Clawfu-skills seo-content-writer
Write search-optimized content that ranks on Google using proven frameworks from Ahrefs, Moz, and Google's E-E-A-T guidelines—create helpful, people-first content that satisfies both search engines and readers. Use when: **Write blog posts** optimized for search engines; **Create pillar content** for topical authority; **Optimize existing content** for better rankings; **Write product or service pages** that rank; **Create how-to guides** and tutorials
git clone https://github.com/guia-matthieu/clawfu-skills
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/guia-matthieu/clawfu-skills "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/content/seo-content-writer" ~/.claude/skills/guia-matthieu-clawfu-skills-seo-content-writer && rm -rf "$T"
skills/content/seo-content-writer/SKILL.mdSEO Content Writer
Write search-optimized content that ranks on Google using proven frameworks from Ahrefs, Moz, and Google's E-E-A-T guidelines—create helpful, people-first content that satisfies both search engines and readers.
When to Use This Skill
Use this skill when you need to:
- Write blog posts optimized for search engines
- Create pillar content for topical authority
- Optimize existing content for better rankings
- Write product or service pages that rank
- Create how-to guides and tutorials
- Develop content briefs for writers
- Audit content for E-E-A-T compliance
- Build topical clusters around key themes
This skill is particularly valuable for:
- Content marketers creating SEO-driven content
- Bloggers wanting organic traffic
- SaaS companies building content marketing engines
- E-commerce sites needing category and product content
- Agencies producing client content at scale
- Anyone who wants their content to be found on Google
Methodology Foundation
Sources:
- Ahrefs - "SEO Writing: 8 Steps to Create Search-Optimized Content"
- Google Search Quality Rater Guidelines (E-E-A-T framework)
- Moz SEO Learning Center
Core Principle: SEO writing is about creating the best possible answer to a given query, presented in a way that's easily understood and skimmable, while demonstrating Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness.
"Great writing should feel hard. If you can crank out an article by opening a few browser tabs, so can everyone else. But interview someone, read a book, find an esoteric research paper, or collect some data… and your willingness to do something difficult gives you an edge." — Ryan Law, Ahrefs
What Claude Does vs What You Decide
| Claude Does | You Decide |
|---|---|
| Structures production workflow | Final creative direction |
| Suggests technical approaches | Equipment and tool choices |
| Creates templates and checklists | Quality standards |
| Identifies best practices | Brand/voice decisions |
| Generates script outlines | Final script approval |
What This Skill Does
When invoked, I will guide you through the complete SEO content writing process:
- Research the keyword opportunity - Find topics worth writing about
- Analyze search intent - Understand what searchers really want
- Plan for E-E-A-T - Build expertise and trust signals
- Create a comprehensive outline - Structure for both users and search engines
- Write optimized content - Balance readability with SEO best practices
- Optimize on-page elements - Title tags, meta descriptions, headers
- Add internal links - Connect to your content ecosystem
- Review for quality signals - Final E-E-A-T checklist
How to Use
Provide information about the content you want to create:
Example prompts:
- "Write an SEO-optimized article about [topic]"
- "Create a content brief for [keyword]"
- "Optimize this existing content for search: [paste content]"
- "Help me structure a pillar page for [topic]"
- "Analyze this keyword and suggest a content approach"
- "Review this content for E-E-A-T compliance"
Information that helps:
- Target keyword(s)
- Your website/business context
- Target audience
- Existing content on the topic (yours or competitors')
- Any unique expertise or data you have
- Word count expectations
- Content type (blog post, guide, pillar page, etc.)
Instructions
Phase 1: Keyword Research & Opportunity Assessment
Finding Keywords Worth Targeting
Before writing, ensure people are actually searching for your topic.
Keyword evaluation criteria:
| Factor | What to Look For |
|---|---|
| Search volume | Monthly searches (varies by niche) |
| Keyword difficulty | Can you realistically rank? |
| Business relevance | Does it connect to your offering? |
| Search intent match | Can you satisfy what searchers want? |
| Traffic potential | Total opportunity including related terms |
Quick Keyword Qualification
Ask these questions:
- Does this keyword have search volume?
- Can I create content better than what currently ranks?
- Will this traffic benefit my business?
- Do I have (or can I develop) expertise on this topic?
Phase 2: Search Intent Analysis
Understanding What Searchers Want
Search intent is the "why" behind a query. Misaligning with intent means you won't rank, regardless of content quality.
The Four Types of Search Intent:
| Intent | User Goal | Content Format |
|---|---|---|
| Informational | Learn something | Blog posts, guides, how-tos |
| Navigational | Find a specific page | Brand pages, homepage |
| Commercial | Research before buying | Comparisons, reviews, "best of" |
| Transactional | Make a purchase | Product pages, pricing pages |
How to Analyze Intent
- Google the keyword - Look at what currently ranks
- Identify the dominant format - Listicle? Guide? Video?
- Note common elements - What do all top results include?
- Find the content gap - What's missing?
Intent alignment checklist:
- Does my content format match top results?
- Am I answering the same core question?
- Do I cover the same subtopics?
- Am I at the same depth level?
Phase 3: E-E-A-T Planning
Building Trust Signals Into Your Content
Google evaluates content on four dimensions:
| Component | Definition | How to Demonstrate |
|---|---|---|
| Experience | First-hand involvement with topic | Personal stories, original photos, case studies |
| Expertise | Knowledge and skill in the field | Credentials, detailed explanations, accuracy |
| Authoritativeness | Recognition as a leading source | Backlinks, mentions, awards, industry presence |
| Trustworthiness | Accuracy, honesty, reliability | Citations, transparency, updated info, reviews |
E-E-A-T Content Tactics
For Experience:
- Include personal anecdotes relevant to the topic
- Use original images and screenshots
- Reference specific situations you've encountered
- Share results you've personally achieved
For Expertise:
- Add detailed author bio with credentials
- Include "Reviewed by" expert validation for YMYL topics
- Cite specific data, studies, and sources
- Demonstrate deep understanding (not surface-level)
For Authoritativeness:
- Link to and cite authoritative sources
- Reference your own original research
- Mention relevant credentials or experience
- Include expert quotes or interviews
For Trustworthiness:
- Provide accