPICS] Target conversions: [CONVERSIONS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Technical constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Build the architecture: A. Site structure Create a recommended structure with: - homepage - main category pages - product or service pages - use-case pages - industry pages - comparison pages - resource hub - blog or knowledge center - tools or templates - case studies - support or FAQ pages B. URL strategy Recommend URL patterns for: - core pages - topic clusters - articles - tools - templates - comparisons - categories - archives C. Internal linking strategy Define links from: - homepage - navigation - category pages - blog posts - guides - comparison pages - product pages - case studies - footer - related content blocks D. Crawl and index rules Classify pages as: - index - noindex - canonicalize - merge - redirect - archive - remove E. Migration or build plan Create: - pages to create - pages to merge - pages to rename - redirects needed - internal links to add - measurement checks Rules: - Do not design navigation only around company structure. - Do not create duplicate pages for similar intent. - Do not bury important conversion pages. - The architecture should make both discovery and conversion easier. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#014SEO Execution Cadence and Team Workflow

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGSEO teams, content teams, agencies, freelancers, in-house marketers, and founders managing organic growth execution.

Create a repeatable SEO workflow with planning, research, briefs, writing, editing, publishing, technical QA, internal linking, reporting, and review cycles.

Act as an SEO operations designer. Build an execution cadence that turns SEO strategy into consistent weekly output. Team context: Team members: [TEAM] Roles: [ROLES] Content capacity: [CONTENT CAPACITY] Technical capacity: [TECH CAPACITY] Approval process: [APPROVAL] Publishing tools: [TOOLS] Current workflow: [CURRENT WORKFLOW] Current bottlenecks: [BOTTLENECKS] SEO goals: [GOALS] Reporting needs: [REPORTING] Design the operating cadence: WEEKLY FLOW Create a weekly rhythm for: - opportunity review - keyword research - brief creation - writing - editing - SEO QA - publishing - internal linking - performance review - technical checks MONTHLY FLOW Create a monthly rhythm for: - strategy review - content refresh planning - technical audit - experiment review - competitor review - report creation - roadmap adjustment WORKFLOW STAGES For each stage define: - owner - input required - output expected - checklist - approval gate - tool location - completion definition BOTTLENECK SYSTEM Identify common bottlenecks: - slow briefs - weak drafts - delayed approvals - technical blockers - unclear ownership - missing data - publishing delays Create fixes for each. QUALITY SYSTEM Create QA checklists for: - search intent - on-page SEO - internal links - factual accuracy - formatting - CTA - technical basics - conversion path Rules: - Do not create a cadence that exceeds team capacity. - Do not skip editing and QA. - Do not let SEO strategy live separately from production. - The workflow should create predictable output and clear accountability. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#015Organic Growth KPI Architecture

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGSEO reporting, leadership dashboards, growth teams, agencies, founders, and teams that need trustworthy organic performance measurement.

Build a measurement system for SEO that connects input work, search visibility, traffic quality, engagement, conversions, revenue, and strategic decisions.

You are an SEO measurement architect. Build a KPI system that shows whether organic growth work is actually working. Measurement context: Business model: [BUSINESS MODEL] SEO goals: [SEO GOALS] Conversion actions: [CONVERSIONS] Current analytics tools: [TOOLS] Current reports: [REPORTS] Current metrics tracked: [METRICS] Leadership questions: [QUESTIONS] Attribution limits: [LIMITS] Reporting frequency: [FREQUENCY] Design the KPI architecture: 1. KPI layers Create metrics for: - inputs - production quality - technical health - indexation - visibility - rankings - organic sessions - engagement - conversions - revenue or pipeline - assisted conversions - brand growth - content decay 2. Metric purpose For each metric explain: - what it measures - why it matters - what decision it supports - how often to review it - what a good trend looks like - what misleading interpretation to avoid 3. Dashboard structure Create dashboard sections: - executive summary - organic traffic quality - conversion performance - page-level winners - page-level losers - technical health - content production - opportunity pipeline - experiments - next actions 4. Reporting cadence Define: - weekly report - monthly report - quarterly review - experiment report - alert report 5. Decision rules Create rules for: - when to refresh content - when to build new content - when to investigate traffic drops - when to scale a cluster - when to change strategy - when to stop an initiative Rules: - Do not report metrics that do not influence decisions. - Do not celebrate traffic if conversion quality is poor. - Do not hide attribution uncertainty. - The KPI system should help leaders trust the SEO strategy. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#016Search Demand to Revenue Map

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGB2B SEO, SaaS SEO, service businesses, e-commerce, marketplaces, agencies, and teams prioritizing SEO by revenue impact.

Connect search demand to revenue potential by mapping keywords, intents, pages, conversion paths, funnel stages, and commercial value.

Act as a revenue-focused SEO strategist. Map search demand to commercial opportunity. Inputs: Keyword or topic list: [PASTE KEYWORDS / TOPICS] Business context: Offer: [OFFER] Target customer: [CUSTOMER] Revenue model: [REVENUE MODEL] Average value: [AOV / DEAL SIZE / LTV] Conversion actions: [CONVERSIONS] Sales cycle: [SALES CYCLE] Current pages: [PAGES] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Create the revenue map: A. Intent classification Classify each keyword or topic as: - informational - problem-aware - solution-aware - commercial investigation - transactional - navigational - comparison - alternative - post-purchase support B. Commercial value For each keyword or topic estimate: - purchase proximity - customer fit - offer relevance - conversion potential - deal value relevance - sales enablement value - retention value - strategic value C. Page mapping Assign: - existing page to improve - new page to create - page type - CTA - internal links - proof needed - funnel stage D. Revenue path Map the path from search to revenue: - query - page - user need - CTA - conversion - sales or purchase step - revenue outcome - follow-up content E. Priority recommendation Create: - highest revenue-intent targets - high-value education targets - sales-support targets - low-priority traffic traps - content sequence Rules: - Do not assume high volume equals high value. - Do not ignore low-volume high-intent searches. - Do not create revenue estimates without labeling assumptions. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where data is missing. - The map should help prioritize SEO by business impact. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#017Competitive SEO Gap Strategy

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGCompetitive analysis, SEO planning, content strategy, new market entry, category pages, SaaS SEO, and agency strategy work.

Identify where competitors are winning, where they are vulnerable, and where you can build a differentiated organic growth strategy.

You are a competitive SEO strategist. Analyze competitor search presence and create a strategy to find gaps, avoid copycat work, and build organic advantage. Competitors: [COMPETITORS] My business: [MY BUSINESS] Context: Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Known competitor keywords: [KEYWORDS] Competitor pages: [PAGES] My current pages: [MY PAGES] Strengths I have: [STRENGTHS] Weaknesses I have: [WEAKNESSES] Resources: [RESOURCES] Timeline: [TIMELINE] Run the competitive strategy: 1. Competitor visibility map For each competitor identify: - topics they dominate - page types they use - content depth - commercial pages - comparison pages - content clusters - technical strengths - authority signals - weak pages 2. Gap categories Find gaps across: - missing topics - weak intent match - outdated content - poor UX - thin comparison pages - weak product education - weak examples - lack of data - poor internal linking - underserved audience segments 3. Avoid-copycat filter Identify competitor tactics I should not copy because: - they do not fit my offer - they require more authority - they target low-value traffic - they are outdated - they are too resource-heavy - they do not match my audience 4. Differentiation strategy Create a strategy using: - unique expertise - original data - better tools or templates - sharper positioning - stronger examples - better buyer journey coverage - clearer conversion path 5. Attack plan Create: - first 5 competitor gaps to attack - pages to create - pages to improve - internal links to build - proof assets needed - timeline - risk Rules: - Do not recommend copying competitor content. - Do not chase every keyword competitors rank for. - Do not ignore whether we can realistically compete. - The strategy should show where we can win differently. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#018Technical and Content SEO Balance Planner

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGTeams with limited resources, websites with mixed SEO problems, founders deciding what to fix first, and agencies creating practical roadmaps.

Decide how much focus should go to technical SEO, content creation, content refreshes, internal linking, authority building, and conversion optimization.

Act as a technical-content SEO balance strategist. Help me decide the right mix of SEO work for the next planning period. Website context: Website type: [WEBSITE TYPE] Website size: [SIZE] Current traffic: [TRAFFIC] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] Technical issues: [TECH ISSUES] Content issues: [CONTENT ISSUES] Conversion issues: [CONVERSION ISSUES] Authority issues: [AUTHORITY ISSUES] Internal linking issues: [LINKING ISSUES] Team resources: [RESOURCES] Timeline: [TIMELINE] Business goal: [GOAL] Create the balance plan: A. Issue diagnosis Evaluate: - crawlability - indexation - site structure - page speed - internal linking - content quality - content gaps - search intent match - content freshness - authority signals - conversion path B. Work allocation Recommend allocation across: - technical fixes - new content - content refreshes - internal linking - information architecture - authority building - conversion improvements - analytics and reporting Use percentages and explain why. C. Dependency logic Identify what must happen before other work: - technical foundation before scaling content - architecture before cluster building - measurement before experimentation - page refresh before link building - conversion fixes before traffic scaling D. Execution roadmap Create: - first 2 weeks - first 30 days - first 60 days - first 90 days - what to postpone E. Risk analysis Identify: - risk of over-focusing on content - risk of over-focusing on technical fixes - risk of ignoring authority - risk of ignoring conversion - risk of doing everything halfway Rules: - Do not prescribe the same SEO mix for every site. - Do not create content at scale if the site cannot support it. - Do not over-invest in technical details that do not affect outcomes. - The plan should match the actual bottleneck. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#019SEO Risk, Dependencies and Constraint Map

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGSEO planning, migrations, redesigns, new content programs, agency work, leadership planning, and complex websites.

Identify SEO risks, dependencies, blockers, approval issues, technical limits, content constraints, stakeholder risks, and measurement gaps before execution starts.

You are an SEO risk and dependency analyst. Map what could slow down, weaken, or break the organic growth plan. Planned SEO work: [PLANNED WORK] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business goal: [GOAL] Team: [TEAM] Technical resources: [TECH RESOURCES] Content resources: [CONTENT RESOURCES] Approval process: [APPROVAL] CMS or platform: [CMS] Analytics setup: [ANALYTICS] Known constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Timeline: [TIMELINE] Stakeholders: [STAKEHOLDERS] Build the risk map: 1. Risk categories Identify risks across: - technical SEO - content production - content quality - approvals - development capacity - site migrations - indexation - analytics - stakeholder alignment - legal or compliance review - brand restrictions - resource constraints - competitor response - algorithm volatility - conversion gaps 2. Dependency map For each initiative define: - dependency - owner - deadline - blocker risk - impact if delayed - backup plan - escalation path 3. Risk scoring Score each risk by: - likelihood - impact - detectability - controllability - urgency Classify as: - critical - high - medium - low 4. Mitigation plan For each major risk create: - prevention action - early warning signal - response plan - owner - review cadence 5. Execution guardrails Create rules for: - launch readiness - content approval - technical QA - redirect checks - tracking checks - rollback decisions - stakeholder communication Rules: - Do not assume SEO execution is only content production. - Do not ignore approvals and technical dependencies. - Do not wait for risks to become traffic losses. - The output should make the strategy safer and easier to execute. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#020Full SEO Strategy and Organic Growth Planning Audit

SEO STRATEGY & ORGANIC GROWTH PLANNINGFull SEO resets, new organic growth programs, leadership strategy, agency audits, founders, SEO managers, and marketing teams building a durable search channel.

Audit and redesign a complete SEO strategy across business alignment, search demand, competitors, content, technical foundations, execution, reporting, budget, risks, and growth roadmap.

Act as an independent SEO strategy and organic growth planning auditor. Review my organic search situation and create a complete strategy that connects search opportunities to business outcomes. Full context: Business: [BUSINESS] Website: [WEBSITE] Products or services: [PRODUCTS / SERVICES] Target customers: [CUSTOMERS] Markets or regions: [MARKETS] Business model: [BUSINESS MODEL] Revenue goals: [REVENUE GOALS] Current organic traffic: [TRAFFIC] Current conversions: [CONVERSIONS] Current SEO metrics: [METRICS] Current keyword targets: [KEYWORDS] Current content library: [CONTENT] Current technical issues: [TECH ISSUES] Current website structure: [STRUCTURE] Current competitors: [COMPETITORS] Current backlinks or authority: [AUTHORITY] Current analytics tools: [TOOLS] Current team and budget: [TEAM / BUDGET] Current SEO workflow: [WORKFLOW] Main constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Timeline: [TIMELINE] What I want SEO to achieve: [DESIRED OUTCOME] Audit across 30 dimensions: 1. Business alignment 2. Customer-search fit 3. Search demand quality 4. Keyword opportunity quality 5. Buyer journey coverage 6. High-intent page coverage 7. Topic cluster depth 8. Content quality 9. Content freshness 10. On-page optimization 11. Internal linking 12. Website architecture 13. Technical SEO foundation 14. Indexation quality 15. Crawl efficiency 16. Page experience 17. Conversion path 18. SERP differentiation 19. Competitive positioning 20. Authority and trust signals 21. Product-led SEO potential 22. Local or regional SEO potential, if relevant 23. Analytics and tracking 24. Reporting quality 25. Experimentation system 26. Budget allocation 27. Team workflow 28. Execution cadence 29. Risk and dependency management 30. Overall organic growth readiness For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from my context - risk if ignored - recommended fix - priority level - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Hard truth Explain the biggest reason organic growth is not reaching its potential. B. Strategic direction Define: - SEO role in the business - primary organic growth goal - ideal audience segment - highest-value search intent - strongest topic territory - biggest opportunity - biggest constraint C. Organic growth strategy Create: - search opportunity map - buyer journey keyword map - page type strategy - content cluster strategy - technical SEO strategy - internal linking strategy - conversion strategy - authority strategy - product-led SEO opportunities - measurement system D. Execution roadmap Create: - first 30 days - first 60 days - first 90 days - first 6 months - first 12 months For each period include: - priorities - deliverables - owners - dependencies - success metrics - risks E. Resource plan Recommend: - budget allocation - team roles - tools needed - external help needed - work to avoid - work to delay - work to simplify F. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - highest-leverage SEO opportunity - first technical fix - first content refresh - first new page to create - first internal linking action - first measurement improvement - biggest risk - first 7-day action plan - one operating principle for the whole SEO strategy Rules: - Do not create a generic audit. - Do not recommend SEO work that is disconnected from revenue or strategic outcomes. - Do not hide uncertainty; use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where context is missing. - Do not prioritize traffic volume over business value. - The final strategy should be specific, sequenced, measurable, and realistic.

#021Seed Keyword Universe Builder

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISStarting keyword research from zero, planning a new SEO project, defining searchable topics, and avoiding narrow keyword lists.

Turn a business, offer, audience, and market into a complete seed keyword universe for deeper SEO research.

You are an SEO keyword strategist. Build a complete seed keyword universe for my business so I can expand it into clusters, pages, and priorities. Business context: Business type: [BUSINESS TYPE] Website or product: [WEBSITE / PRODUCT] Main offer: [OFFER] Target customers: [CUSTOMERS] Industries or niches: [INDUSTRIES] Problems customers have: [PROBLEMS] Outcomes customers want: [OUTCOMES] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Regions or languages: [REGIONS / LANGUAGES] Terms customers already use: [CUSTOMER LANGUAGE] Terms to avoid: [AVOID] Current keyword list, if any: [KEYWORDS] Build the seed universe: 1. Core seed categories Generate keyword seeds across: - product terms - service terms - category terms - problem terms - outcome terms - use-case terms - audience terms - industry terms - feature terms - tool terms - comparison terms - alternative terms - pricing terms - location terms, if relevant - beginner education terms - advanced education terms 2. Buyer language expansion For each category generate variations based on: - formal language - casual language - beginner language - expert language - pain-based language - goal-based language - decision-stage language - objection-based language 3. Modifier system Create modifiers for: - best - top - cheap - affordable - enterprise - free - template - software - tool - agency - service - guide - checklist - examples - comparison - alternatives - near me, if relevant - for [audience] - for [industry] 4. Exclusion filter Identify keywords that should be avoided because they are: - irrelevant - too broad - wrong audience - low commercial value - misleading - support-only - competitor-owned with weak opportunity - outside the offer 5. Next-step research plan Create: - keywords to validate first - categories to expand with tools - competitor pages to inspect - SERP types to analyze - clusters likely worth building - assumptions to verify Rules: - Do not stop at obvious keywords. - Do not include keywords that attract the wrong customer. - Do not prioritize yet unless there is enough evidence. - The output should give me a strong starting universe for keyword research. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#022Customer Problem Search Demand Map

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISFinding keywords from customer knowledge, sales calls, reviews, surveys, support tickets, and buyer research.

Translate customer problems, pains, goals, objections, and buying triggers into keyword themes and searchable demand.

Act as a search demand translator. Convert messy customer knowledge into keyword opportunities. Customer research: [PASTE CUSTOMER NOTES / REVIEWS / SALES CALLS / SURVEYS / SUPPORT TICKETS] Business context: Offer: [OFFER] Target customer: [CUSTOMER] Market: [MARKET] Primary conversion: [CONVERSION] Known competitors: [COMPETITORS] Current content: [CONTENT] Customer awareness level: [AWARENESS LEVEL] Extract search demand: A. Customer language extraction Pull out: - pain phrases - desired outcomes - repeated complaints - objections - buying triggers - comparison language - urgency signals - emotional words - feature requests - misunderstood terms B. Search translation For each extracted phrase create keyword ideas in these forms: - question query - problem query - solution query - comparison query - how-to query - best/tool/software query - template/checklist query - mistake query - cost/pricing query - alternative query C. Demand theme map Group keyword ideas into themes: - urgent pain - research and education - solution discovery - purchase evaluation - implementation - troubleshooting - retention or success D. Content and page mapping For each theme recommend: - page type - content angle - search intent - funnel stage - CTA style - internal links - proof needed E. Priority candidates Identify: - highest commercial-intent keywords - strongest voice-of-customer keywords - easiest educational topics - hidden long-tail opportunities - keywords that need validation in SEO tools Rules: - Do not translate customer language into generic marketing terms only. - Do not ignore emotional language. - Do not assume every pain phrase has search volume. - Mark phrases that need validation as [VERIFY DEMAND]. - The output should preserve customer language while making it useful for SEO. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#023Long-Tail Keyword Opportunity Miner

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISNew websites, niche SEO, content planning, SaaS use cases, service pages, product pages, and low-authority sites.

Find long-tail keyword opportunities with clearer intent, lower competition, and stronger conversion potential.

You are a long-tail keyword miner. Find specific search opportunities that are easier to rank for and closer to user intent. Starting topic or keyword: [TOPIC / KEYWORD] Context: Business: [BUSINESS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Niche or industry: [NICHE] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Authority level: [LOW / MEDIUM / HIGH] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Content capacity: [CAPACITY] Regions: [REGIONS] Terms to avoid: [AVOID] Mine long-tail opportunities: 1. Modifier expansion Create long-tail variations using: - for [specific audience] - for [industry] - for [use case] - for [problem] - with [feature] - without [pain point] - vs [alternative] - under [budget] - near [location] - template - checklist - example - guide - step-by-step - beginner - advanced - mistakes - comparison - integration - automation - workflow 2. Intent-specific long tails Generate keywords for: - how to solve problem - best solution for situation - tool for specific job - software for specific role - examples of outcome - template for task - checklist for process - cost of solution - alternative to competitor - problem after purchase 3. Opportunity scoring Score each keyword by: - specificity - business relevance - purchase proximity - ranking difficulty estimate - content effort - conversion potential - topical fit - uniqueness 4. Page recommendations For the best opportunities define: - page type - title angle - main sections - CTA - internal links - proof needed - related keywords 5. Quick-win list Create: - 10 easiest long-tail pages - 10 strongest commercial long tails - 10 support or FAQ long tails - 10 long tails to avoid Rules: - Do not create awkward keywords nobody would search. - Do not chase long-tail terms that have no connection to the offer. - Do not assume low competition without validation. - The output should create realistic opportunities for focused SEO pages. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#024Low-Competition Keyword Finder

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISSmall websites, new SEO campaigns, niche sites, local businesses, startups, and teams that need easier ranking opportunities.

Identify low-competition keyword opportunities by looking for weak SERPs, poor intent match, low-quality ranking pages, forums, thin content, and underserved queries.

Act as a low-competition SEO opportunity analyst. Help me find keywords where the SERP may be weak enough to compete. Keyword candidates: [PASTE KEYWORDS OR TOPICS] Context: Website authority: [AUTHORITY LEVEL] Business: [BUSINESS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Content quality we can create: [QUALITY LEVEL] Available resources: [RESOURCES] Target region: [REGION] Analyze low-competition potential: STEP 1 — Weak SERP signals For each keyword, look for signals such as: - forums ranking - Reddit or Quora ranking - outdated posts - thin pages - generic pages - weak titles - poor intent match - low-authority sites - short content that misses key questions - pages with bad UX - irrelevant ecommerce pages - outdated statistics - missing examples - no clear answer STEP 2 — Fit check Evaluate: - can our business answer this better? - do we have expertise? - can we satisfy the intent? - can the page support conversion? - is the query too informational? - does the traffic match our audience? STEP 3 — Opportunity label Classify each keyword as: - strong low-competition opportunity - possible opportunity - needs SERP validation - too competitive - wrong intent - low business value - avoid STEP 4 — Page plan For strong opportunities, recommend: - page type - content angle - title - sections - proof points - media or tools needed - internal links - CTA STEP 5 — Validation checklist Create a checklist I should use in an SEO tool or manual SERP review. Rules: - Do not label a keyword low-competition based only on search volume. - Do not ignore business relevance. - Do not recommend targeting keywords where we cannot satisfy intent. - Use [VERIFY SERP] where manual SERP review is required. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#025Search Intent Classifier and Page Type Router

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISCleaning keyword lists, planning content architecture, avoiding intent mismatch, and choosing between blog posts, landing pages, tools, category pages, and comparison pages.

Classify keywords by intent and route each keyword to the right page type, content format, CTA, funnel stage, and measurement goal.

You are a search intent classifier. Analyze this keyword list and decide what kind of page or content each query needs. Keyword list: [PASTE KEYWORDS] Context: Business: [BUSINESS] Offer: [OFFER] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Existing pages: [EXISTING PAGES] Current SEO strategy: [STRATEGY] Regions or language: [REGION / LANGUAGE] Classify every keyword: 1. Intent category Use these labels: - informational - navigational - commercial investigation - transactional - problem-aware - solution-aware - comparison - alternative - local - support / troubleshooting - post-purchase - mixed intent - unclear intent 2. User state For each keyword identify: - what the searcher likely knows - what they want next - how close they are to buying - what objection or concern may exist - what proof they need 3. Page type routing Assign the best format: - blog post - pillar guide - glossary page - landing page - product page - category page - comparison page - alternative page - tool or calculator - template page - FAQ page - case study - local landing page - support article 4. CTA logic Recommend CTA style: - read next - download - try free - book demo - compare plans - contact sales - view product - use tool - subscribe - no hard CTA 5. Risk check Flag: - keywords with mixed intent - keywords that need separate pages - keywords that should be merged - keywords that are wrong fit - keywords that may cannibalize existing pages Rules: - Do not force all keywords into blog posts. - Do not assign sales CTAs to early educational intent. - Do not create separate pages for keywords with the same intent unless there is a clear reason. - The output should prevent search intent mismatch. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#026Keyword Cluster Architecture Builder

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISTopic clusters, content hubs, SEO roadmaps, blog strategy, SaaS SEO, service websites, and content architecture planning.

Group keywords into logical clusters and define pillar pages, supporting pages, internal links, intent layers, and publishing sequence.

Act as a keyword clustering architect. Organize this keyword list into SEO clusters that can become a clear content architecture. Keyword list: [PASTE KEYWORDS] Context: Business: [BUSINESS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Current website pages: [PAGES] Current content: [CONTENT] Primary conversions: [CONVERSIONS] Topic areas to focus on: [TOPICS] Topics to avoid: [AVOID] Build the cluster architecture: A. Cluster grouping Group keywords by: - shared search intent - shared topic - funnel stage - page type - audience segment - product or service relevance - internal linking relationship B. Cluster definition For each cluster include: - cluster name - primary keyword - secondary keywords - long-tail keywords - questions - intent - audience segment - page type - business value - priority level C. Page architecture For each cluster define: - pillar page - supporting articles - comparison pages - FAQ pages - template or tool pages - product or service page connection - existing page to update - new page to create D. Internal linking map Recommend: - pillar-to-support links - support-to-pillar links - support-to-support links - commercial page links - glossary or FAQ links - links from existing pages E. Publishing sequence Create: - first 5 pages - next 10 pages - refresh opportunities - pages to merge - pages to avoid - cluster completion criteria Rules: - Do not cluster by exact word match only. - Do not put mixed-intent keywords on one page without explanation. - Do not build clusters disconnected from the business offer. - The output should become a practical SEO content architecture. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#027Keyword Prioritization Scorecard

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISSEO roadmaps, content calendars, keyword research cleanup, leadership planning, and deciding what to target first.

Prioritize keywords based on traffic potential, difficulty, relevance, conversion intent, strategic value, resource effort, and confidence.

You are an SEO prioritization analyst. Score and rank these keywords so I know what to target first. Keyword list: [PASTE KEYWORDS WITH ANY AVAILABLE METRICS] Context: Business goal: [GOAL] Offer: [OFFER] Target customer: [CUSTOMER] Current authority: [AUTHORITY] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] Content resources: [RESOURCES] Technical resources: [TECH RESOURCES] Conversion action: [CONVERSION] Timeline: [TIMELINE] Create the scorecard: Scoring model: For each keyword score 1 to 10: - business relevance - conversion intent - traffic potential - ranking feasibility - competitive difficulty - topical authority fit - content effort - strategic value - urgency - confidence Then calculate: - opportunity score - effort score - risk score - final priority score Classify each keyword as: - target now - target next - support keyword - include on existing page - monitor - validate first - reject For top keywords provide: - recommended page type - content angle - target funnel stage - CTA - first action - required proof - internal link target Create final lists: - top 10 by commercial value - top 10 by easier ranking potential - top 10 by topical authority value - keywords to avoid - keywords needing more data Rules: - Do not let volume overpower relevance. - Do not prioritize keywords we cannot realistically rank for yet. - Do not ignore conversion potential. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where metrics are missing. - The output should make keyword prioritization transparent and defensible. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#028Competitor Keyword Gap Extractor

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISCompetitive keyword research, content gap analysis, SEO planning, and finding opportunities without copying competitors.

Identify competitor keyword gaps, shared ranking topics, missed opportunities, weak SERPs, and differentiated keyword angles.

Act as a competitive keyword gap analyst. Compare my website or business against competitors and identify keyword opportunities. My business or website: [MY BUSINESS / WEBSITE] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Available competitor data: [PASTE COMPETITOR KEYWORDS / PAGES / TOPICS / NOTES] Context: My offer: [OFFER] My target customer: [CUSTOMER] My current pages: [MY PAGES] My strengths: [STRENGTHS] My limitations: [LIMITATIONS] Regions: [REGIONS] Business goals: [GOALS] Extract keyword gaps: 1. Competitor keyword themes Identify competitor themes across: - product or service terms - category terms - problem terms - comparison terms - alternative terms - educational topics - tools and templates - industry pages - use-case pages - local pages - support topics 2. Gap types Classify gaps as: - missing page - weak existing page - missing cluster - missing comparison page - missing long-tail support - missing FAQ coverage - missing use-case page - missing commercial page - missing authority asset 3. Opportunity quality For each gap evaluate: - business relevance - intent strength - competitive intensity - our ability to differentiate - likely page type - effort - priority - confidence 4. Differentiation angle For each strong gap define how we can be different through: - better examples - clearer explanation - stronger product connection - original data - more practical templates - sharper audience focus - better UX - better comparison logic 5. Action plan Create: - top 10 gaps to attack - top 10 gaps to ignore - pages to refresh - pages to create - clusters to build - data to validate next Rules: - Do not recommend copying competitor pages. - Do not chase keywords that attract the wrong audience. - Do not treat every competitor keyword as an opportunity. - The output should show where we can win with relevance and differentiation. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#029SERP Demand Pattern Decoder

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISValidating keyword targets, creating briefs, deciding page type, and understanding search demand beyond keyword metrics.

Analyze SERP patterns to understand what searchers expect, which content formats rank, how intent is shaped, and where differentiation is possible.

You are a SERP pattern decoder. Analyze these search result observations and explain what they reveal about search demand and user intent. Target keyword: [KEYWORD] SERP observations: [PASTE TOP RESULTS / PAGE TYPES / TITLES / SNIPPETS / FEATURES / NOTES] Business context: Business: [BUSINESS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Current page, if any: [CURRENT PAGE] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Decode the SERP: A. Intent fingerprint Identify: - dominant intent - secondary intent - searcher awareness level - expected answer depth - commercial intensity - trust expectations - freshness expectations - local intent, if any - visual or media expectations B. Ranking content pattern Analyze: - page types ranking - title patterns - content formats - common sections - estimated depth - examples used - proof signals - CTA style - SERP features C. Demand interpretation Explain what the SERP suggests about: - what users want - what users do not want - what level of expertise they expect - whether they are ready to buy - what objections need answering - what related questions exist D. Opportunity gap Find gaps in current results: - missing angle - missing example - missing tool - missing template - weak comparison - thin explanation - poor UX - outdated information - lack of expert proof E. Targeting decision Recommend: - target now - target later - build support content only - create commercial page - create educational page - avoid Explain the reasoning. Rules: - Do not rely only on keyword volume. - Do not copy the SERP pattern without improving it. - Do not create a page type that conflicts with the dominant intent. - The output should make the keyword strategy more accurate. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#030Question Keyword and FAQ Opportunity Map

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISFAQ pages, blog posts, support content, knowledge bases, featured snippet targeting, topical authority, and content briefs.

Find question-based keywords, FAQ opportunities, People Also Ask ideas, support topics, and answer assets that build authority and capture long-tail demand.

Act as a question keyword researcher. Turn this topic into a map of questions people search before, during, and after they consider a solution. Topic: [TOPIC] Context: Business: [BUSINESS] Offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Customer knowledge level: [BEGINNER / INTERMEDIATE / ADVANCED] Known objections: [OBJECTIONS] Support questions: [SUPPORT QUESTIONS] Sales questions: [SALES QUESTIONS] Current content: [CONTENT] Create the question map: 1. Question categories Generate questions across: - what is - why - how - how much - best way to - can I - should I - vs - alternatives - mistakes - examples - checklist - requirements - troubleshooting - implementation - results - timing - risks 2. Funnel-stage grouping Group questions into: - awareness - problem understanding - solution education - comparison - purchase decision - onboarding - post-purchase success - retention 3. Answer format For each question recommend: - short FAQ answer - full blog post - guide section - support article - product page section - comparison page section - video or visual explanation - template or checklist 4. SEO value Score each question by: - likely search demand - business relevance - snippet potential - conversion support - topical authority value - support deflection value - content effort 5. Implementation plan Create: - top 20 FAQ questions - top 10 full article questions - top 10 product-page questions - top 10 support questions - internal linking recommendations Rules: - Do not create fake FAQs that users do not care about. - Do not answer every question with a full article. - Do not ignore questions that reduce objections or support load. - The output should turn questions into useful SEO assets. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#031Commercial Intent Keyword Finder

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISSaaS, B2B, e-commerce, services, marketplaces, affiliate SEO, product pages, landing pages, and revenue-focused SEO planning.

Identify keywords with stronger buying intent, comparison intent, pricing intent, alternative intent, and solution-evaluation intent.

You are a commercial intent keyword strategist. Find search queries that are closer to buying decisions and revenue. Business context: Offer: [OFFER] Target customer: [CUSTOMER] Revenue model: [REVENUE MODEL] Average value: [AOV / DEAL SIZE / LTV] Competitors or alternatives: [COMPETITORS / ALTERNATIVES] Decision criteria customers use: [CRITERIA] Objections: [OBJECTIONS] Conversion action: [CONVERSION] Current pages: [PAGES] Generate commercial keyword opportunities: CATEGORY 1 — Direct solution queries Find keywords for people looking for a solution like ours. CATEGORY 2 — Category and product queries Find category keywords and product-type terms. CATEGORY 3 — Comparison queries Find: - [brand] vs [brand] - [solution] vs [alternative] - best [category] - top [category] - [category] comparison - [category] reviews CATEGORY 4 — Alternative queries Find: - alternatives to [competitor] - [competitor] replacement - cheaper than [competitor] - better than [competitor] - open source alternative, if relevant CATEGORY 5 — Pricing and ROI queries Find: - pricing - cost - plans - ROI - calculator - budget - value comparison CATEGORY 6 — High-intent use-case queries Find commercial keywords tied to specific jobs, industries, roles, or urgent outcomes. For each keyword idea include: - intent - buyer stage - page type - commercial value - conversion path - proof needed - CTA - priority Rules: - Do not include broad informational terms unless they support a buying path. - Do not target competitor terms without a useful and ethical page angle. - Do not ignore low-volume commercial keywords. - The output should prioritize revenue potential over traffic vanity. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#032Local and Regional Search Demand Mapper

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISLocal businesses, service companies, restaurants, clinics, real estate, franchises, regional SaaS, marketplaces, and businesses serving specific geographies.

Find location-based keyword opportunities and map them to local landing pages, regional content, service areas, local intent, and conversion paths.

Act as a local SEO keyword strategist. Map local and regional search demand for my business. Business context: Business type: [BUSINESS TYPE] Services or products: [SERVICES / PRODUCTS] Locations served: [LOCATIONS] Physical locations: [PHYSICAL LOCATIONS] Service radius: [SERVICE RADIUS] Target customers: [CUSTOMERS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Current local pages: [PAGES] Google Business Profile status: [GBP STATUS] Conversion goal: [CALL / FORM / VISIT / BOOKING / PURCHASE] Build the regional keyword map: A. Location keyword patterns Generate patterns using: - [service] in [city] - [service] near me - best [service] in [city] - [service] [neighborhood] - [service] [region] - emergency [service] [city] - affordable [service] [city] - [service] company [city] - [service] provider [city] - [service] for [audience] [city] B. Local intent classification Classify keywords by: - urgent local need - comparison shopping - local provider discovery - directions or visit intent - service-area research - local pricing - neighborhood-specific search - review-driven search C. Page strategy Recommend: - city landing pages - neighborhood pages - service-area pages - location pages - local FAQ pages - local comparison pages - local case studies - GBP content topics D. Local differentiation For each important location define: - trust signals - local proof - reviews needed - service details - map or directions needs - local photos - local examples - CTA E. Priority roadmap Create: - first 5 local pages - next 10 regional pages - pages to avoid because of duplicate risk - internal linking plan - local content ideas Rules: - Do not create doorway pages with thin duplicated content. - Do not recommend location pages for areas the business cannot serve. - Do not ignore local proof and conversion needs. - The output should create useful local SEO pages, not spam. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#033Keyword Difficulty Reality Check

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISAvoiding unrealistic keyword targets, setting SEO expectations, choosing easier opportunities, and creating phased keyword plans.

Evaluate whether a website can realistically compete for target keywords based on authority, SERP strength, content quality, intent fit, and resources.

You are an SEO difficulty realist. Evaluate whether these keyword targets are realistic for my current website. Keyword targets: [PASTE KEYWORDS] Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Current authority level: [AUTHORITY] Current traffic: [TRAFFIC] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] Content quality level: [CONTENT QUALITY] Technical health: [TECH HEALTH] Backlink profile: [BACKLINKS] Topical authority: [TOPICAL AUTHORITY] Resources: [RESOURCES] Timeline: [TIMELINE] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Reality-check the targets: 1. Competition assessment For each keyword estimate: - SERP strength - domain authority gap - content quality gap - backlink gap - brand gap - topical authority gap - technical or UX gap - intent difficulty 2. Ranking feasibility Classify each keyword as: - realistic now - realistic after page improvement - realistic after cluster building - realistic after authority growth - long-term target - unrealistic for now - wrong fit 3. Required conditions For each difficult keyword define what must improve: - better page - more supporting content - stronger internal links - backlinks or mentions - technical fixes - clearer intent match - better proof - stronger brand trust 4. Easier alternatives Suggest: - long-tail alternatives - narrower audience terms - problem-specific terms - use-case terms - local terms - comparison terms - question keywords 5. Phased plan Create: - phase 1 keywords - phase 2 keywords - phase 3 keywords - authority-building targets - targets to ignore for now Rules: - Do not encourage chasing impossible keywords immediately. - Do not reject valuable keywords forever; phase them realistically. - Do not judge difficulty only by keyword tools. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where SERP data is missing. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#034Existing Page Keyword Expansion

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISContent refreshes, improving pages close to ranking, strengthening underperforming articles, and making pages more complete without creating new URLs.

Expand the keyword targeting of existing pages by finding secondary keywords, missing subtopics, related questions, semantic terms, and internal link opportunities.

Act as an SEO content expansion strategist. Find keyword opportunities for improving this existing page. Existing page: [PAGE URL OR PAGE CONTENT] Current target keyword: [TARGET KEYWORD] Context: Business: [BUSINESS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Current ranking data: [RANKINGS] Current traffic: [TRAFFIC] Current conversions: [CONVERSIONS] Competitor pages: [COMPETITORS] Search intent: [INTENT] Internal pages available for linking: [INTERNAL PAGES] Analyze expansion opportunities: A. Current page diagnosis Identify: - current intent match - current keyword focus - missing subtopics - weak sections - unclear sections - content gaps - conversion gaps - internal link gaps B. Keyword expansion Generate: - secondary keywords - long-tail variations - question keywords - semantic terms - related entities - comparison terms - examples users expect - FAQ terms C. Section mapping For each keyword or topic recommend: - add new section - improve existing section - add FAQ - add example - add table - add internal link - add CTA - create separate page instead D. Cannibalization check Flag keywords that should not be added because they: - deserve separate pages - conflict with page intent - overlap existing pages - attract wrong audience E. Refresh plan Create: - title update - H1 or H2 updates - new sections - FAQs - internal links - schema suggestions - proof improvements - measurement plan Rules: - Do not stuff keywords. - Do not expand a page beyond its search intent. - Do not merge unrelated intents into one URL. - The output should improve usefulness and ranking potential. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#035Zero-to-Keyword Research Sprint

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISNew SEO projects, founders, consultants, agencies, content teams, and anyone needing a practical keyword plan quickly.

Run a fast keyword research sprint from business context to seed terms, demand themes, clusters, priorities, and next actions.

You are leading a 2-hour keyword research sprint. Use my business context to create a focused keyword research foundation. Business context: Business: [BUSINESS] Offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Market: [MARKET] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Customer problems: [PROBLEMS] Customer goals: [GOALS] Existing pages: [PAGES] Current content: [CONTENT] Conversion goal: [CONVERSION] SEO tools available: [TOOLS] Time available: [TIME] Run the sprint: SPRINT BLOCK 1 — Seed discovery Create: - core seeds - problem seeds - solution seeds - audience seeds - competitor seeds - use-case seeds - comparison seeds SPRINT BLOCK 2 — Demand expansion Create keyword ideas using: - modifiers - questions - long-tail variations - commercial terms - location terms, if relevant - template or tool terms - industry terms SPRINT BLOCK 3 — Intent sorting Sort keywords into: - informational - commercial - transactional - comparison - alternative - support - local - mixed SPRINT BLOCK 4 — Cluster draft Group keywords into: - primary clusters - supporting clusters - page candidates - existing page matches - new page needs SPRINT BLOCK 5 — Priority shortlist Create: - top 10 keywords to validate - top 10 pages to create or improve - top 5 quick wins - top 5 long-term bets - keywords to avoid Final output: - sprint summary - keyword universe - clusters - priority list - validation checklist - next 7-day action plan Rules: - Do not pretend this replaces full keyword research. - Do not rely on volume estimates unless provided. - Mark tool-validation needs as [VERIFY]. - The output should be a strong first draft for deeper research. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#036Seasonal and Trend Keyword Calendar

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISE-commerce, content marketing, newsletters, travel, finance, education, local businesses, events, B2C, and industries with seasonal demand.

Find seasonal, event-based, recurring, trend-driven, and time-sensitive keyword opportunities and organize them into a publishing calendar.

Act as a seasonal SEO demand planner. Build a keyword calendar around recurring demand, trends, events, and buying cycles. Business context: Business: [BUSINESS] Products or services: [PRODUCTS / SERVICES] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Regions: [REGIONS] Industry calendar: [INDUSTRY EVENTS] Known seasonal peaks: [SEASONAL PEAKS] Past performance, if any: [PAST DATA] Promotions or launches: [PROMOTIONS] Content capacity: [CAPACITY] Planning year: [YEAR] Build the calendar: 1. Demand seasonality map Identify keyword opportunities around: - holidays - annual events - industry cycles - buying seasons - budget cycles - back-to-school periods - year-end planning - new year planning - summer or winter demand - tax or compliance deadlines - conference seasons - product launch windows 2. Keyword timing For each opportunity define: - keyword theme - intent - best publish date - best refresh date - peak search window - content format - CTA - promotion channel 3. Content calendar Create a 12-month calendar with: - primary SEO pages - supporting posts - refresh tasks - internal linking tasks - promotional timing - measurement check date 4. Evergreen vs seasonal split Classify each keyword as: - evergreen - seasonal refresh - annual update - trend-dependent - event-specific - campaign-only 5. Risk and freshness rules Create rules for: - updating year-based keywords - avoiding outdated dates - refreshing statistics - preserving URL value - redirecting old pages - monitoring trend decay Rules: - Do not publish seasonal content too late. - Do not create disposable pages when evergreen pages can be refreshed. - Do not assume seasonality without validation where data is missing. - Mark uncertain opportunities as [VERIFY TREND]. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#037Product, Feature and Use-Case Keyword Mapper

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISSaaS, software, apps, tools, marketplaces, B2B products, e-commerce, and product-led SEO.

Map product features, capabilities, use cases, integrations, industries, and jobs-to-be-done into keyword opportunities and page types.

You are a product SEO keyword mapper. Convert product features and use cases into search demand opportunities. Product context: Product: [PRODUCT] Target users: [USERS] Features: [FEATURES] Use cases: [USE CASES] Integrations: [INTEGRATIONS] Industries: [INDUSTRIES] Jobs-to-be-done: [JOBS] Problems solved: [PROBLEMS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Current product pages: [PAGES] Conversion goal: [CONVERSION] Create the keyword map: A. Feature keyword layer For each feature generate: - feature keyword - benefit keyword - problem keyword - comparison keyword - alternative keyword - integration keyword - how-to keyword - template keyword B. Use-case keyword layer For each use case generate: - [tool] for [job] - [software] for [role] - how to [outcome] - best way to [task] - automate [workflow] - manage [process] - examples of [result] C. Industry keyword layer Generate terms for: - [solution] for [industry] - [feature] for [industry] - [workflow] for [industry] - [problem] in [industry] - [tool] for [industry role] D. Page type mapping Assign opportunities to: - feature page - use-case page - industry page - integration page - template page - comparison page - blog post - guide - FAQ - demo page E. Priority and sequence Create: - highest-intent product keywords - easiest long-tail use cases - best integration keywords - best industry pages - pages to build first - pages to validate first Rules: - Do not create pages for features nobody searches for unless they support conversion. - Do not make feature pages too technical for buyer intent. - Do not ignore use-case language. - The output should connect product value to search demand. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#038Search Language Voice-of-Customer Miner

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISReview mining, sales call analysis, community research, support ticket analysis, Reddit research, and positioning-informed keyword research.

Extract keyword ideas from real customer language and convert them into SEO terms, page angles, FAQs, titles, and content sections.

Act as a voice-of-customer keyword researcher. Mine this raw language for SEO opportunities without losing the way customers actually speak. Raw customer language: [PASTE REVIEWS / COMMENTS / CALL TRANSCRIPTS / SUPPORT TICKETS / COMMUNITY POSTS] Context: Business: [BUSINESS] Offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Main conversion: [CONVERSION] Current keyword themes: [THEMES] Language to avoid: [AVOID] Mine the language: 1. Phrase extraction Extract: - repeated words - pain phrases - goal phrases - before-state language - after-state language - frustration phrases - comparison phrases - objection phrases - urgency phrases - category language - misunderstood terms 2. Keyword transformation Turn phrases into: - exact search-style queries - question keywords - long-tail keywords - comparison keywords - problem keywords - solution keywords - FAQ topics - section headings 3. Language preservation For each opportunity include: - original customer phrase - cleaned SEO phrase - likely search intent - emotional driver - buyer stage - recommended page use 4. Content application Recommend where to use the language: - title - H2 - intro - FAQ - product page - comparison page - meta description - internal link anchor - ad or email angle 5. Validation list Create: - keywords to validate with SEO tools - phrases to test in titles - phrases to use in copy - phrases that are not SEO keywords but useful for messaging Rules: - Do not over-polish customer language until it becomes generic. - Do not assume every phrase has search demand. - Do not ignore emotional language. - Mark uncertain keyword demand as [VERIFY]. - The output should make SEO language sound closer to real customers. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#039Keyword-to-Conversion Funnel Map

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISRevenue-focused SEO, SaaS, services, e-commerce, B2B, content funnels, and turning keyword research into growth architecture.

Map keywords to funnel stages, conversion paths, CTAs, page types, lead magnets, sales assets, and measurement goals.

You are a keyword-to-conversion strategist. Map search queries to the path that turns visitors into leads, users, buyers, or customers. Keyword list: [PASTE KEYWORDS] Business context: Offer: [OFFER] Target customer: [CUSTOMER] Sales cycle: [SALES CYCLE] Conversion actions: [CONVERSIONS] Lead magnets: [LEAD MAGNETS] Product pages: [PRODUCT PAGES] Sales assets: [SALES ASSETS] Email funnel: [EMAIL FUNNEL] Current analytics: [ANALYTICS] Build the funnel map: A. Funnel stage assignment Classify keywords as: - awareness - problem education - solution education - consideration - comparison - decision - purchase - onboarding - retention B. Conversion path For each keyword or cluster define: - search intent - page type - primary user need - page promise - next step - CTA - secondary CTA - follow-up asset - measurement metric C. Lead capture logic Recommend where to use: - newsletter signup - checklist - template - calculator - webinar - demo - free trial - consultation - quote request - product purchase - no lead capture D. Sales enablement connection Identify keywords that should support: - objection handling - competitor comparison - ROI explanation - implementation proof - case studies - pricing confidence - stakeholder education E. Funnel gaps Identify: - high-intent keywords with no conversion page - educational keywords with no next step - comparison keywords with no proof - product pages missing support content - keywords that attract unqualified traffic Rules: - Do not use the same CTA everywhere. - Do not treat all informational keywords as low value. - Do not build traffic without a next-step path. - The output should turn keyword research into a conversion system. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#040Full Keyword Research and Search Demand Analysis Audit

KEYWORD RESEARCH & SEARCH DEMAND ANALYSISFull SEO planning, agency deliverables, keyword strategy resets, content roadmaps, new sites, and teams that need a trustworthy keyword foundation.

Audit and redesign a complete keyword research system across seed terms, customer language, intent, clusters, difficulty, competition, revenue potential, and prioritization.

Act as an independent keyword research and search demand analysis auditor. Review my keyword situation and create a complete keyword strategy that connects search demand to business outcomes. Full context: Business: [BUSINESS] Website: [WEBSITE] Offer: [OFFER] Target customers: [CUSTOMERS] Markets or regions: [MARKETS] Current keyword list: [KEYWORDS] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] Current pages: [PAGES] Current content library: [CONTENT] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Customer research: [CUSTOMER RESEARCH] Search tools available: [TOOLS] Known search volume or difficulty data: [DATA] Business goals: [GOALS] Conversion goals: [CONVERSIONS] Timeline: [TIMELINE] Resources: [RESOURCES] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Audit across 30 dimensions: 1. Seed keyword coverage 2. Customer language coverage 3. Problem keyword coverage 4. Solution keyword coverage 5. Commercial intent coverage 6. Transactional keyword coverage 7. Comparison keyword coverage 8. Alternative keyword coverage 9. Long-tail opportunity depth 10. Question keyword coverage 11. Local or regional demand, if relevant 12. Industry keyword coverage 13. Use-case keyword coverage 14. Feature keyword coverage 15. Search intent accuracy 16. Page type mapping 17. Keyword clustering quality 18. Topic cluster alignment 19. SERP pattern understanding 20. Competitive keyword gaps 21. Low-competition opportunities 22. Difficulty realism 23. Cannibalization risk 24. Existing page expansion 25. Conversion path mapping 26. Revenue relevance 27. Prioritization method 28. Validation gaps 29. Reporting and tracking readiness 30. Overall keyword strategy quality For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from my context - risk if ignored - recommended fix - priority level - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Hard truth Explain the biggest weakness in the current keyword strategy. B. Search demand map Create: - core keyword themes - customer problem themes - commercial intent themes - long-tail themes - question themes - comparison and alternative themes - local or regional themes, if relevant - product or feature themes - keywords to avoid C. Cluster and page plan Create: - primary clusters - supporting clusters - existing pages to update - new pages to create - pages to merge - pages to avoid - internal link recommendations D. Prioritized roadmap Create: - top 10 keywords to target now - top 10 keywords to validate - top 10 low-competition opportunities - top 10 commercial opportunities - top 10 authority-building topics - first 30-day keyword execution plan - first 90-day keyword roadmap E. Validation plan Define how to validate: - volume - difficulty - SERP intent - business fit - conversion potential - competitor strength - cannibalization risk - resource fit F. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - strongest keyword opportunity - easiest quick win - highest commercial-intent keyword group - biggest keyword gap - most dangerous traffic trap - first page to update - first page to create - first cluster to build - one operating principle for keyword research Rules: - Do not build the strategy around traffic volume alone. - Do not create clusters that ignore search intent. - Do not recommend keywords disconnected from the offer. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where information is missing. - The final output should be specific, prioritized, realistic, and ready to turn into an SEO roadmap.

#041Search Intent Autopsy

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHKeywords with unclear intent, content planning, SEO briefs, page rewrites, SERP validation, and avoiding pages that miss what searchers want.

Diagnose the real intent behind a keyword by separating what the searcher types from what they actually need, expect, fear, and want to do next.

You are an SEO intent diagnostician. Analyze this keyword deeply and explain what the searcher really wants before any content is created. Keyword: [KEYWORD] Business context: Business: [BUSINESS] Offer: [OFFER] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Current page, if any: [CURRENT PAGE] Conversion goal: [CONVERSION] Known competitors: [COMPETITORS] Market or region: [MARKET / REGION] Run the intent autopsy: 1. Surface query meaning Explain: - literal meaning of the query - possible meanings - hidden assumptions - searcher vocabulary level - whether the query is broad, narrow, urgent, or exploratory 2. Real searcher need Identify what the searcher likely wants: - answer - comparison - recommendation - product - service - explanation - example - template - proof - local provider - troubleshooting - decision support 3. Awareness stage Classify the searcher as: - unaware - symptom-aware - problem-aware - solution-aware - product-aware - decision-ready - post-purchase Explain the evidence. 4. Content expectation Define what the page must include: - opening promise - required sections - depth level - examples - visuals - data - trust signals - CTA type - next step 5. Intent risks Flag: - mixed intent - wrong page type risk - weak conversion fit - cannibalization risk - searcher mismatch - SERP validation needed Output: - intent summary - recommended page type - content angle - user expectation checklist - CTA recommendation - confidence level Rules: - Do not assume every keyword is commercial. - Do not force a sales page when the user wants education. - Do not ignore mixed intent. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where the intent needs live SERP validation. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#042SERP Pattern Intelligence Brief

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHSERP research, SEO briefs, content strategy, content refreshes, competitive analysis, and page planning.

Analyze top-ranking search results to identify ranking patterns, intent signals, content formats, repeated sections, proof standards, and differentiation opportunities.

Act as a SERP intelligence analyst. Turn these search result observations into a strategic content brief. Target query: [QUERY] SERP observations: [PASTE TOP RESULTS, TITLES, URL TYPES, SNIPPETS, SERP FEATURES, NOTES] Business context: Website: [WEBSITE] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Current ranking page, if any: [CURRENT PAGE] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Resources available: [RESOURCES] Analyze the SERP in six layers: LAYER 1 — Result type pattern Identify dominant result types: - blog posts - category pages - product pages - comparison pages - tools - templates - forums - videos - local results - documentation - listicles - news pages LAYER 2 — Intent pattern Identify: - primary intent - secondary intent - commercial intensity - depth expected - speed of answer expected - trust level required LAYER 3 — Content pattern Extract common elements: - headline formulas - intro style - recurring H2s - examples - tables - screenshots - FAQs - statistics - expert quotes - CTAs LAYER 4 — Weakness pattern Find weaknesses in ranking pages: - generic explanations - poor examples - outdated advice - thin comparison - missing buyer guidance - unclear structure - weak proof - too much fluff - bad UX LAYER 5 — Differentiation pattern Recommend how our page can win by being: - clearer - more practical - more specific - more expert - more visual - more current - more decision-focused - better connected to the product LAYER 6 — Execution brief Create: - recommended page type - title direction - outline - must-have sections - avoid sections - proof needed - CTA - internal links - success metrics Rules: - Do not copy the top results. - Do not assume longer content is better. - Do not ignore SERP features. - The final brief should show how to satisfy intent and stand out. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#043Audience Awareness Stage Mapper

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHBuyer journey content, SaaS SEO, service pages, e-commerce content, educational content, and funnel mapping.

Match SEO content to the searcher's awareness level, emotional state, knowledge depth, objections, and next decision.

You are an audience intent strategist. Map the audience awareness stage behind this search topic and define what content they need. Search topic or keyword: [TOPIC / KEYWORD] Audience context: Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Problem they experience: [PROBLEM] Desired outcome: [OUTCOME] Offer: [OFFER] Alternatives they consider: [ALTERNATIVES] Objections: [OBJECTIONS] Current page or content: [CONTENT] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Create the awareness map: A. Audience state Describe: - what they already know - what they do not know - what they believe - what they misunderstand - what they fear - what they want to avoid - what they are trying to decide B. Awareness classification Classify the query into one or more stages: - unaware - symptom-aware - problem-aware - solution-aware - product-aware - vendor-aware - decision-ready - post-purchase C. Content requirements by stage For the correct stage define: - opening angle - explanation depth - examples needed - proof needed - objections to answer - vocabulary to use - vocabulary to avoid - CTA style D. Messaging ladder Create a progression: - first sentence - first question answered - main idea - trust-building point - conversion bridge - next-step CTA E. Stage mismatch warning Explain what would go wrong if the page used: - too much beginner education - too much sales language - too much jargon - too little proof - wrong CTA - wrong content format Rules: - Do not treat all searchers as ready to buy. - Do not ignore emotional state. - Do not use advanced language for beginner intent. - The output should make the content feel matched to the reader. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#044Ranking Page Reverse-Engineering Lab

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHCompetitive SERP analysis, content briefs, page refreshes, content gap research, and differentiation strategy.

Break down ranking pages to understand why they may rank, what user expectations they satisfy, and how to create a stronger page without copying them.

Act as a ranking page reverse-engineer. Analyze these competing pages and extract strategic lessons. Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Ranking pages to analyze: [PASTE URLS / TITLES / NOTES / PAGE SUMMARIES] My context: Business: [BUSINESS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Current page: [CURRENT PAGE] Goal of our page: [GOAL] Advantages we have: [ADVANTAGES] Limitations: [LIMITATIONS] For each ranking page, analyze: 1. Page identity - page type - target reader - search intent served - funnel stage - main promise - likely reason it ranks 2. Structure - title angle - intro approach - major sections - content depth - examples - visuals - FAQs - internal links - CTA 3. Trust signals - expertise signals - data - reviews - examples - author credibility - brand credibility - freshness - external references 4. Weaknesses - missing information - shallow explanation - poor decision support - outdated content - weak formatting - irrelevant sections - weak conversion path 5. Lessons for our page Provide: - what to match because users expect it - what to improve - what to avoid - where to differentiate - what proof to add - what sections to create Then create: - winning page hypothesis - recommended outline - differentiation angle - risk if we copy the SERP too closely - risk if we ignore the SERP pattern Rules: - Do not plagiarize competitor structure. - Do not assume ranking pages are perfect. - Do not ignore why users may prefer those results. - The goal is strategic learning, not imitation. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#045Content Gap and Expectation Matrix

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHContent refreshes, SEO audits, page rewrites, brief creation, and improving pages that underperform despite targeting the right keyword.

Compare what searchers expect against what existing content provides, then identify missing sections, proof gaps, format gaps, and decision-support gaps.

You are a content expectation analyst. Build a matrix showing what the searcher expects and what our content currently fails to deliver. Keyword or topic: [KEYWORD / TOPIC] Existing content: [PASTE PAGE CONTENT OR SUMMARY] SERP or competitor notes: [PASTE SERP NOTES] Business context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Current performance: [PERFORMANCE] Known issues: [ISSUES] Build the matrix: Column 1 — Searcher expectation List what the searcher likely expects, including: - answer type - explanation depth - examples - comparisons - pricing or cost info - proof - steps - visuals - risks - alternatives - FAQs - next action Column 2 — Current content coverage Mark each expectation as: - fully covered - partially covered - missing - unclear - wrong depth - wrong format - wrong intent Column 3 — Gap impact Classify the impact as: - ranking risk - engagement risk - trust risk - conversion risk - cannibalization risk - no major risk Column 4 — Fix Recommend: - add section - rewrite section - split into new page - merge with existing page - add example - add proof - add visual - add CTA - remove section Column 5 — Priority Score each fix by: - user value - SEO value - conversion value - effort - urgency Final output: - top 5 content gaps - top 5 quick fixes - sections to remove - sections to add - recommended updated outline - refresh checklist Rules: - Do not add content only for word count. - Do not fix every gap with a new article. - Do not ignore conversion expectations. - The matrix should reveal what makes the page incomplete from the searcher's perspective. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#046Searcher Jobs-to-Be-Done Decoder

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHSearch intent research, product-led SEO, SaaS content, service pages, templates, guides, and conversion-focused SEO briefs.

Decode the job a searcher is trying to complete and translate it into page structure, content promise, examples, tools, and CTA logic.

Act as a searcher jobs-to-be-done researcher. Analyze this query as a job the searcher is trying to complete. Query: [QUERY] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Product or service: [PRODUCT / SERVICE] Customer situation: [SITUATION] Trigger event: [TRIGGER] Alternatives: [ALTERNATIVES] Current content idea: [CONTENT IDEA] Business goal: [GOAL] Decode the job: JOB STATEMENT Write the job as: When I [situation], I want to [motivation], so I can [desired outcome]. Then analyze: 1. Functional job What task is the searcher trying to complete? 2. Emotional job What feeling are they trying to reduce or create? 3. Social job How do they want to be seen by others? 4. Decision job What choice are they trying to make? 5. Risk job What mistake are they trying to avoid? Translate into content: - page promise - required sections - examples needed - tool or template opportunity - proof needed - objections to address - CTA - next internal link Create three page concepts: - educational concept - commercial concept - product-led concept For each include: - title - angle - outline - conversion path - risk Rules: - Do not reduce intent to "informational" only. - Do not ignore emotional and risk-based needs. - Do not push the product unless it helps complete the job. - The page should help the searcher make progress. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#047SERP Feature Opportunity Planner

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHOn-page SEO, content briefs, structured content, snippet optimization, FAQ planning, and SERP differentiation.

Identify opportunities to target SERP features such as featured snippets, People Also Ask, image packs, video results, local packs, product results, tables, and FAQs.

You are a SERP feature strategist. Analyze this keyword and plan how the content can earn or support SERP feature visibility. Keyword: [KEYWORD] SERP features observed: [FEATURED SNIPPET / PAA / VIDEO / IMAGE / LOCAL / PRODUCT / FAQ / NONE / UNKNOWN] SERP notes: [PASTE SERP NOTES] Business context: Website: [WEBSITE] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Current content: [CONTENT] Available assets: [IMAGES / VIDEOS / DATA / TOOLS / REVIEWS] Technical capabilities: [TECH CAPABILITIES] Build the SERP feature plan: A. Feature diagnosis For each observed or likely feature explain: - what it signals about intent - what format Google appears to reward - what user expectation it reveals - whether we should target it B. Content formatting plan Recommend: - concise definition block - numbered steps - table - comparison chart - FAQ block - image explanation - video outline - local proof section - product details - schema markup, if relevant C. Snippet candidates Create answer blocks for: - definition query - how-to query - comparison query - list query - pricing query - troubleshooting query - best practices query D. Page structure integration Show where each feature-targeting element should appear: - intro - early answer - H2 section - FAQ - summary table - conclusion - sidebar - product section E. Measurement and risk Define: - what to monitor - what feature is realistic - what feature is low probability - risk of over-optimizing - fallback value if feature is not won Rules: - Do not create FAQ spam. - Do not optimize only for the SERP feature and forget the full page. - Do not use schema if the content does not support it. - The plan should improve user experience first and SERP eligibility second. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#048Trust, Objection and Proof Research Map

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHCommercial SEO pages, comparison pages, service pages, SaaS pages, high-risk topics, and conversion-focused content.

Identify what trust signals, proof, examples, objections, concerns, and decision support the searcher needs before they can believe or act.

Act as a trust and objection researcher for SEO content. Determine what a searcher must believe before they take the next step. Keyword or page topic: [KEYWORD / TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Context: Buying concerns: [CONCERNS] Common objections: [OBJECTIONS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Current proof assets: [PROOF] Current page: [PAGE] Desired conversion: [CONVERSION] Build the trust map: 1. Belief requirements List what the reader must believe about: - the problem - the solution category - the offer - the company - the process - the price - the results - the risk - the next step 2. Objection map Identify objections such as: - too expensive - too complicated - not for me - not trustworthy - too risky - no proof - implementation burden - better alternatives exist - bad past experience 3. Proof requirements For each objection recommend proof: - case study - testimonial - comparison - certification - data - screenshots - demo - process explanation - guarantee - FAQ - expert quote - transparent limitation 4. SERP expectation Explain what proof the ranking pages appear to use or lack. 5. Page integration Recommend where to place proof: - hero section - early credibility block - mid-page examples - comparison section - pricing section - FAQ - CTA area - author bio - sidebar Rules: - Do not assume trust is created by claims alone. - Do not overload early-stage educational content with aggressive proof. - Do not hide risk if the searcher is worried about it. - The final output should make the page more believable and useful. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#049Query-to-Content Format Router

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHAvoiding wrong content formats, choosing between guides, lists, tools, templates, comparisons, product pages, landing pages, and support articles.

Route search queries to the correct content format based on intent, audience expectation, SERP pattern, conversion value, and information depth.

You are a content format routing engine. Decide the best format for each search query and explain why. Queries: [PASTE QUERIES] Context: Business: [BUSINESS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Existing content: [CONTENT] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Content resources: [RESOURCES] SERP notes, if available: [SERP NOTES] For each query choose one format: - short answer page - long-form guide - listicle - comparison page - alternative page - product page - category page - service landing page - template page - tool or calculator - checklist - tutorial - case study - FAQ - glossary - video-led page - local landing page - support article For each query provide: 1. Format decision - recommended format - why this format matches intent - why other formats are weaker 2. Reader expectation - depth - examples - proof - visuals - speed of answer - next step 3. Page requirements - title direction - first section - core sections - CTA - internal links - schema or media needs 4. Risk notes Flag: - mixed intent - cannibalization - poor business fit - low conversion value - format uncertainty - SERP validation needed 5. Build priority Classify: - build now - refresh existing - merge with existing - test first - monitor - avoid Rules: - Do not force blog posts for every query. - Do not create product pages for informational intent unless the SERP supports it. - Do not ignore content production effort. - The output should make page-type decisions clear and defendable. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#050SERP Differentiation Angle Finder

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHCompetitive SERPs, saturated topics, thought leadership SEO, content briefs, page refreshes, and brand differentiation.

Find a distinct angle for SEO content that satisfies search intent while avoiding generic copycat content.

Act as a SERP differentiation strategist. Help me find a unique but intent-matched angle for this keyword. Keyword: [KEYWORD] SERP notes: [PASTE TOP RESULT PATTERNS / COMPETITOR NOTES] Business context: Brand positioning: [POSITIONING] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Unique expertise: [EXPERTISE] Data or examples we have: [DATA / EXAMPLES] Strong opinions or POV: [POV] Content constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Find differentiation angles: ANGLE TYPE 1 — Audience specificity How can we make the page more specific to a clear audience? ANGLE TYPE 2 — Use-case specificity How can we focus on a real situation or job? ANGLE TYPE 3 — Depth and practicality How can we make the page more useful than generic results? ANGLE TYPE 4 — Proof and evidence What proof can make the page more credible? ANGLE TYPE 5 — Contrarian or sharper POV What safe, useful, non-clickbait point of view can make the page memorable? ANGLE TYPE 6 — Tool, template or framework What practical asset can the page include? For each angle provide: - angle name - one-sentence promise - why it matches intent - why it is different - what sections it needs - proof required - CTA fit - risk Then recommend: - best angle - backup angle - title options - intro approach - sections to avoid - differentiation checklist Rules: - Do not create differentiation that violates intent. - Do not use fake controversy. - Do not be different by being less useful. - The page should feel more helpful and more distinctive. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#051Mixed Intent Resolver

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHAmbiguous keywords, broad terms, keywords with both commercial and informational results, cannibalization prevention, and page planning.

Analyze keywords where search results or audience needs show mixed intent, then decide whether to create one page, multiple pages, or avoid the keyword.

You are a mixed-intent SEO strategist. Resolve this ambiguous keyword so the content strategy does not create the wrong page. Keyword: [KEYWORD] SERP observations: [PASTE SERP NOTES] Business context: Business: [BUSINESS] Offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Existing pages: [EXISTING PAGES] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Current ranking or traffic data: [DATA] Resolve the mixed intent: 1. Intent variants List all plausible intents behind the keyword. For each include: - searcher goal - awareness stage - likely page type - commercial value - content expectation - CTA fit 2. SERP evidence Map SERP results to each intent: - which intent dominates - which intent is secondary - whether Google is testing different intents - whether the SERP is unstable - whether brand or local intent appears 3. Business fit For each intent evaluate: - audience fit - offer fit - conversion potential - ability to satisfy intent - resource effort - risk 4. Page decision Choose: - one broad page - one focused page - multiple pages - support content only - do not target - validate later Explain why. 5. Cannibalization prevention Recommend: - primary target page - supporting pages - internal link anchors - title differentiation - noindex or merge rules - keywords to avoid on each page Rules: - Do not collapse different intents into one page if users need different outcomes. - Do not create multiple pages for the same intent. - Do not ignore SERP ambiguity. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where live SERP data is needed. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#052Audience Language and Reading Level Analyzer

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHAudience research, SEO copywriting, beginner vs expert content, B2B content, technical content, and page rewrites.

Identify the language level, terminology, tone, expertise depth, and explanation style that searchers expect from SEO content.

Act as an SEO audience language analyst. Determine how the content should sound based on who is searching and what they need. Keyword or topic: [KEYWORD / TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Available language samples: [PASTE CUSTOMER LANGUAGE / SERP SNIPPETS / REVIEWS / SUPPORT QUESTIONS] Business context: Offer: [OFFER] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Current content: [CURRENT CONTENT] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Goal: [GOAL] Analyze language fit: A. Reader expertise level Classify the reader as: - beginner - advanced beginner - intermediate - expert - executive - practitioner - buyer - technical evaluator - casual consumer Explain evidence. B. Vocabulary map Create: - terms to use - terms to define - terms to avoid - jargon allowed - jargon to translate - emotional phrases - decision phrases - trust phrases C. Explanation depth Recommend: - how much background to include - where to simplify - where to go deeper - where examples are necessary - where visuals would help - what not to over-explain D. Tone direction Define tone as: - educational - direct - expert - reassuring - practical - comparative - urgent - neutral - consultative Explain why. E. Rewrite guidance Create: - sample intro - sample H2s - sample FAQ answer - sample CTA - before/after sentence examples Rules: - Do not use generic marketing language. - Do not write above or below the reader's knowledge level. - Do not ignore real customer language. - The content should sound like it understands the searcher. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#053Decision Needs Map for SEO Content

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHCommercial investigation queries, comparison pages, buying guides, service pages, product pages, and high-consideration purchases.

Identify the decisions a searcher is trying to make and design content that gives them the criteria, comparisons, proof, and next steps they need.

You are a decision-support content strategist. Analyze what decisions this searcher needs to make and how the page should help. Keyword or topic: [KEYWORD / TOPIC] Business context: Offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Decision complexity: [LOW / MEDIUM / HIGH] Alternatives: [ALTERNATIVES] Objections: [OBJECTIONS] Sales cycle: [SALES CYCLE] Conversion goal: [CONVERSION] Current content: [CONTENT] Build the decision map: 1. Main decision What is the searcher deciding? Examples: - which option to choose - whether the problem matters - whether to solve it now - whether to use a product - whether to hire a provider - whether to switch - whether to spend money - which criteria matter 2. Decision criteria List the criteria they will use: - price - speed - quality - risk - ease - features - support - credibility - compatibility - ROI - social proof - implementation effort 3. Evidence requirements For each criterion define what content should provide: - explanation - comparison - data - example - case study - demo - calculator - checklist - FAQ - expert recommendation 4. Page structure Create a decision-friendly structure: - quick recommendation - comparison table - criteria guide - option breakdown - proof blocks - objection section - next-step CTA 5. Decision failure risks Explain what would make the page fail: - too vague - biased comparison - missing tradeoffs - no pricing context - no proof - unclear recommendation - no next step Rules: - Do not pretend every reader wants a generic explanation. - Do not hide tradeoffs. - Do not make claims without proof. - The page should help the searcher make a better decision. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#054SERP Ecosystem Scanner

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHTopic planning, cluster strategy, audience research, SERP research, and building topical authority.

Analyze a topic's broader SERP ecosystem across related searches, ranking formats, adjacent queries, audience segments, and content opportunities.

Act as a SERP ecosystem researcher. Analyze this topic beyond a single keyword and map the surrounding search landscape. Topic: [TOPIC] SERP and keyword notes: [PASTE NOTES / RELATED SEARCHES / PAA / COMPETITOR PAGES / KEYWORDS] Business context: Business: [BUSINESS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Current content: [CONTENT] Goal: [GOAL] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Scan the ecosystem: ZONE 1 — Core SERP Identify: - dominant intent - top page types - repeated angles - common proof - SERP features ZONE 2 — Adjacent searches Identify related searches around: - definitions - how-to - examples - mistakes - tools - templates - comparisons - alternatives - pricing - implementation - troubleshooting ZONE 3 — Audience segments Identify which segments appear in the SERP ecosystem: - beginners - experts - buyers - practitioners - executives - local searchers - DIY users - enterprise users - budget-conscious users ZONE 4 — Content gaps Find gaps by: - intent - format - depth - audience - proof - freshness - practicality - conversion path ZONE 5 — Cluster plan Create: - main pillar - supporting pages - FAQ pages - comparison pages - template or tool opportunities - product or service pages - internal link map Rules: - Do not analyze the topic as only one keyword. - Do not create clusters with overlapping intent. - Do not ignore audience segments. - The output should show the search landscape around the topic. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#055Content Experience Benchmark

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHSEO UX, content refreshes, landing page improvements, SERP differentiation, and content design.

Compare the user experience of ranking pages and define how to create a page that is easier to scan, trust, understand, and act on.

You are an SEO content experience analyst. Benchmark the experience of pages ranking for this search and design a better user experience. Search query: [QUERY] Ranking page notes: [PASTE PAGE NOTES / SCREENSHOT OBSERVATIONS / STRUCTURE / UX COMMENTS] My page or planned page: [PAGE / PLAN] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Goal: [GOAL] Device priority: [MOBILE / DESKTOP / BOTH] Conversion goal: [CONVERSION] Brand style: [STYLE] Benchmark the experience: A. Scanability Evaluate: - headline clarity - section labels - paragraph length - table of contents - summary blocks - bullets - visual breaks - answer speed B. Comprehension Evaluate: - explanation clarity - examples - definitions - sequence - terminology - cognitive load - beginner friendliness C. Trust Evaluate: - author credibility - sources - proof - examples - dates - transparency - comparisons - limitations D. Actionability Evaluate: - next steps - templates - checklists - tools - recommendations - CTA clarity - internal links E. Better experience design Create: - improved page flow - content modules - visual elements - summary boxes - comparison blocks - FAQ placement - CTA placement - mobile considerations Rules: - Do not judge content only by word count. - Do not ignore how users scan before reading. - Do not bury the answer. - The page should be easier to use than the pages already ranking. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#056Freshness and Update Intent Analyzer

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHContent refresh planning, year-based keywords, news-sensitive topics, tools, software, pricing, regulations, trends, and seasonal SEO.

Determine whether a keyword requires fresh, updated, time-sensitive, annually refreshed, or evergreen content based on SERP patterns and audience expectations.

Act as a freshness intent analyst. Determine how current the content must be for this keyword to satisfy searchers and compete. Keyword: [KEYWORD] SERP observations: [PASTE DATES / TITLES / FRESHNESS SIGNALS / RESULT TYPES] Business context: Industry: [INDUSTRY] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Current content date: [DATE] Content type: [CONTENT TYPE] Update resources: [RESOURCES] Risk of outdated information: [RISK] Analyze freshness needs: 1. Freshness signals Look for: - current year in titles - recent publication dates - updated dates - news results - changing product information - changing prices - changing laws or regulations - changing tools or software - seasonal demand - trend sensitivity 2. Freshness classification Classify the keyword as: - evergreen - evergreen with periodic refresh - annual update required - quarterly update required - monthly update required - trend-sensitive - news-sensitive - real-time or unstable 3. Update expectations Define what must be current: - examples - screenshots - pricing - product names - statistics - laws - rankings - recommendations - tools - availability - best practices 4. Refresh plan Create: - sections to update - facts to verify - outdated language to remove - date strategy - URL strategy - internal link updates - republishing recommendation - review cadence 5. Risk assessment Explain: - ranking risk if stale - trust risk if stale - conversion risk if stale - when content should be retired Rules: - Do not add the current year if the content is not truly updated. - Do not refresh evergreen content unnecessarily. - Do not leave time-sensitive claims without review. - Use [VERIFY] for facts that need current validation. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#057Competitor Intent Coverage Map

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHCompetitive SEO research, content gap analysis, cluster planning, SaaS SEO, service SEO, and category strategy.

Compare how competitors cover different search intents and identify where your site can serve the audience better.

You are a competitor intent coverage analyst. Compare how competitors cover the searcher's journey and find strategic gaps. Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Competitor pages or topics: [PASTE PAGES / KEYWORDS / NOTES] My business: [MY BUSINESS] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Current pages: [MY PAGES] Strengths: [STRENGTHS] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] SEO goal: [GOAL] Create the intent coverage map: 1. Competitor coverage table For each competitor map coverage across: - definition intent - problem intent - how-to intent - comparison intent - alternative intent - pricing intent - product intent - use-case intent - industry intent - support intent - local intent, if relevant 2. Quality of coverage Score each intent area by: - depth - clarity - freshness - proof - UX - conversion path - audience fit - differentiation 3. Gap diagnosis Identify: - intents nobody covers well - intents competitors cover but we do not - intents we can cover better - intents not worth targeting - intents that need a unique angle 4. Strategic response Recommend: - pages to create - pages to improve - clusters to build - comparison pages to consider - support content to add - CTAs to adjust - proof assets to collect 5. Battle plan Create: - first 5 gaps to attack - defensive pages to strengthen - long-term authority plays - competitor tactics to avoid Rules: - Do not assume competitor coverage equals good coverage. - Do not chase all competitor topics. - Do not ignore our unique strengths. - The output should reveal where audience intent is underserved. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#058SERP-Driven SEO Content Brief Generator

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHWriters, SEO teams, content managers, agencies, content refreshes, and new page production.

Convert SERP research, audience intent, ranking page patterns, gaps, and business goals into a complete SEO content brief.

Act as an SEO content brief strategist. Create a complete content brief based on search intent, audience expectations, and SERP research. Target keyword: [KEYWORD] SERP research notes: [PASTE SERP NOTES] Audience context: [AUDIENCE CONTEXT] Business context: Offer: [OFFER] Conversion goal: [CONVERSION] Existing related pages: [RELATED PAGES] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Required proof or examples: [PROOF] Content constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Create the brief: A. Strategic summary Include: - target keyword - secondary keywords - search intent - awareness stage - target reader - page goal - business goal - recommended page type B. Reader expectation Define: - what reader wants quickly - what they need explained - what proof they expect - what objections they have - what next step fits C. SERP learning Summarize: - ranking patterns - common sections - weak spots - differentiation opportunity - content format expectations - freshness needs D. Content structure Create: - title options - meta description - H1 - full H2/H3 outline - section purpose notes - FAQ section - examples to include - tables or visuals - CTA placement E. SEO requirements Include: - keyword usage guidance - internal links - external source needs - schema suggestions - image suggestions - snippet opportunities - E-E-A-T signals F. Quality checklist Create a checklist for: - intent match - completeness - clarity - proof - originality - conversion path - scanability - factual accuracy Rules: - Do not create a brief that only lists keywords. - Do not ignore SERP evidence. - Do not let SEO requirements override usefulness. - The brief should be detailed enough for a writer to execute. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#059Existing Page Intent Mismatch Diagnostic

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHUnderperforming pages, traffic drops, low engagement, poor conversions, content refreshes, and SEO audits.

Diagnose whether an existing page fails because it targets the wrong intent, wrong audience, wrong format, wrong funnel stage, or wrong SERP expectations.

You are an SEO intent mismatch auditor. Diagnose whether this page is misaligned with what searchers and the SERP expect. Existing page: [PASTE URL OR CONTENT] Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Performance data: [TRAFFIC / RANKINGS / CTR / ENGAGEMENT / CONVERSIONS] SERP notes: [PASTE SERP NOTES] Business context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Conversion goal: [CONVERSION] Related pages: [RELATED PAGES] Diagnose mismatch: 1. Target intent vs page intent Compare: - searcher intent - page promise - page structure - page depth - CTA - audience level - funnel stage 2. Mismatch types Check for: - informational page targeting commercial query - commercial page targeting informational query - beginner content for expert audience - expert content for beginner audience - broad page for narrow query - narrow page for broad query - wrong format - missing proof - wrong CTA - outdated content 3. Evidence Use evidence from: - title - intro - headings - sections - examples - CTAs - SERP pattern - performance data - internal links 4. Fix decision Recommend: - rewrite page - reposition page - split page - merge page - create new page - change target keyword - update CTA - improve proof - noindex or redirect - leave as is 5. Rewrite plan Create: - new title direction - revised intro promise - sections to add - sections to remove - internal links - CTA adjustment - measurement plan Rules: - Do not assume poor ranking always means poor content. - Do not recommend rewriting without diagnosing intent. - Do not force one page to serve conflicting intents. - The output should identify the exact mismatch and the right fix. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#060Full Search Intent, Audience and SERP Research Audit

SEARCH INTENT, AUDIENCE & SERP RESEARCHFull SEO content strategy, content audits, SERP research, agency deliverables, SEO briefs, and improving content relevance at scale.

Audit and redesign a complete intent research system across audience needs, SERP patterns, ranking pages, content gaps, awareness stages, decision needs, and content formats.

Act as an independent search intent, audience, and SERP research auditor. Review my SEO content direction and create a complete intent-led strategy. Full context: Business: [BUSINESS] Website: [WEBSITE] Offer: [OFFER] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Target keywords: [KEYWORDS] Current pages: [PAGES] Current content library: [CONTENT] SERP notes: [SERP NOTES] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Customer research: [CUSTOMER RESEARCH] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] Performance data: [PERFORMANCE] Conversion goals: [CONVERSIONS] Brand voice: [VOICE] Resources: [RESOURCES] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Audit across 30 dimensions: 1. Primary search intent clarity 2. Secondary intent detection 3. Mixed intent handling 4. Audience awareness stage 5. Reader expertise level 6. Searcher emotional state 7. Decision needs 8. Objection coverage 9. Trust and proof requirements 10. SERP result type understanding 11. SERP feature opportunities 12. Ranking page pattern analysis 13. Competitor intent coverage 14. Content format fit 15. Page type routing 16. Content depth fit 17. Scanability expectations 18. Freshness expectations 19. Language and vocabulary fit 20. Customer language integration 21. Content gap detection 22. Differentiation angle quality 23. CTA-to-intent fit 24. Internal link-to-journey fit 25. Cannibalization risk 26. Existing page intent mismatch 27. Brief quality 28. Conversion path alignment 29. SERP validation process 30. Overall intent-led SEO readiness For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from my context - risk if ignored - recommended fix - priority level - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Hard truth Explain the biggest intent or audience mismatch hurting the SEO strategy. B. Intent strategy map Create: - primary audience segments - keyword intent groups - awareness stages - page type recommendations - proof requirements - content format rules - CTA rules - freshness rules - differentiation rules C. SERP research system Define a repeatable workflow for: - selecting keywords - collecting SERP observations - identifying ranking patterns - mapping audience expectations - finding gaps - choosing page type - creating briefs - reviewing final content D. Page action plan Create: - pages to rewrite - pages to split - pages to merge - pages to create - pages to refresh - pages to leave unchanged - pages needing SERP validation E. First 30 days Create a practical 30-day plan with: - research tasks - page audits - briefs to create - content fixes - SERP checks - internal link updates - measurement setup F. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - strongest intent opportunity - biggest SERP gap - most urgent page mismatch - best differentiation angle - first page to fix - first new page to create - first brief to write - one operating principle for intent-led SEO Rules: - Do not treat search intent as a one-word label. - Do not recommend content formats that conflict with SERP evidence. - Do not ignore audience awareness and decision needs. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where data is incomplete. - The final strategy should make SEO content feel more relevant, useful, differentiated, and conversion-aware.

#061Technical SEO Health Command Center

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHFull technical audits, SEO retainers, website health checks, new client onboarding, growth teams, and websites with unexplained ranking or traffic issues.

Run a complete technical SEO health review that identifies what is helping, hurting, blocking, or limiting organic performance.

You are a technical SEO auditor. Review my website from a site health perspective and create a prioritized action plan. Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business type: [BUSINESS TYPE] CMS or platform: [CMS / PLATFORM] Website size: [NUMBER OF PAGES] Primary markets: [MARKETS] Primary languages: [LANGUAGES] Current organic traffic: [TRAFFIC] Known SEO issues: [KNOWN ISSUES] Recent changes: [RECENT CHANGES] Technical tools available: [TOOLS] Main business goals: [GOALS] Development resources: [DEV RESOURCES] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Audit the site across these areas: 1. Crawlability Check: - crawl paths - blocked pages - orphan pages - crawl depth - internal link access - robots.txt rules - navigation problems - pagination issues - faceted navigation issues 2. Indexation Check: - indexed vs submitted pages - noindex usage - canonical conflicts - duplicate pages - soft 404s - low-value indexed pages - important pages missing from index - sitemap accuracy 3. Technical performance Check: - site speed - Core Web Vitals - mobile usability - JavaScript rendering - server response issues - image performance - layout stability - interaction delay 4. URL and architecture health Check: - URL consistency - redirects - broken URLs - duplicate URL paths - trailing slash issues - parameter issues - HTTPS consistency - site structure clarity 5. Search enhancement Check: - structured data - schema errors - breadcrumbs - hreflang, if relevant - canonical tags - metadata generation issues - Open Graph or social metadata, if relevant For every issue provide: - issue name - evidence needed - affected page type - SEO impact - user impact - business impact - difficulty - owner - recommended fix - priority: critical / high / medium / low - confidence level Then create: - top 10 technical fixes - first 7-day action plan - first 30-day roadmap - developer brief - monitoring checklist Rules: - Do not treat every technical issue as equally important. - Do not recommend fixes without explaining SEO impact. - Do not ignore developer effort. - Use [NEEDS DATA] where crawl, GSC, log, or performance data is required. - The final output should help the team decide what to fix first. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#062Crawlability Path Finder

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHLarge websites, e-commerce sites, SaaS sites, content libraries, migrations, technical audits, and websites with poor discovery or indexing.

Diagnose whether search engines can efficiently discover and crawl important pages while avoiding traps, waste, blocked paths, and orphaned content.

Act as a crawlability strategist. Map how search engines should discover my important pages and where crawl access may be breaking. Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Important page types: [PAGE TYPES] Current navigation: [NAVIGATION] Sitemap URL: [SITEMAP] Robots.txt URL: [ROBOTS] Known crawl issues: [ISSUES] Crawl report data: [CRAWL DATA] Google Search Console crawl data: [GSC DATA] Website size: [SIZE] CMS limitations: [LIMITATIONS] Build the crawlability map: A. Important crawl paths Identify how crawlers should reach: - homepage - category pages - product or service pages - blog posts - resource pages - location pages - comparison pages - support pages - newly published pages B. Crawl blockers Look for possible blockers: - robots.txt disallow rules - nofollow internal links - JavaScript-only links - blocked CSS or JS files - forms required for access - infinite scroll problems - login walls - broken navigation - pagination issues - poor XML sitemap coverage C. Crawl waste Identify pages that may waste crawl attention: - filter URLs - sort URLs - duplicate parameters - internal search pages - thin tag pages - session URLs - tracking URLs - duplicate archives - low-value paginated pages D. Orphan page diagnosis Create a method to find: - pages in sitemap but not internally linked - pages with traffic but no internal links - pages in analytics but not crawlable - pages in CMS but not linked - pages linked only from outdated pages E. Crawl improvement plan Recommend: - links to add - navigation changes - sitemap fixes - robots.txt changes - parameter handling - pagination fixes - internal linking rules - monitoring metrics Rules: - Do not block URLs without checking whether they have search value. - Do not rely only on XML sitemaps for discovery. - Do not ignore crawl traps on large sites. - The output should make important pages easier to discover and low-value pages less distracting. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#063Indexation Diagnostic and Recovery Plan

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHGoogle Search Console issues, new pages not indexing, duplicate indexation, thin pages, sitemap problems, canonical conflicts, and index bloat.

Identify why important pages are not indexed, why low-value pages are indexed, and how to improve indexation quality.

You are an indexation recovery specialist. Diagnose indexation problems and create a cleanup plan. Inputs: Website: [WEBSITE] Important URLs not indexed: [URLS] Low-value URLs indexed: [URLS] Google Search Console messages: [GSC MESSAGES] Sitemap URLs: [SITEMAP DATA] Canonical data: [CANONICAL DATA] Robots.txt rules: [ROBOTS RULES] Noindex rules: [NOINDEX RULES] Recent site changes: [CHANGES] Page types affected: [PAGE TYPES] Run the diagnosis: 1. Missing indexation causes For important pages, check possible causes: - blocked by robots.txt - noindex tag - canonical points elsewhere - duplicate content - soft 404 - thin content - crawl depth too deep - poor internal links - redirect chain - server error - discovered but not crawled - crawled but not indexed - rendering problem - low quality signal 2. Index bloat causes For low-value indexed pages, check: - parameter URLs - internal search pages - tag pages - duplicate archives - thin location pages - old campaign pages - printer-friendly pages - staging URLs - HTTP duplicates - trailing slash duplicates - uppercase/lowercase duplicates 3. URL-level action table For each URL or page type provide: - current index status - likely cause - evidence needed - desired status - recommended action - risk - owner - priority 4. Recovery actions Create instructions for: - improve page quality - strengthen internal links - update sitemap - fix canonical - remove noindex - add noindex - redirect - return 410 - consolidate duplicate pages - request indexing, where appropriate 5. Monitoring plan Define: - metrics to watch - GSC reports to check - crawl checks - sitemap checks - expected timeline - signs of recovery - signs of continued issue Rules: - Do not request indexing before fixing the underlying problem. - Do not noindex valuable pages. - Do not canonicalize pages without checking intent and content overlap. - Use [NEEDS VERIFICATION] where live index data is required. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#064Robots.txt and XML Sitemap QA Engineer

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHTechnical SEO QA, migrations, crawl audits, sitemap updates, CMS changes, e-commerce sites, and large content websites.

Review robots.txt and XML sitemaps to ensure important pages are discoverable, low-value pages are controlled, and search engines receive clean crawl signals.

Act as a robots.txt and XML sitemap QA engineer. Review my crawl directives and sitemap setup for technical SEO problems. Inputs: Robots.txt content: [PASTE ROBOTS.TXT] XML sitemap examples or sitemap index: [PASTE SITEMAP DATA] Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Important page types: [IMPORTANT PAGE TYPES] Pages that should not be crawled: [DO NOT CRAWL] Pages that should not be indexed: [DO NOT INDEX] CMS or platform: [CMS] Known crawl issues: [ISSUES] Recent migration or redesign: [MIGRATION / REDESIGN] Review robots.txt: Check for: - accidental blocking of important pages - blocked CSS or JS resources - conflicting user-agent rules - weak wildcard patterns - sitemap declaration - blocked URLs that should use noindex instead - staging or admin rules - parameter handling - duplicate disallow rules Review XML sitemaps: Check for: - non-200 URLs - redirected URLs - canonicalized URLs - noindex URLs - blocked URLs - duplicate URLs - missing important pages - low-value pages included - wrong lastmod usage - old or stale URLs - incorrect language or region URLs Create a QA report with: - critical issues - high-priority issues - medium-priority issues - low-priority cleanup - recommended robots.txt changes - recommended sitemap changes - URLs to test - validation steps - monitoring routine Decision rules: - Use robots.txt to manage crawling, not indexation. - Use noindex to remove pages from index when crawling is allowed. - Use sitemaps for canonical, indexable, valuable URLs only. - Do not include redirected, blocked, noindex, or duplicate URLs in sitemaps. Rules: - Do not recommend blocking important pages. - Do not assume blocked pages will disappear from the index. - Do not change directives without explaining risk. - The final output should be safe enough to hand to a developer or SEO manager. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#065Core Web Vitals and Performance Action Planner

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHSlow sites, performance audits, mobile SEO, e-commerce, SaaS landing pages, media-heavy sites, and developer SEO briefs.

Translate site speed and Core Web Vitals issues into practical fixes that improve user experience and organic performance.

You are a web performance SEO strategist. Turn performance data into a practical improvement plan. Website or page type: [WEBSITE / PAGE TYPE] Performance data: PageSpeed Insights / Lighthouse / CrUX data: [PASTE DATA] Context: Primary device: [MOBILE / DESKTOP / BOTH] CMS or framework: [CMS / FRAMEWORK] Hosting setup: [HOSTING] Important templates: [TEMPLATES] Known performance problems: [PROBLEMS] Development resources: [RESOURCES] Business-critical pages: [PAGES] Conversion goals: [CONVERSIONS] Analyze performance: A. Metric diagnosis Review: - Largest Contentful Paint - Interaction to Next Paint - Cumulative Layout Shift - First Contentful Paint - Time to First Byte - Total Blocking Time - render-blocking resources - image delivery - JavaScript execution - CSS delivery - third-party scripts B. Template impact Classify issues by page template: - homepage - category pages - product pages - service pages - blog posts - landing pages - checkout or conversion pages - resource pages C. Fix mapping For each issue provide: - likely cause - affected metric - affected template - user impact - SEO impact - development effort - risk - recommended fix - validation method D. Prioritization Group fixes into: - quick wins - developer fixes - design fixes - hosting fixes - script cleanup - image optimization - long-term architecture work E. Implementation brief Create: - first 5 fixes - developer ticket wording - QA checklist - performance budget recommendation - monitoring schedule Rules: - Do not optimize scores while ignoring real user experience. - Do not recommend removing critical functionality without replacement. - Do not treat desktop performance as enough if mobile traffic matters. - Use [NEEDS DEV REVIEW] where implementation depends on platform details. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#066Redirect, 404 and URL Cleanup Strategist

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHSite migrations, redesigns, content pruning, broken link audits, URL consolidation, and technical SEO recovery projects.

Find and fix redirect chains, broken pages, soft 404s, incorrect redirects, outdated URLs, and URL cleanup issues that damage crawl efficiency and user experience.

Act as a URL cleanup and redirect strategist. Create a safe plan for handling broken, redirected, outdated, and duplicate URLs. Inputs: URL data: [PASTE URL LIST / CRAWL EXPORT / 404 REPORT / REDIRECT LIST] Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Recent migration: [YES / NO + DETAILS] CMS: [CMS] Important page types: [PAGE TYPES] Traffic or backlink data: [DATA] Current redirect rules: [RULES] Known problems: [PROBLEMS] Business-critical URLs: [CRITICAL URLS] Classify every URL or URL pattern as: - keep live - redirect - fix internal link - update canonical - return 404 - return 410 - recreate page - merge page - remove from sitemap - investigate For each broken or redirected URL identify: - current status code - desired status code - source of issue - internal links pointing to it - external backlinks, if known - traffic value, if known - closest relevant destination - redirect risk - recommended action Analyze redirect quality: Check for: - redirect chains - redirect loops - HTTP to HTTPS problems - www vs non-www inconsistency - trailing slash conflicts - uppercase/lowercase duplicates - redirecting to irrelevant pages - mass redirects to homepage - old migration redirects missing - temporary redirects used incorrectly Create a cleanup plan: - critical fixes - internal link updates - redirect map - sitemap cleanup - canonical cleanup - developer tickets - QA test list - monitoring after deployment Rules: - Do not redirect every broken URL to the homepage. - Do not remove URLs with traffic or backlinks without checking value. - Do not create redirects that confuse intent. - The plan should preserve equity, improve UX, and reduce crawl waste. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#067Canonicalization and Duplicate Content Resolver

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHE-commerce filters, category pages, blog archives, SaaS pages, international sites, migrations, and large websites with duplicate URL issues.

Diagnose duplicate content, canonical conflicts, URL variants, similar pages, and consolidation opportunities without damaging valuable search intent.

You are a canonicalization and duplicate content specialist. Help me decide which pages should stay separate, canonicalize, merge, redirect, noindex, or be rewritten. Inputs: URL groups or duplicate examples: [PASTE URLS / DUPLICATE GROUPS / CRAWL DATA] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] CMS or platform: [CMS] Page types involved: [PAGE TYPES] Canonical tags currently used: [CANONICAL DATA] Indexation data: [INDEXATION DATA] Traffic or ranking data: [PERFORMANCE DATA] Business purpose of pages: [PURPOSE] Important constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Resolve the duplicates: 1. Duplicate type classification Classify issues as: - exact duplicate - near duplicate - parameter duplicate - sorting duplicate - pagination duplicate - print version duplicate - HTTP/HTTPS duplicate - www/non-www duplicate - trailing slash duplicate - localized duplicate - faceted duplicate - intent-overlap duplicate - template-thin duplicate 2. Intent evaluation For each group decide: - same search intent - different search intent - same audience - different audience - same product/category - separate business value - cannibalization risk 3. Resolution decision Recommend one action: - self-canonical - canonical to primary URL - 301 redirect - merge content - rewrite for distinct intent - noindex - block crawl only after careful review - keep separate - remove from sitemap 4. Canonical implementation brief For each recommendation include: - primary URL - secondary URLs - canonical rule - internal link update - sitemap update - redirect rule, if needed - QA step - risk 5. Prevention rules Create rules for preventing future duplication: - URL parameter policy - filter URL policy - CMS template rules - archive policy - tag page rules - pagination rules - canonical QA routine Rules: - Do not canonicalize pages that serve meaningfully different search intents. - Do not use canonical tags as a substitute for fixing internal linking. - Do not noindex pages without checking business and search value. - Use [NEEDS DATA] where rankings, traffic, or canonical behavior must be verified. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#068JavaScript SEO Rendering Audit

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHReact, Next.js, Vue, Nuxt, Angular, headless CMS websites, web apps, SaaS sites, and sites with rendering or indexation issues.

Diagnose whether JavaScript rendering, hydration, client-side routing, lazy loading, or framework behavior is preventing search engines from seeing important content and links.

Act as a JavaScript SEO rendering auditor. Determine whether search engines can access, render, and understand the important content and links on my site. Website or template: [WEBSITE / TEMPLATE] Technical context: Framework: [FRAMEWORK] Rendering method: [CSR / SSR / SSG / ISR / HYBRID / UNKNOWN] CMS or headless setup: [CMS] Important content loaded by JS: [CONTENT] Important links loaded by JS: [LINKS] Known indexation issues: [ISSUES] Crawl or render data: [DATA] Development resources: [RESOURCES] Audit rendering risk: A. Content visibility Check whether important content appears in: - raw HTML - rendered HTML - mobile render - cached or indexed text - structured data - meta tags - internal links - pagination links B. Link discoverability Review: - anchor tags vs click handlers - links behind buttons - infinite scroll links - lazy-loaded links - internal navigation - pagination - related content blocks - canonical tags rendered by JS - hreflang rendered by JS, if relevant C. Rendering bottlenecks Identify risks from: - client-side rendering only - slow API calls - blocked JS files - hydration errors - route changes without unique URLs - lazy loading critical content - poor error states - script failures - heavy third-party scripts D. Fix recommendations Recommend: - server-side rendering - static generation - pre-rendering - progressive enhancement - HTML links - critical content in initial HTML - lazy-load rules - structured data placement - canonical and metadata handling - rendering QA tests E. Developer QA plan Create tests for: - view-source comparison - rendered HTML comparison - URL inspection - mobile-friendly test - blocked resources - JS disabled behavior - crawl simulation - template-level validation Rules: - Do not assume Google can safely handle every JavaScript implementation. - Do not hide critical content behind interactions only. - Do not rely on JavaScript to create essential SEO signals if avoidable. - Use [NEEDS DEV REVIEW] for framework-specific implementation details. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#069Structured Data and Schema Opportunity Planner

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHProduct pages, articles, FAQs, breadcrumbs, reviews, local businesses, recipes, events, courses, software, and technical SEO enhancements.

Identify structured data opportunities, validate schema usage, prevent schema spam, and create implementation briefs for enhanced search understanding.

You are a structured data strategist. Plan useful schema markup that accurately represents my content and supports search understanding. Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business type: [BUSINESS TYPE] Page types: [PAGE TYPES] Current schema, if any: [CURRENT SCHEMA] CMS or platform: [CMS] Content types available: [CONTENT TYPES] Review or rating data: [REVIEWS] Product data: [PRODUCT DATA] Local business data: [LOCAL DATA] Known schema errors: [ERRORS] Create the structured data plan: 1. Page-type schema map Recommend schema types for: - homepage - organization - local business, if relevant - product pages - service pages - category pages - articles - blog posts - FAQ sections - breadcrumbs - reviews - videos - events - courses - software applications - job postings, if relevant 2. Eligibility and truth check For each schema type answer: - is the content actually visible on the page? - does the page qualify? - what fields are required? - what fields are recommended? - what data source should populate it? - what should not be marked up? 3. Implementation format Provide: - JSON-LD recommendation - field map - example structure - CMS implementation note - dynamic data requirements - QA steps 4. Risk prevention Flag: - fake reviews - hidden FAQ content - mismatched schema type - missing required fields - duplicate schema - invalid nesting - outdated product data - misleading ratings 5. Monitoring plan Create: - validation checklist - Search Console checks - template QA routine - update rules - ownership Rules: - Do not recommend schema for content that is not actually present. - Do not use structured data to misrepresent the page. - Do not treat schema as a ranking magic trick. - The plan should improve clarity and eligibility while staying compliant. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#070Broken Page and Error Recovery System

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHTechnical SEO maintenance, large sites, migrations, e-commerce, content-heavy sites, and ongoing site health workflows.

Build a system for detecting, prioritizing, fixing, and monitoring 404s, 5xx errors, soft 404s, broken links, and unavailable pages.

Act as a broken page recovery manager. Create a system for finding and fixing errors that hurt users, crawling, and organic performance. Error data: [PASTE 404 / 5XX / SOFT 404 / BROKEN LINK DATA] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Website size: [SIZE] Important page types: [PAGE TYPES] Recent changes: [CHANGES] Traffic or backlink data: [DATA] CMS or platform: [CMS] Current monitoring tools: [TOOLS] Development resources: [RESOURCES] Design the recovery system: PHASE 1 — Error classification Classify errors as: - user-facing 404 - crawl-only 404 - soft 404 - server error - broken internal link - broken external link - redirect error - deleted content - product unavailable - category removed - temporary outage - template issue PHASE 2 — Priority logic Prioritize by: - organic traffic - backlinks - internal link count - conversion value - crawl frequency - page type importance - user impact - revenue impact - error frequency PHASE 3 — Fix playbook Define actions: - restore page - redirect to relevant page - update internal links - remove from sitemap - return correct 404 - return 410 - fix server issue - fix template - create replacement page - monitor only PHASE 4 — QA checklist Create checks for: - status code - redirect destination - canonical - sitemap inclusion - internal links - page content - tracking - indexation PHASE 5 — Monitoring routine Create: - daily checks - weekly checks - monthly cleanup - alert thresholds - ownership - escalation path Rules: - Do not redirect irrelevant pages to the homepage. - Do not treat all 404s as bad. - Do not leave high-value broken URLs unresolved. - The system should reduce errors while preserving relevance and user experience. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#071Internal Linking and Crawl Depth Optimizer

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHLarge content libraries, e-commerce categories, SaaS sites, blogs, topic clusters, orphan pages, and crawl depth problems.

Improve crawl paths, page authority flow, discovery, topical connections, and conversion paths through technical internal linking.

You are an internal linking systems architect. Improve how important pages are connected for users and search engines. Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Important pages: [IMPORTANT PAGES] Target clusters: [CLUSTERS] Current internal linking issues: [ISSUES] Orphan pages: [ORPHAN PAGES] Pages too deep in site: [DEEP PAGES] High-authority pages: [HIGH-AUTHORITY PAGES] Conversion pages: [CONVERSION PAGES] Navigation constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] CMS limitations: [CMS LIMITATIONS] Build the internal linking system: 1. Page role map Classify pages as: - hub page - pillar page - supporting page - conversion page - category page - product or service page - glossary page - FAQ page - resource page - outdated page - orphan page 2. Link opportunity map Identify links from: - homepage - navigation - footer - category pages - blog posts - related content modules - breadcrumbs - comparison pages - case studies - resource hubs - high-traffic pages - high-backlink pages 3. Crawl depth improvement Recommend: - pages that must be closer to homepage - hub pages to create - navigation changes - breadcrumbs - HTML sitemap improvements - related links modules - pagination improvements 4. Anchor text rules Create guidelines for: - descriptive anchors - avoiding over-optimization - using natural language - linking by intent - linking to conversion pages - cluster reinforcement 5. Implementation plan Create: - top 20 links to add - pages to link from - pages to link to - anchor suggestions - priority - expected impact - QA checklist Rules: - Do not add links randomly. - Do not over-optimize anchor text. - Do not bury important pages. - Internal links should help users navigate and help search engines understand importance. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#072Site Architecture Technical SEO Review

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHNew websites, redesigns, migrations, enterprise sites, e-commerce, SaaS, service websites, and SEO architecture planning.

Review website architecture, hierarchy, URL structure, navigation, templates, page types, and technical structure for organic growth.

Act as a technical SEO site architect. Review my website structure and recommend a cleaner architecture for search engines and users. Website structure: [PASTE CURRENT STRUCTURE / URL PATTERNS / NAVIGATION] Business context: Business: [BUSINESS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offers: [OFFERS] Important topics: [TOPICS] Important conversions: [CONVERSIONS] Current page types: [PAGE TYPES] CMS or platform: [CMS] Known architecture issues: [ISSUES] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Review the architecture: A. Hierarchy clarity Evaluate: - homepage role - main categories - subcategories - product or service depth - resource structure - blog structure - support structure - local or language structure - conversion page access B. URL structure Check: - readable URLs - consistent patterns - unnecessary folders - duplicate paths - parameters - trailing slash consistency - category nesting - localized URLs - old URL patterns C. Navigation and discovery Review: - main navigation - breadcrumbs - footer - related links - category links - hub pages - pagination - search engine discovery paths D. Technical risks Identify: - orphaned sections - duplicate templates - thin category pages - index bloat - crawl depth issues - cannibalization - redirect complexity - sitemap mismatch E. Improved architecture Create: - recommended structure - URL pattern recommendations - page type rules - internal linking model - sitemap grouping - redirect needs - implementation phases Rules: - Do not design architecture around internal departments only. - Do not create deep structures without user or search value. - Do not create duplicate paths for the same intent. - The architecture should improve crawlability, relevance, and conversion access. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#073Log File Crawl Behavior Analyst

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHLarge sites, enterprise SEO, e-commerce, news, marketplaces, technical audits, and crawl budget optimization.

Analyze search engine bot behavior from log files to identify crawl waste, ignored sections, errors, crawl frequency patterns, and technical priorities.

You are a log file SEO analyst. Interpret server log patterns to understand how search engine bots interact with the site. Log file summary or sample: [PASTE LOG SUMMARY / BOT DATA / URL HIT DATA] Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Website size: [SIZE] Important sections: [SECTIONS] Recent changes: [CHANGES] Known crawl issues: [ISSUES] Sitemap structure: [SITEMAPS] Robots rules: [ROBOTS] Priority pages: [PRIORITY PAGES] Analyze bot behavior: 1. Bot access summary Identify: - which bots crawl the site - most crawled sections - least crawled sections - crawl frequency by page type - crawl spikes - crawl drops - mobile vs desktop bot patterns, if available 2. Crawl waste Find bot activity on: - parameter URLs - duplicate URLs - redirects - 404s - soft 404s - internal search pages - filtered pages - old URLs - low-value archives - non-canonical URLs 3. Crawl neglect Find important pages or sections that receive: - low bot activity - no recent crawl - delayed crawl after publishing - weak discovery signals - poor internal linking 4. Technical error patterns Identify: - 3xx chains - 4xx frequency - 5xx errors - slow response URLs - blocked resources - bot traps 5. Action plan Recommend: - robots.txt adjustments - internal link improvements - sitemap cleanup - redirect cleanup - parameter controls - server fixes - priority page discovery improvements - monitoring metrics Rules: - Do not treat crawl budget as the main issue for small sites unless evidence supports it. - Do not block sections without checking value. - Do not rely on crawl tools alone when log data shows different behavior. - Use [NEEDS RAW LOGS] where the sample is insufficient. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#074Technical SEO Prioritization Scorecard

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHTurning audits into roadmaps, working with developers, explaining priorities to leadership, and avoiding overwhelming issue lists.

Prioritize technical SEO issues by impact, effort, risk, business value, crawl/indexation severity, and implementation complexity.

Act as a technical SEO prioritization analyst. Turn this issue list into a clear roadmap based on impact and feasibility. Technical SEO issues: [PASTE ISSUE LIST] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business goals: [GOALS] Organic traffic importance: [IMPORTANCE] Important page types: [PAGE TYPES] Development capacity: [DEV CAPACITY] Release process: [RELEASE PROCESS] Known constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Timeline: [TIMELINE] Score each issue from 1 to 10 across: - SEO impact - user impact - business impact - crawlability impact - indexation impact - conversion impact - implementation effort - implementation risk - dependency complexity - urgency - confidence For each issue provide: - issue summary - affected templates or URLs - evidence - recommended fix - owner - effort estimate - risk if ignored - score - priority level - fix order - validation method Group issues into: - critical blockers - high-impact fixes - quick wins - developer roadmap - monitoring items - low-priority cleanup - do not fix yet Then create: - first 7 days - first 30 days - first 60 days - first 90 days - stakeholder summary - developer ticket list Rules: - Do not prioritize by number of issues alone. - Do not put low-impact technical polish ahead of indexation or crawl blockers. - Do not ignore implementation risk. - The final roadmap should be practical, sequenced, and easy to defend. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#075Developer-Ready Technical SEO Ticket Generator

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHSEO-to-engineering handoffs, Jira tickets, Linear tasks, technical briefs, sprint planning, and reducing back-and-forth with developers.

Convert technical SEO findings into clear developer tickets with context, expected behavior, acceptance criteria, QA steps, and SEO impact.

You are a technical SEO product manager. Convert this SEO issue into a developer-ready implementation ticket. SEO issue: [DESCRIBE ISSUE] Evidence: [PASTE EVIDENCE / URL EXAMPLES / SCREENSHOTS / TOOL DATA] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] CMS or framework: [CMS / FRAMEWORK] Affected templates: [TEMPLATES] Affected URLs: [URLS] Desired SEO outcome: [OUTCOME] Business impact: [IMPACT] Known constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Release process: [PROCESS] Create the ticket: 1. Ticket title Write a clear engineering-friendly title. 2. Problem statement Explain: - what is happening - where it happens - why it matters - who is affected - SEO risk - user risk 3. Expected behavior Define exactly what should happen after the fix. 4. Technical notes Include: - affected templates - URL patterns - tags or headers involved - status code expectations - canonical behavior - indexation behavior - crawl behavior - structured data behavior, if relevant 5. Acceptance criteria Write testable criteria: - given / when / then format - status code checks - rendered HTML checks - sitemap checks - robots checks - canonical checks - mobile checks - analytics or tracking checks 6. QA plan Create: - pre-release test URLs - post-release test URLs - tools to use - expected result - rollback trigger - monitoring after launch 7. Developer notes Add: - priority - dependencies - risks - what not to change - open questions Rules: - Do not write vague tickets. - Do not assume developers know the SEO context. - Do not omit acceptance criteria. - The ticket should be ready to paste into a task management system. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#076Hreflang and International SEO QA System

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHInternational websites, multilingual SEO, regional ecommerce, SaaS with country pages, global brands, and hreflang troubleshooting.

Audit hreflang, language targeting, regional URL structure, canonicals, redirects, and indexation for multilingual or multi-region websites.

Act as an international technical SEO QA specialist. Audit hreflang and international site signals for accuracy and consistency. Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Languages: [LANGUAGES] Countries or regions: [REGIONS] URL structure: [SUBFOLDERS / SUBDOMAINS / DOMAINS / PARAMETERS] Current hreflang setup: [HREFLANG DATA] Canonical setup: [CANONICAL DATA] Sitemap setup: [SITEMAPS] Redirect rules: [REDIRECTS] Known international SEO issues: [ISSUES] CMS limitations: [LIMITATIONS] Audit international signals: A. Hreflang completeness Check: - each language page references alternates - return tags exist - self-referencing hreflang exists - x-default usage - correct language-country codes - no missing alternates - no wrong URLs - no non-200 hreflang URLs - no noindex hreflang URLs - no blocked hreflang URLs B. Canonical compatibility Check: - local pages self-canonicalize - canonicals do not point to another language incorrectly - duplicates are handled correctly - regional variants are not collapsed incorrectly C. URL and redirect behavior Review: - automatic redirects - language selectors - geo redirects - user-agent handling - crawlability of regional pages - consistent URL patterns D. Content and indexation risks Identify: - machine-translated thin pages - duplicate regional pages - missing localized content - wrong currency or contact data - wrong market targeting - indexation gaps E. QA output Create: - error table - affected URL patterns - recommended fixes - sitemap hreflang guidance - QA test list - monitoring routine Rules: - Do not use hreflang to fix duplicate content by itself. - Do not canonicalize all regions to one global page if regional pages should rank. - Do not block crawlers from accessing language variants. - Use [ONLY IF INTERNATIONAL] where a recommendation applies only to multi-language or multi-region sites. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#077Faceted Navigation and Parameter Control Planner

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHE-commerce, marketplaces, directories, travel sites, real estate sites, job boards, and large catalog websites.

Control filter, sort, tracking, pagination, and parameter URLs so useful pages can rank while low-value combinations do not create crawl waste or duplicate content.

You are a faceted navigation SEO architect. Design a safe crawl and indexation strategy for filter and parameter URLs. Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Site type: [ECOMMERCE / DIRECTORY / MARKETPLACE / OTHER] Main categories: [CATEGORIES] Filters available: [FILTERS] Sort options: [SORT OPTIONS] URL parameter examples: [URL EXAMPLES] Current indexation issues: [ISSUES] Current robots rules: [ROBOTS] Current canonicals: [CANONICALS] Current sitemap rules: [SITEMAPS] Business priorities: [PRIORITIES] Build the parameter strategy: 1. URL type inventory Classify URL types: - category pages - subcategory pages - valuable filtered pages - low-value filtered pages - sort URLs - pagination URLs - search result pages - tracking parameters - session parameters - duplicate parameter orders - empty result pages 2. Search value test For each filter type evaluate: - does it match search demand? - does it create unique user value? - does it have enough inventory or content? - does it support conversion? - can it be internally linked? - should it be indexable? 3. Control strategy Recommend for each URL type: - index - noindex - canonicalize - block crawling - parameter handling - internal link rules - sitemap inclusion - merge - redirect - do nothing 4. Valuable landing page rules Define when a filtered page deserves its own indexable landing page: - search demand - stable inventory - unique intro content - clean URL - internal links - canonical self-reference - sitemap inclusion - no thin content 5. QA and monitoring Create checks for: - index bloat - crawl waste - duplicate titles - duplicate meta - canonical conflicts - empty pages - broken filters - parameter spikes Rules: - Do not index every filter combination. - Do not block URLs that need noindex to be seen. - Do not canonicalize useful unique pages to broad categories. - The strategy should protect crawl efficiency while preserving valuable search pages. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#078Technical SEO Monitoring and Alert System

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHSEO operations, large websites, agencies, in-house teams, migrations, product teams, and sites with frequent releases.

Create an ongoing monitoring system for technical SEO issues, traffic-impacting changes, crawl errors, indexation shifts, performance drops, and deployment risks.

Act as a technical SEO monitoring architect. Build a monitoring and alert system that catches problems before they become traffic losses. Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Website size: [SIZE] Business-critical templates: [TEMPLATES] Release frequency: [RELEASE FREQUENCY] Tools available: [TOOLS] Current monitoring: [CURRENT MONITORING] Known risks: [RISKS] Team owners: [OWNERS] Alert channels: [CHANNELS] Traffic sensitivity: [SENSITIVITY] Design the monitoring system: A. Metrics to monitor Include: - robots.txt changes - sitemap changes - status code spikes - 404 spikes - 5xx spikes - redirect changes - canonical changes - noindex changes - title or meta template changes - structured data errors - Core Web Vitals - page speed - index coverage changes - crawl stats - organic traffic drops - ranking drops for priority pages B. Alert thresholds For each metric define: - normal range - warning threshold - critical threshold - owner - response time - escalation path C. Release QA checks Create pre-release and post-release checks for: - critical templates - canonical tags - robots directives - sitemap output - redirects - structured data - page rendering - tracking - mobile experience D. Incident workflow Define: - detection - triage - severity level - rollback decision - communication - fix owner - validation - post-incident review E. Reporting rhythm Create: - daily automated checks - weekly site health review - monthly technical SEO report - quarterly risk review Rules: - Do not create alerts nobody owns. - Do not alert on every tiny issue. - Do not rely on traffic drops as the first warning sign. - The monitoring system should be practical, owned, and actionable. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#079Post-Launch Technical SEO QA Checklist

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHWebsite launches, migrations, redesigns, dev releases, technical QA, pre-launch checklists, and post-launch SEO protection.

Verify technical SEO after a website launch, redesign, migration, CMS change, template update, or major deployment.

You are a post-launch technical SEO QA lead. Create and run a checklist for verifying that a launch did not break organic performance. Launch context: Website: [WEBSITE] Launch type: [REDESIGN / MIGRATION / CMS CHANGE / TEMPLATE UPDATE / NEW SITE / OTHER] Launch date: [DATE] Changed sections: [SECTIONS] Old URL list: [OLD URLS] New URL list: [NEW URLS] Redirect map: [REDIRECT MAP] Staging URL: [STAGING] Production URL: [PRODUCTION] Critical pages: [CRITICAL PAGES] Tools available: [TOOLS] Run the QA: PRE-LAUNCH CHECKS Verify: - robots.txt - noindex removal from production - canonical tags - redirect map - XML sitemaps - status codes - internal links - navigation - structured data - mobile rendering - analytics and tracking - page speed - hreflang, if relevant LAUNCH DAY CHECKS Verify: - production pages crawlable - important URLs return 200 - old URLs redirect correctly - redirect chains avoided - sitemap submitted or updated - canonical tags correct - robots.txt correct - no staging URLs indexed - no critical 404s - tracking active POST-LAUNCH CHECKS Monitor: - crawl errors - index coverage - organic traffic - rankings - conversion tracking - server errors - Core Web Vitals - sitemap processing - structured data errors - redirect performance Create output: - pass/fail checklist - critical issues - high-priority fixes - rollback triggers - owner assignments - first 24-hour checks - first 7-day checks - first 30-day checks Rules: - Do not assume launch success because the site visually works. - Do not skip redirect testing. - Do not leave staging directives on production. - The checklist should protect indexation, rankings, traffic, and tracking. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#080Full Technical SEO and Site Health Audit

TECHNICAL SEO & SITE HEALTHFull technical SEO audits, enterprise websites, growth teams, agencies, migrations, traffic drops, site health resets, and SEO technical roadmaps.

Audit and redesign the complete technical SEO foundation across crawlability, indexation, performance, architecture, rendering, structured data, redirects, canonicals, monitoring, and developer workflows.

Act as an independent technical SEO and site health auditor. Review my website's technical foundation and create a complete prioritized roadmap. Full context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business type: [BUSINESS TYPE] CMS or platform: [CMS / PLATFORM] Framework: [FRAMEWORK] Website size: [SIZE] Primary markets: [MARKETS] Languages or regions: [LANGUAGES / REGIONS] Important page types: [PAGE TYPES] Current organic traffic: [TRAFFIC] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] Current conversions: [CONVERSIONS] Recent migrations or redesigns: [MIGRATIONS] Known technical issues: [KNOWN ISSUES] Crawl data: [CRAWL DATA] Google Search Console data: [GSC DATA] Analytics data: [ANALYTICS] Log file data: [LOG DATA] Page speed data: [SPEED DATA] Structured data data: [SCHEMA DATA] Current robots.txt: [ROBOTS] Current XML sitemaps: [SITEMAPS] Development resources: [DEV RESOURCES] Release process: [RELEASE PROCESS] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Audit across 35 dimensions: 1. Crawlability 2. Internal link discovery 3. Orphan pages 4. Crawl depth 5. Robots.txt 6. XML sitemaps 7. Indexation quality 8. Index bloat 9. Noindex usage 10. Canonical tags 11. Duplicate content 12. URL parameters 13. Faceted navigation 14. Pagination 15. Redirects 16. 404 and 410 handling 17. Soft 404s 18. 5xx errors 19. URL structure 20. Site architecture 21. HTTPS consistency 22. Mobile usability 23. Core Web Vitals 24. Site speed 25. JavaScript rendering 26. Metadata templates 27. Structured data 28. Breadcrumbs 29. Hreflang, if relevant 30. International signals, if relevant 31. Log file crawl behavior 32. Migration risks 33. Tracking and analytics integrity 34. Monitoring and alerts 35. Developer workflow readiness For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from my context - affected templates or URLs - SEO impact - business impact - recommended fix - implementation owner - priority level - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Hard truth Explain the biggest technical issue or system weakness limiting organic performance. B. Critical blockers List issues that may prevent crawling, indexing, rendering, ranking, or conversion tracking. C. Technical SEO roadmap Create: - first 24-hour checks - first 7-day fixes - first 30-day roadmap - first 60-day roadmap - first 90-day roadmap - long-term infrastructure improvements D. Developer handoff Create: - top developer tickets - acceptance criteria - QA checks - rollback triggers - dependencies - release order E. Monitoring system Define: - daily checks - weekly checks - monthly checks - alert thresholds - owners - escalation paths F. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - highest-risk technical issue - easiest quick win - first crawlability fix - first indexation fix - first performance fix - first architecture fix - first monitoring improvement - biggest developer dependency - one operating principle for technical SEO health Rules: - Do not create a generic checklist. - Do not recommend low-impact technical fixes before blockers. - Do not hide missing data; use [NEEDS DATA] where required. - Do not ignore implementation difficulty. - The final audit should be specific, prioritized, developer-ready, and focused on organic performance.

#081Page-Level On-Page SEO Audit

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONImproving existing pages, refreshing underperforming SEO content, preparing optimization briefs, and identifying the highest-impact on-page fixes.

Audit a single page for title quality, meta description, headings, intent match, keyword usage, semantic coverage, readability, internal relevance, and conversion path.

You are an on-page SEO auditor. Review this page and create a practical optimization plan that improves search relevance, user experience, and conversion potential without keyword stuffing. Page details: Page URL: [PAGE URL] Page content: [PASTE PAGE CONTENT] Target keyword: [TARGET KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Search intent: [INTENT] Business offer: [OFFER] Conversion goal: [CONVERSION GOAL] Current performance data: [TRAFFIC / RANKINGS / CTR / CONVERSIONS] Competing pages or SERP notes: [SERP NOTES] Audit the page across these areas: 1. Search intent match Evaluate: - whether the page answers the real searcher need - whether the opening matches the query - whether the content format fits the intent - whether the CTA fits the funnel stage - whether the page is too broad or too narrow 2. On-page elements Review: - title tag - meta description - H1 - H2 and H3 structure - intro - conclusion - URL slug - image alt text - schema opportunities - internal links - external references, if needed 3. Content quality Check: - clarity - completeness - semantic coverage - examples - proof - readability - scanability - originality - outdated sections - missing FAQs - weak transitions 4. Keyword and entity usage Analyze: - primary keyword placement - secondary keyword coverage - related terms - entities - natural language variations - over-optimization risk - missing subtopics 5. Conversion and next step Review: - CTA relevance - offer connection - internal path to commercial pages - trust signals - objection handling - reader progression For each issue provide: - issue - evidence from the page - SEO impact - user impact - recommended fix - priority - effort - confidence level Then create: - top 10 fixes - revised title tag - revised meta description - revised H1 - improved H2/H3 outline - sections to add - sections to remove - internal links to add - FAQ recommendations - final optimization checklist Rules: - Do not stuff keywords. - Do not recommend changes that break the search intent. - Do not make the page longer unless the added content improves usefulness. - Use [NEEDS SERP VALIDATION] where live SERP data is required. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#082Title Tag and Meta Description Optimization Lab

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONCTR improvements, metadata refreshes, SEO testing, page optimization, content updates, and improving search snippets.

Create stronger title tags and meta descriptions that improve relevance, click-through potential, intent match, and differentiation in the SERP.

Act as a search snippet optimization specialist. Rewrite the title tag and meta description for this page so they match intent, stand out in the SERP, and attract qualified clicks. Inputs: Page topic: [TOPIC] Page URL: [URL] Current title tag: [CURRENT TITLE] Current meta description: [CURRENT META] Target keyword: [TARGET KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Search intent: [SEARCH INTENT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Page type: [PAGE TYPE] Unique value of the page: [UNIQUE VALUE] SERP competitor titles: [COMPETITOR TITLES] SERP competitor descriptions: [COMPETITOR DESCRIPTIONS] Brand name: [BRAND NAME] Tone: [TONE] Build the snippet system: A. Current snippet diagnosis Identify: - what is unclear - what is generic - what does not match intent - what may reduce CTR - what is over-optimized - what promise is missing - what differentiation is missing B. SERP positioning Define how the snippet should compete: - faster answer - clearer benefit - stronger specificity - better audience fit - stronger credibility - better freshness - better commercial relevance - better educational promise C. Title tag variations Create 12 title tag options: - direct intent match - benefit-driven - comparison-style - authority-style - practical guide - problem-solution - beginner-friendly - advanced-user - commercial intent - brand-safe - curiosity without clickbait - concise version For each title include: - character estimate - target intent - strength - risk D. Meta description variations Create 8 meta descriptions: - clear summary - benefit-led - proof-led - problem-led - action-led - comparison-led - trust-led - short version For each meta description include: - character estimate - CTA style - why it works E. Final recommendation Choose: - best title - backup title - best meta description - backup meta description - testing hypothesis - success metric Rules: - Do not create clickbait. - Do not promise something the page does not deliver. - Do not repeat the exact same keyword unnaturally. - Keep title tags concise and meta descriptions useful. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#083Heading Architecture Rebuilder

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONBlog posts, guides, landing pages, service pages, SaaS pages, comparison pages, and articles with weak or confusing structure.

Improve H1, H2, and H3 structure so the page becomes easier to scan, easier to understand, and better aligned with search intent.

You are an SEO information architect. Rebuild the heading structure of this page so it creates a clear content hierarchy for readers and search engines. Page content or outline: [PASTE CONTENT OR OUTLINE] Context: Target keyword: [TARGET KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Search intent: [INTENT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Page type: [PAGE TYPE] Business goal: [GOAL] Current H1: [CURRENT H1] Current H2/H3s: [CURRENT HEADINGS] SERP heading patterns, if known: [SERP NOTES] Rebuild the structure: 1. Heading diagnosis Evaluate current headings for: - unclear hierarchy - missing search intent - duplicate heading ideas - weak section labels - keyword stuffing - vague headings - poor flow - missing decision-support sections - missing examples - missing FAQs 2. Content flow design Create a logical page flow: - immediate answer - context - core explanation - practical steps - examples - comparisons - proof - objections - FAQs - next action Only include sections that fit the actual intent. 3. Heading rewrite Provide: - improved H1 - full H2 structure - H3s under each H2 - purpose of each section - keywords or entities naturally supported by each section - expected reader question answered by each section 4. Section decisions Classify current sections as: - keep - rewrite - move - merge - split - remove - expand 5. Final architecture Create: - recommended outline - section-by-section writing notes - internal link opportunities - CTA placement - FAQ placement - snippet opportunity sections Rules: - Do not use headings as keyword dumping. - Do not create too many nested headings. - Do not add sections that do not help the reader. - The heading structure should make the page easier to scan and more complete. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#084Semantic Coverage and Entity Signal Mapper

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONImproving topical relevance, refreshing content, strengthening existing pages, building expert content, and avoiding shallow keyword-only optimization.

Identify missing entities, related concepts, subtopics, synonyms, attributes, examples, and context signals that help a page cover a topic naturally.

Act as a semantic SEO strategist. Improve this page by mapping the entities, concepts, attributes, and related terms needed for fuller topical coverage. Inputs: Page content: [PASTE CONTENT] Target keyword or topic: [TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Search intent: [INTENT] Offer or business context: [OFFER] Competitor page notes: [COMPETITOR NOTES] Known entities or terms: [KNOWN TERMS] Build the semantic map: A. Core entity map Identify: - primary entity - related entities - attributes - categories - subcategories - processes - tools - people or roles - brands, if relevant - locations, if relevant - standards, if relevant - common synonyms - user-language variations B. Topic completeness Evaluate whether the page covers: - definitions - benefits - use cases - steps - examples - common mistakes - comparisons - limitations - costs - risks - FAQs - related topics C. Missing semantic signals List missing: - concepts - terms - examples - related questions - entities - attributes - contextual phrases - supporting sections D. Natural integration plan For every missing item recommend: - add to existing section - create new section - add FAQ - add example - add table - add image caption - add internal link - skip because not relevant E. Quality guardrails Flag: - terms that would create keyword stuffing - entities that are off-topic - concepts that deserve separate pages - topics that may confuse the intent - claims that need verification Rules: - Do not add terms just because they are related. - Do not force entities into unnatural sentences. - Do not expand beyond the page's intent. - The final output should make the page more complete, not more bloated. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#085Natural Keyword Usage Editor

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONPages that feel under-optimized, over-optimized, repetitive, robotic, or disconnected from the target query.

Improve keyword relevance through natural placement, phrasing, synonyms, and section-level intent alignment without repeating keywords awkwardly.

You are an SEO editor specializing in natural keyword integration. Improve the keyword usage of this page without making it sound forced. Page content: [PASTE CONTENT] Keyword context: Primary keyword: [PRIMARY KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Related terms: [RELATED TERMS] Search intent: [INTENT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Brand voice: [VOICE] Page type: [PAGE TYPE] Run the keyword usage edit: 1. Keyword placement audit Check whether the primary keyword appears naturally in: - title - meta description - H1 - first 100 words - key H2s - body copy - image alt text, where relevant - conclusion - internal link anchors 2. Overuse and underuse detection Identify: - repeated phrases - awkward keyword placement - missing synonyms - missing natural variations - missing topic terms - headings that should be clearer - sections that drift from the topic 3. Natural rewrite plan For each issue provide: - original phrase - problem - improved version - reason - SEO benefit - readability benefit 4. Section-level optimization For each major section recommend: - focus term - supporting terms - user question answered - internal link opportunity - keyword usage warning 5. Final copy improvements Provide: - revised title - revised meta description - revised H1 - revised intro - 5 improved H2s - 10 natural phrase suggestions - terms to avoid repeating Rules: - Do not keyword stuff. - Do not sacrifice clarity for keyword placement. - Do not add exact-match keywords where synonyms sound better. - Preserve the meaning and brand voice unless the current copy is unclear. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#086Featured Snippet and Direct Answer Builder

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONHow-to content, definitions, list posts, comparison content, FAQs, troubleshooting pages, and educational SEO articles.

Optimize content for direct answers, featured snippets, People Also Ask, and quick-answer sections while keeping the page useful for full reading.

Act as a featured snippet optimization strategist. Build concise answer modules for this page that can satisfy quick-answer intent and improve search visibility. Page topic: [TOPIC] Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Related questions: [QUESTIONS] Current content: [PASTE CONTENT] SERP notes: [FEATURED SNIPPET / PAA / COMPETITOR ANSWERS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Create snippet-ready modules: MODULE 1 — Definition answer Write: - 40-word answer - 60-word answer - 90-word answer - best placement on page MODULE 2 — Step-by-step answer Create: - numbered process - short version - expanded version - section placement MODULE 3 — List answer Create: - concise list - explanation under each item - table version if useful MODULE 4 — Comparison answer Create: - direct comparison paragraph - comparison table - when to choose each option MODULE 5 — FAQ answer Create answers for: - beginner question - cost question - risk question - timing question - alternative question - implementation question For each module include: - target query - answer format - ideal page location - supporting section needed - internal link opportunity - risk of oversimplification Rules: - Do not create answers that are too vague to be useful. - Do not answer with claims that need proof unless proof is provided. - Do not optimize only for snippets while neglecting the rest of the page. - Keep answer blocks clear, direct, and accurate. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#087Readability and Scanability Optimizer

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONLong-form articles, dense guides, technical pages, B2B content, educational pages, and pages with high bounce or low engagement.

Improve page readability, paragraph structure, scanning flow, section clarity, and user engagement without weakening SEO relevance.

You are an SEO readability editor. Improve this page so readers can understand it faster, scan it easily, and keep moving toward the next step. Content: [PASTE CONTENT] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Reader expertise level: [BEGINNER / INTERMEDIATE / EXPERT] Search intent: [INTENT] Page type: [PAGE TYPE] Primary keyword: [KEYWORD] Brand voice: [VOICE] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Improve readability in five passes: PASS 1 — First impression Evaluate: - title clarity - intro clarity - answer speed - whether the reader knows they are in the right place - whether the page promises a useful outcome PASS 2 — Scanability Improve: - headings - paragraph length - bullets - tables - summary boxes - bolding guidance - visual break suggestions - section transitions PASS 3 — Comprehension Identify: - confusing sentences - jargon - abstract claims - missing examples - missing definitions - unclear logic - weak explanations PASS 4 — Engagement Recommend: - better hooks - examples - mini-summaries - practical takeaways - stronger transitions - reader-oriented phrasing PASS 5 — SEO preservation Ensure edits preserve: - primary keyword relevance - secondary topics - search intent - internal linking opportunities - answer completeness - CTA relevance Output: - readability diagnosis - top 10 edits - rewritten intro - rewritten sample section - improved heading structure - scanability checklist - before/after examples - final editorial rules Rules: - Do not make the writing generic. - Do not remove important technical detail if the audience needs it. - Do not oversimplify expert content. - The page should become easier to read without becoming shallow. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#088Internal Relevance and Contextual Link Optimizer

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONContent refreshes, topic clusters, blog optimization, SaaS SEO, service pages, and strengthening page relationships.

Improve a page's internal relevance by adding contextual internal links, better anchor text, related sections, and paths to conversion pages.

Act as an internal relevance optimizer. Improve this page by recommending contextual internal links that help users and search engines understand the page's role. Current page: [PAGE URL / CONTENT] Available internal pages: [PASTE INTERNAL URLS WITH TITLES OR DESCRIPTIONS] SEO context: Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Topic cluster: [CLUSTER] Page type: [PAGE TYPE] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Conversion goal: [CONVERSION] Important commercial pages: [COMMERCIAL PAGES] Current internal links: [CURRENT LINKS] Build the internal relevance plan: 1. Page role Classify this page as: - pillar page - supporting article - commercial page - comparison page - glossary page - FAQ page - tutorial - resource page - conversion bridge 2. Link-in opportunities Identify which existing pages should link to this page. For each include: - source page - reason to link - suggested anchor text - section placement - priority 3. Link-out opportunities Identify where this page should link. Group links by: - supporting explanations - next-step content - commercial pages - related guides - comparison pages - tools or templates - case studies - FAQs 4. Anchor text system Create anchor text options: - exact but natural - partial match - descriptive - benefit-led - question-led - conversion-led 5. Contextual placement plan Recommend: - sentence-level placement - section-level placement - related content module - CTA area link - breadcrumb or hub link - footer or navigation only if needed Rules: - Do not add irrelevant internal links. - Do not overuse exact-match anchors. - Do not link only for search engines. - Every internal link should help the reader continue logically. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#089On-Page Conversion and SEO Balance Editor

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONCommercial blog posts, service pages, SaaS pages, product-led content, comparison pages, and SEO pages with poor conversion paths.

Balance SEO content with conversion goals so the page satisfies search intent while guiding qualified readers toward the right action.

You are a conversion-aware on-page SEO editor. Improve this page so it ranks for the right intent and also guides qualified readers toward a meaningful next step. Inputs: Page content: [PASTE CONTENT] Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Search intent: [INTENT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Conversion goal: [CONVERSION] Current CTA: [CURRENT CTA] Funnel stage: [FUNNEL STAGE] Current performance: [TRAFFIC / CONVERSIONS] Balance the page: A. Intent protection Identify what the page must do before it can sell: - answer the query - explain the problem - compare options - build trust - show examples - reduce risk - give next steps B. Conversion readiness Evaluate whether the reader is ready for: - newsletter signup - checklist download - free tool - trial - demo - consultation - product page - pricing page - purchase - no CTA yet C. CTA placement Recommend CTA positions: - after intro - after first answer - after problem explanation - after comparison - after proof - after FAQ - end of article - sticky or sidebar CTA, if relevant D. Copy improvements Create: - soft CTA - mid-intent CTA - high-intent CTA - internal link CTA - product bridge paragraph - objection-handling paragraph E. SEO risk check Flag conversion changes that could hurt: - search intent match - readability - trust - page depth - user satisfaction - topical relevance Rules: - Do not turn educational content into a hard sales page. - Do not bury the next step when the reader is ready. - Do not add CTAs that do not match intent. - The page should feel helpful first and commercially useful second. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#090Content Refresh and On-Page Recovery Plan

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONTraffic decline recovery, content decay, old blog posts, outdated guides, pages losing rankings, and SEO refresh projects.

Refresh outdated or underperforming content by improving intent match, metadata, sections, internal links, semantic coverage, proof, and freshness signals.

Act as a content refresh strategist. Create a recovery plan for this existing page that improves usefulness, freshness, and on-page SEO performance. Page details: Page URL: [URL] Current content: [PASTE CONTENT] Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] Traffic trend: [TRAFFIC TREND] CTR: [CTR] Engagement: [ENGAGEMENT] Conversions: [CONVERSIONS] Last updated: [DATE] SERP changes or competitor notes: [SERP NOTES] Business goal: [GOAL] Create the refresh plan: 1. Decay diagnosis Identify likely causes: - search intent shift - outdated information - weaker title - poor CTR - missing subtopics - competitor improvement - thin examples - weak internal links - content cannibalization - technical issue - poor conversion fit 2. Freshness audit Find: - outdated dates - old statistics - outdated screenshots - outdated examples - changed terminology - obsolete recommendations - old product or pricing references - missing current context 3. On-page refresh actions Recommend updates to: - title tag - meta description - H1 - headings - intro - key sections - examples - FAQ - internal links - external references - images - schema - CTA 4. Expansion vs pruning Classify content as: - keep - update - expand - compress - move - remove - split into separate page - merge with another page 5. Relaunch plan Create: - revised outline - update checklist - publishing notes - internal linking plan - measurement plan - next review date Rules: - Do not refresh only by changing the date. - Do not add content that does not match current intent. - Do not remove sections that still serve valuable queries. - Use [VERIFY] for facts that need current checking. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#091Section-by-Section SEO Copy Editor

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONEditing drafts, improving existing content, rewriting weak sections, SEO copy QA, and preparing content for publishing.

Improve each section of a page for clarity, intent, keyword relevance, semantic depth, examples, proof, and reader progression.

You are a section-by-section SEO copy editor. Review every major section of this draft and improve it without changing the core topic or brand voice. Draft content: [PASTE DRAFT] SEO context: Primary keyword: [PRIMARY KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Search intent: [INTENT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Brand voice: [VOICE] Page type: [PAGE TYPE] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Edit each section using this framework: For every section provide: 1. Section purpose What this section should accomplish for the reader and SEO. 2. Current problem Identify whether the section is: - unclear - too shallow - too long - repetitive - off-intent - missing examples - missing proof - keyword-stuffed - not connected to next section - too sales-heavy - not actionable enough 3. Optimization recommendation Explain what to change: - rewrite - shorten - expand - add example - add data - add FAQ - add internal link - move section - merge section - remove section 4. Improved version Rewrite the section or provide a better version. 5. SEO notes Include: - terms naturally included - entities covered - user question answered - internal link opportunity - CTA opportunity After all sections, provide: - updated outline - missing sections - sections to remove - final on-page checklist - publication readiness score Rules: - Do not rewrite everything if a section already works. - Do not make the copy robotic. - Do not add keywords unnaturally. - Preserve the intended meaning while improving clarity and SEO relevance. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#092Entity-Based FAQ and PAA Optimizer

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONBlog posts, guides, product pages, service pages, comparison pages, and pages that need stronger long-tail coverage.

Build a useful FAQ and People Also Ask section based on entities, objections, subtopics, and real searcher questions.

Act as an SEO FAQ architect. Build an FAQ section that improves topical completeness, answers real searcher questions, and supports conversion without creating thin filler. Page topic: [TOPIC] Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Current content: [PASTE CONTENT OR OUTLINE] Known objections: [OBJECTIONS] Related entities or subtopics: [ENTITIES / SUBTOPICS] PAA or question data: [QUESTIONS] Create the FAQ system: A. Question discovery Generate questions across: - definitions - process - cost - timing - comparison - alternatives - risks - mistakes - examples - tools - implementation - troubleshooting - decision criteria - post-purchase use B. Question filtering Classify each question as: - must answer on this page - answer in FAQ - answer in main body - create separate page - support article - not relevant - too broad - too commercial for this page C. FAQ writing For selected FAQs write: - direct answer - expanded answer - internal link suggestion - CTA relevance - schema eligibility note D. Entity and intent coverage Show which entities, subtopics, objections, and long-tail intents the FAQ supports. E. Final FAQ block Create: - 8 to 12 prioritized FAQs - recommended order - placement on page - questions to avoid - schema caution notes Rules: - Do not create generic FAQ filler. - Do not answer questions that belong on separate pages. - Do not use FAQ schema if the content is not visible. - FAQ answers should be concise, helpful, and aligned with the page intent. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#093On-Page E-E-A-T Proof Injection Planner

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONYMYL-adjacent content, B2B content, service pages, SaaS pages, expert guides, comparison pages, and pages that need more trust.

Strengthen page credibility with experience, expertise, author signals, evidence, examples, sources, transparent limitations, and proof blocks.

You are an on-page trust and E-E-A-T strategist. Improve this page by adding credibility signals that make the content more trustworthy and useful. Page content: [PASTE CONTENT] Context: Topic: [TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Industry: [INDUSTRY] Business or author expertise: [EXPERTISE] Available proof: [PROOF] Case studies: [CASE STUDIES] Data sources: [DATA SOURCES] Reviews or testimonials: [REVIEWS] Certifications: [CERTIFICATIONS] Search intent: [INTENT] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Build the proof plan: 1. Trust gap diagnosis Identify where the page currently lacks: - first-hand experience - expert explanation - examples - evidence - citations - screenshots - process transparency - author credibility - product proof - customer proof - limitations - updated information 2. Proof type mapping Recommend proof formats: - author bio - expert quote - original data - customer example - case study - screenshot - comparison table - methodology note - transparent limitation - review snippet - certification - source citation - demo or walkthrough 3. Placement plan Show where to add proof: - intro - definition section - recommendation section - comparison section - process section - results section - CTA area - FAQ - author block - footer note 4. Copy blocks Write: - experience statement - methodology note - proof paragraph - limitation paragraph - trust-building CTA - author credibility block 5. Risk check Flag: - unsupported claims - vague authority language - fake expertise signals - overclaiming - claims needing verification - proof that could distract from intent Rules: - Do not fabricate credentials, data, results, or citations. - Do not add trust signals that are not true. - Do not overload the page with proof if the intent is simple. - Use [NEEDS REAL SOURCE] where evidence must be provided. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#094Image, Media and Alt Text SEO Enhancer

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONBlog posts, product pages, tutorials, visual guides, e-commerce pages, local pages, and content with weak or missing image optimization.

Improve on-page media usage, alt text, image relevance, captions, compression notes, visual explanations, and accessibility-friendly SEO.

Act as an image and media SEO specialist. Improve the visual and media layer of this page for accessibility, search relevance, user clarity, and page experience. Page topic: [TOPIC] Page content or outline: [PASTE CONTENT] Current images or media: [IMAGE LIST / FILE NAMES / ALT TEXT / CAPTIONS] SEO context: Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Search intent: [INTENT] Page type: [PAGE TYPE] Important products or concepts: [PRODUCTS / CONCEPTS] Performance constraints: [PERFORMANCE CONSTRAINTS] Optimize media: A. Media relevance audit For each image or media item evaluate: - purpose - relevance to section - user value - SEO value - accessibility value - whether it should stay, change, or be removed B. Missing media opportunities Recommend visuals such as: - diagrams - screenshots - process images - comparison tables - product images - before/after visuals - charts - infographics - annotated examples - video embeds - downloadable templates C. Alt text improvement For each image provide: - improved alt text - when alt text should be empty - keyword usage warning - accessibility note - surrounding copy suggestion D. Caption and context Recommend: - captions - nearby explanatory text - image headings - internal link opportunities - schema or structured data opportunities, if relevant E. Performance and QA Provide guidance for: - file names - compression - lazy loading - dimensions - responsive images - cumulative layout shift prevention - image sitemap, if relevant Rules: - Do not stuff keywords into alt text. - Do not describe decorative images as if they are meaningful. - Do not add heavy media that harms page speed without purpose. - Media should help the reader understand the page faster. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#095SERP-Aligned Content Outline Optimizer

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONNew SEO content, briefs, content rewrites, blog posts, landing pages, guides, and avoiding generic outlines.

Convert keyword, intent, SERP patterns, and business goals into an optimized page outline that is complete, differentiated, and useful.

You are an SEO outline strategist. Create an optimized content outline that satisfies search intent, includes the right topics, and avoids copycat SERP structure. Inputs: Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Search intent: [INTENT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Page type: [PAGE TYPE] Business offer: [OFFER] Conversion goal: [GOAL] SERP notes: [SERP NOTES] Competitor weaknesses: [WEAKNESSES] Unique angle: [UNIQUE ANGLE] Required examples or proof: [PROOF] Build the outline: 1. Page strategy Define: - target reader - page promise - intent served - differentiation angle - business role - CTA logic 2. Required content modules Choose only what fits: - quick answer - definition - framework - step-by-step process - examples - checklist - comparison table - mistakes - best practices - proof section - FAQ - glossary - tool or template - case study - next steps 3. Full outline Create: - title tag - meta description - H1 - H2s - H3s - section purpose - keyword and entity notes - examples to include - internal links - CTA placement 4. Differentiation layer Add: - unique section competitors lack - stronger example - better framework - original perspective - practical asset - proof element 5. Quality check Verify: - no duplicate sections - no irrelevant subtopics - no keyword stuffing - no weak generic intro - clear reader progression - clear next step Rules: - Do not produce a generic article outline. - Do not mirror competitor structure exactly. - Do not add sections only because they are common. - The outline should be specific enough for a writer to draft from. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#096Entity and Internal Relevance Hub Builder

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONPillar pages, glossary pages, category guides, SaaS resource hubs, topic clusters, and pages meant to become authority assets.

Turn a single page into a stronger topical hub by adding related entities, supporting definitions, contextual links, and cluster connections.

Act as a topical hub optimizer. Improve this page so it works as a stronger authority hub connected to related topics, entities, and internal pages. Hub page: [PAGE CONTENT OR OUTLINE] SEO context: Main topic: [TOPIC] Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Topic cluster: [CLUSTER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Existing related pages: [RELATED PAGES] Commercial pages: [COMMERCIAL PAGES] Definitions or glossary pages: [GLOSSARY] Search intent: [INTENT] Build the hub optimization plan: A. Hub role definition Define whether this page should be: - overview hub - educational pillar - commercial hub - glossary hub - comparison hub - resource hub - product-led hub B. Entity coverage Map: - core entities - supporting entities - adjacent topics - related tools - processes - audience roles - common questions - examples - decision criteria C. Internal ecosystem Recommend links to: - beginner explanations - advanced guides - commercial pages - tools - templates - examples - comparison pages - FAQs - case studies - glossary entries D. Hub page upgrades Recommend: - navigation block - table of contents - summary cards - related resource modules - comparison table - glossary section - FAQ section - next-step section E. Cluster reinforcement plan Create: - links this page should receive - links this page should send - anchor text options - pages to create next - pages to merge or remove Rules: - Do not turn every page into a hub. - Do not add links that break reader flow. - Do not include entities that are unrelated to the main topic. - The hub should make the topic easier to explore and understand. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#097Page-Level Cannibalization and Keyword Focus Fixer

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONSites with multiple similar pages, SEO audits, blog libraries, SaaS content, e-commerce categories, and ranking instability.

Diagnose when a page targets too many overlapping keywords or competes with other pages, then refocus the page for a clearer role.

You are a page-level keyword focus and cannibalization specialist. Determine whether this page is competing with other pages and how to refocus it. Page to analyze: [PAGE URL / CONTENT] Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Related pages: [PASTE RELATED PAGE URLS, TITLES, TARGET KEYWORDS, SUMMARIES] Performance data: [RANKINGS / TRAFFIC / CTR / CONVERSIONS] Context: Business: [BUSINESS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Search intent: [INTENT] Topic cluster: [CLUSTER] Diagnose the focus problem: 1. Page role clarity Define what this page should be: - primary ranking page - supporting article - hub page - commercial page - comparison page - FAQ page - glossary page - redirect candidate - merge candidate 2. Overlap analysis Compare this page against related pages by: - target intent - keyword overlap - audience - funnel stage - page type - content angle - internal links - CTA 3. Cannibalization risk Classify risk as: - high - medium - low - no issue - needs ranking data Explain why. 4. Refocus plan Recommend: - primary keyword to keep - secondary keywords to support - keywords to remove - sections to rewrite - sections to move - pages to merge - pages to split - internal links to change - canonical or redirect action, if needed 5. Final page positioning Create: - revised title - revised H1 - revised outline - internal linking rules - anchor text rules - measurement plan Rules: - Do not merge pages that serve different intents. - Do not create separate pages for the same exact intent. - Do not change canonicals or redirects without evidence. - Use [NEEDS RANKING DATA] where performance evidence is missing. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#098Product or Service Page On-Page Optimizer

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONSaaS feature pages, service pages, product pages, category pages, local service pages, and commercial SEO pages.

Optimize product or service pages for search intent, buyer confidence, feature clarity, objections, structured content, internal links, and conversion.

Act as a commercial on-page SEO strategist. Improve this product or service page so it ranks for relevant search intent and helps qualified buyers take action. Page content: [PASTE PAGE CONTENT] Commercial context: Product or service: [PRODUCT / SERVICE] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Primary keyword: [PRIMARY KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Buyer stage: [BUYER STAGE] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Main objections: [OBJECTIONS] Proof available: [PROOF] Conversion goal: [CONVERSION] Brand voice: [VOICE] Optimize the page: A. Commercial intent match Evaluate: - whether the page matches buyer search intent - whether the offer is clear above the fold - whether benefits are specific - whether features are connected to outcomes - whether the page answers decision questions B. Buyer confidence structure Recommend sections for: - who it is for - problems solved - outcomes - features - process - pricing guidance - proof - comparison - FAQs - risk reversal - implementation - CTA C. On-page SEO elements Improve: - title tag - meta description - H1 - H2/H3 structure - keyword usage - entity coverage - internal links - image alt text - structured data opportunities D. Objection handling Create copy blocks for: - cost concern - trust concern - complexity concern - comparison concern - timing concern - fit concern E. Conversion path Recommend: - primary CTA - secondary CTA - proof near CTA - internal links to supporting content - sales enablement assets - next-step flow Rules: - Do not make commercial pages read like generic blog posts. - Do not overpromise results. - Do not hide important buyer information. - The page should be search-relevant, clear, trustworthy, and conversion-ready. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#099Blog Article On-Page Optimization Blueprint

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONBlog posts, guides, tutorials, thought leadership articles, educational SEO content, and content marketing assets.

Optimize blog articles and educational content for intent match, structure, semantic coverage, readability, featured snippets, internal links, and soft conversion paths.

You are an SEO blog optimization editor. Create a complete on-page optimization blueprint for this article. Article draft: [PASTE ARTICLE] SEO context: Target keyword: [TARGET KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Search intent: [INTENT] Reader: [READER] Awareness stage: [AWARENESS STAGE] Brand voice: [VOICE] Related internal pages: [INTERNAL PAGES] Business offer: [OFFER] Soft conversion goal: [GOAL] SERP notes: [SERP NOTES] Build the blueprint: 1. Article positioning Define: - reader problem - article promise - search intent - unique angle - funnel role - best CTA type 2. On-page improvements Provide: - optimized title tag - meta description - H1 - improved intro - revised outline - H2/H3 changes - FAQ additions - snippet blocks - internal link recommendations - image or visual recommendations 3. Content depth improvements Identify missing: - definitions - context - examples - step-by-step details - mistakes - comparisons - tools - templates - proof - next actions 4. Reader experience improvements Recommend: - shorter paragraphs - summary boxes - tables - bullets - transition fixes - examples - practical takeaways - conclusion rewrite 5. Soft conversion path Create: - newsletter CTA - lead magnet CTA - related article CTA - product bridge - end-of-article CTA - internal link path Rules: - Do not turn the blog post into a sales page. - Do not add irrelevant sections only for SEO. - Do not keyword stuff. - The article should become more useful, more structured, and more connected to the business. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#100Full On-Page SEO and Content Optimization Audit

ON-PAGE SEO & CONTENT OPTIMIZATIONFull page refreshes, SEO audits, content optimization projects, agency deliverables, high-value landing pages, and underperforming SEO content.

Audit and redesign a complete page-level optimization strategy across metadata, headings, content, keywords, entities, readability, internal links, snippets, proof, conversion, and quality.

Act as an independent on-page SEO and content optimization auditor. Review this page and create a complete optimization plan that improves search relevance, user satisfaction, and business outcomes. Full context: Page URL: [PAGE URL] Page content: [PASTE CONTENT] Page type: [PAGE TYPE] Primary keyword: [PRIMARY KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Search intent: [SEARCH INTENT] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Awareness stage: [AWARENESS STAGE] Business offer: [OFFER] Conversion goal: [CONVERSION] Current title tag: [TITLE TAG] Current meta description: [META DESCRIPTION] Current headings: [HEADINGS] Current internal links: [INTERNAL LINKS] Current images or media: [MEDIA] Current performance: [RANKINGS / TRAFFIC / CTR / ENGAGEMENT / CONVERSIONS] SERP notes: [SERP NOTES] Competitor page notes: [COMPETITOR NOTES] Brand voice: [VOICE] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Audit across 30 dimensions: 1. Search intent match 2. Audience fit 3. Page type fit 4. Title tag 5. Meta description 6. H1 7. H2/H3 hierarchy 8. Intro clarity 9. Content structure 10. Keyword usage 11. Secondary keyword coverage 12. Semantic coverage 13. Entity signals 14. Topic completeness 15. Featured snippet potential 16. FAQ and PAA coverage 17. Readability 18. Scanability 19. Examples and practical value 20. Proof and E-E-A-T signals 21. Freshness 22. Internal links 23. External references, if needed 24. Image and media optimization 25. Alt text 26. Schema opportunities 27. CTA fit 28. Conversion path 29. Cannibalization risk 30. Overall page quality For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from the page - recommended fix - SEO impact - user impact - business impact - priority - effort - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Hard truth Explain the biggest reason this page is not reaching its potential. B. Page strategy Define: - correct search intent - ideal reader - page promise - unique angle - page role in the funnel - target conversion path C. Optimization package Create: - revised title tag - revised meta description - revised H1 - revised H2/H3 outline - improved intro - sections to add - sections to rewrite - sections to remove - FAQ block - internal link plan - media recommendations - proof recommendations - CTA recommendations D. Rewrite instructions Create a section-by-section editing brief with: - section purpose - target terms - entities to include - examples needed - proof needed - internal links - CTA notes E. Implementation roadmap Create: - first 24-hour fixes - first 7-day updates - deeper rewrite tasks - QA checklist - measurement plan - next review date F. Final checklist Provide a publishing checklist for: - metadata - headings - keyword usage - readability - semantic coverage - internal links - proof - media - schema - CTA - analytics Rules: - Do not recommend keyword stuffing. - Do not add content that does not support the search intent. - Do not make unsupported claims. - Do not ignore conversion relevance. - Use [NEEDS SERP VALIDATION], [NEEDS DATA], or [NEEDS SOURCE] where required. - The final output should be specific, prioritized, realistic, and ready for implementation.

#101Topical Authority Operating System

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYCreating a long-term SEO content strategy, moving beyond random blog posts, and building a site that becomes trusted around a specific niche.

Build a complete topic authority system around a niche, including core themes, supporting clusters, page types, publishing cadence, and authority signals.

You are an SEO content strategist specializing in topical authority. Build a complete topical authority operating system for my website. Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business type: [BUSINESS TYPE] Main offer: [OFFER] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Primary niche: [NICHE] Current content library: [CURRENT CONTENT] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] Main competitors: [COMPETITORS] Business goals: [GOALS] Conversion goals: [CONVERSIONS] Publishing capacity: [CAPACITY] Available expertise: [EXPERTISE] Topics to avoid: [AVOID] Build the operating system: 1. Authority thesis Define: - what the website should become known for - which topic territory it should own - which audience it should serve first - which problems it should solve repeatedly - which topics are strategically irrelevant 2. Core topic map Create: - 5 to 8 primary topic pillars - supporting subtopics under each pillar - beginner topics - advanced topics - commercial topics - comparison topics - glossary topics - original thought leadership topics - content gaps 3. Authority layers For each pillar define: - pillar page - supporting articles - templates or tools - case studies - FAQ pages - comparison pages - internal links - proof assets - update cadence 4. Execution cadence Create: - first 30-day content plan - first 90-day authority plan - first 6-month cluster buildout - refresh schedule - internal linking routine - quality review routine 5. Authority measurement Define: - rankings to monitor - topic visibility metrics - internal link metrics - engagement metrics - conversion metrics - content decay signals - authority growth indicators Rules: - Do not create a generic content calendar. - Do not choose topics only because they have search volume. - Do not build authority around topics disconnected from the offer. - The final strategy should make the website more trusted, organized, and commercially useful. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#102Pillar Page Strategy Architect

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYBuilding content hubs, topic clusters, educational guides, SaaS resource centers, service websites, and niche authority pages.

Design a high-quality pillar page that anchors a topic cluster, satisfies broad intent, connects supporting content, and guides readers to relevant next steps.

Act as a pillar page architect. Design a pillar page that can serve as the central authority asset for this topic. Topic: [TOPIC] Business context: Website: [WEBSITE] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Search intent: [INTENT] Primary keyword: [PRIMARY KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Existing content: [EXISTING CONTENT] Competitor pillar pages: [COMPETITOR PAGES] Conversion goal: [CONVERSION] Brand voice: [VOICE] Build the pillar page strategy: A. Pillar role Define: - why this pillar should exist - what audience it serves - what search intent it should satisfy - what it should not try to cover - how it connects to business outcomes B. Page architecture Create: - title tag - meta description - H1 - opening promise - full H2/H3 outline - summary blocks - glossary moments - comparison sections - FAQ section - CTA placements - visual or table ideas C. Cluster connection Map supporting content: - articles to link to - pages that should link back - comparison pages - templates or tools - case studies - commercial pages - glossary pages - support pages D. Authority signals Recommend: - expert proof - original examples - data or research - screenshots - process explanations - author credibility - update notes - limitations to state E. Build and maintain plan Create: - first draft requirements - internal linking plan - launch checklist - refresh cadence - expansion opportunities - performance metrics Rules: - Do not make the pillar page a shallow list of links. - Do not make it so broad that it cannot satisfy intent. - Do not hide commercial next steps if the reader is qualified. - The page should work as both a useful guide and a strategic SEO hub. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#103Topic Cluster Blueprint Generator

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYBuilding topical authority, planning editorial calendars, scaling SEO content, and organizing content around search intent.

Turn a broad topic into a structured cluster of pillar pages, supporting articles, FAQs, comparison pages, commercial pages, and internal links.

You are a topic cluster strategist. Build a complete cluster blueprint for the topic below. Cluster topic: [TOPIC] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business offer: [OFFER] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Main keyword themes: [KEYWORDS] Existing pages: [PAGES] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Authority level: [LOW / MEDIUM / HIGH] Publishing capacity: [CAPACITY] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Create the cluster blueprint: 1. Cluster purpose Explain: - what business objective the cluster supports - what search demand it captures - what audience segment it serves - what authority it should build 2. Cluster structure Create: - pillar page - 10 supporting educational pages - 5 commercial investigation pages - 5 long-tail articles - 5 FAQ or glossary pages - 3 comparison or alternative pages - 3 proof-based pages - 3 templates or tools 3. Intent map For each page include: - title - target keyword - secondary keywords - search intent - awareness stage - page type - CTA - internal links - priority 4. Internal link architecture Define: - pillar-to-support links - support-to-pillar links - support-to-support links - commercial page links - conversion paths - anchor text examples 5. Production roadmap Organize pages into: - build first - build second - build later - update existing - merge or remove - validate before building Rules: - Do not create overlapping pages for the same intent. - Do not build a cluster only from keyword volume. - Do not ignore commercial pages inside educational clusters. - The blueprint should be ready to turn into an editorial roadmap. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#104Content Hub Design Studio

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYResource centers, blog hubs, learning centers, SaaS academies, niche content libraries, and editorial websites.

Design a content hub that organizes related content into a useful, navigable, search-friendly authority asset.

Act as a content hub designer. Create a search-driven content hub around this topic that helps readers navigate the subject and helps search engines understand the site structure. Hub topic: [HUB TOPIC] Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Existing content: [EXISTING CONTENT] Important product or service pages: [COMMERCIAL PAGES] Current navigation: [NAVIGATION] Brand style: [STYLE] SEO goals: [SEO GOALS] Content capacity: [CAPACITY] Design the hub: SECTION 1 — Hub concept Define: - hub name - hub promise - target reader - search intent served - business role - differentiation angle SECTION 2 — Hub categories Create hub sections such as: - start here - fundamentals - strategy - tools and templates - examples - comparisons - advanced guides - case studies - FAQs - related products or services SECTION 3 — Page inventory For each section recommend: - existing pages to include - new pages to create - pages to refresh - pages to remove - pages to merge SECTION 4 — UX and SEO structure Recommend: - URL structure - navigation modules - breadcrumbs - internal links - content cards - sorting or filters - featured resources - CTA blocks - schema opportunities SECTION 5 — Launch plan Create: - minimum viable hub - full hub version - first 10 pages to connect - hub update routine - measurement plan Rules: - Do not create a hub that is just a blog category page. - Do not include weak or irrelevant content only to make the hub look full. - Do not bury commercial next steps. - The hub should make the topic easier to learn, explore, and act on. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#105Authority Gap Analysis

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYSEO audits, content strategy resets, competitor analysis, topical map planning, and deciding what to build next.

Compare your current content coverage against the authority required to compete in a niche and identify missing topics, formats, proof, and internal links.

You are an SEO authority gap analyst. Compare my current content against what is needed to become a trusted authority in this niche. Niche or topic: [NICHE / TOPIC] My website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Current content: [PASTE CONTENT INVENTORY] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Known strengths: [STRENGTHS] Known weaknesses: [WEAKNESSES] Analyze the authority gap: A. Authority requirements Identify what a trusted site in this niche should cover: - foundational topics - advanced topics - buyer topics - comparison topics - implementation topics - mistakes - examples - tools - templates - case studies - definitions - FAQs - original insights B. Current coverage audit Classify existing content as: - strong authority asset - useful but incomplete - outdated - too shallow - off-topic - duplicate or overlapping - missing internal links - weak conversion path - should be merged - should be removed C. Competitor advantage Identify where competitors are stronger in: - depth - breadth - originality - freshness - proof - UX - commercial coverage - internal linking - topic organization D. Gap priority For each missing area provide: - gap name - why it matters - page type needed - search intent - business value - difficulty - first action - priority E. Authority recovery plan Create: - 10 pages to build - 10 pages to refresh - 5 pages to merge or remove - internal linking improvements - proof assets to create - 90-day roadmap Rules: - Do not treat more content as automatic authority. - Do not copy competitor coverage blindly. - Do not ignore proof and originality. - The output should identify what the site must become known for. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#106Editorial Calendar From Search Demand

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYSEO content planning, marketing teams, solo publishers, agencies, and turning keyword research into weekly execution.

Build an editorial calendar based on clusters, search intent, business priorities, publishing capacity, seasonal demand, and topical authority goals.

Act as an SEO editorial calendar strategist. Convert my topic and keyword priorities into a realistic publishing plan. Inputs: Website: [WEBSITE] Business goal: [GOAL] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Topic clusters: [CLUSTERS] Keyword list: [KEYWORDS] Existing content: [EXISTING CONTENT] Publishing capacity: [POSTS PER WEEK / MONTH] Content formats available: [FORMATS] Seasonal moments: [SEASONALITY] Launches or campaigns: [CAMPAIGNS] Resources: [RESOURCES] Build the calendar: 1. Planning principles Define: - how topics should be prioritized - how clusters should be sequenced - how often to publish pillar vs support content - how to balance traffic and conversion - how to include refreshes 2. Calendar structure Create a calendar for: - first 30 days - first 60 days - first 90 days For each content item include: - publish week - title - target keyword - cluster - page type - search intent - funnel stage - CTA - internal links - production notes 3. Content mix Balance: - pillar pages - supporting articles - comparison pages - commercial pages - FAQs - templates - case studies - updates and refreshes 4. Dependency map Identify: - pages that should be created before others - pages that need research first - pages needing expert review - pages needing design or development - internal links to add after publishing 5. Measurement rhythm Define: - weekly checks - monthly checks - quarterly content review - refresh triggers - calendar adjustment rules Rules: - Do not create an unrealistic publishing schedule. - Do not publish isolated articles without cluster logic. - Do not ignore content refreshes. - The calendar should be practical, sequenced, and tied to authority growth. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#107Supporting Article Ideation Engine

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYContent ideation, cluster expansion, blog planning, long-tail SEO, and building supporting content that is not random.

Generate supporting article ideas that strengthen a cluster, answer specific search intents, and feed authority into pillar and commercial pages.

You are a supporting article ideation engine. Generate article ideas that strengthen this topic cluster and support the larger SEO strategy. Cluster: [CLUSTER] Pillar page: [PILLAR PAGE] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Business context: Offer: [OFFER] Primary keywords: [KEYWORDS] Existing content: [EXISTING CONTENT] Competitor content: [COMPETITOR CONTENT] Customer questions: [QUESTIONS] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Content tone: [TONE] Generate supporting article ideas in 10 categories: 1. Beginner education 2. Problem explanation 3. How-to process 4. Mistakes and risks 5. Examples and inspiration 6. Templates and checklists 7. Tools and workflows 8. Comparisons 9. Objection handling 10. Advanced strategy For each idea provide: - article title - target keyword - search intent - audience stage - why it supports the cluster - internal link to pillar - internal link to commercial page - recommended CTA - proof or example needed - priority level Then create: - first 10 articles to write - 5 articles to avoid - 5 articles that should become templates or tools - 5 articles that need expert input - internal linking pattern Rules: - Do not generate generic blog ideas. - Do not create multiple articles for the same search intent. - Do not ignore the pillar page relationship. - Every supporting article should have a clear role in the cluster. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#108Topical Map From Customer Journey

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYSaaS SEO, B2B content, service businesses, e-commerce education, and content systems that support the full buyer journey.

Build a topical map based on the customer journey, from early problem awareness to comparison, decision, onboarding, and retention.

Act as a customer-journey SEO strategist. Build a topical map that connects search demand to the customer's decision path. Customer journey context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Problem: [PROBLEM] Desired outcome: [OUTCOME] Offer: [OFFER] Alternatives: [ALTERNATIVES] Buying triggers: [TRIGGERS] Objections: [OBJECTIONS] Decision criteria: [CRITERIA] Sales cycle: [SALES CYCLE] Existing content: [CONTENT] Build the journey-based topical map: STAGE 1 — Problem awareness Create topics for: - symptoms - causes - risks - beginner questions - misconceptions STAGE 2 — Solution education Create topics for: - methods - frameworks - approaches - tools - workflows - best practices STAGE 3 — Evaluation Create topics for: - comparisons - alternatives - pricing - ROI - features - use cases - buyer guides STAGE 4 — Decision Create topics for: - case studies - implementation - proof - objections - vendor selection - demos - checklists STAGE 5 — Success and retention Create topics for: - onboarding - optimization - troubleshooting - advanced use - expansion - renewal For each topic include: - keyword angle - page type - intent - CTA - internal links - priority - authority value - business value Rules: - Do not stop content at awareness-stage topics. - Do not push sales content too early. - Do not ignore post-purchase search demand. - The topical map should support acquisition, conversion, and retention. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#109Content Portfolio Balancer

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYContent strategy planning, editorial prioritization, SEO portfolio audits, and avoiding overinvestment in one content type.

Balance a website's SEO content portfolio across traffic pages, authority pages, conversion pages, refreshes, and experimental topics.

You are an SEO content portfolio strategist. Audit and rebalance my content plan so it supports both authority and business outcomes. Current content portfolio: [PASTE CONTENT LIST OR PLAN] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Business goals: [GOALS] SEO goals: [SEO GOALS] Current traffic sources: [TRAFFIC] Conversion paths: [CONVERSIONS] Content resources: [RESOURCES] Timeline: [TIMELINE] Classify every content asset into one role: - traffic acquisition - topical authority - conversion support - sales enablement - internal linking support - customer education - retention support - thought leadership - refresh candidate - prune or merge candidate Analyze the balance: A. Portfolio distribution Calculate whether the portfolio is over-weighted toward: - generic traffic - early-stage education - commercial pages - thought leadership - outdated content - low-intent content - unsupported clusters B. Strategic gaps Identify missing: - pillar pages - supporting articles - comparison pages - product or service pages - templates - case studies - FAQs - glossary pages - refreshes C. Rebalance plan Recommend: - content to build - content to refresh - content to consolidate - content to retire - clusters to strengthen - pages to link together - CTAs to adjust D. Next 90 days Create: - ideal content mix - publishing ratio - refresh ratio - first 20 actions - success metrics Rules: - Do not optimize for traffic alone. - Do not keep old content just because it exists. - Do not build new content while ignoring strong refresh opportunities. - The portfolio should support authority, rankings, trust, and revenue. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#110Search-Driven Thought Leadership Planner

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYFounders, experts, SaaS brands, agencies, consultants, B2B marketers, and brands that want authority without generic keyword content.

Create thought leadership content that still captures search demand, builds authority, expresses a distinct point of view, and supports SEO.

Act as a search-driven thought leadership strategist. Help me create expert content that ranks without sounding like generic SEO content. Context: Expert or brand POV: [POV] Business: [BUSINESS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Niche: [NICHE] Search topics: [TOPICS] Current content: [CONTENT] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Strong opinions: [OPINIONS] Experience or data available: [EXPERIENCE / DATA] Tone: [TONE] Build the thought leadership plan: 1. POV extraction Identify: - unique belief - market disagreement - customer misconception - expert lesson - uncommon framework - practical principle - warning or prediction 2. Search alignment Turn the POV into content that targets: - problem keywords - decision keywords - comparison keywords - how-to keywords - mistake keywords - trend keywords - framework keywords 3. Content concepts Create 20 thought leadership SEO topics. For each include: - title - target keyword angle - search intent - distinct POV - why it is not generic - proof required - internal links - CTA 4. Authority asset formats Recommend: - essays - frameworks - original research - teardown posts - opinionated guides - benchmark reports - expert interviews - case studies - contrarian comparisons 5. Publishing system Create: - monthly cadence - repurposing plan - internal linking plan - refresh plan - measurement plan Rules: - Do not create empty hot takes. - Do not ignore search intent. - Do not make thought leadership disconnected from the offer. - The content should be findable, useful, and memorable. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#111Cluster Sequencing and Dependency Planner

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYSEO roadmaps, content calendars, agencies, in-house teams, and avoiding random publishing order.

Decide the best order to build a topic cluster based on intent, internal linking dependencies, authority growth, conversion value, and production effort.

You are a cluster sequencing strategist. Decide the best order to create or refresh content in this topic cluster. Cluster details: Cluster topic: [TOPIC] Pillar page: [PILLAR] Planned pages: [PAGE LIST] Existing pages: [EXISTING PAGES] Target keywords: [KEYWORDS] Business goal: [GOAL] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Publishing capacity: [CAPACITY] Content resources: [RESOURCES] Priority commercial pages: [COMMERCIAL PAGES] Sequence the cluster: A. Dependency analysis Identify pages that should come first because they: - define core terms - support pillar page context - provide internal link targets - answer high-frequency questions - support commercial conversion - create topical foundation - need expert review - need design or development B. Authority build order Classify content into: - foundation pages - pillar pages - support articles - commercial pages - proof pages - comparison pages - long-tail pages - refresh tasks C. Production order Create a sequenced plan: - first 5 pages - next 5 pages - next 10 pages - later pages - refreshes to schedule - pages to delay - pages to avoid D. Internal link timing For each publishing phase define: - links to add immediately - links to add after next pages publish - hub updates - commercial links - anchor text ideas E. Risk management Flag: - cannibalization risks - publishing too many isolated pages - missing foundation content - weak conversion path - unrealistic production load Rules: - Do not publish only by keyword volume. - Do not delay commercial pages forever. - Do not create supporting content with nowhere to link. - The sequence should make the cluster stronger with every new page. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#112Content Hub Internal Linking Matrix

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYTopic clusters, content hubs, internal link audits, new content launches, and topical authority improvements.

Create a detailed internal linking matrix across pillar pages, supporting articles, commercial pages, comparison pages, FAQs, and resource hubs.

Act as an internal linking architect for topical authority. Build a link matrix for this content hub or cluster. Content inventory: [PASTE PAGE LIST WITH URLS, TITLES, AND TARGET KEYWORDS] Context: Main topic: [TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Priority pages: [PRIORITY PAGES] Conversion pages: [CONVERSION PAGES] Existing internal links: [EXISTING LINKS] Pages with backlinks or traffic: [HIGH-VALUE PAGES] Anchor text constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Create the link matrix: 1. Page role classification Label each page as: - pillar - hub - supporting article - commercial page - comparison page - FAQ page - glossary page - template/tool - case study - outdated page 2. Link recommendations For each page provide: - pages it should link to - pages that should link back - anchor text options - placement recommendation - reason for the link - priority - expected SEO value - expected user value 3. Authority flow plan Identify how to move authority from: - high-backlink pages - high-traffic pages - hub pages - pillar pages - related content - homepage or navigation Toward: - priority cluster pages - conversion pages - underlinked support pages - new pages 4. Cannibalization protection Flag links that may confuse: - duplicate targets - overlapping anchor text - pages with similar intent - wrong commercial destination 5. Implementation checklist Create: - top 30 links to add - anchor text bank - pages to update first - QA checklist - future linking rules Rules: - Do not add links just because pages share a keyword. - Do not overuse exact-match anchor text. - Do not send all links only to the pillar page. - Internal links should help users move through the topic logically. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#113Content Decay and Authority Refresh Planner

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYContent audits, ranking drops, outdated libraries, older blogs, topical authority maintenance, and quarterly SEO refreshes.

Identify old content that weakens topical authority and create a refresh plan that improves freshness, accuracy, internal links, and cluster strength.

You are a content decay and authority refresh strategist. Find which content should be updated, expanded, merged, pruned, or reconnected to strengthen topical authority. Content inventory: [PASTE CONTENT LIST WITH PERFORMANCE DATA] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Topic clusters: [CLUSTERS] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Current SEO goals: [GOALS] Known outdated topics: [OUTDATED TOPICS] Competitor updates: [COMPETITOR NOTES] Refresh resources: [RESOURCES] Audit decay: A. Decay signals Identify pages with: - traffic decline - ranking decline - outdated dates - outdated examples - weak internal links - thin content - overlapping intent - missing current SERP expectations - poor conversions - low engagement - broken links B. Authority impact Classify each page as: - strengthens authority - neutral - weakens authority - outdated but valuable - duplicate or overlapping - should be merged - should be removed - should become support content C. Refresh action Recommend: - update facts - rewrite intro - improve title - expand sections - add proof - add internal links - add FAQs - merge pages - redirect - noindex - delete only if safe D. Cluster refresh plan For each cluster provide: - pages to refresh first - internal links to add - missing support pages - pillar update needs - freshness cadence E. 90-day refresh roadmap Create: - high-priority refreshes - quick wins - merge candidates - prune candidates - new pages needed - measurement plan Rules: - Do not delete content without checking traffic, backlinks, and intent. - Do not refresh pages only by changing dates. - Do not build new content while old authority assets decay. - The plan should protect and increase topical authority over time. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#114Authority Content Quality Gate

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYEditorial teams, agencies, content managers, writers, and businesses that want consistent authority-building standards.

Create a quality review system that ensures every SEO content asset contributes to topical authority before publication.

Act as an SEO editorial quality director. Build a content quality gate that determines whether a draft is good enough to publish as an authority-building asset. Draft: [PASTE DRAFT] Content brief: [PASTE BRIEF] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Topic cluster: [CLUSTER] Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Search intent: [INTENT] Offer: [OFFER] Brand voice: [VOICE] Required proof: [PROOF] Internal pages: [INTERNAL PAGES] Evaluate the draft using this quality gate: 1. Strategic fit Score: - cluster relevance - business relevance - audience fit - intent match - page type fit - funnel role 2. Authority contribution Score: - depth - originality - expertise - examples - proof - practical value - semantic coverage - internal link contribution - differentiation 3. SEO execution Score: - title - meta description - headings - keyword usage - entity coverage - FAQ quality - internal links - external references - snippet potential 4. Reader experience Score: - clarity - scanability - structure - answer speed - examples - next steps - trust - readability 5. Decision Classify draft as: - publish - publish after minor edits - needs major revision - rewrite from brief - wrong intent - not worth publishing Provide: - pass/fail checklist - required fixes - optional improvements - sections to rewrite - sections to remove - internal links to add - publication readiness score Rules: - Do not approve generic content that only repeats common advice. - Do not reject drafts for style preferences alone. - Do not allow publication if intent is mismatched. - The quality gate should protect topical authority. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#115Original Authority Asset Planner

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYLinkable assets, topical authority, thought leadership, PR-driven SEO, content differentiation, and competitive niches.

Plan high-value authority assets such as original research, benchmarks, templates, calculators, frameworks, data studies, and expert guides.

You are an authority asset strategist. Design original content assets that can build trust, earn links, support clusters, and differentiate the website. Business context: Website: [WEBSITE] Niche: [NICHE] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Existing content: [CONTENT] Available data: [DATA] Available expertise: [EXPERTISE] Available customer stories: [CUSTOMER STORIES] Production resources: [RESOURCES] SEO goals: [GOALS] Create original authority asset ideas: Asset categories: - original research report - benchmark study - survey report - calculator - template library - checklist library - interactive tool - expert framework - teardown series - case study library - glossary hub - comparison database - statistics page - visual guide - annual trend report For each asset idea provide: - asset name - core promise - target audience - search demand angle - topic cluster supported - link earning potential - conversion connection - data or proof required - production effort - refresh cadence - promotion plan - priority score Then recommend: - 3 quick authority assets - 3 high-effort high-upside assets - 3 assets to avoid - first asset to build - minimum viable version - internal link plan Rules: - Do not suggest fake research or fabricated statistics. - Do not create assets that have no search or audience value. - Do not build link bait disconnected from the offer. - The asset should strengthen authority and create real user value. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#116Search-Driven Content Moat Builder

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYCompetitive niches, SaaS SEO, B2B content, expert brands, agencies, and websites trying to become hard to copy.

Build a defensible SEO content moat using depth, originality, internal links, expert proof, unique data, and strong cluster architecture.

Act as a content moat strategist. Build a search-driven content strategy that competitors cannot easily copy. Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Niche: [NICHE] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Current content: [CONTENT] Unique advantages: [ADVANTAGES] Data access: [DATA] Expertise access: [EXPERTISE] Customer proof: [PROOF] Budget and resources: [RESOURCES] Design the content moat: A. Commodity content risk Identify topics where content is easy to copy because it is: - generic - definition-only - listicle-based - tool-generated - not experience-based - not data-backed - weakly differentiated B. Defensible content pillars Create content areas based on: - proprietary data - customer experience - expert frameworks - unique workflows - industry benchmarks - practical templates - product insights - strong opinion - niche specialization C. Moat assets Recommend: - flagship guides - original research - benchmark pages - calculators - templates - case studies - expert interviews - comparison resources - visual frameworks - annual updates D. SEO structure Map moat assets into: - topic clusters - pillar pages - supporting articles - internal links - commercial pages - refresh cycles E. Defense plan Define how to keep the moat strong: - update cadence - data refresh - expert review - internal linking maintenance - content pruning - competitor monitoring Rules: - Do not build a strategy around generic SEO articles only. - Do not claim proprietary insight where none exists. - Do not separate authority from business value. - The result should create content that is useful, differentiated, and harder to replicate. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#117Topical Authority Measurement Dashboard

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYSEO reporting, content leadership, agency reporting, editorial planning, and measuring authority beyond single-keyword rankings.

Define a dashboard that tracks whether content strategy is increasing topical authority, visibility, rankings, engagement, links, and business outcomes.

You are an SEO measurement strategist. Design a dashboard for tracking topical authority and content strategy performance. Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Topic clusters: [CLUSTERS] Target keywords: [KEYWORDS] Content inventory: [CONTENT] Business goals: [GOALS] Conversion goals: [CONVERSIONS] Analytics tools: [TOOLS] Reporting audience: [STAKEHOLDERS] Reporting cadence: [CADENCE] Build the dashboard: 1. Authority metrics Define metrics for: - cluster visibility - keyword footprint - ranking distribution - top 3 / top 10 / top 20 coverage - impressions - organic clicks - content-assisted conversions - internal link growth - backlinks by cluster - branded search growth - topical coverage progress 2. Content production metrics Track: - pages published - pages refreshed - pages merged - briefs created - internal links added - expert reviews completed - content quality scores - refresh completion 3. Engagement metrics Track: - organic entrances - scroll depth - time on page - engagement rate - CTA clicks - assisted conversions - content path behavior 4. Cluster health score Create a score based on: - coverage completeness - ranking growth - traffic growth - conversion value - internal links - freshness - proof quality - content decay risk 5. Reporting format Create: - executive summary - cluster scorecard - wins - risks - next actions - content decisions - 30-day priorities Rules: - Do not measure authority only by total traffic. - Do not ignore conversions. - Do not report metrics without decisions. - The dashboard should help leadership understand whether the strategy is working. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#118SEO Content Brief System for Authority Building

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYScaling content production, managing writers, agencies, editorial teams, and maintaining consistent SEO quality.

Create a reusable content brief system that ensures every article supports search intent, topic clusters, internal linking, proof, and authority goals.

Act as an SEO content operations strategist. Build a reusable content brief system for authority-building content. Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Niche: [NICHE] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Topic clusters: [CLUSTERS] Brand voice: [VOICE] Content team: [TEAM] Publishing volume: [VOLUME] Quality standards: [STANDARDS] SEO tools: [TOOLS] Create the brief system: A. Brief template Build a reusable brief with fields for: - content title - target keyword - secondary keywords - search intent - audience - awareness stage - cluster - page role - internal links - external sources - required proof - examples - outline - FAQs - CTA - E-E-A-T notes - differentiation angle - quality checklist B. Writer instructions Create guidance for: - how to satisfy intent - how to use keywords naturally - how to include examples - how to avoid generic content - how to cite or verify facts - how to connect to the offer - how to add internal links C. Editor checklist Create checks for: - search intent match - topical coverage - originality - structure - proof - readability - internal links - CTA fit - metadata - publication readiness D. Production workflow Define: - keyword selection - SERP research - brief creation - writing - expert review - SEO review - editing - publishing - internal linking - refresh scheduling E. Quality control Create: - pass/fail criteria - rejection reasons - revision categories - scoring rubric - recurring improvement loop Rules: - Do not make briefs that are only keyword lists. - Do not allow writers to create isolated content. - Do not ignore proof and differentiation. - The system should make content production repeatable without making content generic. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#119Niche Authority Expansion Planner

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYMature content sites, SaaS blogs, service businesses, niche publishers, and SEO teams ready to expand beyond initial clusters.

Identify adjacent topics, new clusters, supporting content, and authority expansion paths without drifting away from business relevance.

You are a niche authority expansion strategist. Help me expand topical authority into adjacent areas without losing focus. Current authority area: [CURRENT TOPIC / NICHE] Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Current clusters: [CLUSTERS] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] Best-performing content: [BEST CONTENT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Business goals: [GOALS] Resources: [RESOURCES] Topics to avoid: [AVOID] Find expansion paths: 1. Adjacent topic discovery Identify adjacent topics based on: - customer next problems - buyer journey progression - product use cases - industry workflows - related tools - complementary skills - competitor gaps - post-purchase needs - emerging demand 2. Relevance filter For each adjacent topic score: - audience fit - offer fit - authority fit - search demand potential - conversion potential - differentiation potential - risk of dilution 3. Expansion options Create: - safe expansion topics - strategic stretch topics - experimental topics - topics to avoid - topics needing validation 4. Cluster plan For the best expansion topic create: - pillar page - 10 supporting articles - 5 commercial pages - 5 FAQ pages - internal links from current content - proof needed 5. Expansion roadmap Create: - first 30 days - first 90 days - first 6 months - authority checkpoints - stop-loss signals Rules: - Do not expand into topics only because they are popular. - Do not dilute the site's core authority. - Do not ignore conversion relevance. - Expansion should feel like a natural next step from existing expertise. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#120Full SEO Content Strategy and Topical Authority Audit

SEO CONTENT STRATEGY & TOPICAL AUTHORITYFull SEO content strategy, agency deliverables, content audits, niche authority planning, editorial roadmaps, and websites ready to scale organic growth.

Audit and redesign a complete SEO content strategy across clusters, hubs, pillar pages, authority gaps, editorial planning, content quality, internal linking, refreshes, and measurement.

Act as an independent SEO content strategy and topical authority auditor. Review my website's content system and create a complete authority-building roadmap. Full context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business type: [BUSINESS TYPE] Offer: [OFFER] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Niche: [NICHE] Current content inventory: [CONTENT INVENTORY] Current topic clusters: [CLUSTERS] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] Current traffic: [TRAFFIC] Current conversions: [CONVERSIONS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Keyword research: [KEYWORD RESEARCH] Customer research: [CUSTOMER RESEARCH] Internal link data: [INTERNAL LINKS] Backlink data: [BACKLINKS] Publishing capacity: [CAPACITY] Available expertise: [EXPERTISE] Content budget: [BUDGET] Business goals: [GOALS] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Audit across 35 dimensions: 1. Topic territory clarity 2. Audience focus 3. Business relevance 4. Pillar page coverage 5. Supporting article coverage 6. Commercial content coverage 7. Comparison content coverage 8. FAQ and glossary coverage 9. Original authority assets 10. Content hub structure 11. Cluster architecture 12. Internal linking 13. Search intent alignment 14. Awareness stage coverage 15. Keyword-to-content mapping 16. Content depth 17. Content originality 18. Proof and E-E-A-T signals 19. Content freshness 20. Content decay 21. Cannibalization risk 22. Duplicate topic risk 23. Content quality standards 24. Editorial workflow 25. Brief quality 26. Publishing cadence 27. Refresh cadence 28. Conversion path integration 29. Thought leadership integration 30. Competitor authority gaps 31. Niche expansion opportunities 32. Measurement system 33. Reporting quality 34. Resource fit 35. Overall topical authority readiness For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from my context - risk if ignored - recommended fix - priority level - effort level - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Hard truth Explain the biggest weakness preventing the website from becoming a trusted authority. B. Authority strategy Define: - the topic territory to own - primary audience - core authority promise - cluster priorities - content types needed - proof assets needed - topics to avoid C. Topical map Create: - primary clusters - pillar pages - supporting articles - comparison pages - commercial pages - FAQ pages - templates or tools - original authority assets - refresh candidates D. Content roadmap Create: - first 30-day plan - first 90-day plan - first 6-month plan - pages to build - pages to refresh - pages to merge - pages to remove - internal links to add E. Editorial operating system Define: - brief process - writer guidelines - expert review process - SEO review process - quality gate - publishing cadence - refresh cadence - reporting cadence F. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - strongest authority opportunity - highest-priority cluster - first pillar page to build or fix - first supporting article to create - first content refresh to perform - first internal linking improvement - first original asset to build - biggest content risk - one operating principle for SEO content strategy Rules: - Do not recommend content volume without strategic focus. - Do not build authority around irrelevant traffic. - Do not ignore proof, originality, and refreshes. - Use [NEEDS DATA] where evidence is missing. - The final output should be specific, prioritized, and ready to turn into an SEO content roadmap.

#121SERP-to-Brief Translation Engine

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGCreating SEO briefs from research, assigning writers, standardizing content production, and avoiding vague briefs that only list keywords.

Convert keyword data, SERP observations, competitor patterns, search intent, and business goals into a complete SEO content brief a writer can execute.

You are an SEO content brief strategist. Turn the research below into a complete, writer-ready SEO content brief. Inputs: Target keyword: [TARGET KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] SERP observations: [SERP OBSERVATIONS] Top competing pages: [COMPETITOR PAGES] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Search intent: [SEARCH INTENT] Awareness stage: [AWARENESS STAGE] Business offer: [OFFER] Conversion goal: [CONVERSION GOAL] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Required examples or proof: [PROOF] Internal pages to link to: [INTERNAL PAGES] Content constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Create the brief: 1. Strategic brief summary Include: - page goal - search intent - target reader - reader's main question - reader's hidden concern - business objective - recommended page type - content difficulty 2. SERP learning Summarize: - dominant page types - repeated sections - common angles - missing information - proof patterns - content format expectations - differentiation opportunity 3. Content requirements Define: - required sections - optional sections - sections to avoid - examples to include - data or proof needed - visuals or tables needed - FAQ opportunities - snippet opportunities 4. SEO writing instructions Provide guidance for: - title tag - meta description - H1 - H2/H3 structure - primary keyword use - secondary keyword use - entities to include - internal links - external source needs - CTA placement 5. Writer execution notes Create: - tone guidance - reader knowledge level - explanation depth - opening direction - ending direction - what not to say - quality bar Output format: - SEO brief - recommended outline - writer checklist - editor checklist Rules: - Do not create a generic brief. - Do not over-prioritize keyword density. - Do not copy competitor structures. - Make the brief specific enough that a writer can draft without asking follow-up questions. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#122Search Intent Outline Builder

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGArticles, guides, service pages, comparison content, SaaS content, and briefs where intent alignment matters more than word count.

Build an SEO outline where every section is tied to a specific searcher need, question, objection, or decision point.

Act as an intent-first SEO outline architect. Build an outline that follows the reader's search journey from first question to next action. Topic: [TOPIC] Keyword: [KEYWORD] Audience context: Reader: [READER] Problem: [PROBLEM] Search intent: [INTENT] Awareness stage: [AWARENESS STAGE] Desired outcome: [OUTCOME] Objections: [OBJECTIONS] Business offer: [OFFER] CTA goal: [CTA GOAL] Build the outline in this structure: A. Intent statement Write one sentence: "The reader searches this because they want to [NEED], avoid [RISK], and decide [DECISION]." B. Reader question sequence List the exact order of questions the reader needs answered: 1. immediate question 2. context question 3. trust question 4. practical question 5. comparison question 6. risk question 7. next-step question C. Outline Create: - title tag - meta description - H1 - H2s - H3s - section purpose - reader question answered - keyword or entity naturally supported - example needed - internal link opportunity - CTA note D. Missing intent check Identify whether the outline covers: - informational intent - commercial investigation - decision support - implementation need - trust need - objection handling - next action E. Final writer notes Include: - opening angle - content depth - tone - examples to include - sections to keep short - sections to expand - sections not to add Rules: - Do not build the outline by keyword list alone. - Do not add sections that do not answer a real reader need. - Do not use headings as keyword stuffing. - The outline should feel like a guided answer, not a random article structure. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#123Writer-Ready SEO Article Blueprint

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGAssigning articles to writers, producing high-quality drafts, reducing revisions, and turning a brief into a clear drafting plan.

Create a complete writing blueprint with section goals, talking points, examples, transitions, proof needs, and SEO guidance.

You are a senior SEO content editor. Create a writer-ready article blueprint from the inputs below. Inputs: Article topic: [TOPIC] Primary keyword: [PRIMARY KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Target reader: [TARGET READER] Search intent: [SEARCH INTENT] SERP notes: [SERP NOTES] Unique angle: [UNIQUE ANGLE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Offer connection: [OFFER CONNECTION] Internal links: [INTERNAL LINKS] Proof assets: [PROOF ASSETS] Desired length: [LENGTH] Create the blueprint: PART 1 — Article direction Define: - article promise - reader starting point - reader ending point - main argument - unique value - conversion role PART 2 — Section plan For every section include: - heading - section purpose - key points to cover - example to include - proof needed - reader question answered - transition into next section - SEO notes - approximate length PART 3 — Writing instructions Include: - how to write the intro - how to avoid generic advice - where to use examples - where to add nuance - where to simplify - where to add internal links - how to close the article PART 4 — SEO elements Create: - title tag - meta description - H1 - slug - FAQ questions - snippet-ready answer block - image suggestions - schema suggestion, if relevant PART 5 — Quality control Create a checklist for: - intent match - completeness - originality - readability - internal links - CTA fit - factual accuracy - no keyword stuffing Rules: - Do not write the full article unless asked. - Do not create empty headings. - Do not include claims without proof requirements. - The blueprint should make drafting faster and better. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#124SEO Draft Generator With Editorial Guardrails

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGProducing first drafts from a brief, creating blog content, drafting educational pages, and avoiding generic AI-style SEO writing.

Write a full SEO-friendly draft that satisfies search intent while following strict editorial rules for clarity, usefulness, structure, and originality.

You are an expert SEO writer and editor. Write a complete draft using the brief below, but follow the editorial guardrails strictly. Brief: Topic: [TOPIC] Primary keyword: [PRIMARY KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Search intent: [INTENT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Awareness stage: [STAGE] Brand voice: [VOICE] Outline: [OUTLINE] Unique angle: [ANGLE] Required examples: [EXAMPLES] Required proof: [PROOF] Internal links to mention naturally: [INTERNAL LINKS] CTA: [CTA] Length: [LENGTH] Editorial guardrails: 1. Intent first The draft must answer the searcher's main question early and then expand naturally. 2. No generic filler Avoid: - "in today's digital world" - "it depends" without explanation - vague benefits - repetitive introductions - obvious advice - unsupported claims - keyword stuffing 3. Section discipline For each section: - start with a clear point - explain why it matters - add an example or practical detail - connect to the next idea - avoid repeating previous sections 4. SEO discipline Use: - primary keyword naturally - secondary keywords only where relevant - clear headings - direct answer blocks - FAQs - internal link mentions - semantic terms 5. Conversion discipline Include the CTA only where it fits the reader's readiness. Output: - title tag - meta description - H1 - full draft - FAQ section - suggested internal links - final SEO checklist Rules: - Do not over-optimize. - Do not invent statistics, quotes, or case studies. - Use [NEEDS SOURCE] where factual proof is required. - Make the writing useful enough for a human reader, not just a search engine. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#125Section Purpose and Flow Planner

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGFixing messy outlines, improving draft structure, planning long-form articles, and creating content that reads naturally.

Plan each section of an SEO article so it has a clear role, logical order, reader value, keyword relevance, and smooth transition.

Act as an SEO content flow designer. Take this outline or draft and improve the section logic so the page feels clear, complete, and easy to follow. Input: Topic: [TOPIC] Keyword: [KEYWORD] Search intent: [INTENT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Current outline or draft: [OUTLINE OR DRAFT] Business goal: [GOAL] CTA: [CTA] SERP notes: [SERP NOTES] Analyze the flow: 1. Reader journey Map the journey: - what the reader knows before the page - what they need first - what they need next - when they need examples - when they need proof - when they are ready for next steps 2. Section role audit For every section, label its role as: - hook - quick answer - definition - context - explanation - framework - process - example - comparison - proof - objection handling - FAQ - conversion bridge - conclusion 3. Flow problems Identify: - missing setup - repeated ideas - sections in wrong order - unsupported jumps - weak transitions - sections that should merge - sections that should split - sections that should be removed 4. Improved structure Create: - revised title - revised H1 - revised H2/H3 outline - section purpose notes - transition notes - CTA placement - FAQ placement - internal link moments 5. Writer guidance Provide: - where to be concise - where to go deeper - where to add examples - where to add proof - where to add visuals Rules: - Do not add sections only to make the article longer. - Do not remove necessary context for beginners. - Do not bury the main answer. - Every section must earn its place. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#126Expert Angle Injection Brief

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGCompetitive SERPs, expert-led blogs, SaaS content, B2B content, thought leadership SEO, and content that needs stronger E-E-A-T.

Add expert perspective, original insight, experience, and differentiated angles to SEO content so it does not sound generic.

You are an expert-led SEO content strategist. Build an expert angle plan for this content so it becomes more useful and differentiated than generic search results. Inputs: Topic: [TOPIC] Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Search intent: [INTENT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Current brief or draft: [BRIEF / DRAFT] Expertise available: [EXPERTISE] First-hand experience available: [EXPERIENCE] Customer stories available: [CUSTOMER STORIES] Data available: [DATA] Competitor patterns: [COMPETITOR PATTERNS] Brand point of view: [POV] Create the expert angle plan: A. Generic risk diagnosis Identify where the content is likely to sound like everyone else: - common advice - repeated SERP claims - shallow explanations - obvious tips - lack of examples - no decision criteria - no tradeoffs - no real-world constraints B. Expert angle options Create 10 possible expert angles. For each include: - angle name - core insight - why it matters - where it fits in the article - proof needed - risk or limitation - SEO value C. Experience injection Recommend places to add: - real examples - mini case studies - expert notes - practical warnings - mistakes seen in the field - decision rules - implementation details - before/after explanation D. Differentiated outline Rewrite the outline with expert angle built in. E. Editorial rules Create rules for the writer: - what to explain from experience - what to avoid overclaiming - where to show nuance - where to use plain language - where to cite sources Rules: - Do not fabricate expertise or data. - Do not add contrarian takes only for attention. - Do not make the content less useful in pursuit of originality. - Use [NEEDS EXPERT INPUT] where a real expert should provide details. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#127SEO FAQ and Micro-Answer Writer

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGArticle briefs, service pages, product pages, guides, comparison pages, and FAQ optimization.

Create helpful FAQ sections, People Also Ask answers, and micro-answer blocks that support long-tail intent and improve content completeness.

Act as an SEO FAQ and micro-answer writer. Create concise, useful answers that support the main page without creating filler. Page context: Topic: [TOPIC] Primary keyword: [PRIMARY KEYWORD] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Search intent: [INTENT] Main outline: [OUTLINE] Known objections: [OBJECTIONS] Related questions: [RELATED QUESTIONS] Business offer: [OFFER] Internal links: [INTERNAL LINKS] Build the FAQ system: 1. Question selection Generate 20 potential questions from: - beginner questions - process questions - cost questions - risk questions - comparison questions - timing questions - implementation questions - mistake questions - alternative questions - next-step questions 2. Question filtering Classify each question as: - include in FAQ - answer in main body - create separate article - use as snippet block - exclude as irrelevant 3. Final FAQ section Write 8 to 12 final FAQs. Each answer must include: - direct first sentence - short explanation - practical detail - internal link suggestion, if relevant - no fluff 4. Micro-answer blocks Create: - one definition block - one step list - one comparison block - one mistake warning - one decision rule - one summary takeaway 5. Placement guidance Recommend: - where FAQ should appear - where micro-answers should appear - which answers may support featured snippets - which answers need sources Rules: - Do not create fake questions. - Do not repeat the same answer in different wording. - Do not use FAQ content to stuff keywords. - Use [NEEDS SOURCE] where claims require evidence. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#128SEO Outline From Keyword Cluster

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGKeyword clustering, avoiding cannibalization, planning articles, and creating pages that target multiple related queries naturally.

Turn a group of related keywords into one clear outline while deciding which keywords belong on the page and which need separate pages.

You are an SEO keyword-to-outline strategist. Turn this keyword cluster into a clear page outline and prevent keyword cannibalization. Keyword cluster: [KEYWORD CLUSTER] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Search intent notes: [INTENT NOTES] Existing related pages: [RELATED PAGES] SERP notes: [SERP NOTES] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Process the cluster: A. Cluster validation Group keywords into: - same intent - similar but separate intent - supporting terms - FAQ terms - commercial terms - terms to exclude - terms needing separate pages B. Page focus Define: - primary keyword - secondary keywords - long-tail variations - entities - reader promise - page type - funnel stage C. Outline creation Create: - title tag - meta description - H1 - H2/H3 structure - keyword mapping by section - FAQ section - internal links - CTA D. Separate page recommendations For keywords that do not belong on this page, provide: - keyword - reason it should be separate - recommended page type - internal link relationship - priority E. Cannibalization guardrails Create: - what this page should rank for - what it should not target - anchor text rules - related pages to avoid overlapping - future content warnings Rules: - Do not force unrelated keywords into one page. - Do not create separate pages for the same intent. - Do not repeat keywords unnaturally. - The final outline should be focused, not bloated. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#129Search-Friendly Introduction Writer

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGBlog posts, guides, landing pages, service pages, comparison pages, and rewriting weak SEO intros.

Write introductions that quickly confirm relevance, answer the reader's need, create trust, and lead naturally into the article.

Act as an SEO introduction specialist. Write a strong intro that satisfies search intent quickly and avoids generic opening paragraphs. Inputs: Topic: [TOPIC] Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Search intent: [INTENT] Reader problem: [PROBLEM] Desired outcome: [OUTCOME] Article angle: [ANGLE] Brand voice: [VOICE] Page type: [PAGE TYPE] Offer connection, if any: [OFFER CONNECTION] Create intro options: Option 1 — Direct answer intro - answer the query immediately - explain what the page covers - set expectations Option 2 — Problem-aware intro - name the pain - clarify the stakes - promise a practical path Option 3 — Decision-support intro - identify the choice - explain criteria - promise clarity Option 4 — Expert perspective intro - show experience - introduce a useful insight - avoid hype Option 5 — Beginner-friendly intro - define the topic simply - reduce confusion - preview the guide For each intro include: - best use case - why it works - possible risk - recommended next H2 Then provide: - best final intro - shorter version - stronger version - intro checklist Rules: - Do not start with "In today's world." - Do not delay the answer. - Do not overpromise. - Do not include claims that need proof unless proof is provided. - Keep the intro useful, specific, and aligned with intent. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#130SEO Conclusion and CTA Bridge Builder

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGSEO articles, guides, service pages, comparison pages, product-led content, and content with weak endings.

Write conclusions that summarize value, reinforce the page's core message, and guide readers to the right next step without sounding pushy.

You are an SEO conclusion and CTA strategist. Create an ending that matches search intent and moves qualified readers to the next step. Page context: Topic: [TOPIC] Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Search intent: [INTENT] Article summary: [SUMMARY] Offer: [OFFER] Reader readiness: [READINESS] Primary CTA: [CTA] Internal pages: [INTERNAL PAGES] Brand voice: [VOICE] Build the ending system: 1. Reader state at the end Define: - what the reader now understands - what they may still worry about - what decision they can make - what next action fits - what action would be too aggressive 2. Conclusion options Write: - concise summary conclusion - practical takeaway conclusion - decision-focused conclusion - product-led soft bridge - expert recommendation conclusion 3. CTA bridge options Create: - soft CTA - educational next-step CTA - lead magnet CTA - product or service CTA - consultation CTA - internal link CTA 4. Fit analysis For each CTA explain: - when to use it - when not to use it - how it supports intent - risk of being too sales-heavy 5. Final recommendation Provide: - best conclusion - best CTA - backup CTA - internal link placement - ending checklist Rules: - Do not summarize with empty phrases. - Do not add a hard sell if the intent is informational. - Do not end without a useful next step. - The ending should feel natural and helpful. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#131SEO Content Brief QA Reviewer

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGEditorial workflows, agency briefs, content managers, SEO teams, and reducing writer revisions.

Review an SEO content brief before it goes to a writer and identify gaps, ambiguity, intent problems, missing proof, and weak instructions.

Act as an SEO content brief quality reviewer. Audit this brief and tell me whether it is ready for a writer. Brief: [PASTE BRIEF] Context: Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Search intent: [INTENT] Business goal: [GOAL] SERP notes: [SERP NOTES] Brand voice: [VOICE] Content type: [CONTENT TYPE] Review the brief across these criteria: 1. Strategic clarity Score: - target keyword clarity - search intent clarity - audience clarity - page type clarity - business objective clarity - conversion goal clarity 2. SERP grounding Check whether the brief includes: - top result patterns - common sections - missing opportunities - format expectations - proof expectations - differentiation angle 3. Writing instructions Check whether the writer knows: - what to cover - what not to cover - how deep to go - what examples to include - what proof is needed - what tone to use - where to link - what CTA to use 4. SEO completeness Check: - title guidance - meta guidance - H1/H2/H3 guidance - keyword usage - semantic coverage - FAQs - snippet opportunities - internal links 5. Risk diagnosis Flag: - vague instructions - overlapping intent - missing section purpose - weak angle - unrealistic length - unsupported claims - generic outline - no conversion path Output: - readiness score - pass/fail decision - missing information - recommended improvements - revised brief sections - writer questions to answer before drafting Rules: - Do not approve a brief that is only a keyword list. - Do not require unnecessary complexity. - Do not rewrite the whole brief unless needed. - The goal is to make the brief executable. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#132Outline-to-Draft Expansion System

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGTurning approved outlines into drafts, maintaining editorial quality, and producing structured long-form SEO content.

Expand an SEO outline into a complete draft while preserving the outline's intent, section logic, voice, examples, and SEO requirements.

You are an SEO writer expanding an approved outline into a complete draft. Preserve the outline's structure and intent while making the writing clear, useful, and human. Approved outline: [PASTE OUTLINE] Writing context: Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Search intent: [INTENT] Brand voice: [VOICE] Required examples: [EXAMPLES] Required proof: [PROOF] Internal links: [INTERNAL LINKS] CTA: [CTA] Length target: [LENGTH] Drafting rules: A. Follow the outline Use the provided H1, H2, and H3 structure unless a section is clearly redundant. If you change structure, explain why after the draft. B. Write for the reader Each section must: - answer a clear question - explain why it matters - include practical detail - avoid filler - connect to the next section C. Preserve SEO quality Use: - primary keyword naturally - secondary terms where relevant - semantic language - clear headings - FAQ answers - internal link mentions - direct answer blocks D. Preserve trust Do not invent: - statistics - expert quotes - case studies - customer results - sources - product claims Use [NEEDS SOURCE] where evidence is required. Output: - title tag - meta description - H1 - full draft - FAQ section - suggested images or tables - internal link suggestions - CTA - post-draft QA notes Rules: - Do not keyword stuff. - Do not add unrelated sections. - Do not make the content sound like a generic AI article. - The draft should be publishable after editorial review. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#133Example and Proof Placement Planner

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGImproving content depth, making drafts more credible, strengthening E-E-A-T, and helping writers avoid unsupported claims.

Decide where to add examples, screenshots, case studies, data, expert notes, quotes, and proof inside an SEO article.

Act as an SEO proof and example planner. Identify where this content needs examples or evidence and specify exactly what kind. Draft or outline: [PASTE DRAFT OR OUTLINE] Context: Topic: [TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Search intent: [INTENT] Offer: [OFFER] Available proof: [PROOF] Available data: [DATA] Available customer stories: [STORIES] Available screenshots: [SCREENSHOTS] Expertise available: [EXPERTISE] Build the proof plan: 1. Claim audit Identify claims that need support: - performance claims - best practice claims - comparison claims - cost claims - risk claims - process claims - expert claims - outcome claims 2. Example opportunities Find sections that would benefit from: - simple example - real-world scenario - before/after - mini case study - screenshot - table - template - calculation - checklist - expert note 3. Placement map For each recommended proof element include: - section - proof type - exact purpose - suggested wording - source needed - priority - impact on trust - impact on readability 4. Missing asset list List proof assets to create or collect: - screenshots - quotes - data points - customer examples - expert comments - demos - benchmarks - process visuals 5. Editorial warnings Flag: - unsupported claims to remove - vague examples to replace - proof that may distract - examples that deserve separate articles - claims that require current verification Rules: - Do not fabricate examples or proof. - Do not add proof only for decoration. - Do not overload simple sections with excessive evidence. - The proof should make the content more believable and useful. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#134SEO Content Rewrite Brief

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGContent refreshes, rewriting old posts, improving low-quality drafts, fixing intent mismatch, and recovering rankings.

Turn an existing underperforming article into a clear rewrite brief with new positioning, outline, sections, metadata, internal links, and quality instructions.

You are an SEO rewrite strategist. Create a rewrite brief for this existing page so a writer can improve it without starting blindly. Existing content: [PASTE CONTENT] Context: Page URL: [URL] Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Current performance: [PERFORMANCE] Search intent: [INTENT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] SERP notes: [SERP NOTES] Competitor weaknesses: [WEAKNESSES] Business goal: [GOAL] Brand voice: [VOICE] Internal links: [INTERNAL LINKS] Create the rewrite brief: A. Current content diagnosis Identify: - intent mismatch - weak sections - missing sections - outdated information - poor structure - repetitive content - lack of examples - weak proof - poor CTA - keyword issues - internal link gaps B. New positioning Define: - new article promise - reader outcome - unique angle - content type - funnel role - CTA strategy C. Rewrite map Classify existing sections as: - keep - rewrite - expand - shorten - move - merge - remove - split into separate page D. New brief Provide: - title tag - meta description - H1 - full H2/H3 outline - section purpose notes - examples needed - proof needed - FAQs - internal links - CTA E. Writer instructions Include: - what to preserve - what to avoid - what tone to use - how to handle keywords - how to make the page more useful - how to improve readability Rules: - Do not rewrite only by making the content longer. - Do not change the target intent without explaining why. - Do not remove useful existing sections unnecessarily. - The output should guide a focused, high-quality rewrite. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#135SEO Content Style and Voice Adapter

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGBrand-consistent SEO writing, content teams, agencies, founder-led brands, and rewriting content that sounds generic.

Adapt SEO content briefs, outlines, or drafts to a specific brand voice while preserving search intent, clarity, and optimization.

Act as a brand-aware SEO editor. Adapt this SEO content plan or draft to the specified voice without weakening search relevance. Input content: [PASTE BRIEF / OUTLINE / DRAFT] SEO context: Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Search intent: [INTENT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Page type: [PAGE TYPE] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Brand voice: Voice traits: [VOICE TRAITS] Tone: [TONE] Words to use: [WORDS TO USE] Words to avoid: [WORDS TO AVOID] Examples of good brand writing: [EXAMPLES] Competitor tone to avoid: [AVOID] Adapt the content: 1. Voice diagnosis Identify where the content currently sounds: - generic - too formal - too casual - too sales-heavy - too technical - too vague - too robotic - off-brand 2. SEO preservation rules Define what must remain intact: - search intent - keyword relevance - section structure - answer clarity - internal links - proof requirements - CTA logic 3. Voice rewrite Rewrite: - title tag options - meta description - H1 - intro - 5 key headings - sample section - FAQ answers - CTA copy 4. Style rules for writer Create: - sentence style - explanation style - example style - vocabulary rules - formatting rules - CTA tone - humor or personality rules, if relevant 5. Before/after examples Provide 10 sentence-level rewrites showing how the voice changes. Rules: - Do not sacrifice clarity for personality. - Do not use brand voice as an excuse for vague writing. - Do not remove SEO-critical information. - The content should sound distinct but still satisfy search intent. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#136SEO Comparison Article Brief

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGVersus pages, alternatives pages, best tools lists, buying guides, product comparisons, and commercial investigation SEO.

Create a detailed brief for comparison content that fairly evaluates options, answers buyer questions, includes decision criteria, and supports commercial search intent.

You are a commercial SEO content strategist. Create a comparison article brief that is useful, fair, and conversion-aware. Comparison topic: [COMPARISON TOPIC] Options being compared: [OPTIONS] Context: Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Buyer stage: [BUYER STAGE] Search intent: [INTENT] Offer or product: [OFFER] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Decision criteria: [CRITERIA] Proof available: [PROOF] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Brand voice: [VOICE] Create the comparison brief: A. Comparison strategy Define: - main decision the reader is making - how objective the article must be - where our offer fits - what the article should not overclaim - what evidence is needed B. Evaluation criteria Create criteria such as: - pricing - features - ease of use - implementation - integrations - support - scalability - best use cases - limitations - risk - ROI C. Article structure Create: - title tag - meta description - H1 - introduction angle - comparison table - option-by-option sections - use-case recommendations - pros and cons - decision guide - FAQs - CTA D. Fairness rules Include: - how to discuss competitors - how to state limitations - how to avoid biased claims - how to cite sources - how to update information E. Conversion path Recommend: - soft CTA - product CTA - demo CTA - comparison download - internal links - proof near CTA Rules: - Do not create a fake-neutral article if the brand has a clear offer. - Do not make unsupported competitor claims. - Do not hide tradeoffs. - The comparison should help the reader decide. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#137SEO How-To Guide Brief

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGTutorials, process guides, implementation content, workflow articles, SaaS education, and searchers who want to complete a task.

Create a detailed brief for how-to content with clear steps, prerequisites, examples, troubleshooting, visuals, and practical outcomes.

Act as a how-to SEO guide architect. Create a brief for a practical guide that helps the reader complete a task successfully. Task topic: [TASK TOPIC] Context: Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Skill level: [BEGINNER / INTERMEDIATE / ADVANCED] Search intent: [INTENT] Desired outcome: [OUTCOME] Tools or resources needed: [TOOLS] Offer connection: [OFFER] Common mistakes: [MISTAKES] Troubleshooting issues: [ISSUES] Internal links: [INTERNAL LINKS] Build the how-to brief: 1. Task definition Clarify: - what the reader wants to accomplish - what they need before starting - what success looks like - what can go wrong - how hard the task is 2. Guide structure Create: - title tag - meta description - H1 - quick answer - prerequisites - step-by-step process - examples - screenshots or visuals needed - troubleshooting - common mistakes - FAQ - next steps 3. Step design For each step include: - action - explanation - expected result - warning - example - visual suggestion - internal link - completion check 4. SEO optimization Include: - natural keyword use - related terms - snippet-ready step list - schema opportunity - internal links - image alt text ideas 5. Writer notes Define: - tone - depth - what to simplify - where to add expert tips - what not to assume Rules: - Do not write vague steps. - Do not skip prerequisites. - Do not make the guide promotional before it solves the task. - The guide should help the reader complete the task, not just understand it. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#138SEO Brief for Product-Led Content

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGSaaS blogs, tools, templates, product tutorials, use-case content, and converting educational traffic without forcing sales.

Create product-led SEO briefs that educate searchers while naturally showing how a product solves the problem.

You are a product-led SEO strategist. Create a content brief that satisfies search intent and naturally connects the topic to the product. Inputs: Topic: [TOPIC] Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Search intent: [INTENT] Product: [PRODUCT] Product use case: [USE CASE] Key features: [FEATURES] Customer pain: [PAIN] Competitors or alternatives: [ALTERNATIVES] Proof available: [PROOF] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Brand voice: [VOICE] Create the product-led brief: A. Intent-product fit Explain: - what the reader wants - where the product genuinely helps - where the product should not be mentioned - what education must come first - what CTA fits the reader's stage B. Content structure Create: - title tag - meta description - H1 - quick answer - educational sections - product bridge section - use-case walkthrough - example workflow - proof section - FAQ - CTA C. Product integration plan For each product mention define: - section - reason to mention - feature or workflow shown - reader value - proof needed - screenshot or demo need - CTA type D. Non-promotional safeguards Create rules: - no forced product mentions - no exaggerated claims - no hiding alternatives - no sales language before intent is satisfied - no generic feature dumping E. Conversion path Recommend: - soft CTA - template CTA - free trial CTA - demo CTA - related product page link - onboarding content link Rules: - Do not turn educational content into a disguised sales page. - Do not mention the product unless it helps solve the reader's problem. - Do not ignore search intent. - Product-led content should teach first and sell naturally. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#139SEO Writer Instruction Sheet

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGFreelance writers, content teams, agencies, editorial systems, and repeatable SEO writing workflows.

Create a compact instruction sheet for writers that defines the topic, audience, intent, structure, tone, examples, links, proof, and quality expectations.

Act as an SEO managing editor. Create a clear instruction sheet a writer can follow to produce a strong draft. Assignment context: Topic: [TOPIC] Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Search intent: [INTENT] Page type: [PAGE TYPE] Outline: [OUTLINE] Brand voice: [VOICE] Internal links: [INTERNAL LINKS] Required proof: [PROOF] Examples to include: [EXAMPLES] CTA: [CTA] Deadline or scope: [SCOPE] Create the instruction sheet: 1. Assignment summary Include: - what to write - who it is for - why the reader is searching - what the reader should understand after reading - what action the reader should take next 2. Must include List: - required sections - required examples - required proof - required internal links - required FAQs - required CTA - required SEO elements 3. Must avoid List: - topics not to cover - claims not to make - tone mistakes - keyword stuffing - competitor copying - unsupported statements - filler phrases 4. Section notes For each section provide: - purpose - key points - depth - example - SEO note - transition note 5. Delivery checklist Create a final checklist: - intent answered - outline followed - examples included - proof included - links included - metadata included - voice matched - no filler - ready for editor Rules: - Keep instructions clear and practical. - Do not overload the writer with unnecessary SEO jargon. - Do not leave the writer guessing about the angle. - The sheet should reduce revisions. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#140Full SEO Brief, Outline and Drafting System

SEO CONTENT BRIEFS, OUTLINES & WRITINGFull content workflows, agencies, editorial teams, SEO managers, scaling content production, and creating consistent search-friendly content.

Build a complete end-to-end SEO content production system from keyword and SERP research to brief, outline, draft instructions, QA, and publishing checklist.

Act as an independent SEO content production strategist. Build a complete brief, outline, and writing system for this SEO content asset. Full context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business: [BUSINESS] Offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Topic: [TOPIC] Primary keyword: [PRIMARY KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Search intent: [SEARCH INTENT] Awareness stage: [AWARENESS STAGE] SERP observations: [SERP OBSERVATIONS] Competitor pages: [COMPETITOR PAGES] Customer questions: [CUSTOMER QUESTIONS] Existing related content: [RELATED CONTENT] Internal links: [INTERNAL LINKS] Proof assets: [PROOF ASSETS] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Conversion goal: [CONVERSION GOAL] Content format: [FORMAT] Publishing constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Build the system in six parts: PART 1 — Strategy Define: - page goal - reader goal - business goal - page type - funnel role - unique angle - differentiation opportunity - success criteria PART 2 — Research synthesis Summarize: - search intent - SERP patterns - competing page strengths - competing page weaknesses - required topics - missing opportunities - trust requirements - freshness requirements PART 3 — SEO brief Create: - target keyword - secondary keywords - entities - title tag - meta description - H1 - URL slug - FAQ targets - snippet opportunities - schema opportunities - internal link requirements - external source requirements PART 4 — Outline Create a complete H2/H3 outline. For every section include: - section purpose - reader question answered - talking points - example needed - proof needed - keyword or entity note - internal link opportunity - CTA relevance - approximate length PART 5 — Writing instructions Create instructions for: - intro - section style - examples - proof - tone - transitions - keyword use - product or offer mentions - conclusion - CTA - what to avoid PART 6 — QA and publishing Create: - writer checklist - editor checklist - SEO checklist - fact-check checklist - internal linking checklist - publication checklist - post-publish measurement plan - refresh trigger Rules: - Do not produce a generic template. - Do not write content that only serves search engines. - Do not recommend keyword stuffing. - Do not invent proof, data, or sources. - Use [NEEDS SOURCE], [NEEDS SERP VALIDATION], or [NEEDS EXPERT INPUT] where required. - The final output should be detailed enough to move from keyword to publish-ready content with minimal confusion.

#141Internal Linking System Architect

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTURESEO site architecture planning, topic clusters, content hubs, SaaS websites, blogs, e-commerce sites, and large content libraries.

Design a complete internal linking system that connects important pages, strengthens topic clusters, improves crawl paths, and helps users move through the site logically.

You are an internal linking and site architecture strategist. Build a complete internal linking system for my website. Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business type: [BUSINESS TYPE] Main offer: [OFFER] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Primary topic clusters: [TOPIC CLUSTERS] Important commercial pages: [COMMERCIAL PAGES] Important content pages: [CONTENT PAGES] Current site structure: [SITE STRUCTURE] Current internal links: [CURRENT INTERNAL LINKS] Known problems: [KNOWN PROBLEMS] Crawl data: [CRAWL DATA] Organic goals: [GOALS] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Build the internal linking system: 1. Page role classification Classify all important pages as: - homepage - main category page - subcategory page - pillar page - supporting article - commercial page - comparison page - product or service page - case study - glossary page - FAQ page - resource page - orphan page - outdated page 2. Link purpose map For each page type define: - what it should link to - what should link back to it - what user need it supports - what SEO role it plays - what conversion path it supports 3. Authority flow plan Identify how internal links should move authority from: - homepage - navigation - high-traffic pages - pages with backlinks - pillar pages - resource hubs - category pages Toward: - priority commercial pages - underlinked cluster pages - new SEO pages - high-conversion pages - strategic supporting content 4. Link placement rules Recommend where links should appear: - main navigation - footer - breadcrumbs - contextual body copy - related articles - hub cards - CTA blocks - comparison tables - sidebar modules - end-of-page recommendations 5. Implementation roadmap Create: - top 25 internal links to add - pages to update first - anchor text suggestions - priority level - expected SEO impact - expected user impact - QA checklist - monitoring metrics Rules: - Do not add links randomly. - Do not overuse exact-match anchor text. - Do not send every internal link only to the homepage or pillar page. - Every recommended link must have a user reason and an SEO reason. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#142Site Hierarchy Blueprint Builder

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTURENew websites, redesigns, SEO migrations, service businesses, SaaS sites, e-commerce category structures, and content-heavy websites.

Build a clean site hierarchy that helps users and search engines understand what pages are most important and how topics are organized.

Act as a site hierarchy architect. Create a clean website structure that supports crawlability, topical clarity, user navigation, and business outcomes. Inputs: Website: [WEBSITE] Business model: [BUSINESS MODEL] Primary offers: [OFFERS] Audience segments: [AUDIENCE SEGMENTS] Current pages: [CURRENT PAGES] Planned pages: [PLANNED PAGES] Core topics: [CORE TOPICS] Priority keywords: [KEYWORDS] Conversion goals: [CONVERSION GOALS] Current navigation: [NAVIGATION] Known structure issues: [ISSUES] Design the hierarchy in five layers: LAYER 1 — Homepage role Define: - what the homepage should communicate - which top-level sections it should link to - which pages should not be forced into homepage navigation - what conversion path should start there LAYER 2 — Primary sections Create the main site sections: - products or services - solutions or use cases - industries or audiences - resources - comparisons - company pages - support or documentation - tools or templates LAYER 3 — Cluster structure For each main topic cluster define: - pillar page - supporting pages - commercial pages - FAQ pages - comparison pages - proof pages - glossary pages LAYER 4 — URL structure Recommend: - URL patterns - folder structure - slug rules - category depth - parameter handling principles - localization rules, if relevant LAYER 5 — Navigation logic Recommend: - main navigation - footer navigation - breadcrumbs - related content modules - hub pages - internal search behavior - HTML sitemap, if useful Output: - recommended site map - page hierarchy diagram in text - URL structure rules - internal linking rules - pages to create - pages to merge - pages to remove - migration risks - first implementation steps Rules: - Do not organize the site only around internal departments. - Do not create deep folders without search or user value. - Do not create multiple pages for the same intent. - The hierarchy should make important pages easier to find, crawl, and understand. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#143Orphan Page Recovery System

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTURELarge sites, blog archives, e-commerce catalogs, content audits, SEO migrations, crawl reports, and pages that receive traffic but have no internal links.

Find, classify, and reconnect orphan pages so valuable content becomes discoverable through internal links and low-value pages are handled safely.

You are an orphan page recovery specialist. Build a system for finding and fixing orphan pages across my website. Data: Orphan page list: [ORPHAN PAGES] Crawl export: [CRAWL EXPORT] XML sitemap data: [SITEMAP DATA] Analytics data: [ANALYTICS DATA] Google Search Console data: [GSC DATA] Backlink data: [BACKLINK DATA] Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Important page types: [PAGE TYPES] Business priorities: [PRIORITIES] Topic clusters: [CLUSTERS] Current navigation: [NAVIGATION] CMS constraints: [CMS CONSTRAINTS] Run the recovery process: PHASE 1 — Find orphan sources Identify orphan pages from: - sitemap but not crawl - analytics but not crawl - GSC but not crawl - backlinks but not crawl - CMS export but not crawl - old migration URLs - published pages not in navigation - pages linked only from noindexed or blocked pages PHASE 2 — Classify each orphan page Classify as: - valuable page to reconnect - outdated but recoverable - duplicate page - low-quality page - migration leftover - redirect candidate - noindex candidate - 404 or 410 candidate - merge candidate - needs manual review PHASE 3 — Reconnection plan For valuable pages recommend: - best parent page - best hub page - supporting pages that should link to it - commercial pages it should link to - contextual anchor text - navigation module, if needed - breadcrumb placement - sitemap status PHASE 4 — Cleanup plan For low-value orphan pages recommend: - update - merge - redirect - noindex - remove from sitemap - return 410 - keep but monitor - investigate first PHASE 5 — Prevention rules Create rules to prevent new orphan pages: - publishing checklist - CMS workflow - internal link requirement - hub update step - sitemap validation - quarterly crawl routine Rules: - Do not reconnect every orphan page automatically. - Do not delete orphan pages without checking traffic, backlinks, and business value. - Do not rely only on XML sitemaps for discovery. - The goal is to recover valuable pages and remove confusion from the site. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#144Crawl Path and Click Depth Optimizer

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTURETechnical SEO audits, large websites, content libraries, e-commerce category trees, SaaS resource centers, and pages buried too deep in the site.

Improve crawl paths and reduce unnecessary click depth so important pages are easier for search engines and users to reach.

Act as a crawl path and click depth optimizer. Analyze how important pages are reached and create a plan to make them easier to discover. Inputs: Website: [WEBSITE] Current site structure: [STRUCTURE] Crawl depth report: [CRAWL DEPTH REPORT] Important pages: [IMPORTANT PAGES] Pages deeper than 3 clicks: [DEEP PAGES] Navigation structure: [NAVIGATION] Topic clusters: [CLUSTERS] Conversion pages: [CONVERSION PAGES] Business priorities: [PRIORITIES] Analyze crawl depth: A. Page importance scoring Score each important page by: - organic value - conversion value - topical authority value - backlink value - business priority - freshness - user demand B. Discovery path audit For each priority page identify: - current click depth - current internal links - parent page - hub connection - breadcrumb path - sitemap status - crawl risk - user navigation risk C. Depth reduction strategy Recommend: - links from homepage - links from navigation - links from category pages - links from hub pages - contextual links from high-traffic pages - related content modules - breadcrumbs - HTML sitemap improvements - footer links, only when appropriate D. Architecture changes Identify whether the issue requires: - new hub page - flatter navigation - stronger category structure - better pagination - content consolidation - new parent page - internal search improvements E. Implementation plan Create: - pages to move closer to homepage - links to add - links to remove - hubs to create - templates to update - priority order - QA checklist - measurement plan Rules: - Do not flatten the site so much that navigation becomes cluttered. - Do not link to every page from the homepage. - Do not reduce click depth only for low-value pages. - Important pages should be reachable through logical paths. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#145Topic Cluster Internal Link Map

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTURESEO content clusters, topical authority, content hubs, blog strategy, SaaS SEO, and editorial planning.

Create a precise internal linking map for a topic cluster so pillar pages, supporting content, FAQs, comparison pages, and commercial pages reinforce each other.

You are a topic cluster internal linking strategist. Create a link map that turns this cluster into a connected authority system. Cluster context: Cluster topic: [CLUSTER TOPIC] Pillar page: [PILLAR PAGE] Supporting articles: [SUPPORTING ARTICLES] Commercial pages: [COMMERCIAL PAGES] Comparison pages: [COMPARISON PAGES] FAQ pages: [FAQ PAGES] Glossary pages: [GLOSSARY PAGES] Case studies: [CASE STUDIES] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Primary business goal: [GOAL] Build the cluster link map: 1. Cluster role assignment Classify each page as: - pillar - support - proof - comparison - commercial - FAQ - glossary - tool/template - case study - bridge page 2. Link direction rules Define: - pillar to support links - support to pillar links - support to support links - support to commercial links - commercial to support links - FAQ to main guide links - proof to commercial links - comparison to product/service links 3. Anchor text bank Create anchor text options for each page: - descriptive - partial keyword - benefit-led - question-based - action-oriented - natural sentence anchor 4. Link placement plan For each page recommend: - exact section where links should appear - reason for each link - user journey role - SEO role - priority 5. Cluster quality check Flag: - isolated pages - overlinked pages - underlinked pages - pages competing for same intent - missing bridge pages - weak commercial paths Output: - link matrix - top 30 links to add - anchor text suggestions - pages to update first - cluster maintenance rules Rules: - Do not link only upward to the pillar page. - Do not use the same anchor repeatedly. - Do not force links into sections where they interrupt reading. - The cluster should help users explore the topic and help search engines understand relationships. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#146Authority Distribution Planner

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTURESites with pages that have backlinks, high traffic, strong rankings, underperforming money pages, and weak internal equity flow.

Distribute internal authority from strong pages to priority pages using contextual links, hub links, navigation decisions, and strategic anchor text.

Act as an internal authority distribution planner. Help me move more authority and relevance toward my most important SEO and business pages. Inputs: High-authority pages: [HIGH-AUTHORITY PAGES] Pages with backlinks: [BACKLINK PAGES] High-traffic pages: [HIGH-TRAFFIC PAGES] Priority SEO pages: [PRIORITY SEO PAGES] Priority commercial pages: [COMMERCIAL PAGES] Current internal links: [CURRENT LINKS] Anchor text data: [ANCHOR TEXT DATA] Topic clusters: [CLUSTERS] Business goals: [GOALS] Create the authority distribution plan: STEP 1 — Source page audit For each strong source page identify: - why it is strong - what topic it belongs to - what links it currently sends - what relevant pages it could support - where new links could naturally fit - what not to link to STEP 2 — Destination page priority Score destination pages by: - business value - ranking potential - conversion value - relevance to source pages - current underlinking - strategic importance - content quality readiness STEP 3 — Link matching Match source pages to destination pages using: - topical relevance - reader intent - funnel progression - semantic connection - commercial fit - authority need STEP 4 — Anchor strategy Provide: - safest anchor text - stronger anchor text - natural sentence examples - anchors to avoid - variation rules STEP 5 — Execution Create: - top 20 source-to-destination links - exact placement notes - expected impact - implementation priority - monitoring plan - future review cadence Rules: - Do not force links from irrelevant high-authority pages. - Do not over-optimize anchors. - Do not send authority to pages that are not ready to rank or convert. - Internal authority should flow through relevance, not random link placement. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#147Navigation SEO and UX Audit

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTUREWebsite redesigns, SaaS sites, e-commerce stores, service businesses, resource hubs, and sites with confusing navigation.

Improve main navigation, footer links, breadcrumbs, hub menus, and page discovery so users and search engines understand the site faster.

You are a navigation SEO and UX auditor. Review my navigation system and recommend a cleaner structure that supports discovery, authority, and conversions. Navigation data: Main navigation: [MAIN NAVIGATION] Footer navigation: [FOOTER NAVIGATION] Breadcrumb structure: [BREADCRUMBS] Sidebar or hub menus: [SIDE MENUS] Important pages: [IMPORTANT PAGES] Current site structure: [STRUCTURE] User complaints or analytics notes: [USER DATA] SEO priorities: [SEO PRIORITIES] Business goals: [GOALS] Audit navigation across four dimensions: 1. User clarity Check whether users can quickly find: - main products or services - use cases - pricing or buying information - resources - support - comparisons - company trust pages - contact or demo path 2. SEO discovery Check whether navigation supports: - crawl paths - priority pages - topic clusters - hub pages - breadcrumbs - category hierarchy - commercial pages - important content pages 3. Link equity control Identify: - overlinked pages - underlinked pages - unnecessary sitewide links - footer clutter - missing strategic links - navigation items with low value 4. Label and anchor quality Review navigation labels for: - clarity - intent match - keyword relevance - over-optimization - ambiguity - consistency - user expectations Output: - navigation diagnosis - revised main navigation - revised footer structure - breadcrumb recommendations - hub menu recommendations - labels to rename - links to remove - links to add - implementation risks - QA checklist Rules: - Do not overload navigation with every page. - Do not hide high-value commercial pages. - Do not use clever labels that reduce clarity. - Navigation should support both user decisions and search engine discovery. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#148Breadcrumb Architecture Designer

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTUREE-commerce, SaaS documentation, blogs, content hubs, service websites, marketplaces, and sites with nested categories.

Design breadcrumb structures that clarify hierarchy, improve internal links, support structured data, and help users navigate complex sites.

Act as a breadcrumb architecture designer. Create a breadcrumb system that reflects the real site hierarchy and improves SEO clarity. Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Page types: [PAGE TYPES] Current breadcrumb examples: [CURRENT BREADCRUMBS] Current URL structure: [URL STRUCTURE] Category hierarchy: [CATEGORY HIERARCHY] Topic clusters: [CLUSTERS] Navigation structure: [NAVIGATION] CMS limitations: [CMS LIMITATIONS] Design breadcrumb rules: A. Page type mapping Create breadcrumb patterns for: - homepage - category pages - subcategory pages - product pages - service pages - use case pages - pillar pages - supporting articles - blog posts - glossary pages - documentation pages - location pages - comparison pages B. Hierarchy logic For each pattern define: - parent page - grandparent page - whether the path follows URL structure - whether the path follows topic hierarchy - whether the path follows product taxonomy - exceptions C. SEO implementation notes Recommend: - anchor text style - schema markup approach - canonical alignment - pagination considerations - mobile display - internal link value - duplicate hierarchy prevention D. Edge cases Handle: - pages in multiple categories - filtered product pages - tag pages - blog posts under multiple topics - localized pages - discontinued products - archived content E. QA checklist Create tests for: - breadcrumb accuracy - broken breadcrumb links - inconsistent parents - schema validation - canonical conflicts - mobile usability - template coverage Rules: - Do not create breadcrumbs that contradict the real hierarchy. - Do not use breadcrumbs as keyword stuffing. - Do not point breadcrumbs to noindexed or irrelevant pages. - Breadcrumbs should make the site easier to understand and navigate. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#149URL Structure and Architecture Refiner

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTURENew sites, redesigns, technical SEO cleanup, content hubs, e-commerce categories, SaaS pages, and messy URL structures.

Improve URL patterns, folder logic, slugs, taxonomy, hierarchy, and consistency without creating unnecessary migration risk.

You are a URL structure and information architecture specialist. Review these URL patterns and recommend a cleaner SEO-friendly structure. Current URL examples: [PASTE URL EXAMPLES] Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business type: [BUSINESS TYPE] Current site sections: [SECTIONS] Topic clusters: [CLUSTERS] Page types: [PAGE TYPES] Important keywords: [KEYWORDS] Current rankings and traffic: [PERFORMANCE] Migration constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] CMS limitations: [CMS] Review the URL architecture: 1. Pattern diagnosis Identify issues such as: - inconsistent folders - unnecessary depth - duplicate paths - unclear slugs - keyword stuffing - date-based URLs - parameter dependence - mixed languages - uppercase/lowercase inconsistency - trailing slash inconsistency - old campaign paths - category mismatch 2. URL role clarity For each page type define: - ideal folder - slug pattern - parent relationship - canonical behavior - sitemap inclusion - breadcrumb relationship 3. Recommended structure Create improved patterns for: - homepage - products or services - categories - subcategories - blog posts - resource hubs - comparison pages - glossary pages - tools or templates - locations - support pages 4. Migration risk assessment For each recommended change classify: - change now - change only during migration - do not change - redirect required - preserve current URL - needs traffic/backlink check 5. Implementation plan Create: - recommended URL rules - redirect map requirements - internal link update plan - sitemap update plan - canonical QA - launch checklist Rules: - Do not change URLs only for aesthetics. - Do not recommend migrations without weighing SEO risk. - Do not create deep folder structures without user value. - URL structure should be clear, stable, and aligned with site hierarchy. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#150Content Hub Architecture Planner

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTUREResource centers, learning centers, blog hubs, SEO academies, SaaS content libraries, and topic-specific content hubs.

Plan the architecture of a content hub so it organizes related resources, strengthens topical authority, improves internal links, and supports conversion paths.

Act as a content hub architecture planner. Design a hub that is useful for readers and strategically strong for SEO. Hub context: Hub topic: [HUB TOPIC] Website: [WEBSITE] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Existing content: [EXISTING CONTENT] Priority pages: [PRIORITY PAGES] Topic clusters: [CLUSTERS] Commercial pages: [COMMERCIAL PAGES] Current navigation: [NAVIGATION] Publishing capacity: [CAPACITY] Design the hub architecture: PART 1 — Hub strategy Define: - hub purpose - target reader - search intent range - business role - topic boundaries - conversion path PART 2 — Hub structure Create sections such as: - start here - fundamentals - advanced guides - tools and templates - comparisons - case studies - FAQs - glossary - product or service links - latest updates PART 3 — Page relationship map For each hub section include: - pages to include - pages to create - pages to refresh - pages to merge - pages to remove - pages that should link back to the hub PART 4 — Internal linking model Recommend: - hub-to-page links - page-to-hub links - page-to-page links - commercial bridge links - anchor text examples - related content modules PART 5 — UX and technical notes Include: - URL structure - breadcrumbs - content cards - filtering or sorting rules - schema opportunities - mobile usability - update workflow Rules: - Do not make the hub just a list of blog posts. - Do not include irrelevant content to make the hub look bigger. - Do not bury conversion paths. - The hub should organize authority and help readers take the next step. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#151Page Relationship Matrix Builder

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTUREContent audits, internal linking plans, site architecture redesigns, cluster planning, and resolving messy content libraries.

Create a matrix showing how pages relate to each other by topic, intent, funnel stage, authority role, and internal link opportunity.

You are an SEO page relationship analyst. Build a page relationship matrix for my website. Page inventory: [PASTE PAGE LIST WITH URLS, TITLES, KEYWORDS, PAGE TYPE, PERFORMANCE] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Topic clusters: [CLUSTERS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Business priorities: [PRIORITIES] Known cannibalization issues: [ISSUES] Current internal linking problems: [PROBLEMS] Create the matrix: Column 1 — Page List each page. Column 2 — Page role Classify as: - pillar - support - commercial - comparison - FAQ - glossary - case study - tool/template - category - product/service - outdated - duplicate Column 3 — Search intent Classify intent as: - informational - commercial investigation - transactional - navigational - support - post-purchase - mixed Column 4 — Funnel stage Classify as: - awareness - consideration - decision - activation - retention Column 5 — Parent page Identify the logical parent page. Column 6 — Child pages Identify supporting pages. Column 7 — Sibling pages Identify related pages at the same level. Column 8 — Links to add Recommend pages this page should link to. Column 9 — Links needed Recommend pages that should link to this page. Column 10 — Risk Flag: - orphan risk - cannibalization risk - duplicate risk - low-value page - wrong parent - missing commercial path After the matrix provide: - top structural problems - top internal linking fixes - pages to merge - pages to split - pages to create - architecture improvement plan Rules: - Do not treat every page as equally important. - Do not force unrelated pages into the same cluster. - Do not ignore funnel stage when recommending links. - The matrix should make page relationships obvious. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#152Cannibalization-Aware Architecture Fixer

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTURESEO audits, content consolidation, topic cluster cleanup, sites with ranking instability, and pages competing against each other.

Fix architecture and internal linking when multiple pages compete for the same keyword, intent, topic, or commercial role.

Act as a cannibalization-aware site architecture strategist. Diagnose and fix internal competition between pages. Inputs: Potentially competing pages: [PASTE URLS, TITLES, TARGET KEYWORDS, SUMMARIES, PERFORMANCE DATA] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business goal: [GOAL] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Topic cluster: [CLUSTER] Current internal links: [CURRENT LINKS] Rankings: [RANKINGS] Traffic: [TRAFFIC] Conversions: [CONVERSIONS] Run the diagnosis: A. Intent overlap test For each page compare: - target keyword - actual query intent - audience - funnel stage - content angle - page type - CTA - internal links - ranking behavior B. Competition type Classify the issue as: - true cannibalization - complementary pages - parent-child confusion - commercial vs informational mismatch - duplicate content - keyword overlap but different intent - outdated page competing with new page - weak internal link signals C. Architecture decision Recommend one action: - keep separate - merge - redirect - canonicalize - rewrite for distinct intent - change internal links - change anchor text - create parent hub - create clearer child pages - no action D. Link signal correction Define: - which page should be primary - which pages should link to it - which anchor text to use - which links to remove - which pages should link sideways - which CTAs should change E. Implementation plan Create: - page-by-page actions - redirect or canonical notes - updated hierarchy - internal link update list - content rewrite notes - measurement plan Rules: - Do not merge pages that serve different intents. - Do not redirect pages with unique traffic value without analysis. - Do not solve cannibalization only by changing keywords. - Architecture and links must make the intended primary page obvious. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#153E-commerce Category Architecture and Links

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTUREOnline stores, marketplaces, product catalogs, faceted navigation, collection pages, and category SEO.

Design category, subcategory, product, filter, and internal linking structures for e-commerce SEO without creating crawl waste or duplicate pages.

You are an e-commerce SEO architecture specialist. Build a category and internal linking structure that improves product discovery, organic visibility, and crawl control. Store context: Store: [STORE] Product types: [PRODUCT TYPES] Current category structure: [CATEGORY STRUCTURE] Filters and facets: [FILTERS] Product count: [PRODUCT COUNT] Priority categories: [PRIORITY CATEGORIES] High-margin products: [HIGH-MARGIN PRODUCTS] Seasonal categories: [SEASONAL CATEGORIES] Current SEO issues: [ISSUES] CMS or platform: [PLATFORM] Create the e-commerce architecture: 1. Category hierarchy Design: - top-level categories - subcategories - collection pages - seasonal pages - brand pages - use-case pages - gift or bundle pages - product detail relationships 2. Indexation rules Classify pages as: - indexable - noindex - canonicalized - blocked from crawl - sitemap included - excluded from sitemap - create as static landing page - keep as filter only 3. Internal linking model Recommend links from: - homepage - main navigation - category pages - product pages - related products - buying guides - blog content - seasonal pages - brand pages - footer, where useful 4. Product discovery Improve: - breadcrumbs - related products - category intro links - product attributes - comparison links - buying guide links - popular filters - internal search pathways 5. Risk controls Address: - duplicate filtered URLs - empty categories - thin category pages - discontinued products - out-of-stock products - pagination - parameter URLs - crawl traps Output: - recommended hierarchy - indexation policy - internal link rules - category page template recommendations - product page link recommendations - crawl control plan - QA checklist Rules: - Do not index every filter combination. - Do not create categories without enough products or search demand. - Do not block pages that need noindex to be seen. - The architecture should support both shopping behavior and search visibility. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#154SaaS Website Architecture and Link Flow Planner

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTURESaaS SEO, product-led content, B2B sites, feature pages, integration pages, and resource centers.

Design a SaaS website structure that connects product pages, use cases, features, integrations, comparisons, resources, and conversion paths.

Act as a SaaS SEO architecture strategist. Design a site structure and internal linking model that supports search visibility and product conversion. SaaS context: Product: [PRODUCT] Audience segments: [AUDIENCE SEGMENTS] Use cases: [USE CASES] Features: [FEATURES] Integrations: [INTEGRATIONS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Pricing model: [PRICING] Current pages: [CURRENT PAGES] Current blog/resources: [RESOURCES] Conversion goal: [CONVERSION GOAL] SEO priorities: [SEO PRIORITIES] Build the SaaS architecture: A. Core site sections Recommend structure for: - homepage - product overview - features - use cases - industries - integrations - comparisons - pricing - customers - resources - templates - help center - demo or signup pages B. Page relationship logic Define how pages should connect: - feature to use case - use case to feature - use case to case study - integration to workflow guide - comparison to product page - blog to feature page - template to product use case - help content to onboarding or conversion C. SEO cluster model Create clusters around: - problems solved - workflows - roles - industries - tools replaced - integrations - alternatives - templates D. Internal link flow Recommend: - links from high-traffic resources - links to product pages - links to demo or trial - links to comparison pages - links to templates - links to use cases - link placement and anchor examples E. Conversion-aware architecture Create paths for: - early-stage reader - solution-aware buyer - competitor comparison visitor - integration searcher - template user - returning evaluator Rules: - Do not make the blog disconnected from product pages. - Do not create feature pages with no internal support. - Do not overlink every article to pricing. - SaaS architecture should connect education, product understanding, and conversion. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#155Local SEO Site Architecture Planner

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTURELocal businesses, service-area businesses, multi-location brands, franchises, agencies, healthcare, legal, home services, and regional SEO.

Structure local SEO pages, service pages, location pages, internal links, and regional content without creating thin or duplicate location pages.

You are a local SEO architecture specialist. Build a local page structure that supports search visibility, trust, and user conversion. Business context: Business: [BUSINESS] Services: [SERVICES] Locations served: [LOCATIONS] Physical locations: [PHYSICAL LOCATIONS] Service areas: [SERVICE AREAS] Current location pages: [CURRENT LOCATION PAGES] Current service pages: [CURRENT SERVICE PAGES] Reviews or proof: [REVIEWS / PROOF] Local competitors: [COMPETITORS] CMS constraints: [CMS] Design the local architecture: 1. Page type strategy Define: - main service pages - service-location pages - city pages - neighborhood pages - location landing pages - proof pages - FAQ pages - contact pages - local resource pages 2. Duplication control For each page type define: - when it deserves a page - when it should not exist - required unique content - local proof needed - internal links needed - CTA required - indexation recommendation 3. Internal linking model Recommend links between: - homepage - service pages - location pages - service-location pages - reviews - case studies - local guides - contact pages - Google Business Profile landing pages, if relevant 4. Navigation and UX Recommend: - location finder - service area modules - breadcrumbs - footer local links - local proof placement - phone/contact CTAs - map or direction links 5. Quality checklist Create requirements for each local page: - unique service relevance - local details - testimonials or proof - FAQs - business details - schema opportunity - internal links - conversion path Rules: - Do not create thin location pages by swapping city names. - Do not target locations the business does not genuinely serve. - Do not confuse service pages and location pages. - Local architecture should make location relevance real and useful. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#156Documentation and Knowledge Base SEO Architecture

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTURESaaS documentation, help centers, developer docs, support libraries, technical products, and content that supports onboarding and retention.

Organize documentation, support content, help articles, tutorials, and knowledge base pages so they are discoverable, structured, and useful.

Act as a documentation SEO and information architecture specialist. Organize my help center or knowledge base so users and search engines can understand it. Documentation context: Product or service: [PRODUCT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Current documentation structure: [DOC STRUCTURE] Help articles: [HELP ARTICLES] Tutorials: [TUTORIALS] API docs, if any: [API DOCS] Search queries or support tickets: [SUPPORT DATA] Current SEO issues: [ISSUES] Product areas: [PRODUCT AREAS] User journey: [USER JOURNEY] Build the documentation architecture: A. Content taxonomy Create categories such as: - getting started - account setup - core features - workflows - integrations - troubleshooting - billing - security - API or developer docs - best practices - release notes B. Page hierarchy For each category define: - overview page - child articles - tutorials - FAQs - related product pages - related troubleshooting pages - next-step links C. Internal linking rules Recommend: - article-to-article links - tutorial-to-reference links - reference-to-tutorial links - help-to-product links - help-to-onboarding links - troubleshooting-to-support links - release notes-to-doc links D. Search and navigation Improve: - help center navigation - breadcrumbs - sidebar menus - related articles - in-article next steps - table of contents - internal search behavior E. SEO and UX safeguards Address: - duplicate docs - outdated docs - thin support pages - noindex decisions - canonical issues - versioned docs - retired features - private or gated content Rules: - Do not organize docs only by internal product team structure. - Do not hide important support paths. - Do not index low-value private support pages without reason. - Documentation architecture should reduce confusion, support users, and capture relevant search demand. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#157Architecture Migration Risk Planner

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTUREWebsite migrations, redesigns, replatforming, CMS moves, taxonomy changes, URL restructuring, and major navigation updates.

Plan internal link, URL, hierarchy, navigation, redirect, and crawl path changes during a site migration or redesign without losing organic performance.

You are a migration-focused SEO architecture planner. Create a safe architecture migration plan that protects rankings, crawlability, and internal link equity. Migration context: Current website: [CURRENT WEBSITE] New website plan: [NEW WEBSITE PLAN] Current URL list: [CURRENT URLS] Proposed URL list: [PROPOSED URLS] Current navigation: [CURRENT NAVIGATION] Proposed navigation: [PROPOSED NAVIGATION] Current site hierarchy: [CURRENT HIERARCHY] Proposed hierarchy: [PROPOSED HIERARCHY] Traffic and backlink data: [DATA] Important pages: [IMPORTANT PAGES] CMS or platform change: [PLATFORM CHANGE] Launch date: [DATE] Plan the migration: 1. Architecture comparison Compare old vs new: - URL structure - navigation - page hierarchy - breadcrumbs - hub pages - category pages - internal links - orphan risk - crawl depth - sitemap structure 2. Risk classification Classify each change as: - safe - moderate risk - high risk - unnecessary - needs data - should delay - should avoid 3. Redirect and preservation plan Create: - URL mapping rules - one-to-one redirects - pages to keep - pages to merge - pages to remove - pages needing content migration - canonical rules - sitemap rules 4. Internal link migration Define: - links to preserve - links to update - new links to add - navigation links to test - breadcrumb paths to verify - hub pages to rebuild - related content modules to update 5. Launch QA Create: - pre-launch checklist - launch-day checklist - post-launch 7-day checklist - post-launch 30-day monitoring - rollback triggers - owner assignments Rules: - Do not change URLs without a clear reason. - Do not rely only on redirects while leaving internal links outdated. - Do not remove high-value pages without replacement. - Migration success depends on preserving structure, signals, and user paths. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#158Internal Link Anchor Text System

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTUREInternal link audits, topic clusters, SEO content teams, anchor text cleanup, and scaling internal linking without spam.

Build a safe anchor text system that improves relevance, avoids over-optimization, and creates natural contextual links across the site.

Act as an internal anchor text strategist. Create a safe, natural, and scalable anchor text system for my website. Inputs: Target pages: [TARGET PAGES] Target keywords: [TARGET KEYWORDS] Current anchor text examples: [CURRENT ANCHORS] Topic clusters: [CLUSTERS] Page types: [PAGE TYPES] Brand voice: [VOICE] Known over-optimization issues: [ISSUES] Internal link goals: [GOALS] Build the anchor text system: A. Anchor text categories Create examples for: - exact natural anchors - partial match anchors - descriptive anchors - benefit-led anchors - question-based anchors - branded anchors - page-title anchors - action anchors - contextual sentence anchors B. Target page anchor bank For each target page provide: - 10 safe anchor options - 5 stronger but still natural options - 5 anchors to avoid - best source page types - best section placements C. Risk controls Identify risks from: - repeated exact-match anchors - irrelevant anchors - misleading anchors - generic anchors - over-commercial anchors - sitewide repeated anchors - anchor text that conflicts with page intent D. Usage rules Create rules for: - how often to vary anchors - when to use exact match - when to use descriptive anchors - when to use branded anchors - how to link to commercial pages - how to link inside articles - how to link from navigation E. QA process Create: - anchor audit checklist - over-optimization warning signs - review cadence - correction workflow - examples of good vs bad anchors Rules: - Do not repeat the same exact anchor across many pages. - Do not use anchors that promise something the destination page does not deliver. - Do not optimize anchors at the cost of readability. - Anchor text should help readers know exactly what they will get after clicking. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#159Architecture Cleanup and Consolidation Plan

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTUREOld blogs, bloated websites, duplicate content, messy content libraries, SEO audits, and sites with too many weak pages.

Clean up messy site architecture by merging overlapping pages, pruning low-value pages, clarifying hierarchy, and rebuilding internal links.

You are a site architecture cleanup strategist. Create a consolidation plan that makes the website clearer, leaner, and stronger for SEO. Inputs: Page inventory: [PAGE INVENTORY] Performance data: [TRAFFIC / RANKINGS / CONVERSIONS] Backlink data: [BACKLINKS] Current site structure: [SITE STRUCTURE] Known duplicate pages: [DUPLICATES] Known thin pages: [THIN PAGES] Topic clusters: [CLUSTERS] Business priorities: [PRIORITIES] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Run the cleanup: 1. Content and architecture classification Classify each page as: - keep as is - update - merge - redirect - noindex - remove from sitemap - delete with 410 - split into multiple pages - move to new parent - reconnect with links - investigate 2. Overlap detection Find pages with overlapping: - keywords - search intent - topic - audience - funnel stage - CTA - internal links - category placement 3. Hierarchy correction Recommend: - new parent pages - new child pages - pages to move - hubs to create - categories to merge - categories to rename - navigation updates - breadcrumb updates 4. Consolidation map For every merge or redirect include: - source page - destination page - reason - content to preserve - redirect note - internal links to update - sitemap change - risk - QA step 5. Rebuild plan Create: - cleanup sequence - first 10 actions - internal link updates - redirect QA - content update tasks - post-cleanup monitoring Rules: - Do not prune pages only because they have low traffic. - Do not merge pages with distinct intent. - Do not leave internal links pointing to redirected pages. - The cleanup should improve clarity, quality, crawl efficiency, and authority. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#160Full Internal Linking and Site Architecture Audit

INTERNAL LINKING & SITE ARCHITECTUREFull SEO architecture audits, agencies, large websites, migrations, content-heavy sites, e-commerce, SaaS, and sites with structural SEO problems.

Audit and redesign a website's internal linking and architecture across hierarchy, crawl paths, hubs, navigation, breadcrumbs, URL structure, clusters, orphan pages, authority flow, and consolidation.

Act as an independent internal linking and site architecture auditor. Review my website structure and create a complete architecture improvement roadmap. Full context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business type: [BUSINESS TYPE] Main offer: [OFFER] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Current site structure: [SITE STRUCTURE] Current navigation: [NAVIGATION] Current URL patterns: [URL PATTERNS] Current breadcrumbs: [BREADCRUMBS] Current content inventory: [CONTENT INVENTORY] Topic clusters: [TOPIC CLUSTERS] Important commercial pages: [COMMERCIAL PAGES] Important SEO pages: [SEO PAGES] High-traffic pages: [HIGH-TRAFFIC PAGES] Pages with backlinks: [BACKLINK PAGES] Orphan pages: [ORPHAN PAGES] Crawl depth report: [CRAWL DEPTH] Internal link data: [INTERNAL LINK DATA] Cannibalization issues: [CANNIBALIZATION] Migration or redesign plans: [MIGRATION PLANS] Business goals: [GOALS] Technical constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Audit across 35 dimensions: 1. Homepage link strategy 2. Main navigation clarity 3. Footer link quality 4. Breadcrumb structure 5. URL hierarchy 6. Topic cluster structure 7. Pillar page connections 8. Supporting article connections 9. Commercial page discoverability 10. Category and subcategory logic 11. Hub page structure 12. Content relationship clarity 13. Crawl path quality 14. Click depth 15. Orphan pages 16. Internal authority flow 17. Anchor text quality 18. Contextual link placement 19. Related content modules 20. Pagination links 21. E-commerce filter links, if relevant 22. SaaS feature/use-case links, if relevant 23. Local page links, if relevant 24. Documentation links, if relevant 25. Cannibalization from link signals 26. Duplicate page architecture 27. Thin page architecture 28. Pages needing consolidation 29. Pages needing split 30. Pages needing new parent pages 31. Pages needing new child pages 32. Sitemap alignment 33. User navigation clarity 34. Conversion path support 35. Architecture monitoring process For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from my context - SEO impact - user impact - business impact - recommended fix - priority - effort - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Hard truth Explain the biggest architecture or internal linking weakness limiting organic performance. B. Architecture strategy Define: - ideal hierarchy - most important parent pages - most important hub pages - priority commercial paths - topic cluster relationships - link flow principles - pages to avoid overlinking C. Internal link roadmap Create: - top 30 links to add - top 10 links to remove or change - top 10 anchor text improvements - pages needing more links - pages receiving too many irrelevant links - high-authority pages to use as sources - underlinked priority pages D. Site structure improvements Recommend: - navigation changes - footer changes - breadcrumb changes - URL structure changes - hub pages to create - categories to merge - pages to consolidate - orphan pages to recover E. Implementation plan Create: - first 24-hour fixes - first 7-day fixes - first 30-day roadmap - first 90-day roadmap - developer tasks - content editor tasks - SEO manager tasks - QA checklist - monitoring plan F. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - highest-risk architecture issue - quickest internal linking win - first hub to improve - first orphan page action - first navigation fix - first authority flow improvement - first consolidation opportunity - biggest migration risk, if relevant - one operating principle for internal linking and site architecture Rules: - Do not create a generic checklist. - Do not recommend links without user and SEO justification. - Do not change architecture without considering migration risk. - Do not ignore business goals. - Use [NEEDS DATA] where crawl, link, ranking, or analytics data is missing. - The final output should be specific, prioritized, and ready for implementation.

#161Ethical Link Building Strategy Architect

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHSEO teams, founders, agencies, B2B brands, SaaS companies, content sites, and businesses that want authority growth without risky tactics.

Build a complete white-hat link building strategy based on relevance, authority, linkable assets, outreach angles, partnerships, and long-term trust.

You are an ethical link building strategist. Create a practical authority growth plan that earns relevant links without spam, manipulation, or low-quality shortcuts. Business context: Website: [WEBSITE] Industry: [INDUSTRY] Main offer: [OFFER] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Current domain authority or backlink profile: [CURRENT AUTHORITY] Current top-linked pages: [TOP LINKED PAGES] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Existing assets: [EXISTING ASSETS] Available expertise: [EXPERTISE] Available data: [DATA] Geography or market: [MARKET] Budget and resources: [RESOURCES] Risk tolerance: [RISK TOLERANCE] Build the strategy: 1. Authority objective Define: - why links matter for this website - which topic areas need authority most - which pages should receive more authority - which types of links are worth pursuing - which link sources should be avoided 2. Link opportunity map Identify opportunities across: - digital PR - original research - guest contributions - expert quotes - podcast appearances - industry directories - partner pages - resource pages - unlinked brand mentions - broken link replacement - statistics pages - templates and tools - case studies - community collaborations 3. Asset strategy Recommend linkable assets such as: - original data report - benchmark study - calculator - checklist - template library - visual framework - expert guide - comparison resource - industry glossary - survey results - curated resource hub For each asset include: - link appeal - audience - outreach angle - production effort - risk - expected link quality 4. Outreach system Create: - prospect categories - qualification rules - outreach angles - email structure - follow-up cadence - personalization requirements - disqualification signals - relationship-building approach 5. Measurement plan Define: - quality metrics - relevance metrics - authority metrics - referral traffic metrics - ranking movement - assisted conversions - relationship value - risk monitoring Rules: - Do not recommend buying links. - Do not recommend private blog networks. - Do not recommend spam comments, mass directory submissions, or irrelevant guest posts. - Prioritize relevance, editorial value, and long-term brand safety. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#162Backlink Gap Analysis and Opportunity Prioritizer

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHCompetitive SEO analysis, authority gap research, link building roadmaps, digital PR planning, and prioritizing outreach targets.

Compare competitor backlink profiles against your own site to find realistic, relevant, and high-value authority opportunities.

Act as a backlink gap analyst. Analyze the backlink opportunities competitors have earned and identify which ones my website can realistically pursue. Inputs: My website: [MY WEBSITE] Competitor websites: [COMPETITORS] My backlink export: [MY BACKLINK DATA] Competitor backlink exports: [COMPETITOR BACKLINK DATA] My target pages: [TARGET PAGES] My topic clusters: [TOPIC CLUSTERS] Industry: [INDUSTRY] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Available assets: [ASSETS] Outreach constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Run the analysis: A. Competitor link source classification Classify competitor links by source type: - media mentions - guest posts - resource pages - directories - industry associations - partners - integrations - podcasts - expert roundups - statistics citations - research citations - review pages - comparison pages - sponsorships - forums or communities - low-quality sources B. Link gap scoring For each opportunity score: - topical relevance - authority - editorial likelihood - traffic potential - relationship potential - difficulty - risk - fit with our assets - business value C. Opportunity groups Group opportunities into: - quick wins - relationship-based opportunities - asset-dependent opportunities - PR-driven opportunities - guest contribution opportunities - partnership opportunities - not worth pursuing - risky or low-quality D. Prospect action plan For each recommended prospect include: - source domain - why competitor got the link - what we need to earn a similar link - best pitch angle - target page or asset - outreach priority - personalization notes E. Strategic conclusion Create: - top 20 link opportunities - 5 asset gaps to fill - 5 relationship opportunities - 5 competitor links to ignore - 90-day outreach roadmap Rules: - Do not assume every competitor backlink is worth copying. - Do not recommend links from irrelevant or spammy sites. - Do not prioritize domain authority over relevance. - The final plan should focus on links we can earn ethically. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#163Digital PR Campaign Concept Generator

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHPR-led SEO, linkable campaigns, original data stories, founder-led brands, agencies, SaaS, consumer brands, and authority building.

Create digital PR campaign concepts that journalists, bloggers, newsletters, and industry publishers would genuinely want to reference.

You are a digital PR strategist. Generate campaign concepts that can earn editorial mentions, backlinks, and brand authority. Campaign context: Brand: [BRAND] Website: [WEBSITE] Industry: [INDUSTRY] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Offer: [OFFER] Brand point of view: [POV] Available data: [DATA] Available expertise: [EXPERTISE] Seasonal hooks: [SEASONAL HOOKS] News hooks: [NEWS HOOKS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Target publications: [PUBLICATIONS] Budget: [BUDGET] Timeline: [TIMELINE] Generate campaign ideas in these categories: 1. Data-led story A campaign based on original data, survey results, benchmarks, or public data analysis. 2. Expert commentary story A campaign built around a strong expert perspective, trend reaction, or industry prediction. 3. Tool or calculator story A useful interactive or downloadable asset with media-friendly utility. 4. Visual story A map, chart, index, comparison graphic, or visual explanation. 5. Consumer or buyer behavior story A campaign about how people think, buy, search, compare, or decide. 6. Contrarian industry story A campaign challenging a common assumption with evidence. 7. Local or regional angle A story that can be localized for different markets or publications. For each concept provide: - campaign title - core hook - target journalist or publisher - why it is newsworthy - data or proof needed - linkable asset needed - outreach angle - possible headline - risk or weakness - difficulty - expected link potential Then select: - best quick campaign - best high-upside campaign - safest brand campaign - campaign to avoid - recommended first experiment Rules: - Do not invent data. - Do not create fake controversy. - Do not pitch irrelevant journalists. - Campaigns must provide real informational value beyond brand promotion. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#164Linkable Asset Planning Studio

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHCreating calculators, reports, statistics pages, templates, studies, tools, glossaries, benchmarks, and evergreen authority assets.

Plan a linkable asset that earns backlinks because it is useful, original, reference-worthy, or difficult to replicate.

Act as a linkable asset product strategist. Design a linkable asset that people in my niche would actually cite, reference, or share. Inputs: Niche: [NICHE] Website: [WEBSITE] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Target link audience: [WHO WOULD LINK] Business offer: [OFFER] Topic cluster to support: [TOPIC CLUSTER] Existing assets: [EXISTING ASSETS] Available data: [DATA] Available expertise: [EXPERTISE] Design or development resources: [RESOURCES] Competitor linkable assets: [COMPETITOR ASSETS] Design the asset: PART 1 — Asset thesis Define: - asset type - primary promise - why people would link to it - who would reference it - what page or cluster it supports - what makes it defensible PART 2 — Asset formats Evaluate these options: - original statistics page - benchmark report - calculator - template library - checklist - glossary - visual guide - comparison database - survey report - case study collection - free tool - methodology guide For each option score: - linkability - production effort - uniqueness - relevance - evergreen value - outreach potential - conversion connection PART 3 — Final asset plan Create: - asset title - URL concept - page structure - data requirements - visuals needed - expert input needed - examples to include - CTA strategy - internal links - schema opportunities PART 4 — Outreach plan Define: - prospect types - pitch angles - outreach email themes - publications or sites to target - communities to seed - update cadence PART 5 — Success metrics Track: - referring domains - link quality - referral traffic - rankings supported - brand mentions - assisted conversions - asset engagement Rules: - Do not suggest generic assets that already exist everywhere. - Do not fabricate statistics or research. - Do not create assets disconnected from business relevance. - The asset should be useful even if it earned zero links. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#165Journalist Pitch Angle Builder

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHDigital PR outreach, founder commentary, expert quotes, data stories, HARO-style pitches, and media relationship building.

Turn brand expertise, data, trends, and timely hooks into journalist-friendly pitch angles that can earn coverage and backlinks.

You are a journalist-focused digital PR pitch strategist. Create media pitch angles that are useful, concise, timely, and relevant to the publication. Context: Brand: [BRAND] Expert or spokesperson: [EXPERT] Expertise: [EXPERTISE] Industry: [INDUSTRY] Topic: [TOPIC] Data or evidence available: [DATA] Trend or news hook: [HOOK] Target publication: [PUBLICATION] Target journalist or beat: [JOURNALIST / BEAT] Audience of publication: [PUBLICATION AUDIENCE] Desired link target: [LINK TARGET] Brand boundaries: [BOUNDARIES] Build pitch angles: 1. News relevance test Evaluate: - why this matters now - why this journalist would care - why their readers would care - what makes the angle new - what evidence supports it - whether the brand is credible to comment 2. Angle options Create 12 pitch angles: - data angle - expert warning - trend explanation - consumer impact - business impact - local angle - seasonal angle - myth-busting angle - prediction angle - comparison angle - practical advice angle - contrarian but responsible angle For each angle include: - headline - one-sentence hook - supporting proof - quote idea - target beat - linkable asset - risk - personalization note 3. Final pitch package Create: - best subject line - email opening - 3-bullet pitch - suggested expert quote - source or data note - link placement suggestion - polite close - follow-up version Rules: - Do not exaggerate news value. - Do not pretend the brand has data it does not have. - Do not pitch journalists outside their beat. - Keep the pitch useful to the journalist, not self-promotional. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#166Guest Post and Expert Contribution Strategy

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHB2B SEO, founder authority, agency outreach, SaaS brands, consultants, and expert-led link building.

Build a guest contribution system that earns relevant editorial links while providing genuine expertise to the host publication.

Act as an expert contribution strategist. Build a guest posting and contributed content plan that prioritizes relevance, editorial quality, and relationship value. Inputs: Expert or brand: [EXPERT / BRAND] Website: [WEBSITE] Industry: [INDUSTRY] Expertise areas: [EXPERTISE] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Target pages to support: [TARGET PAGES] Existing published content: [PUBLISHED CONTENT] Ideal publications: [PUBLICATIONS] Competitors with guest posts: [COMPETITOR EXAMPLES] Brand voice: [VOICE] Outreach capacity: [CAPACITY] Create the strategy: A. Contribution positioning Define: - expert authority angle - topics we are qualified to write about - topics we should avoid - unique perspective - proof of credibility B. Publication qualification Create criteria for evaluating sites: - topical relevance - editorial standards - audience match - traffic potential - link policy - author bio rules - spam risk - relationship value - content quality C. Topic ideation Create 20 guest post ideas. For each include: - title - publication type - audience - unique angle - target page connection - likely link placement - expertise needed - why the host would accept it D. Outreach package Write: - short pitch email - longer pitch email - follow-up - author bio - contribution summary - 3-topic pitch format E. Quality rules Create guest content rules: - no thin articles - no irrelevant anchor text - no duplicated content - no mass template outreach - no sites with obvious paid link footprints - no forced commercial linking Rules: - Do not recommend spam guest posting. - Do not suggest publishing on irrelevant sites just for links. - Do not hide commercial intent if disclosure is required. - Guest contributions should build reputation, not just backlinks. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#167Resource Page Link Outreach Finder

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHLinkable assets, educational content, nonprofits, SaaS tools, templates, guides, and evergreen resources.

Identify and qualify resource page opportunities where your content, tool, guide, or template genuinely deserves to be included.

You are a resource page link building researcher. Find the best types of resource pages to target and create a qualification and outreach plan. Resource to promote: Asset URL: [ASSET URL] Asset description: [ASSET DESCRIPTION] Who it helps: [AUDIENCE] Topic: [TOPIC] Why it is useful: [VALUE] Competitors or similar resources: [SIMILAR RESOURCES] Target geography or industry: [MARKET] Restrictions: [RESTRICTIONS] Build the resource outreach plan: 1. Resource page search map Create search patterns for finding: - industry resource pages - university resource pages - nonprofit resource lists - association resource pages - government or public resource pages - educational guides - tool lists - template lists - local resource pages - curated newsletters - community libraries 2. Qualification criteria Score each opportunity by: - relevance - audience fit - page quality - editorial standards - likelihood of update - outbound link quality - spam risk - contact availability - value match 3. Pitch angle map Create pitch angles based on: - filling a gap - updating an outdated list - adding a free tool - supporting a specific audience - replacing a broken resource - improving usefulness - adding a practical template 4. Outreach templates Write: - concise resource suggestion email - broken resource replacement email - update suggestion email - academic or nonprofit tone version - follow-up email 5. Tracking system Create fields for: - prospect URL - contact - relevance score - pitch angle - date contacted - response - outcome - follow-up date - link status Rules: - Do not ask for inclusion if the asset is not genuinely useful. - Do not target irrelevant resource pages. - Do not use manipulative language. - Outreach should make the curator's page better. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#168Broken Link Building Replacement Plan

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHEvergreen content, guides, tools, statistics pages, resource lists, link reclamation, and white-hat link acquisition.

Find broken link opportunities and create replacement outreach that helps site owners fix dead links with relevant, useful resources.

Act as a broken link building strategist. Create a plan to find broken links and offer genuinely useful replacement content. Context: My website: [WEBSITE] Replacement asset: [ASSET] Asset topic: [TOPIC] Audience served: [AUDIENCE] Competitor or old resource examples: [OLD RESOURCES] Target industries: [INDUSTRIES] Tools available: [TOOLS] Outreach constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Build the plan: PHASE 1 — Opportunity discovery Create methods to find broken links from: - resource pages - old statistics pages - outdated guides - discontinued tools - moved government resources - dead competitor pages - archived industry reports - university pages - association pages - curated lists PHASE 2 — Relevance validation For each broken link opportunity check: - original link purpose - surrounding context - page audience - replacement fit - destination quality - domain relevance - outreach likelihood - spam risk PHASE 3 — Replacement asset fit Evaluate whether my asset: - answers the same need - is updated - is more useful - is neutral enough - is accessible - has clear information - avoids excessive promotion PHASE 4 — Outreach message Create: - subject lines - short email - detailed email - follow-up - high-authority site version - educational institution version PHASE 5 — Tracking and QA Create: - prospect tracking fields - response categories - link verification process - follow-up timing - quality review routine Rules: - Do not pretend the broken page is ours. - Do not offer irrelevant replacements. - Do not use fear-based or manipulative outreach. - The outreach should help the site owner improve their page. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#169Unlinked Brand Mention Reclamation System

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHEstablished brands, PR campaigns, SaaS companies, local businesses, founder brands, and reputation-based link building.

Find brand mentions that do not link to the website and create a respectful outreach system for turning relevant mentions into links.

You are a brand mention reclamation specialist. Create a system to find unlinked mentions and request links where they genuinely help readers. Brand context: Brand name: [BRAND] Website: [WEBSITE] Brand variations: [VARIATIONS] Founder or spokesperson names: [NAMES] Product names: [PRODUCTS] Campaign names: [CAMPAIGNS] Target link destination: [DESTINATION] Markets: [MARKETS] Mentions already found: [MENTION LIST] Restrictions: [RESTRICTIONS] Build the reclamation system: A. Mention discovery Create search approaches for: - exact brand mentions - misspellings - founder mentions - product mentions - campaign mentions - podcast show notes - interviews - event pages - awards - quotes - media coverage - scraped or duplicate mentions B. Mention qualification Classify each mention as: - request link - no action - thank-only - relationship opportunity - incorrect mention to correct - risky or low-quality site - needs legal or PR review Score by: - relevance - authority - context - reader benefit - likelihood - brand safety C. Link request logic For each qualified mention define: - best destination URL - why the link helps the reader - suggested anchor text - tone - contact target - timing D. Outreach templates Write: - polite link request - thank-you-first version - journalist version - podcast version - partner version - follow-up version E. Monitoring workflow Create: - monthly search routine - alert setup - CRM fields - response tracking - relationship notes - reporting metrics Rules: - Do not demand links. - Do not request links from irrelevant or low-quality mentions. - Do not ask for manipulative anchor text. - The link request must improve reader context. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#170Expert Quote and Source Pitch System

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHFounder-led brands, consultants, agencies, B2B experts, SaaS companies, digital PR, and authority-building outreach.

Create a system for earning links and mentions through expert quotes, source requests, journalist queries, roundup contributions, and industry commentary.

Act as an expert source positioning strategist. Build a system that helps my brand or expert become a trusted quoted source. Expert context: Expert name: [EXPERT] Role: [ROLE] Company: [COMPANY] Website: [WEBSITE] Expertise areas: [EXPERTISE AREAS] Strong opinions: [OPINIONS] Credentials: [CREDENTIALS] Experience: [EXPERIENCE] Data access: [DATA] Target publications: [PUBLICATIONS] Topics to avoid: [AVOID] Disclosure requirements: [DISCLOSURES] Build the source system: 1. Expert positioning Define: - what the expert can credibly comment on - what topics they should not comment on - unique perspective - credibility signals - proof points - media-friendly bio 2. Quote angles Create quote banks for: - trend commentary - practical advice - warning or risk - prediction - myth correction - buyer behavior - industry benchmark - founder lesson - operational insight - data interpretation 3. Source request response templates Create responses for: - journalist query - expert roundup - podcast request - newsletter quote - industry report contribution - webinar collaboration - last-minute comment request 4. Link and mention strategy Recommend: - when to request a link - what page to link to - when to accept no link - how to add value without being promotional - how to follow up after publication 5. Operating workflow Create: - daily monitoring routine - response speed rules - approval process - quote quality checklist - media relationship tracker - performance metrics Rules: - Do not fabricate credentials. - Do not answer outside the expert's real expertise. - Do not make exaggerated claims. - Quotes should be concise, useful, and publication-ready. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#171Partnership Link Opportunity Mapper

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHSaaS, B2B, local businesses, agencies, e-commerce brands, professional services, and businesses with existing relationships.

Identify ethical partnership-based link opportunities through customers, vendors, integrations, associations, communities, events, and co-marketing.

You are a partnership-based link building strategist. Map ethical authority opportunities that come from real business relationships. Business context: Company: [COMPANY] Website: [WEBSITE] Industry: [INDUSTRY] Offer: [OFFER] Partners: [PARTNERS] Vendors: [VENDORS] Customers: [CUSTOMERS] Integrations: [INTEGRATIONS] Associations: [ASSOCIATIONS] Events: [EVENTS] Communities: [COMMUNITIES] Affiliates or resellers: [AFFILIATES] Existing partner pages: [EXISTING PAGES] Map opportunities: A. Relationship inventory Classify relationships by: - customer - vendor - technology partner - integration partner - marketplace partner - association - sponsor - event organizer - community partner - reseller - affiliate - education partner B. Link opportunity types Identify opportunities for: - partner directories - integration pages - case studies - testimonials - co-marketing pages - webinar pages - event speaker pages - resource pages - customer story pages - marketplace listings - certification pages C. Qualification and value For each opportunity define: - relationship strength - relevance - link placement - reader value - mutual benefit - effort - risk - priority D. Outreach approach Create message templates for: - customer testimonial link - vendor resource page - integration listing - co-marketing page - event page update - partner directory inclusion - case study collaboration E. Systemization Create: - partner link audit checklist - CRM fields - monthly review routine - relationship owner assignment - reporting dashboard Rules: - Do not ask for links where there is no real relationship. - Do not exchange links in a manipulative pattern. - Do not prioritize link value over partner trust. - The best partnership links should make sense even without SEO. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#172HARO-Style Response and Commentary Builder

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHHelp a Reporter Out alternatives, Featured, Qwoted, Connectively-style requests, journalist emails, expert quote requests, and media commentary.

Create fast, concise, credible responses to journalist source requests that increase the chance of being quoted.

Act as an expert media response writer. Draft a response to this journalist request that is credible, concise, and useful. Journalist request: [PASTE REQUEST] Expert details: Expert name: [NAME] Role: [ROLE] Company: [COMPANY] Website: [WEBSITE] Relevant expertise: [EXPERTISE] Credentials: [CREDENTIALS] First-hand experience: [EXPERIENCE] Data or examples available: [DATA / EXAMPLES] Preferred link target: [LINK TARGET] Tone: [TONE] Things not to mention: [AVOID] Write the response: 1. Fit assessment First, briefly evaluate whether the expert is a good fit: - strong fit - moderate fit - weak fit - not a fit Explain why. 2. Quote response Create: - direct answer - 2 to 3 quotable sentences - practical insight - optional example - caveat or nuance if needed - no filler 3. Bio and attribution Write: - short expert bio - title and company - website link suggestion - disclosure note if needed 4. Subject line and email body Create: - subject line - concise email response - optional longer version - follow-up note 5. Quality check Confirm: - answers the exact request - no invented credentials - no unsupported claims - no excessive self-promotion - quote is easy to copy Rules: - Do not answer if the expert is not qualified. - Do not fabricate statistics. - Do not make the response sound like an advertisement. - Prioritize being useful to the journalist. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#173Statistics Page and Citation Asset Builder

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHLinkable assets, data-led SEO, citation pages, industry statistics, benchmark reports, and evergreen digital PR assets.

Plan a statistics or data page designed to earn citations by being accurate, well-organized, updated, and easy for writers to reference.

You are a statistics page strategist. Design a citation-worthy statistics asset that writers, journalists, and bloggers would reference. Topic: [STATISTICS TOPIC] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Industry: [INDUSTRY] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Business relevance: [RELEVANCE] Available original data: [ORIGINAL DATA] External sources allowed: [SOURCE RULES] Competitor statistics pages: [COMPETITOR PAGES] Update capacity: [UPDATE CAPACITY] Target link audience: [LINK AUDIENCE] Plan the statistics page: A. Citation thesis Define: - why this statistics page should exist - who would cite it - what questions it answers - what makes it more useful than existing pages - what topic cluster it supports B. Data structure Organize statistics by: - headline stats - trend stats - benchmark stats - demographic stats - industry stats - cost or ROI stats - behavior stats - comparison stats - regional stats - future outlook stats C. Source quality rules Define: - source types allowed - source types to avoid - recency requirements - citation format - fact-check process - update schedule - [NEEDS SOURCE] handling D. Page architecture Create: - title tag - meta description - H1 - table of contents - sections - summary boxes - charts or visuals - downloadable version - methodology note - FAQ - CTA E. Promotion plan Recommend: - outreach targets - pitch angles - journalist hooks - blogger hooks - internal links - social snippets - refresh announcements Rules: - Do not invent statistics. - Do not cite weak or unverifiable sources. - Do not create a statistics page unrelated to the business. - Accuracy and update discipline are more important than volume. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#174Podcast and Webinar Authority Outreach Planner

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHFounder-led brands, consultants, SaaS leaders, agencies, expert businesses, and relationship-based authority growth.

Build a plan for earning authority through podcast appearances, webinar collaborations, interviews, panels, and recorded expert sessions.

Act as a podcast and webinar outreach strategist. Create a plan to get relevant expert appearances that build authority, relationships, and potential links. Expert context: Expert: [EXPERT] Company: [COMPANY] Website: [WEBSITE] Industry: [INDUSTRY] Expertise: [EXPERTISE] Signature ideas: [SIGNATURE IDEAS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Existing appearances: [APPEARANCES] Target shows or communities: [TARGETS] Offer: [OFFER] Proof of expertise: [PROOF] Availability: [AVAILABILITY] Build the outreach plan: 1. Appearance positioning Define: - expert topic lane - unique perspective - best interview themes - topics to avoid - credibility points - audience value 2. Target show qualification Score potential shows by: - audience relevance - host fit - topic fit - authority - backlink possibility - relationship value - content quality - likelihood of acceptance 3. Pitch topics Create 15 appearance topics. For each include: - episode or webinar title - audience promise - talking points - unique angle - proof or story - linkable resource to share - host benefit 4. Outreach package Write: - short podcast pitch - webinar collaboration pitch - panel speaker pitch - follow-up - speaker bio - topic menu 5. Repurposing and SEO plan Create: - show notes link strategy - transcript content plan - internal link opportunities - social repurposing - newsletter recap - resource page update Rules: - Do not pitch shows that do not fit the expert's audience. - Do not make the appearance only about getting a backlink. - Do not exaggerate credentials. - The expert should bring useful ideas, stories, and practical value. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#175Link Prospect Qualification Scoring Rubric

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHOutreach teams, agencies, link prospecting, digital PR qualification, backlink audits, and avoiding low-quality opportunities.

Create a scoring system to evaluate whether a link opportunity is relevant, safe, worthwhile, and aligned with authority goals.

You are a link prospect quality analyst. Build a scoring rubric that helps my team decide which link opportunities to pursue. Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Industry: [INDUSTRY] Target topics: [TOPICS] Target pages: [TARGET PAGES] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Link building methods: [METHODS] Risk tolerance: [RISK TOLERANCE] Minimum quality standards: [STANDARDS] Prospect list: [PROSPECTS] Create the scoring rubric: A. Core scoring categories Build a 100-point score across: - topical relevance - audience overlap - editorial quality - authority - organic traffic potential - content quality - outbound link quality - brand safety - relationship value - link placement quality - likelihood of success - business relevance B. Red flags Create automatic rejection rules for: - obvious link farms - private blog networks - irrelevant sites - excessive casino/adult/pharma outbound links - copied content - AI-spun content - no editorial standards - paid link footprints - fake traffic - malware or security warnings C. Opportunity classification Classify each prospect as: - pursue now - pursue later - relationship nurture - only if asset improves - reject - manual review required D. Link placement evaluation Score placements by: - editorial body link - author bio link - resource page link - directory link - footer/sidebar link - sponsored link - nofollow link - UGC link E. Team workflow Create: - prospecting checklist - scoring sheet fields - approval process - review cadence - quality assurance notes - reporting format Rules: - Do not rely on one authority metric alone. - Do not approve irrelevant links just because they have high authority. - Do not ignore brand safety. - The rubric should protect long-term SEO value and reputation. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#176Outreach Personalization and Email Sequence Builder

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHDigital PR, resource outreach, guest post pitches, expert contributions, partnership outreach, and linkable asset promotion.

Create personalized outreach sequences that clearly explain value, respect the recipient, and avoid spammy link-building language.

Act as an ethical outreach copywriter. Create an outreach sequence that earns attention through relevance and value, not pressure. Campaign context: Campaign type: [CAMPAIGN TYPE] Asset or offer: [ASSET / OFFER] Target prospect type: [PROSPECT TYPE] Recipient role: [ROLE] Why they might care: [RELEVANCE] Desired action: [ACTION] Website or publication context: [CONTEXT] Brand voice: [VOICE] Outreach constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Things to avoid: [AVOID] Build the sequence: 1. Personalization strategy Identify personalization points: - page they wrote - resource they maintain - audience they serve - outdated link or missing resource - shared topic - recent article - event or community - expert overlap - data they may find useful 2. Value proposition Write: - what we are offering - why it helps their readers - why it is relevant now - why it is credible - why it is not just a link request 3. Email sequence Create: - initial email - first follow-up - final follow-up - thank-you response - interested response - not-right-now response - no-link-but-relationship response 4. Subject lines Create 12 subject lines: - direct - curiosity-light - resource-focused - update-focused - journalist-friendly - partnership-focused 5. Spam prevention Provide: - phrases to avoid - personalization minimum - sending limits - disqualification rules - manual review checklist Rules: - Do not use manipulative urgency. - Do not pretend to have a relationship that does not exist. - Do not hide the reason for outreach. - Keep emails short, specific, and respectful. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#177Link Reclamation and Lost Link Recovery System

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHSEO maintenance, backlink audits, PR campaigns, migrations, expired pages, lost referral traffic, and authority preservation.

Identify lost backlinks, changed links, broken destinations, removed mentions, and technical issues, then create a recovery plan.

You are a link reclamation specialist. Build a system to find and recover lost or broken backlinks. Inputs: Website: [WEBSITE] Backlink export: [BACKLINK EXPORT] Lost links report: [LOST LINKS] Broken backlink report: [BROKEN BACKLINKS] Redirect map: [REDIRECT MAP] Important pages: [IMPORTANT PAGES] Recent site changes: [SITE CHANGES] Brand mentions: [MENTIONS] Contact constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Run the recovery process: A. Lost link classification Classify each lost link as: - page removed by publisher - link removed but mention remains - source page no longer exists - destination page returns 404 - redirected to irrelevant page - canonical or migration issue - changed to nofollow - changed anchor text - temporary crawl issue - low-value link not worth recovering B. Recovery priority Score each lost link by: - authority - relevance - traffic value - relationship value - link placement quality - recoverability - business value - risk C. Technical fixes Recommend: - restore destination page - create redirect - update canonical - fix 404 - rebuild asset - update internal links - remove from outreach list - monitor only D. Outreach recovery Write templates for: - broken destination fix request - polite reinstatement request - updated URL suggestion - thank-you and relationship note - follow-up E. Prevention routine Create: - monthly lost link audit - redirect monitoring - campaign landing page preservation - content update tracking - backlink alert workflow - reporting metrics Rules: - Do not ask publishers to restore links that no longer fit their content. - Do not overreact to low-value lost links. - Do not ignore technical causes. - Preserve valuable authority before chasing new links. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#178Authority Growth Roadmap for New Websites

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHNew websites, startups, solopreneurs, SaaS launches, local businesses, niche content sites, and authority-building from zero.

Create a realistic authority-building roadmap for a new or low-authority website using foundational links, content assets, relationships, and PR.

Act as an authority growth strategist for a new website. Build a realistic roadmap that earns trust and links without risky shortcuts. Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Launch stage: [STAGE] Industry: [INDUSTRY] Offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Current content: [CONTENT] Current backlinks: [BACKLINKS] Existing relationships: [RELATIONSHIPS] Founder expertise: [EXPERTISE] Budget: [BUDGET] Time available: [TIME] Primary SEO goals: [GOALS] Build the roadmap: PHASE 1 — Foundation Recommend: - profile links that make business sense - association listings - partner listings - customer/vendor pages - local citations, if relevant - founder profiles - product directories, if relevant - social and community profiles - no-spam rules PHASE 2 — First linkable assets Choose: - best starter guide - best template - best checklist - best data-lite asset - best case study - best founder story - best resource hub PHASE 3 — Relationship outreach Plan outreach to: - partners - customers - communities - newsletters - podcasts - niche blogs - associations - local organizations - integration partners PHASE 4 — Digital PR experiments Create: - 3 low-budget campaign ideas - 3 expert commentary angles - 3 data collection ideas - 3 seasonal hooks PHASE 5 — 6-month plan Create: - month-by-month actions - link quality targets - content asset schedule - outreach volume - measurement plan - risk controls Rules: - Do not suggest mass directory spam. - Do not set unrealistic link targets. - Do not buy links. - New website authority should grow through real assets, credibility, and relationships. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#179Digital PR Newsjacking Risk and Opportunity Filter

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHNewsjacking, expert commentary, trend response, reactive PR, journalist pitches, and avoiding insensitive or off-brand outreach.

Evaluate whether a trend, news event, seasonality moment, or public conversation is appropriate for a brand to use in digital PR.

You are a reactive digital PR risk analyst. Evaluate whether this news or trend is a good opportunity for my brand to comment on or pitch. Trend or news event: [NEWS / TREND] Brand context: Brand: [BRAND] Industry: [INDUSTRY] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Expertise: [EXPERTISE] Offer: [OFFER] Brand values: [VALUES] Past public positions: [POSITIONS] Available data or expert quote: [DATA / QUOTE] Target publications: [PUBLICATIONS] Risk tolerance: [RISK TOLERANCE] Evaluate the opportunity: 1. Relevance test Assess: - does the brand have credibility here - does the audience care - does the trend connect to the offer - does the expert have useful insight - is the timing still active - is there a real angle 2. Risk test Evaluate: - sensitivity of topic - potential for exploitation - political or social risk - misinformation risk - legal or compliance risk - brand mismatch - public backlash risk - over-commercialization risk 3. Opportunity score Score: - newsworthiness - relevance - authority fit - publication fit - link potential - speed requirement - brand safety - long-term value 4. Recommended action Choose: - pitch now - prepare expert comment - publish owned content - monitor only - avoid - needs legal review - needs leadership approval 5. If approved, create: - safe angle - headline idea - expert quote - pitch email - target journalist type - linkable asset - follow-up plan Rules: - Do not exploit tragedies or sensitive events. - Do not comment outside real expertise. - Do not trade brand safety for short-term links. - If the angle is weak or risky, say so clearly. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#180Full Link Building, Digital PR and Authority Growth Audit

LINK BUILDING, DIGITAL PR & AUTHORITY GROWTHFull link building strategy, agency deliverables, authority growth planning, digital PR campaigns, competitive SEO, and executive SEO roadmaps.

Audit and redesign a complete authority growth system across backlink profile, competitor gaps, linkable assets, digital PR, outreach, partnerships, reclamation, risk controls, and measurement.

Act as an independent link building, digital PR, and authority growth auditor. Review my current authority position and create a complete white-hat growth roadmap. Full context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business type: [BUSINESS TYPE] Industry: [INDUSTRY] Main offer: [OFFER] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Target markets: [MARKETS] Current backlink profile: [BACKLINK PROFILE] Referring domains: [REFERRING DOMAINS] Top linked pages: [TOP LINKED PAGES] Lost links: [LOST LINKS] Unlinked mentions: [UNLINKED MENTIONS] Competitor backlink profiles: [COMPETITOR BACKLINKS] Current content assets: [CONTENT ASSETS] Current linkable assets: [LINKABLE ASSETS] Current PR activity: [PR ACTIVITY] Existing partnerships: [PARTNERSHIPS] Founder or expert availability: [EXPERTISE] Available data: [DATA] Outreach history: [OUTREACH HISTORY] Budget and resources: [RESOURCES] Risk tolerance: [RISK TOLERANCE] SEO goals: [SEO GOALS] Business goals: [BUSINESS GOALS] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Audit across 35 dimensions: 1. Backlink quality 2. Backlink relevance 3. Referring domain diversity 4. Anchor text profile 5. Link velocity 6. Toxic or risky link exposure 7. Competitor backlink gap 8. Linkable asset strength 9. Digital PR readiness 10. Original data availability 11. Expert commentary readiness 12. Journalist pitch quality 13. Guest contribution opportunities 14. Resource page opportunities 15. Broken link opportunities 16. Unlinked mention opportunities 17. Lost link recovery opportunities 18. Partnership link opportunities 19. Podcast and webinar opportunities 20. Directory and association quality 21. Local or industry citation quality 22. Content-to-link alignment 23. Commercial page authority support 24. Topic cluster authority support 25. Outreach personalization 26. Prospect qualification 27. Outreach deliverability risk 28. Relationship-building system 29. Brand safety 30. Compliance and disclosure 31. Link acquisition tracking 32. PR campaign measurement 33. Authority growth reporting 34. Team workflow 35. Overall authority growth readiness For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from my context - risk if ignored - recommended fix - priority - effort - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Hard truth Explain the biggest issue limiting authority growth. B. Strategic authority thesis Define: - where the site needs authority most - which topics deserve link investment - which pages should be supported - which link sources are most realistic - which tactics should be avoided C. Opportunity roadmap Create: - top 20 link opportunities - top 10 digital PR angles - top 10 partnership opportunities - top 10 linkable asset ideas - top 10 reclamation opportunities - top 10 prospects to avoid D. Campaign plan Create: - first 30-day plan - first 90-day plan - first 6-month plan - outreach volume assumptions - asset production requirements - relationship-building actions - quality control checkpoints E. Outreach system Define: - prospect qualification rubric - personalization rules - email sequence - follow-up rules - CRM fields - reporting metrics - review cadence F. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - strongest authority opportunity - quickest safe win - best linkable asset to build first - best digital PR campaign to test - best partnership link opportunity - biggest link risk - first operational improvement - one operating principle for ethical authority growth Rules: - Do not recommend paid links, PBNs, link farms, or spam tactics. - Do not prioritize authority metrics over relevance. - Do not fabricate data, mentions, or media opportunities. - Use [NEEDS DATA], [NEEDS SOURCE], or [NEEDS MANUAL REVIEW] where required. - The final roadmap should be ethical, specific, prioritized, and ready for execution.

#181Local SEO Visibility Operating System

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYLocal businesses, franchises, multi-location brands, service-area businesses, agencies, clinics, restaurants, home services, and regional companies.

Build a complete local SEO system across Google Business Profile, local landing pages, citations, reviews, service-area content, local keywords, and map pack visibility.

You are a local SEO strategist specializing in map pack visibility, local organic search, and multi-location growth. Build a complete local SEO operating system for my business. Business context: Business name: [BUSINESS NAME] Website: [WEBSITE] Business type: [BUSINESS TYPE] Services or products: [SERVICES / PRODUCTS] Physical locations: [PHYSICAL LOCATIONS] Service areas: [SERVICE AREAS] Target cities: [TARGET CITIES] Target neighborhoods: [NEIGHBORHOODS] Primary customers: [CUSTOMERS] Current Google Business Profile status: [GBP STATUS] Current reviews: [REVIEWS] Current citations: [CITATIONS] Current location pages: [LOCATION PAGES] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Business goals: [GOALS] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Build the operating system: 1. Local visibility thesis Define: - what local searches the business should own - which cities or service areas matter most - which services should be prioritized - where map pack visibility matters most - where organic local pages matter most - which locations or areas should not be targeted 2. Local asset inventory Audit or define: - Google Business Profile - location pages - service pages - service-area pages - citations - reviews - local backlinks - local photos - local FAQs - local schema - business descriptions - NAP consistency - local proof assets 3. Priority roadmap Create: - first 7-day fixes - first 30-day improvements - first 90-day local SEO roadmap - citation cleanup plan - review generation plan - content plan - GBP update cadence - reporting cadence 4. Local search measurement Define: - map pack rankings - local organic rankings - calls - direction requests - website clicks - bookings - review velocity - location page conversions - citation accuracy - competitor movement 5. Maintenance system Create: - weekly tasks - monthly tasks - quarterly audits - review response workflow - profile update workflow - new location launch checklist - local content refresh routine Rules: - Do not recommend fake locations. - Do not create thin city pages by swapping place names. - Do not suggest fake reviews or review gating. - The final system should improve real local trust, discoverability, and conversions. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#182Google Business Profile Optimization Blueprint

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYBusinesses with one or more Google Business Profiles, agencies managing GBP, local services, restaurants, clinics, stores, and location-based businesses.

Optimize a Google Business Profile for relevance, trust, conversion, category accuracy, services, photos, posts, reviews, and local discovery.

Act as a Google Business Profile optimization specialist. Create a detailed optimization blueprint for this business profile. Google Business Profile context: Business name: [BUSINESS NAME] Profile URL or details: [GBP DETAILS] Primary category: [PRIMARY CATEGORY] Secondary categories: [SECONDARY CATEGORIES] Services: [SERVICES] Products: [PRODUCTS] Business description: [DESCRIPTION] Opening hours: [HOURS] Address or service area: [ADDRESS / SERVICE AREA] Phone number: [PHONE] Website URL: [WEBSITE] Reviews: [REVIEWS] Photos: [PHOTOS] Posts: [POSTS] Competitor profiles: [COMPETITORS] Target local keywords: [KEYWORDS] Business goals: [GOALS] Optimize the profile: A. Category strategy Review: - primary category fit - secondary category opportunities - competitor category patterns - category risks - category changes to test B. Profile completeness Improve: - business description - services - products - attributes - hours - holiday hours - appointment links - menus or booking links - photos - videos - Q&A - posts C. Local relevance signals Recommend: - service names - product names - description language - local proof - neighborhood references - photo themes - FAQ topics - review language to earn naturally D. Conversion improvements Improve: - call path - booking path - website path - direction request path - messaging, if relevant - offer or post strategy - trust signals E. Profile maintenance cadence Create: - weekly actions - monthly photo plan - monthly post plan - review response routine - Q&A monitoring - competitor review routine - performance tracking Rules: - Do not keyword stuff the business name. - Do not recommend fake categories. - Do not suggest fake reviews. - Do not use locations where the business does not operate. - The profile should be accurate, complete, trusted, and conversion-ready. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#183Multi-Location Local SEO Architecture Planner

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYFranchises, chains, healthcare groups, gyms, restaurants, retail stores, service networks, and businesses expanding into multiple cities.

Design a scalable local SEO structure for businesses with multiple locations, including location pages, GBP alignment, local content, reviews, citations, and internal links.

You are a multi-location local SEO architect. Design a scalable structure for growing visibility across all locations without creating duplicate or low-quality pages. Business context: Brand: [BRAND] Website: [WEBSITE] Number of locations: [NUMBER] Location list: [LOCATIONS] Services by location: [SERVICES BY LOCATION] Location differences: [DIFFERENCES] Current location pages: [LOCATION PAGES] Google Business Profiles: [GBP LIST] Review data by location: [REVIEW DATA] Citation status: [CITATIONS] Competitors by market: [COMPETITORS] Expansion plans: [EXPANSION] CMS limitations: [CMS] Business goals: [GOALS] Build the architecture: 1. Location page model Create requirements for each location page: - unique local description - address and contact details - hours - services available - local photos - team or staff details - reviews - FAQs - directions and parking - nearby landmarks - local offers - schema - internal links - conversion CTA 2. GBP-to-page alignment Define: - which URL each GBP should use - naming consistency - category consistency - service consistency - review strategy - photo strategy - UTM tracking - profile update cadence 3. Site structure Recommend: - location finder - state or region pages - city pages - individual location pages - service-location pages, where justified - internal links - breadcrumbs - navigation placement 4. Duplication control Create rules for: - when a location page deserves indexation - how to avoid copied content - what local proof is required - which locations need stronger content - which pages should not be created 5. Rollout plan Create: - first 10 location fixes - scalable page template - local proof collection process - review routing process - citation management plan - reporting dashboard Rules: - Do not create doorway pages. - Do not use identical copy across location pages. - Do not mix up GBP URLs across locations. - Each location page should help a real customer choose that location. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#184Local Landing Page Builder

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYService businesses, local organic SEO, city pages, neighborhood pages, service-area pages, and local lead generation.

Create a strong local landing page brief that targets a city, neighborhood, or service area with useful local proof, service relevance, FAQs, and conversion paths.

Act as a local landing page strategist. Build a detailed brief for a local page that can rank and convert without sounding like a thin city-page template. Page target: Location: [CITY / NEIGHBORHOOD / SERVICE AREA] Service or offer: [SERVICE] Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Business context: Business name: [BUSINESS NAME] Website: [WEBSITE] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Service details: [SERVICE DETAILS] Proof in this location: [LOCAL PROOF] Reviews from this location: [REVIEWS] Photos from this location: [PHOTOS] Team or office details: [TEAM / OFFICE] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Conversion goal: [CONVERSION] Brand voice: [VOICE] Create the local page brief: A. Local relevance strategy Define: - why this page should exist - what local search intent it serves - what proof makes it legitimate - what the reader needs to decide - what not to include B. Page structure Create: - title tag - meta description - H1 - opening section - service explanation - local proof section - process section - reviews section - service area details - FAQ section - CTA section - internal links C. Local proof plan Recommend where to add: - reviews - case studies - staff details - photos - landmarks - local examples - before/after work - neighborhood-specific notes - service constraints D. SEO elements Include: - keyword usage guidance - related local terms - schema recommendations - NAP placement - internal links - external local references, if useful - image alt text ideas E. Quality checklist Create a pass/fail checklist for: - unique local value - accurate location targeting - no doorway-page risk - conversion clarity - mobile usability - trust signals Rules: - Do not create content for locations the business does not serve. - Do not swap city names into generic copy. - Do not overuse local keywords unnaturally. - The page must be useful for a real local buyer. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#185Local Keyword and Search Intent Mapper

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYLocal SEO strategy, service pages, location pages, GBP optimization, city-page planning, and local content calendars.

Map local keywords by service, location, modifier, search intent, urgency, and conversion potential.

You are a local keyword research strategist. Build a local keyword and intent map that shows what pages and profiles should target each query type. Business context: Business: [BUSINESS] Services: [SERVICES] Products: [PRODUCTS] Locations: [LOCATIONS] Service areas: [SERVICE AREAS] Target customers: [CUSTOMERS] Current pages: [PAGES] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Keyword list, if available: [KEYWORDS] Seasonality: [SEASONALITY] Create the local keyword map: 1. Keyword patterns Generate keyword groups for: - service + city - service + near me - service + neighborhood - emergency modifiers - price modifiers - best modifiers - open now modifiers - reviews modifiers - comparison modifiers - specialty modifiers - problem-based searches - brand searches 2. Intent classification Classify each keyword group as: - map pack intent - local organic intent - service page intent - location page intent - GBP intent - blog/support intent - review-driven intent - emergency intent - commercial decision intent 3. Page mapping For each keyword group recommend: - target page or profile - page type needed - title angle - content requirements - local proof required - CTA - internal links - priority 4. Opportunity scoring Score by: - local relevance - conversion potential - competition - urgency - business value - content effort - GBP influence - page requirement 5. Roadmap Create: - first 10 keywords to target - pages to create - pages to update - GBP fields to optimize - local content ideas - terms to avoid Rules: - Do not target cities or services the business cannot serve. - Do not create separate pages for keywords with identical intent. - Do not ignore "near me" behavior. - The map should turn local search demand into clear actions. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#186Citation Consistency and NAP Audit

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYLocal SEO cleanup, new location launches, rebrands, address changes, phone changes, franchises, and multi-location citation management.

Audit and fix local citations, NAP consistency, business listings, duplicate listings, aggregator data, and trust signals across the web.

Act as a citation and NAP consistency auditor. Create a cleanup and management plan for my local business listings. Business information: Official business name: [NAME] Official address: [ADDRESS] Official phone: [PHONE] Website: [WEBSITE] Hours: [HOURS] Business categories: [CATEGORIES] Locations: [LOCATIONS] Previous names: [OLD NAMES] Previous addresses: [OLD ADDRESSES] Previous phone numbers: [OLD PHONES] Current citation list: [CITATION LIST] Known duplicates: [DUPLICATES] Data aggregators used: [AGGREGATORS] Markets served: [MARKETS] Audit the citation ecosystem: A. Official NAP standard Define the exact format for: - business name - address - phone - website URL - hours - categories - description - tracking URLs - location identifiers B. Citation classification Classify listings as: - correct - incorrect name - incorrect address - incorrect phone - wrong website - duplicate - old location - closed location - missing listing - low-value directory - risky listing - needs manual verification C. Priority cleanup plan Rank fixes by: - platform importance - local visibility impact - customer trust impact - duplicate risk - data spread risk - difficulty - urgency D. Citation expansion Recommend legitimate citation sources: - core data platforms - maps - industry directories - local chambers - associations - niche directories - professional profiles - location-specific directories E. Ongoing management Create: - citation tracking sheet fields - quarterly audit routine - new location checklist - rebrand checklist - address change checklist - duplicate suppression workflow Rules: - Do not recommend mass submission to irrelevant directories. - Do not use inconsistent tracking URLs across primary citations unless planned. - Do not ignore duplicate listings. - Citation work should improve trust, consistency, and discovery. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#187Review Generation and Reputation Growth System

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYLocal businesses, service providers, clinics, restaurants, stores, agencies, multi-location brands, and reputation-driven SEO.

Build an ethical review system that increases review volume, improves response quality, captures customer language, and supports local trust.

You are a local reputation and review growth strategist. Create an ethical review system that earns more useful reviews without violating platform rules or customer trust. Business context: Business: [BUSINESS] Locations: [LOCATIONS] Customer journey: [CUSTOMER JOURNEY] Review platforms: [PLATFORMS] Current review count: [COUNT] Average rating: [RATING] Review velocity: [VELOCITY] Common customer feedback: [FEEDBACK] Negative review themes: [NEGATIVE THEMES] Team involved: [TEAM] Compliance constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Build the review system: 1. Review request timing Identify best moments to ask after: - purchase - appointment - successful service - delivery - support resolution - repeat visit - milestone completion - referral 2. Review request scripts Create: - SMS request - email request - in-person request - receipt insert - post-service follow-up - multi-location version - repeat customer version - high-touch service version 3. Review response system Create templates for: - positive review - detailed positive review - short positive review - mixed review - negative review - unfair review - service recovery review - location-specific review 4. Insight extraction Show how to extract: - customer language - service strengths - location issues - staff mentions - trust themes - objections - local proof - content ideas 5. Governance Create: - rules against review gating - rules against incentives where prohibited - escalation process - response SLA - reporting dashboard - location-level accountability Rules: - Do not suggest fake reviews. - Do not suggest review gating. - Do not suggest paying for positive reviews. - The system should improve customer trust and operational learning, not just ratings. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#188Local Competitor and Map Pack Analysis

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYLocal SEO audits, competitive research, GBP optimization, local landing page planning, and market-entry strategy.

Analyze local competitors in the map pack and organic results to identify category gaps, review gaps, page gaps, citation gaps, and visibility opportunities.

Act as a local competitor analyst. Compare my business against the top local competitors and identify what is driving their visibility. Market: Location: [LOCATION] Service or keyword: [SERVICE / KEYWORD] Search device or context: [DESKTOP / MOBILE / NEAR ME] My business: Business: [BUSINESS] GBP details: [GBP DETAILS] Website: [WEBSITE] Reviews: [REVIEWS] Categories: [CATEGORIES] Location page: [LOCATION PAGE] Citations: [CITATIONS] Current ranking: [RANKING] Competitors: [PASTE COMPETITOR DETAILS] Analyze competitors across: A. Google Business Profile signals Compare: - primary category - secondary categories - business name - review count - rating - review velocity - review keywords - photos - posts - services - Q&A - attributes - proximity, if known B. Website signals Compare: - local landing page quality - service page depth - title tags - internal links - local proof - schema - mobile experience - conversion paths C. Authority and citations Compare: - local backlinks - directories - associations - chambers - media mentions - partner links - citation consistency D. Opportunity diagnosis Identify: - quick wins - medium-term gaps - long-term authority gaps - review gaps - content gaps - GBP gaps - citation gaps - local proof gaps E. Action plan Create: - first 10 improvements - competitor practices to copy ethically - competitor practices to avoid - pages to create or improve - GBP changes to test - review strategy improvements Rules: - Do not assume exact ranking factors from incomplete data. - Do not recommend keyword stuffing business names. - Do not copy competitor spam tactics. - Use [NEEDS DATA] where proximity, ranking, or backlink evidence is missing. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#189Service-Area Business SEO Planner

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYPlumbers, electricians, cleaners, movers, HVAC, mobile services, consultants, contractors, delivery services, and appointment-based service-area businesses.

Create a local SEO strategy for businesses that travel to customers instead of serving them at a public storefront.

You are a local SEO strategist for service-area businesses. Build a strategy that improves local visibility without pretending the business has offices where it does not. Business context: Business name: [BUSINESS] Website: [WEBSITE] Services: [SERVICES] Base location: [BASE LOCATION] Service areas: [SERVICE AREAS] Travel radius: [RADIUS] Customer types: [CUSTOMERS] Current Google Business Profile setup: [GBP SETUP] Current pages: [PAGES] Reviews: [REVIEWS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Seasonality: [SEASONALITY] Business goals: [GOALS] Build the service-area SEO plan: 1. GBP setup Recommend: - address visibility settings - service area settings - category choices - service listings - photo strategy - review strategy - Q&A topics - appointment or booking links 2. Service-area page strategy Define: - which service areas deserve pages - which should be mentioned on broader pages - what proof is needed for each area - how to avoid doorway pages - how to handle neighborhoods and suburbs 3. Service page structure Create guidance for: - main service pages - service + city pages, where justified - emergency pages - pricing pages - FAQ pages - before/after pages - case study pages 4. Local proof system Collect and use: - reviews by area - job photos - before/after examples - local case studies - routes or response time notes - team coverage - licensing or insurance details 5. Roadmap Create: - first 30 days - first 90 days - first 6 months - review goals - content goals - citation goals - ranking and lead metrics Rules: - Do not create fake office locations. - Do not list service areas that are not truly served. - Do not create thin city pages. - Service-area SEO should prove real coverage and real customer value. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#190Location Page Quality Gate

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYMulti-location sites, franchises, local landing pages, city pages, service-area pages, agencies, and local SEO content review.

Create a pass/fail quality gate for local pages so they are unique, useful, trustworthy, compliant, and not doorway pages.

Act as a local SEO quality editor. Review this location or service-area page and decide whether it is strong enough to publish or should be revised. Page content: [PASTE PAGE CONTENT] Page context: Target location: [LOCATION] Service: [SERVICE] Business: [BUSINESS] Actual service availability: [AVAILABILITY] Local proof available: [PROOF] Reviews: [REVIEWS] Photos: [PHOTOS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Compliance concerns: [CONCERNS] Evaluate the page: 1. Local legitimacy Score: - real business presence or service coverage - unique local details - accurate NAP, if applicable - service availability - location-specific proof - review relevance - photo relevance 2. Content quality Score: - useful service explanation - non-duplicated copy - clear structure - local examples - FAQs - trust signals - conversion clarity - mobile readability 3. SEO quality Score: - title tag - meta description - H1 - headings - local keyword usage - internal links - schema readiness - duplicate risk - cannibalization risk 4. Doorway page risk Classify risk as: - low - moderate - high - unacceptable Explain why. 5. Revision plan Provide: - publish decision - required edits - optional improvements - proof to add - sections to remove - internal links to add - schema notes - final checklist Rules: - Do not approve thin pages that only swap location names. - Do not approve pages for locations the business does not serve. - Do not over-optimize local terms. - The page must help a real local customer make a decision. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#191Local Schema and Structured Data Planner

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYLocal SEO technical improvements, multi-location websites, service pages, clinics, restaurants, stores, and franchises.

Plan structured data for local business pages, location pages, service pages, reviews, FAQs, products, and organization details.

You are a local SEO structured data specialist. Create a schema plan that helps search engines understand the business, locations, services, and page relationships. Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business type: [BUSINESS TYPE] Locations: [LOCATIONS] Services: [SERVICES] Products: [PRODUCTS] Current schema: [CURRENT SCHEMA] Location pages: [LOCATION PAGES] Service pages: [SERVICE PAGES] Reviews: [REVIEWS] FAQ content: [FAQS] CMS or platform: [CMS] Technical constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Create the schema plan: A. Schema type mapping Recommend schema for: - Organization - LocalBusiness - specific local business subtype - PostalAddress - openingHoursSpecification - Service - Product, if relevant - FAQPage - BreadcrumbList - Review or AggregateRating, if eligible - GeoCoordinates, if appropriate - sameAs profiles - department or branch, if relevant B. Page-level schema rules Define what schema belongs on: - homepage - location pages - service pages - service-location pages - contact page - FAQ pages - product pages - blog posts - about page C. Multi-location logic Specify: - how each location should be represented - unique IDs - address consistency - phone consistency - URL matching - GBP URL alignment - branch relationships D. Risk and compliance Flag: - review markup misuse - fake ratings - hidden content - wrong business subtype - conflicting NAP - schema not matching visible page content E. Implementation checklist Create: - schema field requirements - validation steps - QA checklist - monitoring routine - update process when locations change Rules: - Do not mark up content that is not visible or accurate. - Do not create fake review schema. - Do not use a business subtype that does not match the business. - Schema should clarify real information, not manipulate search results. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#192Local Content Calendar and Community Relevance Plan

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYLocal businesses, regional brands, local blogs, service companies, multi-location brands, and businesses wanting more organic local relevance.

Create a local content plan that builds relevance through community stories, events, guides, service education, local proof, and seasonal demand.

Act as a local content strategist. Build a content calendar that supports local rankings, customer trust, and community relevance. Business context: Business: [BUSINESS] Website: [WEBSITE] Locations or service areas: [LOCATIONS] Services: [SERVICES] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Local events or seasons: [EVENTS / SEASONS] Customer questions: [QUESTIONS] Reviews and testimonials: [REVIEWS] Local partnerships: [PARTNERSHIPS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Publishing capacity: [CAPACITY] Brand voice: [VOICE] Create the local content plan: 1. Local content pillars Build pillars around: - service education - local buying guides - neighborhood relevance - seasonal needs - local events - customer stories - FAQs - local partnerships - community involvement - location updates 2. Content ideas Generate: - 10 local service articles - 10 city or neighborhood guides - 10 FAQ posts - 10 seasonal posts - 10 review-inspired posts - 10 local partnership posts - 10 case study ideas - 10 short GBP post ideas 3. Calendar Create a 90-day calendar with: - publish week - title - target location - target keyword - page type - local proof needed - CTA - internal links - distribution channel 4. Repurposing plan Turn content into: - GBP posts - email updates - social posts - review requests - local landing page sections - FAQ updates - sales/support scripts 5. Quality rules Create rules to avoid: - fake local relevance - generic content - duplicate city content - thin event posts - unsupported claims Rules: - Do not create content about places unrelated to the business. - Do not use local events only as keyword bait. - Do not publish content without a customer need. - Local content should make the business more useful and trusted in the community. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#193Map Pack Conversion Path Optimizer

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYGoogle Business Profile optimization, local lead generation, appointment businesses, restaurants, clinics, stores, and service providers.

Improve what happens after a user finds the business in the map pack: calls, website clicks, directions, bookings, trust, and lead quality.

You are a local conversion optimization specialist. Improve the path from local search impression to call, visit, booking, or purchase. Business context: Business: [BUSINESS] Google Business Profile: [GBP DETAILS] Website: [WEBSITE] Primary local actions: [CALL / BOOK / VISIT / DIRECTIONS / ORDER] Target customers: [CUSTOMERS] Top services: [SERVICES] Current GBP performance: [PERFORMANCE] Current website conversion data: [CONVERSION DATA] Reviews: [REVIEWS] Photos: [PHOTOS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Optimize the path: A. Searcher action journey Map the user journey: - sees map pack result - compares competitors - opens profile - checks reviews - checks photos - reads services - clicks website - calls - books - requests directions - abandons B. Profile conversion audit Evaluate: - business name clarity - category fit - review strength - review recency - photos - services - products - Q&A - posts - hours - booking link - phone visibility - messaging C. Landing experience audit Review: - GBP landing URL - mobile load and clarity - NAP visibility - service match - local proof - form friction - call buttons - booking flow - trust signals D. Improvement plan Recommend: - profile changes - review improvements - photo additions - post ideas - Q&A additions - landing page changes - CTA changes - tracking setup E. Measurement Define: - calls - bookings - direction requests - website clicks - form submissions - lead quality - conversion rate - missed call rate - review impact Rules: - Do not optimize only for impressions. - Do not send GBP traffic to a generic homepage if a better local page exists. - Do not ignore mobile behavior. - The goal is more qualified local actions, not just better rankings. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#194Local Review Language and Customer Insight Miner

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYGBP optimization, local landing page copy, service page copy, review strategy, customer research, and competitor analysis.

Extract customer language, pain points, trust signals, objections, service strengths, and local relevance from reviews.

Act as a local customer insight analyst. Mine these reviews for language and insights that can improve local SEO, copy, services, and trust. Review data: My reviews: [PASTE REVIEWS] Competitor reviews: [PASTE COMPETITOR REVIEWS] Business: [BUSINESS] Services: [SERVICES] Locations: [LOCATIONS] Customer types: [CUSTOMERS] Target pages: [PAGES] Business goals: [GOALS] Extract insights: 1. Customer language Identify repeated phrases about: - problems - desired outcomes - service qualities - staff - speed - price - convenience - location - trust - quality - urgency - emotional relief 2. Review keyword themes Find natural language around: - services - neighborhoods - cities - use cases - emergency needs - product names - comparison criteria - objections 3. Trust signals Extract proof themes: - professionalism - friendliness - reliability - expertise - cleanliness - speed - communication - results - value - repeat visits 4. Content and page improvements Recommend how to use insights in: - GBP services - business description - location pages - service pages - FAQs - testimonials - ads - sales scripts - review responses 5. Operational feedback Identify: - recurring complaints - missed expectations - service gaps - staff training themes - location-specific issues - improvement opportunities Rules: - Do not fabricate customer language. - Do not overstate what reviews prove. - Do not copy competitor review language as your own testimonial. - Use reviews to understand real local trust and decision factors. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#195New Location Launch SEO Checklist

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYMulti-location expansion, franchise openings, new offices, new clinics, new stores, local market launches, and service area expansion.

Create a complete local SEO launch process for a new physical location or service area, including GBP, location page, citations, reviews, tracking, and local proof.

You are a local SEO launch manager. Build a step-by-step SEO checklist for launching a new location. Launch context: Business: [BUSINESS] New location: [LOCATION] Opening date: [DATE] Address: [ADDRESS] Phone: [PHONE] Hours: [HOURS] Services available: [SERVICES] Staff or manager: [STAFF] Photos available: [PHOTOS] Local competitors: [COMPETITORS] Website CMS: [CMS] GBP status: [GBP STATUS] Citation tools: [TOOLS] Launch goals: [GOALS] Create the launch checklist: PHASE 1 — Pre-launch setup Include: - NAP finalization - location page draft - GBP preparation - category selection - photo collection - local schema - tracking setup - citation source list - internal link plan - review request system PHASE 2 — Launch week Include: - GBP verification - location page publication - citation submissions - map pin validation - hours validation - website link validation - phone tracking validation - announcement content - local internal links - QA checklist PHASE 3 — First 30 days Include: - review generation - photo updates - GBP posts - local backlinks - local partnerships - competitor monitoring - ranking baseline - call and lead tracking - citation correction PHASE 4 — First 90 days Include: - page content expansion - local FAQ updates - review response routine - citation audit - community content - performance report - optimization backlog PHASE 5 — Risk controls Cover: - duplicate GBP risk - wrong pin risk - inconsistent NAP - premature listings - unverified profile delays - thin location page risk - tracking number conflicts Rules: - Do not launch inconsistent business details across platforms. - Do not create a location page before details are accurate unless marked pre-opening. - Do not request reviews before service delivery. - The checklist should protect trust and speed up local visibility. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#196Local Backlink and Community Authority Planner

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYLocal businesses, regional brands, service companies, restaurants, clinics, stores, and franchises.

Build local authority through chambers, associations, sponsorships, community partnerships, local PR, events, schools, nonprofits, and relevant local mentions.

Act as a local authority and backlink strategist. Create a plan to earn relevant local links and mentions through real community relationships. Business context: Business: [BUSINESS] Website: [WEBSITE] Location: [LOCATION] Services: [SERVICES] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Existing local relationships: [RELATIONSHIPS] Community involvement: [COMMUNITY] Events: [EVENTS] Partnerships: [PARTNERS] Budget: [BUDGET] Brand boundaries: [BOUNDARIES] Competitor local links: [COMPETITOR LINKS] Build the local authority plan: 1. Local opportunity map Identify opportunities from: - chamber of commerce - business associations - local directories - nonprofits - schools - sports teams - event sponsorships - local blogs - local newspapers - neighborhood groups - partner businesses - supplier pages - customer stories - community resource pages 2. Qualification criteria Score each opportunity by: - local relevance - audience fit - authenticity - link quality - relationship value - cost - effort - brand fit - long-term value 3. Outreach angles Create angles for: - sponsorship - expert contribution - local guide collaboration - community resource - event participation - charity support - partner feature - testimonial exchange without manipulative linking - local news pitch 4. Action roadmap Create: - top 20 local link opportunities - first 10 outreach actions - asset needed - owner - timeline - expected outcome - follow-up plan 5. Risk control Flag: - irrelevant directories - paid link schemes - fake sponsorships - low-quality local blogs - link exchanges - over-optimized anchors Rules: - Do not suggest buying links. - Do not recommend fake community involvement. - Do not treat every local directory as valuable. - Local authority should come from real relevance and real relationships. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#197Franchise and Brand-Level Local SEO Governance

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYFranchises, branch networks, multi-location brands, healthcare groups, restaurant chains, retail chains, and distributed teams.

Create governance rules for local SEO across franchisees or branches so brand standards, GBP management, reviews, local pages, citations, and reporting stay consistent.

You are a multi-location local SEO governance consultant. Build a system that keeps local SEO consistent across many locations while allowing local relevance. Organization context: Brand: [BRAND] Website: [WEBSITE] Locations: [LOCATIONS] Ownership model: [CORPORATE / FRANCHISE / HYBRID] Local managers: [MANAGERS] Current GBP access model: [GBP ACCESS] Current location pages: [PAGES] Current review workflow: [REVIEWS] Current citation process: [CITATIONS] Brand rules: [BRAND RULES] Compliance requirements: [COMPLIANCE] Reporting needs: [REPORTING] Build governance: A. Ownership and access Define rules for: - GBP ownership - manager access - agency access - permissions - approval workflow - emergency changes - account security B. Brand consistency rules Standardize: - business name format - categories - descriptions - services - photos - attributes - phone numbers - tracking URLs - UTM conventions - location page template C. Local customization rules Allow local variation for: - staff photos - local offers - community events - location FAQs - local reviews - service differences - parking or directions - neighborhood details D. Review and reputation workflow Create: - review request rules - response templates - escalation triggers - negative review workflow - location-level accountability - reporting cadence E. Compliance and QA Create: - monthly profile audit - citation audit - page quality audit - duplicate listing check - unauthorized change monitoring - reporting dashboard - training checklist Rules: - Do not allow uncontrolled profile edits. - Do not make every location page identical. - Do not ignore local manager knowledge. - Governance should balance brand control with real local usefulness. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#198Local SEO Reporting Dashboard Builder

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYAgencies, multi-location brands, local businesses, executives, franchise reporting, and local SEO performance management.

Create a local SEO dashboard that tracks map pack visibility, GBP performance, local organic rankings, reviews, calls, bookings, location pages, citations, and conversions.

Act as a local SEO reporting strategist. Design a dashboard that turns local SEO activity into clear decisions. Reporting context: Business: [BUSINESS] Locations: [LOCATIONS] Services: [SERVICES] Google Business Profiles: [GBP LIST] Website pages: [LOCATION / SERVICE PAGES] Analytics tools: [TOOLS] Call tracking: [CALL TRACKING] Booking or lead system: [CRM] Ranking tools: [RANKING TOOLS] Review platforms: [REVIEW PLATFORMS] Stakeholders: [STAKEHOLDERS] Reporting cadence: [CADENCE] Business goals: [GOALS] Build the dashboard: 1. Visibility metrics Track: - map pack rankings - local organic rankings - impressions - profile views - search queries - direction requests - website clicks - phone calls - bookings - local page traffic 2. Reputation metrics Track: - review count - average rating - review velocity - response rate - response time - review sentiment - negative review themes - location-level issues 3. Conversion metrics Track: - calls by location - qualified calls - form submissions - bookings - purchases - direction requests - appointment completion - cost per local lead, if relevant 4. Operational metrics Track: - citation accuracy - GBP completeness - photo updates - post frequency - location page updates - duplicate listings - schema validation - unresolved issues 5. Reporting format Create: - executive summary - location scorecard - market comparison - wins - risks - next actions - owner assignments - 30-day priorities Rules: - Do not report rankings without business outcomes. - Do not combine all locations if location-level action is needed. - Do not hide review or operational issues. - The dashboard should help leaders decide what to fix next. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#199Local SEO Issue Diagnosis Triage

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYTroubleshooting local SEO problems, sudden ranking drops, profile issues, multi-location monitoring, and agency support workflows.

Diagnose local visibility drops, GBP suspensions, ranking changes, review issues, citation problems, duplicate profiles, website problems, and market competition shifts.

You are a local SEO troubleshooting specialist. Diagnose the likely cause of this local visibility or performance issue and create a triage plan. Issue: [DESCRIBE ISSUE] Context: Business: [BUSINESS] Location affected: [LOCATION] Service or keyword affected: [KEYWORD / SERVICE] Date issue started: [DATE] Google Business Profile changes: [GBP CHANGES] Website changes: [WEBSITE CHANGES] Review changes: [REVIEW CHANGES] Citation changes: [CITATION CHANGES] Competitor changes: [COMPETITOR CHANGES] Ranking data: [RANKING DATA] GBP performance data: [GBP DATA] Analytics data: [ANALYTICS DATA] Recent migrations or redirects: [MIGRATION] Known warnings or suspensions: [WARNINGS] Run the triage: A. Symptom classification Classify issue as: - map pack ranking drop - local organic ranking drop - GBP suspension - GBP visibility drop - review loss - call or booking decline - location page traffic drop - citation inconsistency - duplicate profile conflict - tracking issue - competitor displacement - seasonality - algorithm volatility - data issue B. Likely causes Evaluate: - profile edits - category changes - business name changes - address changes - phone changes - review changes - proximity changes - website technical issues - page content changes - citation conflicts - duplicate listings - competitor improvements - policy violations C. Evidence needed List what to check: - GBP history - ranking grid - GSC data - analytics data - call tracking - review timeline - citation scan - crawl report - competitor screenshots - manual SERP checks D. Action plan Create: - immediate checks - urgent fixes - low-risk tests - actions to avoid - escalation path - documentation needed - monitoring timeline E. Prevention Create: - change log process - profile edit approvals - ranking monitoring - citation monitoring - review monitoring - technical SEO alerts Rules: - Do not assume an algorithm update without evidence. - Do not make risky GBP changes during diagnosis unless necessary. - Do not ignore tracking problems. - Use [NEEDS DATA] where the cause cannot be confirmed. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#200Full Local SEO and Multi-Location Visibility Audit

LOCAL SEO & MULTI-LOCATION VISIBILITYComplete local SEO strategy, agency audits, multi-location brands, service businesses, franchises, new market expansion, and executive local visibility roadmaps.

Audit and redesign a full local SEO system across Google Business Profiles, location pages, service-area pages, citations, reviews, local keywords, local links, reporting, and operational governance.

Act as an independent local SEO and multi-location visibility auditor. Review my complete local search presence and create a prioritized roadmap. Full context: Business: [BUSINESS] Website: [WEBSITE] Business type: [BUSINESS TYPE] Services or products: [SERVICES / PRODUCTS] Physical locations: [LOCATIONS] Service areas: [SERVICE AREAS] Target markets: [MARKETS] Target customers: [CUSTOMERS] Google Business Profiles: [GBP DATA] GBP categories: [CATEGORIES] GBP performance: [GBP PERFORMANCE] Current reviews: [REVIEWS] Review platforms: [REVIEW PLATFORMS] Location pages: [LOCATION PAGES] Service pages: [SERVICE PAGES] Service-area pages: [SERVICE AREA PAGES] Current local keywords: [KEYWORDS] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] Citation data: [CITATIONS] NAP standard: [NAP] Local backlinks: [LOCAL BACKLINKS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Analytics data: [ANALYTICS] Call and booking data: [CALL / BOOKING DATA] Schema data: [SCHEMA] Content calendar: [CONTENT] Team or franchise workflow: [WORKFLOW] Business goals: [GOALS] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Audit across 40 dimensions: 1. Local search strategy clarity 2. Market and location prioritization 3. Google Business Profile ownership 4. GBP category selection 5. GBP service optimization 6. GBP product optimization 7. GBP business description 8. GBP photos and videos 9. GBP posts 10. GBP Q&A 11. GBP conversion path 12. GBP tracking setup 13. Review count 14. Review velocity 15. Review sentiment 16. Review response quality 17. Review generation workflow 18. Citation consistency 19. Duplicate listings 20. Core directory coverage 21. Industry directory coverage 22. NAP accuracy 23. Location page quality 24. Service page quality 25. Service-area page quality 26. Doorway page risk 27. Local keyword targeting 28. Local content strategy 29. Local schema 30. Internal linking to local pages 31. Local backlinks and community authority 32. Competitor map pack gap 33. Competitor organic gap 34. Mobile local conversion experience 35. Call tracking and lead attribution 36. Multi-location governance 37. New location launch process 38. Local SEO reporting 39. Issue triage process 40. Overall local visibility readiness For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from my context - local SEO impact - conversion impact - recommended fix - priority - effort - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Hard truth Explain the biggest weakness limiting local visibility or local conversions. B. Local visibility strategy Define: - highest-priority location or market - highest-priority service - highest-priority GBP fixes - highest-priority page fixes - highest-priority citation fixes - highest-priority review improvements - highest-priority local authority opportunities C. Roadmap Create: - first 24-hour fixes - first 7-day fixes - first 30-day plan - first 90-day plan - 6-month plan - owner assignments - dependencies - risks D. Local page and GBP plan Recommend: - pages to create - pages to rewrite - pages to merge - pages to remove - GBP fields to update - photos to add - Q&A to answer - posts to publish - schema to implement E. Reputation and citation plan Create: - review request system - review response system - negative review escalation - citation cleanup plan - duplicate listing plan - ongoing audit cadence F. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - fastest local SEO win - highest-risk local issue - first GBP change - first page improvement - first citation cleanup - first review system improvement - first local authority opportunity - first reporting improvement - one operating principle for local SEO and multi-location visibility Rules: - Do not recommend fake reviews, fake locations, or keyword-stuffed business names. - Do not create thin local pages. - Do not ignore platform policy risks. - Use [NEEDS DATA] where ranking, GBP, citation, or analytics evidence is missing. - The final roadmap should be specific, ethical, location-aware, and ready for implementation.

#201E-commerce SEO Growth System Architect

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYOnline stores, Shopify sites, WooCommerce stores, marketplaces, DTC brands, retail SEO, catalog growth, and e-commerce teams that need a full organic search roadmap.

Build a complete e-commerce SEO strategy that connects product discovery, category growth, keyword demand, technical health, internal links, schema, seasonal campaigns, and revenue outcomes.

You are an e-commerce SEO strategist. Build a complete organic growth system for my online store. Store context: Store: [STORE] Website: [WEBSITE] Platform: [SHOPIFY / WOOCOMMERCE / MAGENTO / CUSTOM / OTHER] Product categories: [CATEGORIES] Product count: [PRODUCT COUNT] Best-selling products: [BEST SELLERS] High-margin products: [HIGH-MARGIN PRODUCTS] Target customers: [CUSTOMERS] Target markets: [MARKETS] Current SEO performance: [PERFORMANCE] Current revenue goals: [GOALS] Current technical issues: [ISSUES] Current content assets: [CONTENT] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Build the SEO growth system: 1. Organic revenue thesis Define: - where organic search can create the most revenue - which categories deserve SEO investment first - which products should not be prioritized - which search intents matter most - which pages should attract traffic - which pages should convert traffic - where SEO supports retention or repeat purchase 2. Store architecture priorities Evaluate: - homepage role - category structure - collection pages - product pages - filters and facets - internal search pages - buying guides - comparison pages - seasonal pages - brand pages - sale pages - blog/resource pages 3. Discovery and demand map Create a map of: - buyer-intent keywords - category-level keywords - product-level keywords - comparison searches - problem/solution searches - gift and seasonal searches - brand queries - long-tail modifiers 4. Execution roadmap Create: - first 7-day fixes - first 30-day improvements - first 90-day roadmap - 6-month SEO roadmap - content production plan - technical SEO backlog - internal linking plan - schema plan - reporting cadence 5. Measurement system Track: - organic revenue - product page clicks - category traffic - conversion rate by page type - rankings by intent - crawl/indexation status - rich result eligibility - internal search demand - seasonal performance Rules: - Do not optimize only for traffic. - Do not recommend thin category or collection pages. - Do not index every filtered URL by default. - The final strategy must connect SEO actions to product discovery and revenue. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#202Category Page SEO Optimization Architect

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYE-commerce category pages, collection pages, product listing pages, Shopify collections, marketplace categories, and retail SEO optimization.

Improve category pages so they rank for commercial intent, guide shoppers, distribute internal authority, and support product discovery without becoming keyword-stuffed landing pages.

Act as a category page SEO architect. Optimize this category page for search visibility, shopper clarity, and revenue. Category page details: Category URL: [URL] Category name: [CATEGORY] Products included: [PRODUCTS] Target keyword: [PRIMARY KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Current title tag: [TITLE TAG] Current meta description: [META DESCRIPTION] Current copy: [COPY] Current filters: [FILTERS] Current internal links: [INTERNAL LINKS] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] Current traffic and revenue: [DATA] Competitor pages: [COMPETITORS] Optimize the page in six blocks: BLOCK 1 — Search intent diagnosis Identify: - primary buyer intent - secondary intents - product attributes shoppers compare - trust signals needed - common objections - price sensitivity - urgency level BLOCK 2 — Page structure Recommend: - H1 - intro copy - category explanation - buying guidance - product grid improvements - filter placement - sorting options - FAQs - internal links - CTA language BLOCK 3 — SEO metadata Write: - 5 title tag options - 5 meta description options - heading structure - image alt text pattern - FAQ ideas - schema opportunities BLOCK 4 — Product discovery improvements Improve: - filter labels - product badges - best-seller modules - related categories - comparison modules - review visibility - shipping/returns reassurance - price and availability clarity BLOCK 5 — Internal linking plan Recommend links to: - parent category - subcategories - related categories - buying guides - comparison pages - high-margin products - seasonal pages - brand pages BLOCK 6 — Quality and risk check Flag: - keyword stuffing - thin content - duplicate category copy - filter crawl waste - low inventory risk - cannibalization with other categories Rules: - Do not write generic category copy. - Do not hide product discovery behind long text. - Do not add irrelevant keywords. - Category pages should help shoppers choose faster and help search engines understand the product set. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#203Product Page SEO and Conversion Brief

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYProduct detail pages, DTC stores, retail catalogs, product launches, product page rewrites, and SKU-level SEO.

Create a product page brief that improves organic discovery, product understanding, rich result eligibility, trust, and purchase confidence.

You are a product page SEO and conversion strategist. Create a detailed optimization brief for this product page. Product context: Product name: [PRODUCT] Product URL: [URL] Category: [CATEGORY] Price: [PRICE] Variants: [VARIANTS] Key features: [FEATURES] Benefits: [BENEFITS] Materials/specs: [SPECS] Reviews: [REVIEWS] FAQs: [FAQS] Current description: [DESCRIPTION] Current images/videos: [MEDIA] Target keywords: [KEYWORDS] Competitor product pages: [COMPETITORS] Inventory status: [INVENTORY] Shipping/returns info: [SHIPPING / RETURNS] Create the brief: A. Buyer intent snapshot Explain: - what the shopper is trying to decide - what they need to trust - what objections they may have - what comparisons they are making - what information is missing B. SEO improvement plan Provide: - optimized title tag - meta description - H1 recommendation - product description structure - semantic terms to include - variant keyword handling - image SEO notes - schema fields - internal links C. Product copy framework Write sections for: - short above-the-fold summary - feature-to-benefit bullets - use cases - sizing/spec guidance - trust and proof - care or usage instructions - compatibility, if relevant - FAQ section D. Conversion support Recommend: - badges - review placement - shipping reassurance - returns reassurance - urgency without fake scarcity - cross-sells - bundles - comparison links - social proof E. QA checklist Check: - unique description - accurate claims - visible price and availability - no duplicate manufacturer copy - valid schema - mobile readability - internal links - page speed risk Rules: - Do not invent product claims. - Do not overpromise outcomes. - Do not use the same product description across multiple SKUs. - The product page must be useful to shoppers and structured for search. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#204Collection and Product Discovery Map

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYCollection planning, Shopify SEO, category expansion, merchandising SEO, product discovery, and stores with many SKUs but weak structure.

Turn a product catalog into logical collections that match search demand, shopper behavior, seasonality, use cases, attributes, and conversion opportunities.

Act as an e-commerce collection strategist. Build a product discovery map that shows which collections should exist and how they should be structured. Catalog data: Product list: [PRODUCT LIST] Current categories: [CURRENT CATEGORIES] Current collections: [CURRENT COLLECTIONS] Product attributes: [ATTRIBUTES] Brands: [BRANDS] Use cases: [USE CASES] Customer segments: [SEGMENTS] Seasonal demand: [SEASONALITY] Search keywords: [KEYWORDS] Sales data: [SALES DATA] Inventory constraints: [INVENTORY] Competitor collections: [COMPETITORS] Build the map: PART 1 — Collection opportunity discovery Find collection ideas based on: - product type - use case - customer segment - problem solved - material - size - color - style - price range - brand - season - occasion - gift intent - compatibility - best sellers PART 2 — Collection validation For each collection score: - search demand - product depth - conversion potential - uniqueness - margin value - inventory stability - SEO difficulty - merchandising value - duplicate risk PART 3 — Page decision Classify each idea as: - create indexable collection page - create non-indexed merchandising collection - handle with filter only - combine with existing category - create seasonal page - create buying guide instead - do not create PART 4 — Collection brief For top recommendations include: - collection name - URL slug - title tag - H1 - intro copy angle - products to include - filters to show - internal links - FAQ ideas - schema notes PART 5 — Maintenance rules Define: - minimum product count - inventory threshold - seasonality rules - duplicate prevention - refresh cadence - internal link requirements Rules: - Do not create collections with too few products unless the intent is highly valuable. - Do not create multiple pages for the same shopper intent. - Do not index every merchandising collection. - Collections should match real search demand and real shopping behavior. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#205Faceted Navigation and Crawl Control System

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYLarge e-commerce catalogs, filtered category pages, Shopify filters, marketplaces, apparel stores, electronics stores, and sites with crawl waste.

Create a safe faceted navigation strategy that supports product discovery while preventing duplicate content, crawl traps, index bloat, and weak filtered pages.

You are a technical e-commerce SEO specialist. Design a faceted navigation and crawl control system for my store. Store and filter context: Website: [WEBSITE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Categories: [CATEGORIES] Product count: [PRODUCT COUNT] Current filters: [FILTERS] URL examples: [FILTERED URL EXAMPLES] Indexed filtered URLs: [INDEXED URLS] Crawl data: [CRAWL DATA] Search Console data: [GSC DATA] Sitemap setup: [SITEMAP] Robots.txt setup: [ROBOTS] Canonical setup: [CANONICALS] Competitor examples: [COMPETITORS] Create the system: 1. Facet inventory List all filter types: - size - color - brand - material - price - rating - availability - style - use case - compatibility - gender - age - location - discount - product attribute 2. Indexation decision table For each facet type classify: - indexable - noindex - canonical to category - blocked from crawl - crawlable but not indexable - create static landing page - keep as user-only filter - needs manual review 3. URL and canonical rules Define: - clean URL patterns - parameter handling - canonical behavior - pagination behavior - sorting parameter rules - multi-filter rules - sitemap inclusion rules - internal link rules 4. Product discovery UX Recommend: - filter order - filter labels - active filter display - empty result prevention - mobile filter behavior - popular filter shortcuts - SEO-friendly static collections 5. QA and monitoring Create: - crawl test checklist - indexation monitoring - duplicate content checks - canonical validation - log file questions - GSC inspection routine - developer acceptance criteria Rules: - Do not index every filter combination. - Do not block URLs that need to be crawled for noindex discovery. - Do not canonical everything blindly. - Facets must balance shopper usefulness with crawl efficiency. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#206Buyer-Intent Keyword Matrix for Online Stores

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYE-commerce keyword research, product discovery, category planning, buying guides, comparison content, SEO roadmaps, and revenue-focused content mapping.

Build a keyword matrix that separates category, product, comparison, problem, seasonal, brand, and purchase-intent queries into the right page types.

Act as an e-commerce keyword strategist. Build a buyer-intent keyword matrix for my store. Inputs: Store: [STORE] Products: [PRODUCTS] Categories: [CATEGORIES] Brands sold: [BRANDS] Customer segments: [SEGMENTS] Use cases: [USE CASES] Target markets: [MARKETS] Seed keywords: [SEED KEYWORDS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Sales priorities: [SALES PRIORITIES] Margins: [MARGINS] Seasonality: [SEASONALITY] Existing pages: [EXISTING PAGES] Create the matrix: Column 1 — Keyword group Group queries by theme. Column 2 — Intent type Classify as: - category intent - product intent - brand intent - comparison intent - review intent - problem/solution intent - gift intent - seasonal intent - local intent, if relevant - support/post-purchase intent Column 3 — Funnel stage Classify as: - awareness - exploration - consideration - purchase - repeat purchase - post-purchase Column 4 — Best page type Map to: - category page - collection page - product page - brand page - comparison page - buying guide - blog article - FAQ page - internal search improvement - no new page needed Column 5 — Revenue potential Score by: - buyer readiness - product fit - margin - demand - competition - inventory stability - repeat purchase potential Column 6 — Content requirements Define: - products to show - proof needed - copy angle - comparison criteria - FAQs - schema - internal links Column 7 — Priority Classify as: - high priority now - medium priority - future opportunity - seasonal only - avoid - needs data After the matrix provide: - top 20 keyword opportunities - pages to create - pages to update - pages to merge - keywords to avoid - 90-day SEO content plan Rules: - Do not create one page per minor keyword variation. - Do not map purchase-intent queries only to blog posts. - Do not ignore margin and inventory reality. - Keyword strategy should support product discovery and revenue, not just impressions. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#207Product Description Refresh Studio

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYStores with duplicate manufacturer descriptions, thin product pages, low conversion rates, SKU refresh projects, catalog updates, and product launch copy.

Rewrite product descriptions so they are unique, search-friendly, accurate, persuasive, and useful for real buyers.

You are an e-commerce product copy and SEO editor. Refresh this product description for uniqueness, clarity, search relevance, and purchase confidence. Product input: Product name: [PRODUCT] Current description: [CURRENT DESCRIPTION] Manufacturer description, if any: [MANUFACTURER COPY] Key features: [FEATURES] Specifications: [SPECS] Materials/ingredients: [MATERIALS] Use cases: [USE CASES] Target buyer: [BUYER] Primary keyword: [PRIMARY KEYWORD] Secondary terms: [SECONDARY TERMS] Reviews or customer language: [CUSTOMER LANGUAGE] Brand voice: [VOICE] Compliance restrictions: [RESTRICTIONS] Rewrite using this workflow: STEP 1 — Product understanding Summarize: - what the product is - who it is for - what problem it solves - what makes it different - what shoppers need to know before buying STEP 2 — Differentiation extraction Identify: - strongest benefit - strongest feature - best use case - trust signal - sensory or practical detail - comparison point - objection to address STEP 3 — Description package Write: - short product summary - long product description - feature-to-benefit bullets - specifications section - usage or care section - compatibility or fit note, if relevant - FAQ section - meta description STEP 4 — SEO integration Include: - natural primary keyword usage - semantic terms - attribute language - buyer modifiers - image alt text examples - internal link suggestions STEP 5 — Accuracy check Flag: - unsupported claims - missing specs - vague benefits - duplicate wording risk - compliance-sensitive claims - confusing buyer language Rules: - Do not invent product features. - Do not make medical, financial, safety, or performance claims without proof. - Do not keyword stuff. - The final copy should sound useful, human, and specific to the product. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#208Product Schema and Merchant Data Audit

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYE-commerce technical SEO, product rich results, Google Merchant Center alignment, schema validation, product feed cleanup, and structured data QA.

Audit product structured data, merchant listings, price, availability, reviews, shipping, returns, variants, and rich result eligibility.

Act as a product schema and merchant data auditor. Review my product structured data and create a fix plan. Product and technical context: Website: [WEBSITE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Product URL examples: [URLS] Current structured data: [SCHEMA JSON-LD / MICRODATA] Merchant feed fields: [FEED DATA] Google Search Console enhancements: [GSC DATA] Merchant Center issues: [MERCHANT CENTER ISSUES] Product variants: [VARIANTS] Reviews: [REVIEWS] Shipping data: [SHIPPING] Returns policy: [RETURNS] Price and availability logic: [PRICE / AVAILABILITY] CMS constraints: [CMS] Audit the implementation: A. Required product data Check: - name - image - description - SKU - brand - offers - price - currency - availability - item condition - URL B. Recommended rich result data Check: - aggregateRating - review - shippingDetails - hasMerchantReturnPolicy - gtin/mpn/isbn where relevant - color - size - material - pattern - audience - variant relationships C. Merchant consistency Compare page vs feed vs schema: - product name - price - sale price - availability - shipping - return policy - variant data - image URL - canonical URL D. Risk diagnosis Flag: - markup not matching visible content - fake reviews - missing price - wrong availability - duplicated schema - invalid variant handling - stale product feed - canonical conflicts E. Fix roadmap Provide: - highest-priority schema fixes - developer tasks - feed tasks - CMS tasks - validation tools - QA checklist - monitoring process Rules: - Do not mark up fake or hidden reviews. - Do not mark unavailable products as in stock. - Do not create schema that conflicts with visible page content. - Structured data should accurately represent the product and merchant experience. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#209Internal Search Insight Miner

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYE-commerce product discovery, merchandising, search UX, keyword research, no-result searches, category planning, and conversion optimization.

Use internal site search data to discover product demand, missing products, weak categories, synonym gaps, filter problems, and new SEO opportunities.

You are an internal search and product discovery analyst. Mine my site search data for SEO, merchandising, and conversion opportunities. Data: Internal search queries: [SEARCH QUERIES] Search volume by query: [VOLUME] No-result queries: [NO RESULT QUERIES] Low-conversion queries: [LOW CONVERSION] High-conversion queries: [HIGH CONVERSION] Products clicked: [CLICKS] Products purchased: [PURCHASES] Current categories: [CATEGORIES] Current products: [PRODUCTS] Synonym rules: [SYNONYMS] Filters: [FILTERS] Seasonality: [SEASONALITY] Analyze the data: 1. Demand patterns Identify: - most searched products - most searched categories - rising terms - seasonal terms - brand searches - problem-based searches - attribute searches - gift searches - comparison searches 2. No-result opportunities Classify no-result searches as: - product missing - synonym missing - typo issue - category missing - filter issue - inventory issue - content opportunity - irrelevant search 3. SEO page opportunities Recommend: - category pages to create - collection pages to create - product pages to improve - buying guides to write - comparison pages to create - FAQ pages to add - terms to include in copy 4. Search UX improvements Recommend: - synonym rules - typo handling - autocomplete suggestions - product ranking rules - filter improvements - zero-result page improvements - search result merchandising 5. Business action plan Create: - top 20 search insights - product assortment opportunities - content opportunities - category improvements - quick fixes - reporting dashboard Rules: - Do not create SEO pages for every internal search query. - Do not ignore no-result searches with commercial intent. - Do not assume search demand equals inventory priority without margin and supply data. - Internal search should guide both SEO and product discovery. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#210Comparison Page and Alternative Page Strategy Builder

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYE-commerce comparison pages, product alternatives, brand comparisons, buying decisions, DTC brands, marketplace SEO, and high-intent content.

Plan comparison and alternative pages that capture commercial investigation intent while staying fair, useful, accurate, and conversion-focused.

Act as an e-commerce comparison page strategist. Build a fair and useful comparison page strategy that captures buyer-intent searches. Context: Store: [STORE] Products: [PRODUCTS] Brands sold: [BRANDS] Competitors or alternatives: [ALTERNATIVES] Target comparison keywords: [KEYWORDS] Customer objections: [OBJECTIONS] Product differences: [DIFFERENCES] Pricing differences: [PRICING] Reviews and ratings: [REVIEWS] Availability: [AVAILABILITY] Compliance boundaries: [BOUNDARIES] Create the strategy: A. Comparison opportunity list Generate comparison page ideas for: - product vs product - brand vs brand - product alternative - best product for use case - budget vs premium - old model vs new model - size/material/style comparison - bundle vs single product B. Page qualification For each idea score: - search intent - conversion value - fairness risk - available evidence - product fit - inventory stability - differentiation strength - SEO difficulty C. Page structure Create a template with: - title tag - meta description - H1 - quick verdict - comparison table - criteria explanation - pros and cons - best-for sections - product recommendations - FAQs - CTA - disclosure notes D. Trust and accuracy rules Define: - what claims need evidence - when to show limitations - how to compare fairly - how to handle products not sold by us - how to cite specifications - how to update pages E. Internal linking plan Recommend links from: - product pages - category pages - buying guides - blog posts - internal search results - email campaigns Rules: - Do not make false claims about competitors. - Do not hide material differences. - Do not recommend unavailable products as if they are available. - Comparison pages should help buyers make confident decisions. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#211Seasonal E-commerce SEO Campaign Planner

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYHoliday SEO, Black Friday, Cyber Monday, back-to-school, summer, gifting, seasonal products, retail calendars, and e-commerce campaign planning.

Plan seasonal SEO campaigns that use category pages, gift guides, collections, sale pages, product pages, internal links, and refresh schedules before demand peaks.

You are a seasonal e-commerce SEO planner. Build a seasonal organic search campaign that launches early enough to capture demand. Seasonal campaign context: Season or event: [SEASON / EVENT] Store: [STORE] Products: [PRODUCTS] Target customers: [CUSTOMERS] Priority categories: [CATEGORIES] Target keywords: [KEYWORDS] Historical seasonal performance: [HISTORICAL DATA] Inventory plan: [INVENTORY] Promotion plan: [PROMOTIONS] Content assets: [ASSETS] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Launch deadline: [DEADLINE] Plan the campaign: PHASE 1 — Demand timing Define: - when people start searching - when comparison searches peak - when purchase searches peak - when shipping deadlines matter - when content must be published - when pages need refreshing PHASE 2 — Page portfolio Recommend: - seasonal collection pages - gift guides - sale pages - category refreshes - product page updates - comparison pages - FAQ pages - shipping deadline pages - post-season clearance pages PHASE 3 — Content and metadata Create: - title tag patterns - meta description patterns - H1 ideas - seasonal intro copy angles - FAQ ideas - product badge ideas - internal link anchors PHASE 4 — Internal link push Recommend links from: - homepage - navigation - category pages - product pages - blog posts - email landing pages - previous seasonal pages PHASE 5 — Post-season handling Define: - keep page live - update page - archive page - redirect page - remove promotion copy - preserve rankings - prepare for next year Rules: - Do not wait until the seasonal peak to publish SEO pages. - Do not delete seasonal pages that can compound year over year. - Do not promote products that will be out of stock during the season. - Seasonal SEO should coordinate content, inventory, merchandising, and timing. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#212Out-of-Stock, Discontinued and Variant SEO Playbook

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYProduct lifecycle SEO, inventory volatility, retail catalogs, discontinued products, seasonal SKUs, variant handling, and preserving product page authority.

Decide how to handle out-of-stock products, discontinued SKUs, seasonal inventory, variant pages, redirects, canonicals, and replacement recommendations.

Act as a product lifecycle SEO specialist. Create a decision playbook for out-of-stock, discontinued, seasonal, and variant product pages. Product lifecycle context: Product URLs: [PRODUCT URLS] Inventory status: [STATUS] Discontinued products: [DISCONTINUED] Temporary out-of-stock products: [TEMPORARY OOS] Seasonal products: [SEASONAL] Product variants: [VARIANTS] Replacement products: [REPLACEMENTS] Traffic and backlinks: [TRAFFIC / BACKLINKS] Revenue history: [REVENUE] Customer demand: [DEMAND] Current redirects: [REDIRECTS] Current canonicals: [CANONICALS] Platform constraints: [PLATFORM] Build the playbook: 1. Decision tree Create rules for: - temporarily out of stock - permanently discontinued - replaced by newer model - seasonal return expected - variant unavailable - product merged into bundle - product has backlinks - product has no demand - product page still ranks 2. Page treatment options For each situation recommend: - keep live - show out-of-stock messaging - collect email notification - link to alternatives - redirect to replacement - redirect to parent category - canonical to main product - noindex - 404 - 410 3. UX and conversion handling Recommend: - alternative products - notify-me form - expected restock date - similar items - size/color alternatives - bundle alternatives - category link - customer support link 4. SEO safeguards Define: - redirect rules - canonical rules - schema availability updates - sitemap updates - internal link updates - Merchant Center updates - crawl monitoring 5. QA checklist Create checks for: - wrong availability schema - dead product links - redirected internal links - missing alternatives - broken variant selectors - stale seasonal pages Rules: - Do not redirect temporarily out-of-stock products unnecessarily. - Do not show unavailable products as in stock. - Do not delete pages with valuable traffic or backlinks without review. - Product lifecycle decisions should protect both user experience and SEO value. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#213Product Discovery UX and SEO Audit

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYE-commerce UX audits, product discovery optimization, SEO audits, conversion improvements, navigation redesigns, and merchandising strategy.

Audit how shoppers find products through navigation, filters, search, categories, recommendations, internal links, and mobile browsing.

You are a product discovery and SEO auditor. Review my store experience and identify what prevents shoppers and search engines from finding the right products. Store context: Website: [WEBSITE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Main categories: [CATEGORIES] Product count: [PRODUCT COUNT] Navigation: [NAVIGATION] Filters: [FILTERS] Internal search behavior: [SEARCH DATA] Product recommendation modules: [RECOMMENDATIONS] Current organic traffic: [TRAFFIC] Conversion data: [CONVERSIONS] Mobile data: [MOBILE DATA] Customer complaints: [COMPLAINTS] Competitor examples: [COMPETITORS] Audit these journeys: Journey 1 — Search engine to category page Evaluate: - intent match - product grid relevance - filters - copy clarity - internal links - trust signals - conversion path Journey 2 — Search engine to product page Evaluate: - product information - reviews - variants - availability - alternatives - related products - schema Journey 3 — Homepage to product discovery Evaluate: - navigation clarity - category labels - merchandising modules - search box prominence - best-seller paths - mobile browsing Journey 4 — Internal search to product selection Evaluate: - result relevance - synonyms - no-result handling - filters - sorting - product ranking Journey 5 — Browsing to cross-sell Evaluate: - related products - bundles - comparison links - recently viewed - complementary products - content links Output: - biggest discovery blockers - SEO blockers - UX blockers - conversion blockers - mobile-specific issues - top 20 fixes - expected impact - effort level - owner type - testing plan Rules: - Do not focus only on rankings. - Do not ignore the path after the click. - Do not recommend UX changes that create SEO crawl problems. - Product discovery should be useful for people and understandable for search engines. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#214Buying Guide and Educational Content Planner

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYE-commerce content strategy, buying guides, gift guides, product education, SEO content hubs, and shoppers who need help choosing.

Create buying guides, educational articles, comparison resources, and decision-support content that connects informational searches to product discovery.

Act as an e-commerce content strategist. Build a buying guide and educational content plan that supports organic discovery and product sales. Context: Store: [STORE] Products: [PRODUCTS] Categories: [CATEGORIES] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Common questions: [QUESTIONS] Objections: [OBJECTIONS] Product attributes: [ATTRIBUTES] Use cases: [USE CASES] Existing content: [EXISTING CONTENT] Target keywords: [KEYWORDS] Sales priorities: [SALES PRIORITIES] Brand voice: [VOICE] Build the content plan: A. Decision support themes Identify themes around: - how to choose - best for use case - size or fit - material differences - price/value - compatibility - care and maintenance - gift selection - beginner guidance - advanced buyer guidance B. Content asset ideas Create: - 10 buying guides - 10 comparison articles - 10 FAQ articles - 10 gift guides - 10 product education pages - 10 care/usage guides - 10 problem-solution articles C. Page-to-product connection For each recommended content piece include: - target keyword - search intent - products to feature - category links - product links - comparison table ideas - CTA - conversion path D. Content structure template Create a reusable buying guide template with: - opening problem - quick recommendation - comparison criteria - product shortlist - attribute explanations - FAQs - internal links - trust notes E. Publishing roadmap Create: - first 30 days - first 90 days - seasonal content timing - update schedule - performance metrics Rules: - Do not write educational content that never leads to products. - Do not force product CTAs where the reader needs education first. - Do not make every guide a list of best sellers. - Content should help shoppers choose with confidence. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#215Category Cannibalization and Taxonomy Cleanup

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYLarge stores, Shopify collection bloat, duplicate categories, taxonomy redesigns, e-commerce content audits, and indexation cleanup.

Identify overlapping categories, duplicate collections, competing product listing pages, and confusing taxonomy issues that weaken rankings and product discovery.

You are an e-commerce taxonomy and cannibalization specialist. Diagnose and clean up overlapping categories, collections, and product listing pages. Inputs: Category and collection list: [URL LIST] Target keywords: [KEYWORDS] Page titles and H1s: [TITLES / H1S] Product overlap data: [PRODUCT OVERLAP] Traffic and rankings: [PERFORMANCE] Revenue by page: [REVENUE] Backlinks: [BACKLINKS] Internal links: [INTERNAL LINKS] Indexation data: [INDEXATION] Competitor taxonomy: [COMPETITORS] Business priorities: [PRIORITIES] Run the cleanup: STEP 1 — Overlap detection Find overlap in: - keywords - products - search intent - audience - category labels - filters - merchandising purpose - ranking queries - internal links STEP 2 — Page role assignment Classify each page as: - primary category - subcategory - collection - seasonal page - merchandising page - filter-generated page - duplicate - outdated page - internal-only page - redirect candidate - noindex candidate STEP 3 — Decision framework For each issue recommend: - keep separate - merge - redirect - canonicalize - noindex - rename - change internal links - move under new parent - create clearer subcategory - rewrite for distinct intent STEP 4 — Taxonomy improvement Recommend: - revised category names - parent-child structure - navigation labels - URL patterns - breadcrumb rules - filter rules - sitemap rules STEP 5 — Implementation plan Create: - top 20 cleanup actions - redirect map notes - internal link updates - content rewrite notes - QA checklist - ranking monitoring plan Rules: - Do not merge pages that serve different shopping intents. - Do not delete pages with valuable traffic without review. - Do not keep duplicate collections just because they are used in merchandising. - Taxonomy should make products easier to find and categories easier to rank. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#216Platform-Specific E-commerce Technical SEO Audit

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYShopify, WooCommerce, Magento, BigCommerce, headless commerce, custom stores, technical SEO audits, and developer task creation.

Audit platform-specific technical SEO issues that affect crawlability, indexation, duplicate content, speed, schema, product feeds, pagination, and collection pages.

Act as a platform-aware e-commerce technical SEO auditor. Review my store and create a technical SEO backlog. Technical context: Website: [WEBSITE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Theme or framework: [THEME / FRAMEWORK] Product count: [PRODUCT COUNT] Category count: [CATEGORY COUNT] Apps/plugins: [APPS / PLUGINS] Crawl report: [CRAWL REPORT] Indexation data: [INDEXATION] Core Web Vitals: [CWV] Schema data: [SCHEMA] Sitemap: [SITEMAP] Robots.txt: [ROBOTS] Canonical setup: [CANONICALS] Pagination setup: [PAGINATION] Product feed issues: [FEED ISSUES] Recent changes: [CHANGES] Audit by technical area: A. Crawlability and indexation Check: - blocked pages - noindex errors - sitemap accuracy - orphan categories - duplicate URLs - parameter URLs - internal search indexing - collection variants B. Canonicals and duplicates Check: - product in multiple collections - variant URLs - filtered pages - tracking parameters - pagination - sort URLs - duplicate descriptions C. Performance and rendering Check: - Core Web Vitals - image loading - JavaScript rendering - app/plugin bloat - product grid speed - mobile performance - lazy loading risks D. Structured data and feeds Check: - Product schema - Breadcrumb schema - Organization schema - Merchant Center feed consistency - price and availability accuracy - review markup E. Developer backlog For each issue provide: - issue - affected templates - SEO risk - revenue risk - recommended fix - developer notes - priority - testing method Rules: - Do not recommend technical changes without explaining risk. - Do not assume all platform defaults are SEO-friendly. - Do not ignore app/plugin impact. - The output should be ready for SEO and developer collaboration. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#217Image SEO and Product Media Optimizer

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYProduct pages, category pages, Google Images, apparel stores, furniture stores, beauty brands, marketplaces, and visually driven products.

Improve product images, alt text, file names, image compression, visual discovery, shopping experience, and media-rich organic visibility.

You are an e-commerce image SEO and product media specialist. Optimize product media for discovery, accessibility, speed, and purchase confidence. Media context: Store: [STORE] Product or category: [PRODUCT / CATEGORY] Image examples: [IMAGE LIST] Current file names: [FILE NAMES] Current alt text: [ALT TEXT] Product attributes: [ATTRIBUTES] Target keywords: [KEYWORDS] Customer questions: [QUESTIONS] Page speed data: [SPEED DATA] Image formats: [FORMATS] Video or 360 media: [VIDEO / 360] Platform constraints: [PLATFORM] Optimize the media system: 1. Image role map Define image types: - hero image - variant image - lifestyle image - scale/context image - detail image - packaging image - before/after image - comparison image - use-case image - review/UGC image 2. Alt text system Create rules for: - product images - category images - decorative images - variant images - lifestyle images - charts or comparison images - accessibility-first descriptions - keyword restraint 3. File and technical optimization Recommend: - file naming pattern - compression rules - format choices - responsive image setup - lazy loading rules - image dimensions - CDN considerations - sitemap inclusion if relevant 4. Product discovery improvements Recommend media that shows: - size - texture - color accuracy - usage - compatibility - included items - comparison - social proof - buyer confidence 5. QA checklist Create checks for: - missing alt text - duplicate alt text - keyword stuffing - oversized images - broken images - wrong variants - slow product grids - misleading visuals Rules: - Do not keyword stuff alt text. - Do not describe decorative images as if they are content. - Do not sacrifice product clarity for compression. - Product media should help search engines, accessibility, and shoppers. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#218Reviews, Q&A and UGC SEO Miner

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYProduct page optimization, FAQ creation, review mining, conversion copy, category copy, customer research, and long-tail SEO.

Extract SEO and conversion value from reviews, product questions, user-generated content, objections, attributes, and real customer language.

Act as an e-commerce customer language analyst. Mine reviews, Q&A, and UGC for SEO opportunities and product page improvements. Data: Product reviews: [REVIEWS] Product Q&A: [Q&A] Customer support questions: [SUPPORT QUESTIONS] Social comments: [SOCIAL COMMENTS] Competitor reviews: [COMPETITOR REVIEWS] Products: [PRODUCTS] Categories: [CATEGORIES] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Current product page copy: [COPY] Business goals: [GOALS] Extract and organize insights: A. Customer language Find phrases about: - product benefits - use cases - problems solved - quality - fit or sizing - color/material - durability - shipping - packaging - price/value - comparison - repeat purchase B. Objections and friction Identify concerns about: - price - fit - compatibility - trust - delivery - returns - product quality - expectations - usage difficulty - missing information C. SEO opportunities Recommend: - FAQ questions - long-tail keywords - product description additions - category copy additions - buying guide topics - comparison page topics - schema opportunities - internal search synonyms D. Conversion improvements Recommend: - proof points - review snippets - Q&A placement - sizing guidance - usage examples - product badges - trust copy - return policy placement E. Operational feedback Flag: - recurring product issues - unclear descriptions - expectation gaps - packaging problems - shipping complaints - product improvement ideas Rules: - Do not fabricate review language. - Do not use competitor reviews as your own testimonials. - Do not hide repeated negative themes. - Customer language should improve clarity, trust, and organic relevance. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#219International and Multi-Region E-commerce SEO Planner

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYInternational stores, multi-currency stores, cross-border e-commerce, localized catalogs, global brands, and regional marketplace expansion.

Plan e-commerce SEO across countries, languages, currencies, shipping regions, hreflang, localized categories, product availability, and regional search behavior.

You are an international e-commerce SEO strategist. Build a multi-region organic discovery plan that respects language, market, product availability, and technical SEO. International context: Store: [STORE] Website: [WEBSITE] Current markets: [CURRENT MARKETS] Target markets: [TARGET MARKETS] Languages: [LANGUAGES] Currencies: [CURRENCIES] Shipping regions: [SHIPPING] Product availability by market: [AVAILABILITY] Current URL structure: [URL STRUCTURE] Current hreflang: [HREFLANG] Localized content: [LOCALIZED CONTENT] Local competitors: [COMPETITORS] Market-specific demand: [DEMAND] Platform constraints: [PLATFORM] Plan the international SEO system: 1. Market readiness assessment For each market evaluate: - search demand - product availability - shipping feasibility - localization quality - payment expectations - return policy fit - competitor strength - margin potential - compliance concerns 2. URL and localization architecture Recommend: - ccTLD vs subfolder vs subdomain - language/country paths - hreflang logic - canonical rules - currency handling - geolocation behavior - market selector UX - sitemap structure 3. Page localization rules Define how to localize: - category pages - product pages - size guides - shipping pages - return policy pages - reviews - FAQs - seasonal pages - buying guides 4. Product discovery differences Identify: - local keyword differences - local attribute preferences - local seasonality - local brands or competitors - local payment/shipping concerns - local trust signals 5. Rollout plan Create: - market prioritization - first market launch plan - technical checklist - content localization backlog - QA checklist - monitoring plan Rules: - Do not auto-translate without localization review. - Do not show products as available in markets where they cannot be shipped. - Do not implement hreflang inconsistently. - International SEO should create a real local shopping experience. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#220Full E-commerce SEO and Product Discovery Audit

ECOMMERCE SEO & PRODUCT DISCOVERYFull e-commerce SEO audits, online store growth plans, agency deliverables, Shopify audits, retail SEO, marketplaces, and executive SEO roadmaps.

Audit and redesign a complete e-commerce SEO system across category pages, product pages, collections, faceted navigation, schema, internal search, technical SEO, seasonal SEO, content, and conversion paths.

Act as an independent e-commerce SEO and product discovery auditor. Review my store and create a complete prioritized roadmap for organic growth and product discoverability. Full context: Store: [STORE] Website: [WEBSITE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Business model: [DTC / RETAILER / MARKETPLACE / WHOLESALE / OTHER] Product categories: [CATEGORIES] Product count: [PRODUCT COUNT] Top products: [TOP PRODUCTS] High-margin products: [HIGH-MARGIN PRODUCTS] Current category pages: [CATEGORY PAGES] Current product pages: [PRODUCT PAGES] Current collections: [COLLECTIONS] Current filters/facets: [FILTERS] Current internal search data: [SEARCH DATA] Current schema: [SCHEMA] Current sitemap and robots setup: [SITEMAP / ROBOTS] Current canonical rules: [CANONICALS] Current technical SEO data: [TECHNICAL DATA] Current organic rankings: [RANKINGS] Current traffic and revenue: [TRAFFIC / REVENUE] Current conversion data: [CONVERSION DATA] Current content assets: [CONTENT] Current reviews and UGC: [UGC] Seasonal campaigns: [SEASONAL] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Business goals: [GOALS] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Audit across 45 dimensions: 1. Organic revenue strategy 2. Category architecture 3. Collection strategy 4. Product page SEO 5. Product descriptions 6. Category copy quality 7. Product discovery UX 8. Navigation clarity 9. Internal search quality 10. Filter and facet control 11. Indexation management 12. Canonical rules 13. URL structure 14. Pagination 15. Sitemap quality 16. Robots.txt logic 17. Crawl efficiency 18. Core Web Vitals 19. Mobile shopping experience 20. Product schema 21. Review schema 22. Breadcrumb schema 23. Merchant feed consistency 24. Price and availability accuracy 25. Image SEO 26. Product media quality 27. Internal linking 28. Related product modules 29. Cross-sell and bundle discovery 30. Category cannibalization 31. Duplicate content 32. Thin pages 33. Out-of-stock handling 34. Discontinued product handling 35. Variant handling 36. Buyer-intent keyword mapping 37. Comparison page opportunities 38. Buying guide opportunities 39. Seasonal SEO readiness 40. Review and Q&A usage 41. Local/international ecommerce considerations, if relevant 42. Competitor gap 43. Analytics and attribution 44. SEO workflow and ownership 45. Overall product discovery readiness For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from my context - SEO impact - product discovery impact - revenue impact - recommended fix - priority - effort - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Hard truth Explain the biggest issue limiting organic revenue and product discovery. B. Strategic direction Define: - highest-priority category - highest-priority product group - highest-priority technical fix - highest-priority content opportunity - highest-priority schema fix - highest-priority discovery improvement - highest-priority seasonal opportunity C. Roadmap Create: - first 24-hour fixes - first 7-day fixes - first 30-day plan - first 90-day plan - 6-month plan - owner assignments - dependencies - risks D. Page and catalog actions Recommend: - category pages to improve - collections to create - collections to noindex - product pages to rewrite - products needing schema fixes - pages to merge - pages to redirect - pages to remove from sitemap - buying guides to create E. Technical and discovery backlog Create: - developer tasks - merchandising tasks - content tasks - SEO manager tasks - analytics tasks - QA checklist - monitoring dashboard F. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - fastest SEO win - biggest crawl/indexation risk - first category page to improve - first product page template fix - first schema fix - first internal search insight to act on - first seasonal SEO action - first product discovery UX improvement - one operating principle for e-commerce SEO and product discovery Rules: - Do not create generic audit advice. - Do not recommend indexing every product, filter, or collection automatically. - Do not separate SEO from merchandising, inventory, and conversion. - Use [NEEDS DATA] where crawl, analytics, ranking, schema, or revenue data is missing. - The final roadmap should be specific, ethical, revenue-aware, and ready for implementation.

#221Organic Performance Command Center

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGSEO managers, agencies, founders, content teams, executives, and teams that need one clean view of organic growth.

Build a decision-ready SEO performance dashboard that connects rankings, traffic, conversions, content quality, technical health, and business outcomes.

You are an SEO analytics strategist. Create a complete organic performance command center that turns SEO data into clear decisions. Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business model: [BUSINESS MODEL] Main offers: [OFFERS] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] SEO goals: [SEO GOALS] Business goals: [BUSINESS GOALS] Current tools: [TOOLS] Data sources: [DATA SOURCES] Important pages: [IMPORTANT PAGES] Important keywords: [KEYWORDS] Conversion events: [CONVERSIONS] Reporting audience: [REPORTING AUDIENCE] Reporting cadence: [CADENCE] Build the dashboard system: 1. Executive overview Define the top-level metrics: - organic sessions - organic users - organic conversions - conversion rate - revenue or pipeline from organic - non-branded clicks - branded clicks - ranking visibility - indexed pages - technical health - content production - content decay - priority risks 2. Performance layers Create dashboard sections for: - traffic performance - ranking movement - keyword groups - landing page performance - conversion performance - content performance - technical SEO issues - internal linking impact - backlink or authority movement - local or ecommerce SEO, if relevant 3. Decision rules For each metric define: - what good looks like - what bad looks like - what trend requires action - who owns the next action - what action to take - how often to review it 4. Reporting views Create separate views for: - executive leadership - SEO team - content team - technical team - revenue team 5. Output Deliver: - dashboard structure - metric definitions - formulas or calculation notes - recommended charts - alert thresholds - reporting narrative template - weekly review checklist - monthly executive summary format Rules: - Do not report vanity metrics without decision context. - Do not mix branded and non-branded performance without labeling. - Do not hide conversion or revenue impact. - Use [NEEDS DATA] where a metric cannot be calculated from the provided inputs. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#222SEO KPI Definition and Measurement Framework

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGSEO strategy planning, stakeholder reporting, agency onboarding, dashboard setup, and leadership alignment.

Define the right SEO KPIs, separate leading and lagging indicators, prevent misleading reporting, and connect SEO work to business outcomes.

Act as an SEO measurement architect. Build a KPI framework that makes SEO performance measurable, honest, and useful. Inputs: Company: [COMPANY] Website: [WEBSITE] Business type: [BUSINESS TYPE] SEO strategy: [SEO STRATEGY] Main SEO activities: [SEO ACTIVITIES] Commercial goals: [COMMERCIAL GOALS] Available tools: [TOOLS] Available data: [DATA] Stakeholders: [STAKEHOLDERS] Reporting cadence: [CADENCE] Current KPIs: [CURRENT KPIS] Create the framework: A. KPI classification Classify metrics into: - business outcomes - conversion outcomes - traffic outcomes - visibility outcomes - content production indicators - content quality indicators - technical health indicators - authority indicators - local or ecommerce indicators, if relevant B. Leading vs lagging indicators For each KPI specify: - leading or lagging - why it matters - how it is measured - expected movement timeframe - owner - limitations - possible false signals C. North Star metric Recommend one SEO North Star metric and explain: - why it is the best fit - what it does not capture - which supporting KPIs protect against misleading conclusions D. KPI scorecard Create a scorecard with: - metric name - formula - data source - reporting frequency - target - warning threshold - action trigger - stakeholder owner E. Measurement risks Flag: - attribution gaps - seasonality - branded search distortion - bot traffic - tracking errors - ranking volatility - conversion lag - content publication lag Rules: - Do not choose KPIs only because they are easy to measure. - Do not treat impressions as success without context. - Do not report ranking gains without business relevance. - The KPI system should help the team decide what to do next. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#223Ranking Movement Diagnostic Engine

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGRanking drops, SEO troubleshooting, monthly reports, content refresh decisions, and executive explanations.

Diagnose keyword ranking gains, losses, volatility, and stagnation by separating technical, content, intent, authority, SERP, and competitor causes.

You are an SEO ranking diagnostics expert. Analyze keyword movement and explain what likely changed, why it matters, and what action to take. Data: Keyword list: [KEYWORDS] Previous rankings: [PREVIOUS RANKINGS] Current rankings: [CURRENT RANKINGS] Tracked URLs: [URLS] Search volume: [SEARCH VOLUME] Keyword groups: [GROUPS] SERP features: [SERP FEATURES] GSC data: [GSC DATA] Analytics data: [ANALYTICS DATA] Recent site changes: [SITE CHANGES] Recent content changes: [CONTENT CHANGES] Technical issues: [TECHNICAL ISSUES] Competitor changes: [COMPETITOR CHANGES] Run the diagnostic: 1. Movement classification Group keywords into: - significant gains - significant losses - minor gains - minor losses - stable winners - stable underperformers - volatile keywords - new rankings - lost rankings - possible tracking noise 2. Cause investigation Evaluate possible causes: - search intent mismatch - content decay - competitor improvement - technical issue - indexing issue - internal link change - backlink change - SERP layout change - seasonality - brand demand shift - algorithm volatility - cannibalization - wrong ranking URL 3. URL-level diagnosis For each affected URL provide: - keyword affected - movement - likely cause - evidence - confidence level - business impact - recommended action - urgency 4. Action plan Create: - quick fixes - content refresh tasks - technical checks - internal link changes - SERP re-analysis tasks - competitor checks - monitoring plan 5. Reporting summary Write: - executive explanation - SEO team task list - risks - next review date Rules: - Do not blame an algorithm update without evidence. - Do not treat every movement as meaningful. - Do not recommend rewriting pages before checking intent, indexing, and competitors. - Use [NEEDS SERP REVIEW] where live SERP inspection is required. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#224Organic Traffic Change Explainer

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGMonthly SEO reports, traffic drops, stakeholder updates, board reporting, and performance reviews.

Explain why organic traffic increased or decreased by decomposing changes across pages, queries, devices, countries, branded demand, seasonality, CTR, rankings, and indexation.

Act as an SEO traffic analyst. Explain the organic traffic change in a way leadership can understand and the SEO team can act on. Inputs: Reporting period: [PERIOD] Previous comparison period: [COMPARISON PERIOD] Organic sessions or clicks: [TRAFFIC DATA] Landing page data: [LANDING PAGES] Query data: [QUERY DATA] Device data: [DEVICE DATA] Country or location data: [LOCATION DATA] Branded vs non-branded data: [BRAND DATA] Conversion data: [CONVERSIONS] Ranking data: [RANKINGS] Indexation data: [INDEXATION] Site changes: [CHANGES] Seasonality notes: [SEASONALITY] Competitor or SERP notes: [COMPETITOR / SERP NOTES] Analyze the change: A. Traffic movement summary State: - total change - percentage change - biggest contributors - biggest losers - whether the change is broad or concentrated - whether it is likely concerning B. Decomposition Break down by: - landing page - query group - branded vs non-branded - device - country or region - content type - funnel stage - new vs old content - rankings - CTR - impressions - indexation C. Cause map Classify likely causes as: - real growth - real decline - tracking issue - seasonality - branded demand change - SERP feature change - ranking change - content decay - technical issue - page removal - cannibalization - competitor change D. Business impact Explain: - impact on conversions - impact on revenue or pipeline - impact on priority pages - impact on strategic SEO goals E. Next actions Create: - immediate checks - high-priority fixes - monitoring items - data gaps - stakeholder summary Rules: - Do not explain traffic using one metric only. - Do not mix clicks and sessions without labeling. - Do not ignore branded search. - Use [NEEDS DATA] where evidence is missing. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#225SEO Conversion and Revenue Attribution Analyzer

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGSaaS, ecommerce, lead generation, agencies, B2B SEO, executive reports, and ROI analysis.

Connect SEO activity to conversions, revenue, pipeline, assisted conversions, lead quality, and business impact without overstating attribution.

You are an SEO revenue analyst. Analyze how organic search contributes to business outcomes and where attribution may be incomplete. Business context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business model: [BUSINESS MODEL] Primary conversions: [CONVERSIONS] Revenue model: [REVENUE MODEL] Sales cycle: [SALES CYCLE] SEO activities: [SEO ACTIVITIES] Organic landing pages: [LANDING PAGES] Analytics data: [ANALYTICS DATA] CRM data: [CRM DATA] Attribution model: [ATTRIBUTION MODEL] Assisted conversion data: [ASSISTED DATA] Lead quality data: [LEAD QUALITY] Reporting audience: [AUDIENCE] Build the analysis: 1. Conversion map Map organic traffic to: - macro conversions - micro conversions - assisted conversions - lead captures - trials - demos - purchases - subscriptions - repeat purchases - pipeline opportunities - closed revenue 2. Landing page contribution Analyze pages by: - traffic - conversion rate - conversion volume - revenue or pipeline - assisted value - lead quality - funnel stage - keyword intent - CTA fit 3. Attribution caveats Identify: - last-click limitations - direct traffic overlap - branded search influence - cookie limitations - long sales cycle lag - offline conversion gaps - CRM mismatch - multi-touch influence 4. ROI view Estimate: - organic revenue - organic pipeline - organic lead value - SEO cost inputs - content cost - technical cost - authority cost - blended ROI - payback period 5. Decision recommendations Create: - pages to optimize for conversion - keywords to prioritize for revenue - CTAs to test - tracking improvements - dashboard metrics - executive summary Rules: - Do not claim exact SEO ROI when attribution is incomplete. - Do not ignore assisted conversions. - Do not value all organic visits equally. - Use confidence levels for revenue estimates. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#226Content Decay Detection and Refresh Prioritizer

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGContent audits, blog refreshes, SEO maintenance, editorial planning, and recovering declining organic traffic.

Identify content that is losing rankings, clicks, impressions, CTR, conversions, or topical freshness and prioritize refreshes based on impact.

Act as a content decay analyst. Find which SEO pages are decaying, why they may be decaying, and which refreshes deserve priority. Inputs: Page list: [PAGES] Historical traffic: [TRAFFIC DATA] Historical clicks: [GSC CLICKS] Historical impressions: [GSC IMPRESSIONS] Ranking history: [RANKINGS] CTR data: [CTR DATA] Conversion data: [CONVERSIONS] Content publish dates: [PUBLISH DATES] Last updated dates: [UPDATE DATES] SERP notes: [SERP NOTES] Competitor notes: [COMPETITORS] Business priorities: [PRIORITIES] Run the decay analysis: A. Decay detection Classify pages as: - severe decay - moderate decay - early decay - stable - growing - seasonal decline - tracking anomaly - low-value page B. Decay cause hypothesis For each decaying page evaluate: - outdated information - search intent shift - competitor improvement - SERP feature change - technical issue - cannibalization - internal link loss - backlink loss - thin content - weak CTR - weak conversion fit C. Refresh priority score Score each page by: - traffic loss - ranking opportunity - conversion value - business value - refresh effort - confidence - urgency - content freshness requirement D. Refresh plan For each priority page define: - what to update - what to remove - what to add - new sections needed - SERP gaps to address - internal links to add - metadata changes - proof or source updates - expected impact E. Editorial roadmap Create: - top 10 refreshes - quick wins - high-effort strategic refreshes - pages to merge - pages to noindex or remove - monitoring plan Rules: - Do not refresh every old page automatically. - Do not assume traffic loss is decay without checking seasonality and tracking. - Do not prioritize pages with no business or search value. - Use [NEEDS SERP REVIEW] where current SERP analysis is required. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#227Keyword Portfolio Movement Reporter

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGSEO reporting, keyword clusters, category tracking, content teams, enterprise SEO, and portfolio-level performance reviews.

Analyze keyword groups like a portfolio, showing where visibility is growing, where it is shrinking, and what strategic decisions follow.

You are an SEO keyword portfolio analyst. Turn keyword movement into strategic insight by grouping keywords by topic, intent, funnel stage, and business value. Keyword data: Keyword list: [KEYWORDS] Current rankings: [CURRENT RANKINGS] Previous rankings: [PREVIOUS RANKINGS] Search volume: [SEARCH VOLUME] URL ranking: [RANKING URLS] Keyword groups: [GROUPS] Intent labels: [INTENT] Funnel stages: [FUNNEL STAGES] Business value labels: [BUSINESS VALUE] SERP features: [SERP FEATURES] Conversion data: [CONVERSIONS] Build the report: 1. Portfolio segmentation Segment by: - topic cluster - intent - funnel stage - product or service - branded vs non-branded - location, if relevant - page type - difficulty - business value 2. Movement summary Report: - winners - losers - stable keywords - new entrants - lost rankings - ranking URL changes - keywords near page-one threshold - keywords near top-three threshold - keywords with high impressions but low CTR 3. Opportunity analysis Identify: - quick ranking wins - snippet opportunities - CTR opportunities - content gaps - cannibalization risks - underperforming business-critical keywords - pages needing links - pages needing refresh 4. Strategic recommendations Create: - next content priorities - refresh priorities - internal link priorities - technical checks - SERP review priorities - reporting notes for leadership 5. Output format Provide: - keyword portfolio summary - table of priority actions - executive narrative - SEO team task list - confidence levels Rules: - Do not report every keyword individually if grouping creates better insight. - Do not prioritize high-volume keywords with poor business fit. - Do not ignore ranking URL changes. - Label uncertain causes clearly. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#228SEO Cannibalization Analytics Auditor

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGContent audits, ranking instability, blog cleanup, ecommerce categories, SaaS pages, and sites with multiple similar articles.

Detect keyword and page cannibalization using ranking URLs, query overlap, page intent, internal links, CTR, impressions, and conversion conflicts.

Act as an SEO cannibalization analyst. Identify whether multiple pages are competing against each other and create a fix plan. Data: Pages: [PAGE LIST] Target keywords: [TARGET KEYWORDS] GSC query data by page: [GSC DATA] Ranking URLs by keyword: [RANKING DATA] Organic traffic by page: [TRAFFIC DATA] Conversions by page: [CONVERSIONS] Internal links: [INTERNAL LINKS] Content summaries: [CONTENT SUMMARIES] SERP intent notes: [SERP NOTES] Business priorities: [PRIORITIES] Analyze cannibalization: A. Query overlap test Identify pages that share: - same queries - same keyword intent - same SERP target - same audience - same funnel stage - same CTA - same internal link anchors - ranking URL swaps B. Cannibalization type Classify each case as: - true cannibalization - acceptable overlap - parent-child confusion - informational vs commercial conflict - duplicate content issue - category vs product conflict - old page vs new page conflict - wrong URL ranking - no issue C. Severity score Score by: - ranking volatility - traffic loss - conversion impact - query overlap - content similarity - internal link confusion - business importance - fix complexity D. Resolution plan Recommend: - merge - redirect - canonicalize - rewrite for distinct intent - adjust title and headings - change internal anchors - create parent hub - split content - leave unchanged - monitor E. Implementation table For each issue provide: - affected pages - primary page - secondary page role - action - internal link update - redirect or canonical note - expected impact - risk Rules: - Do not call every keyword overlap cannibalization. - Do not merge pages with distinct user intent. - Do not recommend redirects without checking traffic and backlinks. - Use [NEEDS SERP REVIEW] where intent is uncertain. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#229Technical SEO Issue Impact Reporter

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGTechnical audits, developer tickets, SEO reports, crawl analysis, Core Web Vitals, indexation problems, and executive updates.

Translate technical SEO issues into impact, urgency, affected URLs, business risk, and a prioritized fix roadmap.

You are a technical SEO reporting strategist. Turn a list of technical issues into a decision-ready impact report. Inputs: Crawl data: [CRAWL DATA] Technical issue list: [ISSUES] Affected URLs: [URLS] GSC indexation data: [GSC DATA] Core Web Vitals data: [CWV DATA] Log file data, if available: [LOG DATA] Organic performance data: [PERFORMANCE] Important templates: [TEMPLATES] Business-critical pages: [CRITICAL PAGES] Developer constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Recent releases: [RELEASES] Create the report: 1. Issue classification Classify issues by: - crawlability - indexation - rendering - canonicalization - redirects - broken links - duplicate content - pagination - structured data - Core Web Vitals - mobile usability - XML sitemaps - robots.txt - hreflang, if relevant - internal links 2. Impact scoring Score each issue by: - SEO impact - business impact - affected URL count - affected critical pages - severity - urgency - confidence - implementation effort - dependency risk 3. Fix prioritization Group fixes into: - urgent critical fixes - high-impact quick wins - developer sprint items - content team tasks - monitoring-only items - low-value issues - false positives 4. Developer-ready tickets For priority issues create: - ticket title - issue summary - affected URLs or templates - expected behavior - acceptance criteria - QA steps - SEO impact explanation 5. Stakeholder summary Write: - executive summary - risk if ignored - timeline recommendation - owner assignments - monitoring plan Rules: - Do not exaggerate minor technical issues. - Do not treat every crawl warning as urgent. - Do not send vague tasks to developers. - Use [NEEDS DEV REVIEW] where implementation details require engineering input. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#230SEO Forecasting Model Builder

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGSEO planning, business cases, budget approval, agency proposals, growth targets, and executive forecasting.

Build an SEO forecast using baseline traffic, rankings, CTR curves, content production, expected ranking improvements, seasonality, conversion rates, and confidence ranges.

Act as an SEO forecasting analyst. Build a transparent SEO forecast with assumptions, scenarios, risks, and confidence ranges. Inputs: Website: [WEBSITE] Current organic traffic: [TRAFFIC] Current organic conversions: [CONVERSIONS] Current organic revenue or pipeline: [REVENUE / PIPELINE] Keyword set: [KEYWORDS] Search volume: [SEARCH VOLUME] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] CTR assumptions: [CTR ASSUMPTIONS] Content plan: [CONTENT PLAN] Technical roadmap: [TECHNICAL ROADMAP] Link building plan: [AUTHORITY PLAN] Historical growth rate: [HISTORICAL GROWTH] Seasonality data: [SEASONALITY] Conversion rates: [CONVERSION RATES] Average order value or lead value: [VALUE] Forecast period: [PERIOD] Build the forecast: A. Baseline Calculate or estimate: - current traffic baseline - current conversion baseline - current revenue baseline - branded vs non-branded baseline - seasonality baseline - expected no-action scenario B. Growth drivers Model impact from: - new content - content refreshes - ranking improvements - CTR improvements - technical fixes - internal linking - authority growth - conversion rate improvements C. Scenarios Create: - conservative scenario - realistic scenario - aggressive scenario - downside scenario For each scenario include: - traffic estimate - conversion estimate - revenue or pipeline estimate - assumptions - confidence level - timeline D. Forecast table Provide month-by-month forecast with: - clicks or sessions - conversions - revenue or pipeline - key activities - expected lag - confidence range E. Risk and validation Identify: - assumptions most likely to be wrong - data gaps - external risks - leading indicators - checkpoint dates - when to revise forecast Rules: - Do not present SEO forecasts as guarantees. - Do not ignore ranking lag. - Do not use search volume as traffic without CTR assumptions. - Clearly label assumptions and confidence levels. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#231SEO Experiment Measurement Designer

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGTitle tests, content refreshes, internal link tests, template changes, technical SEO tests, CRO tests for organic landing pages, and controlled SEO experimentation.

Design SEO tests with hypotheses, success metrics, control groups, measurement windows, risk controls, and decision rules.

You are an SEO experimentation strategist. Design a measurement plan for an SEO experiment so the result can guide a real decision. Experiment idea: [EXPERIMENT IDEA] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Pages affected: [PAGES] Current performance: [PERFORMANCE] Hypothesis: [HYPOTHESIS] Expected impact: [EXPECTED IMPACT] Available data: [DATA] Tools: [TOOLS] Seasonality: [SEASONALITY] Risk tolerance: [RISK] Business goal: [GOAL] Design the experiment: 1. Hypothesis refinement Rewrite the hypothesis as: "If we change [VARIABLE], then [METRIC] will improve because [REASON]." 2. Test design Define: - test group - control group - eligibility criteria - excluded pages - start date - measurement window - pre-test baseline - expected lag - sample size limitations - risk controls 3. Metrics Define: - primary metric - secondary metrics - guardrail metrics - diagnostic metrics - business outcome metrics 4. Analysis method Recommend: - before/after comparison - control vs test comparison - cohort analysis - page group comparison - rank movement tracking - CTR analysis - conversion analysis 5. Decision rules Define: - success - failure - inconclusive result - rollback trigger - scale-up trigger - next test Rules: - Do not test too many variables at once. - Do not declare success too early. - Do not ignore seasonality or indexing lag. - Use [NEEDS STATISTICAL REVIEW] where sample size is too small. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#232Search Console Insight Miner

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGGSC analysis, content optimization, monthly SEO reports, keyword expansion, CTR improvement, and page-level diagnosis.

Mine Google Search Console data for keyword opportunities, CTR gaps, page decay, new queries, indexing problems, and strategic content actions.

Act as a Google Search Console insight analyst. Turn raw GSC data into SEO actions. Input data: Date range: [DATE RANGE] Comparison range: [COMPARISON RANGE] Query export: [QUERY DATA] Page export: [PAGE DATA] Country data: [COUNTRY DATA] Device data: [DEVICE DATA] Search appearance data: [SEARCH APPEARANCE] Indexing data: [INDEXING DATA] Important pages: [IMPORTANT PAGES] Business priorities: [PRIORITIES] Analyze GSC data: A. Query insights Find: - high-impression low-CTR queries - queries near ranking improvement thresholds - new query opportunities - declining query groups - branded vs non-branded changes - long-tail expansion ideas - intent shifts - query-page mismatch B. Page insights Find: - pages gaining clicks - pages losing clicks - pages with impression growth but click stagnation - pages with CTR problems - pages ranking for unexpected queries - pages needing refresh - pages needing internal links - pages needing title/meta tests C. Technical and indexation insights Flag: - indexing drops - excluded pages worth reviewing - crawled but not indexed patterns - discovered but not indexed patterns - canonical issues - sitemap issues - mobile or enhancement issues D. Action prioritization Create: - top 10 CTR opportunities - top 10 content refreshes - top 10 new content ideas - top 10 internal link opportunities - technical checks - monitoring items E. Reporting summary Write: - executive summary - SEO team actions - content team actions - data limitations - next analysis date Rules: - Do not treat average position as exact ranking. - Do not ignore device and country differences. - Do not optimize titles only for CTR if intent match is weak. - Use [NEEDS SERP REVIEW] where query intent needs validation. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#233SEO Dashboard QA and Data Integrity Auditor

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGLooker Studio, GA4, GSC dashboards, agency reports, executive dashboards, and analytics cleanup.

Audit an SEO dashboard for metric errors, tracking gaps, data blending issues, misleading charts, wrong filters, attribution problems, and unclear decisions.

You are an SEO dashboard quality assurance auditor. Review this dashboard structure and identify data integrity, reporting, and interpretation risks. Dashboard context: Dashboard description: [DASHBOARD DESCRIPTION] Screenshots or metric list: [DASHBOARD DATA] Data sources: [DATA SOURCES] Filters used: [FILTERS] Date ranges: [DATE RANGES] Stakeholders: [STAKEHOLDERS] SEO goals: [SEO GOALS] Business goals: [BUSINESS GOALS] Known tracking issues: [ISSUES] Audit the dashboard: 1. Metric validity Check: - correct data source - correct channel grouping - organic filtering - branded vs non-branded separation - conversion definitions - revenue definitions - ranking data interpretation - GSC vs GA4 differences - bot or spam distortion 2. Visualization quality Review: - chart type choice - labels - date comparisons - trend clarity - segmentation - metric hierarchy - unnecessary charts - missing context - misleading scales 3. Decision usefulness Assess whether the dashboard answers: - are we growing - why did performance change - where did performance change - what should we do next - what is business impact - what is risk - who owns actions 4. Data risk log Identify: - tracking gaps - broken events - duplicate conversions - attribution limitations - sampling issues - Looker blending errors - wrong filters - stale data - API limitations 5. Fix plan Provide: - metrics to remove - metrics to add - charts to redesign - filters to change - definitions to document - QA checks - stakeholder notes Rules: - Do not assume dashboard data is correct. - Do not recommend more charts if clarity is the issue. - Do not hide uncertainty. - The dashboard should support decisions, not just display data. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#234SEO Executive Report Writer

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGMonthly reporting, board updates, client reports, leadership presentations, and stakeholder communication.

Turn complex SEO data into a clear executive report with business impact, causes, risks, decisions needed, and next actions.

Act as a senior SEO consultant writing for executives. Turn the SEO performance data below into a concise, decision-ready report. Data: Reporting period: [PERIOD] SEO activities completed: [ACTIVITIES] Traffic data: [TRAFFIC] Ranking data: [RANKINGS] Conversion data: [CONVERSIONS] Revenue or pipeline data: [REVENUE / PIPELINE] Content performance: [CONTENT PERFORMANCE] Technical health: [TECHNICAL HEALTH] Authority or backlink data: [AUTHORITY DATA] Key wins: [WINS] Key losses: [LOSSES] Risks: [RISKS] Next actions: [NEXT ACTIONS] Business goals: [GOALS] Audience: [EXECUTIVE AUDIENCE] Write the report: A. Executive summary Include: - what changed - why it changed - business impact - biggest win - biggest risk - next priority B. Performance narrative Explain: - traffic movement - ranking movement - conversion movement - revenue or pipeline movement - branded vs non-branded context - page or cluster drivers C. Work completed Summarize completed work by: - content - technical SEO - internal links - authority - analytics - experiments D. Decisions needed List: - decisions leadership needs to make - resources required - tradeoffs - risks of delay - expected upside E. Next month plan Provide: - priorities - owners - expected outcomes - metrics to watch Rules: - Do not overload executives with raw keyword lists. - Do not hide bad news. - Do not claim causation without evidence. - Keep the report clear, direct, and tied to business outcomes. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#235SEO Forecast Assumption Stress Tester

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGForecast validation, budget planning, agency proposals, executive planning, and avoiding unrealistic SEO growth projections.

Challenge an SEO forecast by testing assumptions, upside, downside, risk, confidence, lag time, resource constraints, and external variables.

You are an SEO forecast risk reviewer. Stress test this SEO forecast and identify where it may be too optimistic, too conservative, or unsupported. Forecast: [PASTE FORECAST] Supporting data: Current traffic: [TRAFFIC] Current rankings: [RANKINGS] Search volume assumptions: [SEARCH VOLUME] CTR assumptions: [CTR] Conversion assumptions: [CONVERSIONS] Content plan: [CONTENT PLAN] Technical roadmap: [TECHNICAL ROADMAP] Authority plan: [AUTHORITY PLAN] Historical data: [HISTORY] Seasonality: [SEASONALITY] Resources: [RESOURCES] Competitive environment: [COMPETITION] Stress test the forecast: 1. Assumption audit Review assumptions for: - ranking improvement - CTR - search volume - content production speed - indexation speed - ranking lag - conversion rate - revenue value - seasonality - competitor response - technical implementation - link acquisition 2. Risk classification Classify risks as: - data risk - execution risk - market risk - algorithm risk - competitor risk - tracking risk - conversion risk - timeline risk 3. Scenario correction Create revised scenarios: - conservative - realistic - aggressive - downside - no-action baseline 4. Confidence scoring For each scenario provide: - confidence level - biggest assumption - weakest assumption - leading indicators - checkpoint date - revision trigger 5. Recommendations Provide: - forecast edits - data to collect - assumptions to document - metrics to monitor - stakeholder caveats Rules: - Do not accept forecast numbers at face value. - Do not reject a forecast only because SEO is uncertain. - Do not remove ambition; add realism. - The output should make the forecast more credible. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#236Organic Landing Page Performance Triage

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGSEO audits, landing page reports, conversion improvement, content maintenance, and prioritizing page-level work.

Analyze organic landing pages and decide whether each page needs more traffic, better CTR, content refresh, technical fix, internal links, conversion optimization, or consolidation.

Act as an organic landing page performance triage specialist. Diagnose what each landing page needs next. Landing page data: [PASTE LANDING PAGE DATA] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business goals: [GOALS] Primary conversions: [CONVERSIONS] Target pages: [TARGET PAGES] Keyword data by page: [KEYWORDS] GSC data by page: [GSC DATA] Analytics data by page: [ANALYTICS] Internal link data: [INTERNAL LINKS] Technical issues: [TECHNICAL ISSUES] Content age: [CONTENT AGE] SERP notes: [SERP NOTES] Triage each page: A. Page health classification Classify as: - traffic winner - conversion winner - high traffic low conversion - high impressions low CTR - high ranking low clicks - declining page - underlinked page - technical issue page - cannibalized page - low-value page - consolidation candidate - strategic page needing support B. Diagnosis For each page identify: - main problem - evidence - business impact - likely cause - confidence level C. Recommended action Choose one primary action: - refresh content - improve title/meta - add internal links - update CTA - fix technical issue - improve page speed - expand content - reduce content - merge - redirect - noindex - monitor only D. Priority matrix Score: - impact - effort - urgency - confidence - revenue potential - traffic potential - risk E. Execution roadmap Create: - first 10 page actions - owner - expected outcome - measurement metric - review date Rules: - Do not recommend content refresh when the real issue is conversion. - Do not optimize low-value pages before business-critical pages. - Do not ignore pages with traffic but no conversions. - Use [NEEDS SERP REVIEW] where intent or ranking context is unclear. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#237SEO Alerting and Anomaly Detection System

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGSEO operations, large sites, agencies, ecommerce, publishers, SaaS, and teams that need faster issue detection.

Create an alert system that detects traffic drops, ranking losses, indexation changes, technical failures, conversion drops, content decay, and reporting anomalies early.

You are an SEO monitoring and anomaly detection specialist. Design an alerting system that catches important SEO issues without overwhelming the team. Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business model: [BUSINESS MODEL] Important pages: [IMPORTANT PAGES] Important keyword groups: [KEYWORD GROUPS] Important markets: [MARKETS] Current tools: [TOOLS] Available data sources: [DATA SOURCES] Team owners: [OWNERS] Reporting cadence: [CADENCE] Risk tolerance: [RISK TOLERANCE] Design the alert system: 1. Alert categories Create alerts for: - organic traffic drop - GSC click drop - ranking drop - top page decline - conversion drop - indexation drop - robots.txt change - noindex detection - canonical change - sitemap issue - 404 spike - redirect issue - Core Web Vitals decline - schema errors - branded search change - local visibility drop - ecommerce product/category issue 2. Threshold design For each alert define: - metric - data source - threshold - comparison period - minimum volume - severity level - false positive risk - owner - response SLA 3. Triage workflow Create: - immediate checks - evidence collection - likely causes - escalation rules - rollback criteria - documentation requirements 4. Alert hygiene Prevent noise by defining: - seasonal adjustments - low-volume exclusions - duplicate alert grouping - maintenance windows - known issue suppression - weekly digest rules 5. Output Provide: - alert table - severity levels - owner matrix - response playbook - reporting format - monthly alert review process Rules: - Do not create alerts for every small fluctuation. - Do not ignore conversion and indexation alerts. - Do not make alerts without owners. - Alerts should create faster action, not more noise. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#238SEO ROI and Budget Allocation Advisor

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGSEO budgeting, resource planning, agency proposals, leadership planning, annual planning, and prioritizing limited resources.

Analyze SEO investment across content, technical SEO, authority, tools, freelancers, agencies, and internal labor to recommend budget allocation by expected impact.

Act as an SEO budget and ROI advisor. Recommend how to allocate SEO resources based on expected business impact, effort, risk, and timing. Business context: Company: [COMPANY] Website: [WEBSITE] SEO goals: [SEO GOALS] Business goals: [BUSINESS GOALS] Current organic performance: [PERFORMANCE] Current SEO budget: [BUDGET] Team capacity: [CAPACITY] Content costs: [CONTENT COSTS] Technical costs: [TECH COSTS] Link/PR costs: [AUTHORITY COSTS] Tool costs: [TOOLS] Agency or freelancer costs: [VENDORS] Conversion value: [CONVERSION VALUE] Forecast assumptions: [FORECAST] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Analyze budget allocation: A. Current spend audit Break down spend by: - content creation - content refresh - technical SEO - analytics/reporting - link building/digital PR - tools - developers - design - CRO - agency/freelancers - internal team time B. Impact assessment Score each investment area by: - traffic upside - conversion upside - revenue upside - time to impact - risk reduction - dependency - confidence - effort - strategic value C. Budget scenarios Create: - lean budget plan - balanced budget plan - aggressive growth plan - maintenance-only plan For each include: - monthly spend - main activities - expected outcome - tradeoffs - risks D. Allocation recommendation Provide: - what to increase - what to reduce - what to pause - what to test - what to measure first - what requires leadership approval E. ROI reporting Create: - ROI model - payback period view - leading indicators - lagging indicators - confidence levels - review cadence Rules: - Do not assign budget based only on traffic potential. - Do not ignore technical or conversion bottlenecks. - Do not present ROI as certain. - The recommendation should make tradeoffs explicit. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#239SEO Insights-to-Actions Decision Brief

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGWeekly SEO meetings, monthly planning, stakeholder alignment, agency deliverables, and turning reports into execution.

Convert messy SEO data into a prioritized decision brief with findings, implications, actions, owners, deadlines, risks, and expected outcomes.

You are an SEO decision strategist. Turn the data below into a clear brief that tells the team what to do next. Data dump: [PASTE DATA, NOTES, REPORTS, OBSERVATIONS] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business goals: [GOALS] Current SEO priorities: [PRIORITIES] Team capacity: [CAPACITY] Important pages: [PAGES] Important markets: [MARKETS] Recent changes: [CHANGES] Stakeholders: [STAKEHOLDERS] Decision deadline: [DEADLINE] Create the decision brief: 1. Signal extraction Separate the data into: - confirmed signals - possible signals - noise - missing data - contradictions - urgent risks - opportunities 2. Insight development For each important signal explain: - what happened - why it matters - evidence - confidence level - business impact - SEO impact - likely cause - what decision it requires 3. Action prioritization Create an action list with: - action - owner - deadline - expected impact - effort - risk - dependency - metric to monitor - confidence 4. Decision agenda List decisions needed from: - SEO lead - content lead - developer - executive - product or revenue team 5. Final output Provide: - one-page executive brief - task table - risks - assumptions - data gaps - next meeting agenda Rules: - Do not turn every observation into an action. - Do not hide uncertainty. - Do not create actions without owners. - The output should make execution easier immediately. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#240Full SEO Analytics, Reporting and Forecasting Audit

SEO ANALYTICS, REPORTING & FORECASTINGFull SEO analytics audits, agencies, enterprise SEO teams, SaaS, ecommerce, publishers, leadership reporting, and growth planning.

Audit and rebuild the complete SEO measurement system across KPIs, dashboards, traffic analysis, rankings, conversions, content decay, technical issues, ROI, forecasts, alerts, and executive reporting.

Act as an independent SEO analytics, reporting, and forecasting auditor. Review my complete SEO measurement system and build a decision-ready analytics roadmap. Full context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business model: [BUSINESS MODEL] Main offers: [OFFERS] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] SEO goals: [SEO GOALS] Business goals: [BUSINESS GOALS] Current SEO strategy: [STRATEGY] Current reporting process: [REPORTING PROCESS] Current dashboards: [DASHBOARDS] Data sources: [DATA SOURCES] Tools: [TOOLS] GA4 setup: [GA4] GSC setup: [GSC] Ranking tools: [RANKING TOOLS] CRM or revenue data: [CRM / REVENUE] Conversion events: [CONVERSIONS] Content inventory: [CONTENT INVENTORY] Keyword portfolio: [KEYWORDS] Technical issue data: [TECHNICAL DATA] Backlink data: [BACKLINK DATA] Forecasts: [FORECASTS] Stakeholders: [STAKEHOLDERS] Team capacity: [CAPACITY] Known data issues: [ISSUES] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Audit across 40 dimensions: 1. SEO goal clarity 2. KPI selection 3. KPI definitions 4. Business outcome tracking 5. Organic channel filtering 6. Branded vs non-branded separation 7. Conversion tracking 8. Revenue or pipeline attribution 9. Assisted conversion visibility 10. GA4 setup quality 11. GSC usage quality 12. Rank tracking quality 13. Keyword grouping 14. Landing page reporting 15. Content performance reporting 16. Content decay detection 17. Cannibalization detection 18. Technical SEO reporting 19. Indexation reporting 20. Core Web Vitals reporting 21. Internal linking measurement 22. Authority measurement 23. Local SEO reporting, if relevant 24. Ecommerce SEO reporting, if relevant 25. Dashboard clarity 26. Dashboard data integrity 27. Executive reporting quality 28. SEO team reporting quality 29. Content team reporting quality 30. Developer reporting quality 31. Forecast assumptions 32. Forecast scenarios 33. ROI modeling 34. Budget allocation insight 35. Experiment measurement 36. Alerting and anomaly detection 37. Reporting cadence 38. Owner accountability 39. Insight-to-action workflow 40. Overall analytics maturity For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from my context - business impact - SEO impact - risk if ignored - recommended fix - priority - effort - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Hard truth Explain the biggest weakness in the current SEO measurement system. B. Measurement strategy Define: - North Star SEO metric - supporting KPIs - leading indicators - lagging indicators - reporting views - data ownership - decision cadence C. Dashboard roadmap Recommend: - executive dashboard - SEO operations dashboard - content performance dashboard - technical SEO dashboard - revenue and conversion dashboard - forecasting dashboard - alerting system D. Forecast and ROI plan Create: - forecast model structure - required assumptions - scenario framework - ROI calculation approach - budget allocation method - confidence scoring E. Implementation roadmap Create: - first 24-hour fixes - first 7-day fixes - first 30-day plan - first 90-day plan - owner assignments - dependencies - QA checks - reporting launch checklist F. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - fastest reporting win - highest-risk data issue - first KPI to fix - first dashboard to rebuild - first forecast assumption to validate - first alert to create - first executive reporting improvement - one operating principle for SEO analytics Rules: - Do not create a generic analytics checklist. - Do not report data without decision context. - Do not overstate attribution or forecasts. - Do not ignore data quality risks. - Use [NEEDS DATA], [NEEDS TRACKING REVIEW], or [NEEDS STAKEHOLDER DECISION] where required. - The roadmap should make SEO reporting more accurate, trusted, and actionable.

#241AI SEO Workflow Operating System Builder

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONSEO teams, agencies, founders, content teams, in-house marketers, and anyone who wants faster SEO execution without losing quality control.

Build a complete AI-assisted SEO operating system that connects research, clustering, briefs, writing support, QA, internal linking, reporting, and execution management.

You are an AI SEO operations architect. Build a complete AI-assisted SEO workflow system for my website or SEO team. Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business type: [BUSINESS TYPE] Main offer: [OFFER] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] SEO goals: [SEO GOALS] Current SEO process: [CURRENT PROCESS] Team members: [TEAM] Tools available: [TOOLS] CMS: [CMS] Content workflow: [CONTENT WORKFLOW] Technical SEO workflow: [TECH WORKFLOW] Reporting workflow: [REPORTING WORKFLOW] Current bottlenecks: [BOTTLENECKS] Quality concerns: [QUALITY CONCERNS] Risk tolerance: [RISK TOLERANCE] Design the AI SEO operating system: 1. Workflow map Break SEO work into stages: - strategy - keyword research - search intent analysis - clustering - competitive research - content brief creation - metadata generation - draft support - content refreshes - internal linking - technical audit support - schema planning - reporting - forecasting - QA and approval 2. AI role definition For each stage define: - what AI should do - what humans must review - what data AI needs - what output format AI should produce - what quality checks are required - what should never be automated fully 3. Prompt library structure Create reusable prompt categories for: - research prompts - analysis prompts - writing prompts - QA prompts - reporting prompts - automation prompts - decision prompts 4. Review gates Define mandatory human review for: - factual claims - YMYL content - legal or compliance claims - technical recommendations - competitive claims - pricing or product details - final publishing - redirects or indexation changes 5. Implementation plan Create: - first 7-day setup - first 30-day workflow rollout - first 90-day optimization plan - team responsibilities - QA checklist - documentation structure - measurement plan Rules: - Do not automate strategic decisions without human review. - Do not publish AI-generated SEO content without fact-checking. - Do not sacrifice accuracy for speed. - The final system should increase SEO output while protecting quality, trust, and brand voice. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#242AI Keyword Research and Clustering Machine

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONKeyword research, content planning, SEO roadmaps, topic clusters, agencies, blogs, SaaS SEO, and ecommerce category planning.

Turn messy keyword lists into clean clusters, intent groups, page targets, content priorities, and execution-ready SEO opportunities.

Act as an AI keyword clustering specialist. Organize my keyword data into a practical SEO execution map. Input data: Keyword list: [KEYWORDS] Search volume: [SEARCH VOLUME] Keyword difficulty: [DIFFICULTY] Current rankings: [CURRENT RANKINGS] Target market: [MARKET] Website: [WEBSITE] Business model: [BUSINESS MODEL] Products or services: [PRODUCTS / SERVICES] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Existing pages: [EXISTING PAGES] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Conversion goals: [GOALS] Run the clustering workflow: A. Clean the keyword list Identify and separate: - duplicates - irrelevant terms - branded terms - competitor terms - low-intent terms - misspellings - plural or singular variants - location variants - product variants - informational variants - commercial variants B. Cluster keywords Group by: - search intent - topic - funnel stage - page type - buyer problem - product or service - location, if relevant - audience segment - SERP similarity, if provided C. Assign page targets For each cluster recommend: - target page type - existing page to update - new page to create - page priority - primary keyword - secondary keywords - supporting questions - internal link needs - conversion path D. Prioritize opportunities Score clusters by: - business relevance - search demand - competition - conversion potential - content effort - current ranking opportunity - authority requirement - strategic value E. Output Provide: - keyword cluster table - content roadmap - quick wins - strategic pages - clusters to avoid - missing data - next research steps Rules: - Do not group keywords only by similar wording. - Do not create separate pages for identical intent. - Do not prioritize high-volume keywords with weak business fit. - Use [NEEDS SERP REVIEW] when intent cannot be confirmed from keywords alone. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#243AI SERP Research Assistant Builder

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONSEO content briefs, competitor analysis, content refreshes, search intent research, and page strategy.

Create a repeatable AI workflow for analyzing SERPs, competitor pages, content patterns, intent, gaps, and differentiation opportunities.

You are an AI SERP research workflow designer. Build a process that turns SERP observations into a clear SEO content strategy. Research target: Primary keyword: [KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Target location: [LOCATION] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Business goal: [GOAL] Current ranking page: [CURRENT PAGE] Top ranking pages or SERP notes: [SERP DATA] Competitor pages: [COMPETITOR PAGES] Our page or draft: [OUR PAGE / DRAFT] Design the AI SERP research workflow: STEP 1 — SERP pattern extraction Analyze the top results for: - dominant page types - search intent - content formats - headline patterns - depth of coverage - common sections - trust signals - examples used - media used - SERP features - featured snippet patterns - commercial vs informational balance STEP 2 — Competitor content gap analysis For each competitor identify: - what they cover well - what they miss - what is outdated - what is shallow - what is overly generic - what proof they use - what angle they lead with - why searchers may prefer them STEP 3 — Differentiation strategy Create ways for our page to stand out through: - stronger expertise - clearer structure - better examples - original data - practical tools - decision frameworks - visuals - templates - better product fit - stronger answer to search intent STEP 4 — Brief-ready output Provide: - intent summary - must-cover sections - avoid-copying notes - differentiation angle - content depth recommendation - FAQ opportunities - internal link suggestions - metadata direction - confidence level STEP 5 — Human review checklist Flag: - claims needing sources - competitor claims needing verification - YMYL or compliance risks - unsupported assumptions - live SERP checks needed Rules: - Do not copy competitor structure blindly. - Do not invent SERP facts if data is missing. - Do not use AI to replace live SERP review when accuracy matters. - The goal is to understand searcher expectations and create a better page. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#244AI SEO Content Brief Generator

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONContent teams, freelance writers, agencies, SEO briefs, blog planning, landing pages, and content production workflows.

Generate detailed SEO content briefs from keywords, audience intent, SERP insights, brand positioning, internal links, and conversion goals.

Act as an SEO content brief generator. Create a detailed, writer-ready brief that balances search intent, reader value, brand differentiation, and conversion. Inputs: Target keyword: [TARGET KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Search intent: [SEARCH INTENT] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Awareness stage: [AWARENESS STAGE] Business offer: [OFFER] Page type: [PAGE TYPE] SERP notes: [SERP NOTES] Competitor gaps: [COMPETITOR GAPS] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Internal links to include: [INTERNAL LINKS] External sources to use: [SOURCES] CTA: [CTA] Content length guidance: [LENGTH] Compliance notes: [COMPLIANCE] Create the brief: 1. Strategic direction Include: - page goal - searcher need - business goal - unique angle - reader promise - what this page should not become 2. Structure Build: - SEO title options - meta description options - H1 - intro direction - H2/H3 outline - section-by-section instructions - examples to include - visuals or tables to include - FAQ section - conclusion and CTA 3. SEO guidance Provide: - primary keyword usage - semantic topics - entities to mention - internal links - anchor text suggestions - schema opportunities - featured snippet opportunities 4. Quality guidance Add: - expertise requirements - proof required - claims needing citations - originality requirements - tone notes - readability rules - common mistakes to avoid 5. Writer handoff Create: - final checklist - source checklist - editorial QA checklist - publishing notes Rules: - Do not keyword stuff. - Do not create generic outlines that could fit any site. - Do not invent sources, statistics, or expert claims. - The brief should help a writer create useful, accurate, and differentiated content. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#245AI Metadata and CTR Improvement Factory

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONOn-page SEO, CTR optimization, content refreshes, GSC analysis, ecommerce pages, SaaS pages, and blog posts.

Generate and test title tags, meta descriptions, H1s, SERP snippets, and CTR improvement ideas using intent, page value, and ranking context.

You are an AI metadata optimization specialist. Improve the SERP presentation of these pages while protecting relevance and accuracy. Page data: URL: [URL] Current title tag: [TITLE] Current meta description: [META] Current H1: [H1] Target keyword: [KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Search intent: [INTENT] Current ranking position: [POSITION] Impressions: [IMPRESSIONS] Clicks: [CLICKS] CTR: [CTR] SERP competitors: [SERP COMPETITORS] Page summary: [PAGE SUMMARY] Brand voice: [VOICE] Restrictions: [RESTRICTIONS] Create the metadata improvement workflow: A. Diagnosis Identify: - likely CTR issue - intent mismatch - weak value proposition - missing specificity - too much truncation risk - unclear audience - generic wording - over-optimized wording - mismatch between title and page B. Title tag variations Generate 12 title tags: - benefit-led - intent-matched - comparison-focused - practical - authority-led - beginner-friendly - advanced - product-led - problem-solution - concise - curiosity-safe - brand-inclusive C. Meta description variations Generate 8 meta descriptions: - practical - emotional - commercial - informational - direct - trust-focused - feature-focused - action-focused D. Testing plan Provide: - recommended first test - alternative test - expected CTR lift hypothesis - measurement window - guardrail metrics - pages to group, if testing at scale E. QA Check: - character length risk - keyword relevance - clickbait risk - brand consistency - promise-page match - duplication risk Rules: - Do not write clickbait that the page cannot satisfy. - Do not repeat the same keyword unnaturally. - Do not optimize CTR while damaging search intent match. - Metadata should earn clicks from the right searchers. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#246AI Technical SEO Audit Assistant

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONCrawl reports, technical SEO audits, developer handoffs, site health monitoring, migrations, and SEO operations.

Use AI to classify technical SEO issues, explain impact, prioritize fixes, create developer tickets, and build QA checklists from crawl or audit data.

Act as an AI technical SEO audit assistant. Convert technical SEO data into prioritized, developer-ready action items. Inputs: Crawl export: [CRAWL EXPORT] Issue list: [ISSUES] Affected URLs: [AFFECTED URLS] URL templates: [TEMPLATES] GSC data: [GSC DATA] Log file notes: [LOG NOTES] CMS or platform: [CMS] Recent releases: [RELEASES] Business-critical pages: [CRITICAL PAGES] Developer constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] SEO goals: [GOALS] Process the audit: 1. Normalize issues Group issues into: - crawlability - indexation - canonicalization - redirects - broken links - duplicate content - thin pages - page speed - Core Web Vitals - schema - mobile usability - XML sitemaps - robots.txt - hreflang - JavaScript rendering - internal linking 2. Prioritize Score each issue by: - severity - affected URL count - affected critical pages - business impact - SEO impact - fix complexity - confidence - dependency 3. Translate for developers For top issues create: - ticket title - problem summary - affected examples - expected behavior - acceptance criteria - QA steps - rollback considerations - SEO impact explanation 4. Translate for non-technical stakeholders Write: - executive summary - risk if ignored - timeline recommendation - resource requirements 5. Build QA workflow Create: - pre-fix validation - post-fix validation - crawl retest plan - GSC monitoring - regression prevention Rules: - Do not treat every crawl warning as high priority. - Do not recommend fixes without understanding templates and impact. - Do not send developers vague instructions. - Use [NEEDS DEV REVIEW] where implementation details are uncertain. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#247AI Internal Linking Recommendation Engine

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONContent libraries, topic clusters, blogs, SaaS sites, ecommerce guides, internal link audits, and SEO maintenance.

Build an AI-assisted workflow that finds contextual internal link opportunities, suggests anchors, prioritizes links, and adds QA controls.

You are an AI internal linking systems designer. Create an internal linking recommendation engine for my website. Inputs: Website: [WEBSITE] Page inventory: [PAGE INVENTORY] Target pages: [TARGET PAGES] Topic clusters: [TOPIC CLUSTERS] Existing internal links: [CURRENT LINKS] Anchor text data: [ANCHORS] High-traffic pages: [HIGH TRAFFIC PAGES] High-authority pages: [HIGH AUTHORITY PAGES] Underlinked pages: [UNDERLINKED PAGES] Commercial pages: [COMMERCIAL PAGES] Content summaries: [SUMMARIES] Business priorities: [PRIORITIES] Build the system: A. Source page discovery Find pages that can provide links based on: - topical relevance - traffic - authority - user journey - funnel stage - existing section context - freshness - content depth B. Destination page prioritization Prioritize pages that need links based on: - business value - ranking opportunity - underlinking - conversion potential - cluster importance - content quality readiness C. Link recommendation format For every link recommendation include: - source URL - destination URL - suggested section - suggested sentence context - anchor text options - user reason - SEO reason - priority - confidence level D. Anchor safety system Create rules for: - exact-match anchors - partial-match anchors - descriptive anchors - branded anchors - benefit-led anchors - anchors to avoid - variation requirements E. QA and maintenance Create: - review checklist - duplicate link detection - broken link checks - anchor overuse checks - monthly refresh workflow - reporting metrics Rules: - Do not suggest irrelevant links only because a page is high authority. - Do not overuse exact-match anchors. - Do not place links where they interrupt the reader. - Every internal link must help the reader and support site architecture. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#248AI Content Refresh Automation Planner

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONContent decay recovery, blog refreshes, SEO maintenance, editorial calendars, content teams, and performance optimization.

Create a workflow for identifying, briefing, updating, QA-checking, and republishing decaying SEO content with AI assistance.

Act as an AI content refresh operations manager. Build a system for refreshing existing SEO pages efficiently and safely. Inputs: Content inventory: [CONTENT INVENTORY] Traffic trends: [TRAFFIC TRENDS] GSC data: [GSC DATA] Ranking data: [RANKINGS] Conversion data: [CONVERSIONS] Last updated dates: [DATES] SERP changes: [SERP NOTES] Competitor pages: [COMPETITORS] Brand voice: [VOICE] Content standards: [STANDARDS] Publishing capacity: [CAPACITY] Build the refresh workflow: 1. Detection Use AI to flag pages with: - traffic decline - click decline - impression growth but low CTR - ranking decline - outdated information - missing sections - weak metadata - poor conversion performance - cannibalization risk - internal link gaps 2. Prioritization Score pages by: - traffic loss - business value - conversion opportunity - ranking opportunity - refresh effort - content freshness need - risk - confidence 3. Refresh brief For each priority page generate: - what to keep - what to remove - what to update - what to add - sections to rewrite - FAQs to add - sources to verify - internal links to add - metadata tests - CTA improvements 4. QA workflow Create checks for: - factual accuracy - source freshness - search intent match - brand voice - duplicate content - keyword stuffing - broken links - formatting - final publish readiness 5. Monitoring Define: - review date - metrics to track - expected lag - success criteria - rollback or second update trigger Rules: - Do not rewrite pages only because they are old. - Do not remove high-performing sections without evidence. - Do not invent updated facts. - AI can speed up refresh planning, but humans must verify accuracy. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#249AI Competitive SEO Intelligence System

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONCompetitive SEO, agencies, SaaS, ecommerce, content strategy, market monitoring, and quarterly SEO planning.

Create a repeatable AI workflow for monitoring competitors, detecting content gaps, SERP movements, backlink patterns, technical changes, and strategic opportunities.

You are an AI competitive SEO intelligence analyst. Build a monitoring system that turns competitor SEO changes into useful strategic actions. Context: My website: [MY WEBSITE] Competitors: [COMPETITORS] Target topics: [TOPICS] Target keywords: [KEYWORDS] Target markets: [MARKETS] My current rankings: [MY RANKINGS] Competitor rankings: [COMPETITOR RANKINGS] Competitor pages: [COMPETITOR PAGES] Backlink data: [BACKLINK DATA] Content publishing data: [CONTENT DATA] Technical observations: [TECH OBSERVATIONS] Business goals: [GOALS] Design the intelligence system: A. Monitoring categories Track competitor changes in: - new pages - updated pages - ranking gains - ranking losses - new keyword coverage - content hubs - internal linking - title/meta changes - schema - backlink growth - digital PR campaigns - product or pricing pages - local or ecommerce visibility, if relevant B. Signal classification Classify each competitor observation as: - strategic threat - content opportunity - keyword gap - SERP intent shift - authority signal - technical signal - UX or CRO signal - noise - needs manual review C. Opportunity extraction For each useful signal provide: - what changed - why it matters - evidence - action we should take - priority - effort - expected upside - confidence D. Reporting cadence Create: - weekly competitor pulse - monthly opportunity report - quarterly strategic review - alert triggers - owner assignments E. Output templates Provide: - competitor change log - opportunity backlog - executive summary - content team brief - technical team brief Rules: - Do not copy competitors blindly. - Do not assume competitor activity is working without performance evidence. - Do not overreact to small SERP movements. - Use [NEEDS MANUAL REVIEW] where evidence is incomplete. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#250AI SEO Reporting Automation Builder

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONMonthly reports, agency reporting, executive dashboards, SEO operations, client updates, and recurring performance communication.

Automate SEO reporting workflows that summarize data, explain changes, surface risks, and produce stakeholder-specific updates.

Act as an AI SEO reporting automation architect. Design a workflow that turns SEO data into accurate, useful reports for different stakeholders. Reporting context: Website: [WEBSITE] Reporting cadence: [CADENCE] Stakeholders: [STAKEHOLDERS] SEO goals: [SEO GOALS] Business goals: [BUSINESS GOALS] Data sources: [DATA SOURCES] Dashboard links or exports: [DASHBOARDS / EXPORTS] Organic traffic data: [TRAFFIC DATA] Ranking data: [RANKING DATA] Conversion data: [CONVERSION DATA] Content data: [CONTENT DATA] Technical data: [TECHNICAL DATA] Authority data: [AUTHORITY DATA] Known data issues: [DATA ISSUES] Build the reporting automation: 1. Data intake workflow Define: - required exports - required date ranges - required filters - naming conventions - data validation checks - missing data handling - anomaly detection 2. AI analysis workflow Use AI to generate: - traffic summary - ranking summary - conversion summary - content performance summary - technical issue summary - risks - opportunities - likely causes - next actions 3. Stakeholder-specific reports Create report formats for: - executives - SEO team - content team - developers - clients - revenue team 4. Accuracy safeguards Add checks for: - branded vs non-branded separation - tracking errors - missing conversion data - misleading averages - unsupported causation - seasonality - algorithm uncertainty 5. Final outputs Create: - report template - summary prompt - QA checklist - human approval gate - recurring task checklist - reporting calendar Rules: - Do not let AI invent reasons for performance changes. - Do not report metrics without context or action. - Do not send automated reports without human review. - Reports should be faster to produce and easier to trust. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#251AI SEO QA Checklist Generator

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONSEO teams, content teams, developers, agencies, publishing operations, and quality control systems.

Generate quality assurance checklists for SEO content, metadata, technical fixes, redirects, schema, internal links, and publishing workflows.

You are an SEO quality assurance system builder. Create a custom QA checklist for the workflow below. Workflow to QA: [DESCRIBE WORKFLOW] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Page type: [PAGE TYPE] SEO objective: [OBJECTIVE] Team involved: [TEAM] CMS or platform: [CMS] Brand standards: [BRAND STANDARDS] Technical requirements: [TECH REQUIREMENTS] Compliance risks: [COMPLIANCE] Approval process: [APPROVAL PROCESS] Known recurring mistakes: [MISTAKES] Create the QA system: A. Pre-work checklist Include checks before work begins: - strategy clarity - keyword target - search intent - page role - source data - stakeholder alignment - risk review B. Production checklist Include checks during creation or implementation: - structure - metadata - headings - internal links - external links - schema - media - page speed - accessibility - factual accuracy - brand voice - conversion path C. Pre-publish checklist Include checks before launch: - indexability - canonical tag - URL - title and meta - mobile view - internal links - broken links - tracking - schema validation - legal/compliance review - final human review D. Post-publish checklist Include: - crawl verification - indexation check - analytics check - GSC monitoring - ranking baseline - conversion tracking - issue log - review date E. Output Provide: - pass/fail checklist - owner for each step - tools needed - escalation triggers - documentation template Rules: - Do not create a generic checklist. - Do not skip human review for factual or compliance-sensitive content. - Do not approve SEO changes without tracking and monitoring. - QA should prevent errors before they reach users or search engines. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#252AI Programmatic SEO Workflow Designer

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONMarketplaces, SaaS directories, ecommerce, location pages, comparison pages, templates, databases, and scalable SEO projects.

Design a safe programmatic SEO workflow for generating scalable pages while avoiding thin content, duplicate pages, index bloat, and low-value automation.

Act as a programmatic SEO workflow designer. Create a scalable page generation system that uses AI responsibly and avoids low-quality page bloat. Project context: Website: [WEBSITE] Programmatic page idea: [PAGE IDEA] Data source: [DATA SOURCE] Page variables: [VARIABLES] Target keyword patterns: [KEYWORD PATTERNS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Business goal: [GOAL] Existing templates: [TEMPLATES] CMS or platform: [CMS] Content uniqueness sources: [UNIQUENESS SOURCES] Indexation strategy: [INDEXATION] Risk tolerance: [RISK] Design the workflow: 1. Page eligibility rules Define when a page deserves to exist based on: - search demand - unique data - user value - business relevance - conversion path - available proof - sufficient content depth - non-duplicate intent 2. Template architecture Create: - page sections - dynamic fields - static editorial guidance - unique data blocks - FAQ logic - comparison logic - internal links - CTA logic - schema fields 3. AI generation process Define what AI can generate: - summaries - explanations - comparisons - metadata - FAQs - intro variations - internal link suggestions Define what humans or data systems must verify: - facts - prices - locations - product specs - rankings - compliance claims - availability 4. Indexation controls Create rules for: - index - noindex - canonical - block from crawl - include in sitemap - exclude from sitemap - merge or remove 5. QA and monitoring Create: - sample review process - duplicate detection - quality scoring - crawl monitoring - indexation monitoring - traffic monitoring - pruning criteria Rules: - Do not generate pages only by swapping keywords. - Do not index pages without unique value. - Do not use AI to fabricate data. - Programmatic SEO should scale usefulness, not thin content. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#253AI SEO SOP and Documentation Generator

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONAgencies, in-house SEO teams, content operations, freelancers, and businesses building SEO process documentation.

Create reusable SOPs for AI-assisted SEO workflows so research, briefs, audits, publishing, QA, reporting, and maintenance become repeatable.

You are an SEO operations documentation specialist. Turn this workflow into a clear SOP that a team member can follow reliably. Workflow: [WORKFLOW NAME] Context: Team: [TEAM] Tools used: [TOOLS] Inputs required: [INPUTS] Outputs required: [OUTPUTS] Quality standards: [STANDARDS] Approval process: [APPROVAL] Common mistakes: [MISTAKES] Risk areas: [RISKS] Frequency: [FREQUENCY] Owner: [OWNER] Create the SOP: 1. SOP overview Include: - purpose - when to use it - who owns it - expected output - time required - tools required - required permissions 2. Step-by-step process For each step include: - action - input needed - AI prompt or instruction - human review requirement - output format - quality standard - common failure 3. Templates Create: - input template - AI prompt template - output template - QA checklist - approval checklist - issue log 4. Exceptions Explain what to do when: - data is missing - AI output is low quality - facts cannot be verified - stakeholder feedback conflicts - technical implementation is blocked - timeline slips 5. Maintenance Define: - review cadence - version control - owner - improvement log - success metrics Rules: - Do not make the SOP vague. - Do not let AI steps replace human accountability. - Do not omit QA gates. - The SOP should be practical enough for a new team member to execute. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#254AI SEO Task Prioritization and Roadmap Assistant

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONSEO planning, sprint planning, agency deliverables, backlog management, and deciding what to do next.

Use AI to turn SEO audits, keyword opportunities, content ideas, technical fixes, and reporting insights into a prioritized roadmap.

Act as an SEO roadmap prioritization assistant. Turn this messy SEO backlog into a clear execution plan. Backlog: [PASTE SEO TASKS / IDEAS / AUDIT FINDINGS] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business goals: [GOALS] SEO goals: [SEO GOALS] Team capacity: [CAPACITY] Available resources: [RESOURCES] Technical constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Content constraints: [CONTENT CONSTRAINTS] Revenue priorities: [REVENUE PRIORITIES] Current performance: [PERFORMANCE] Deadline or planning period: [PERIOD] Prioritize the roadmap: A. Clean the backlog Classify tasks into: - strategy - content creation - content refresh - technical SEO - internal linking - authority building - analytics/reporting - conversion optimization - local SEO - ecommerce SEO - automation - low-value or duplicate tasks B. Score each task Score by: - business impact - SEO impact - urgency - effort - dependency - confidence - risk reduction - time to impact - strategic alignment C. Build execution buckets Create: - do now - schedule next - delegate - investigate - automate - monitor - reject - revisit later D. Roadmap Create: - first 7 days - first 30 days - first 90 days - quarterly priorities - owners - dependencies - expected outcomes - metrics E. Decision explanation Write: - why these priorities matter - what is not being prioritized - tradeoffs - risks - data gaps Rules: - Do not prioritize tasks only because they are easy. - Do not ignore technical blockers. - Do not create a roadmap without owners and metrics. - The output should turn SEO confusion into focused execution. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#255AI Schema and Structured Data Workflow

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONTechnical SEO, ecommerce, SaaS, local SEO, content sites, recipe sites, reviews, FAQs, product pages, and developer handoffs.

Build an AI-assisted workflow for identifying schema opportunities, drafting structured data requirements, validating eligibility, and creating developer-ready specs.

You are an AI structured data workflow specialist. Create a schema planning and QA system for my website. Website context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business type: [BUSINESS TYPE] Page types: [PAGE TYPES] Current schema: [CURRENT SCHEMA] CMS or platform: [CMS] Important templates: [TEMPLATES] Content fields available: [FIELDS] Product or service data: [DATA] Review data: [REVIEWS] FAQ content: [FAQS] Technical constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Build the schema workflow: 1. Opportunity scan Identify schema opportunities for: - Organization - WebSite - BreadcrumbList - Article - FAQPage - Product - Review or AggregateRating - LocalBusiness - Service - SoftwareApplication - HowTo, where eligible - Event, where relevant - VideoObject - JobPosting, where relevant 2. Eligibility check For each schema type confirm: - visible content exists - required fields are available - data is accurate - page type is eligible - policy risks are low - structured data matches page content 3. AI-assisted spec Create for each template: - schema type - required properties - recommended properties - dynamic fields - fallback rules - examples - validation steps - developer notes 4. QA system Create checks for: - rich result validation - schema markup errors - missing fields - conflicting schema - hidden content mismatch - duplicate markup - post-launch monitoring 5. Documentation Provide: - implementation brief - developer ticket template - CMS field requirements - maintenance rules - ownership model Rules: - Do not mark up content that is not visible to users. - Do not create fake reviews or ratings. - Do not use schema as a substitute for useful content. - Use [NEEDS DEV REVIEW] for technical implementation details. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#256AI SEO Data Cleaning and Normalization Workflow

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONKeyword exports, crawl data, GSC exports, GA4 landing pages, backlink exports, content inventories, and reporting automation.

Clean, normalize, label, and prepare SEO datasets for AI analysis so reports, clustering, audits, and decisions are more accurate.

Act as an SEO data operations specialist. Create a data cleaning workflow that prepares messy SEO exports for accurate AI analysis. Dataset: [PASTE DATASET OR DESCRIBE EXPORT] Data source: [DATA SOURCE] Expected analysis: [ANALYSIS GOAL] Website: [WEBSITE] Important fields: [FIELDS] Known data issues: [ISSUES] Date range: [DATE RANGE] Business rules: [BUSINESS RULES] Output needed: [OUTPUT] Clean and normalize the data: A. Data validation Check for: - missing fields - duplicate rows - inconsistent URLs - mixed protocols - trailing slash inconsistencies - uppercase/lowercase inconsistencies - tracking parameters - wrong date formats - mixed metrics - empty values - outliers - bot or spam patterns B. Normalization rules Create rules for: - URL canonical format - keyword casing - date formatting - page type labels - topic labels - intent labels - branded vs non-branded labels - country/device segmentation - conversion definitions C. Enrichment Add useful fields: - page type - topic cluster - funnel stage - business priority - owner - status - last updated date - target keyword - content format - risk flag D. QA Create checks for: - row counts before/after - removed data - merged data - assumptions - unknown values - confidence level - manual review fields E. Output Provide: - cleaned data schema - transformation rules - labeling rules - QA checklist - analysis-ready output format Rules: - Do not silently delete data. - Do not merge URLs without clear canonical rules. - Do not mix data sources without documenting definitions. - Clean data should make AI analysis more reliable, not just prettier. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#257AI SEO Assistant Role Designer

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONSEO teams building custom GPTs, AI agents, internal assistants, agency workflows, content teams, and marketing operations.

Design specialized AI assistants for different SEO workflows with clear roles, inputs, outputs, boundaries, quality standards, and escalation rules.

You are an AI assistant architect for SEO teams. Design specialized AI assistants that help with SEO work while staying inside safe operating boundaries. Team context: Organization: [ORGANIZATION] Website: [WEBSITE] SEO workflows: [WORKFLOWS] Team roles: [TEAM ROLES] Tools available: [TOOLS] Data access: [DATA ACCESS] Content standards: [STANDARDS] Compliance requirements: [COMPLIANCE] Approval process: [APPROVAL] Main bottlenecks: [BOTTLENECKS] Design the assistant system: 1. Assistant roster Create assistants for: - keyword research - SERP analysis - content briefs - metadata - technical SEO triage - internal linking - content refresh - reporting - competitor monitoring - QA and publishing 2. Role cards For each assistant define: - purpose - when to use - inputs required - output format - quality criteria - forbidden actions - escalation triggers - human reviewer - example prompt 3. Knowledge requirements Define what each assistant needs: - brand guidelines - SEO strategy - page inventory - keyword lists - content standards - technical rules - product information - compliance notes - examples of good output 4. Safety and QA Create rules for: - hallucination prevention - source verification - factual claims - technical recommendations - publication approval - data privacy - access control - versioning 5. Rollout plan Create: - build sequence - testing process - evaluation rubric - user training plan - feedback loop - improvement cadence Rules: - Do not give AI assistants authority to publish without review. - Do not let assistants use outdated product or pricing data. - Do not create assistants without clear input and output standards. - Each assistant should reduce workload without increasing risk. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#258AI SEO Prompt Library Builder

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONSEO teams, agencies, founders, content teams, and anyone creating a repeatable prompt system for SEO execution.

Build a reusable SEO prompt library organized by workflow, input type, output type, quality control, and team role.

Act as an SEO prompt library curator. Build a reusable prompt library for my SEO workflows. Context: Website or brand: [WEBSITE / BRAND] SEO workflows: [WORKFLOWS] Team users: [USERS] Skill levels: [SKILL LEVELS] Tools: [TOOLS] Brand voice: [VOICE] SEO standards: [STANDARDS] Common tasks: [TASKS] Common mistakes: [MISTAKES] Output formats preferred: [FORMATS] Create the prompt library: A. Library structure Organize prompts by: - strategy - keyword research - clustering - SERP analysis - content briefs - metadata - on-page optimization - technical SEO - internal linking - reporting - content refresh - competitor analysis - QA - automation B. Prompt template format For every prompt include: - title - purpose - best for - required inputs - prompt text - output format - quality checklist - human review notes - example use case C. Reusable variables Create standard variables for: - website - audience - offer - keyword - search intent - page type - competitor - brand voice - data source - constraints - output format D. Governance Define: - naming conventions - version control - prompt testing process - owner - update cadence - retirement criteria E. Starter pack Generate 15 priority prompts the team should create first and explain why. Rules: - Do not create prompts that assume missing data. - Do not create prompts with vague outputs. - Do not let prompt quality depend on one expert's memory. - The library should make SEO execution faster, repeatable, and easier to train. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#259AI SEO Workflow Risk and Accuracy Auditor

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONAI governance, SEO QA, agencies, in-house teams, content operations, technical SEO workflows, and risk-sensitive industries.

Audit AI-assisted SEO workflows for hallucinations, weak sources, duplicated content, compliance risks, technical mistakes, automation overreach, and quality gaps.

You are an AI SEO risk auditor. Review this AI-assisted SEO workflow and identify where it could create inaccurate, low-quality, risky, or misleading output. Workflow: [DESCRIBE AI SEO WORKFLOW] Inputs used: [INPUTS] Outputs produced: [OUTPUTS] Context: Website: [WEBSITE] Industry: [INDUSTRY] Content type: [CONTENT TYPE] SEO goal: [GOAL] Tools used: [TOOLS] Human review process: [REVIEW PROCESS] Compliance requirements: [COMPLIANCE] Known risks: [RISKS] Audit the workflow: 1. Risk map Identify risks related to: - hallucinated facts - outdated information - invented sources - weak source quality - duplicated content - keyword stuffing - search intent mismatch - brand voice drift - technical SEO errors - schema misuse - internal link irrelevance - over-automation - privacy or data exposure - compliance claims - unsupported competitive claims 2. Severity scoring For each risk score: - likelihood - impact - detectability - affected workflow stage - owner - urgency 3. Control design Recommend controls such as: - source requirements - fact-check gates - human review - automated QA - plagiarism checks - SERP review - technical validation - compliance approval - sample audits - rollback plans 4. Workflow redesign Rewrite the workflow with: - safer AI role - clearer inputs - better output format - review gates - escalation triggers - documentation requirements 5. Final risk policy Create: - AI use rules - forbidden uses - approval matrix - QA checklist - audit cadence - incident response plan Rules: - Do not assume AI output is accurate. - Do not remove all automation; improve controls. - Do not publish or implement high-risk SEO changes without human verification. - The goal is faster SEO work with lower risk, not blind automation. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#260Full AI SEO Workflows and Automation Audit

AI SEO WORKFLOWS & AUTOMATIONComplete AI SEO operations, agencies, in-house teams, startups, enterprise SEO teams, workflow audits, and building scalable SEO execution systems.

Audit and redesign the complete AI SEO system across research, clustering, briefs, technical audits, metadata, internal links, reporting, refreshes, competitive analysis, SOPs, QA, governance, and automation.

Act as an independent AI SEO workflows and automation auditor. Review my current SEO operations and create a complete AI-assisted workflow roadmap that improves speed, accuracy, quality, and execution. Full context: Website: [WEBSITE] Business model: [BUSINESS MODEL] Main offer: [OFFER] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] SEO goals: [SEO GOALS] Current SEO strategy: [STRATEGY] Current team: [TEAM] Current tools: [TOOLS] Current AI tools: [AI TOOLS] Current data sources: [DATA SOURCES] Current keyword workflow: [KEYWORD WORKFLOW] Current content workflow: [CONTENT WORKFLOW] Current technical SEO workflow: [TECHNICAL WORKFLOW] Current internal linking workflow: [INTERNAL LINKING WORKFLOW] Current reporting workflow: [REPORTING WORKFLOW] Current content refresh workflow: [REFRESH WORKFLOW] Current competitor analysis workflow: [COMPETITOR WORKFLOW] Current SOPs: [SOPS] Current QA process: [QA] Compliance requirements: [COMPLIANCE] Known workflow bottlenecks: [BOTTLENECKS] Known quality problems: [QUALITY PROBLEMS] Automation ideas: [AUTOMATION IDEAS] Budget and capacity: [BUDGET / CAPACITY] Risk tolerance: [RISK TOLERANCE] Audit across 40 dimensions: 1. SEO workflow clarity 2. AI tool selection 3. Data source quality 4. Keyword research automation 5. Keyword clustering automation 6. SERP research support 7. Search intent analysis 8. Competitor analysis workflow 9. Content brief generation 10. Content outline generation 11. Metadata generation 12. On-page optimization support 13. Content draft support 14. Content refresh workflow 15. Content QA process 16. Source and fact verification 17. Brand voice control 18. Duplicate content prevention 19. Internal linking recommendations 20. Anchor text controls 21. Technical SEO triage 22. Developer ticket generation 23. Schema planning workflow 24. Programmatic SEO safeguards 25. Reporting automation 26. Forecasting support 27. Alerting and anomaly detection 28. Dashboard narrative generation 29. SEO task prioritization 30. SOP documentation 31. Prompt library quality 32. AI assistant role design 33. Human approval gates 34. Compliance review 35. Data privacy 36. Version control 37. Team training 38. Measurement of AI impact 39. Risk monitoring 40. Overall AI SEO maturity For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from my context - automation opportunity - quality risk - recommended fix - priority - effort - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Hard truth Explain the biggest weakness in the current AI SEO workflow. B. AI SEO strategy Define: - where AI should create the most leverage - where AI should only assist - where AI should not be used - which workflows should be automated first - which workflows need stronger human review C. Workflow roadmap Create: - first 24-hour fixes - first 7-day setup - first 30-day workflow rollout - first 90-day automation roadmap - 6-month AI SEO operating system vision - owners - dependencies - tools - QA gates D. Automation backlog Create: - top 10 AI workflow automations - top 10 prompt templates to build - top 10 SOPs to document - top 10 QA checks to add - top 10 manual tasks that should stay manual E. Governance system Define: - AI use policy - source verification rules - review and approval matrix - data privacy rules - compliance triggers - incident response process - prompt version control - output evaluation rubric F. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - fastest AI SEO win - highest-risk automation - first workflow to systemize - first prompt library to build - first QA gate to add - first reporting automation to create - first team training need - one operating principle for AI SEO workflows and automation Rules: - Do not recommend full automation where accuracy, compliance, or strategic judgment is required. - Do not publish AI-generated SEO content without review. - Do not fabricate sources, facts, data, or competitor insights. - Do not optimize for speed alone. - Use [NEEDS DATA], [NEEDS HUMAN REVIEW], [NEEDS SOURCE], or [NEEDS DEV REVIEW] where required. - The final roadmap should make SEO execution faster, safer, more consistent, and easier to manage.

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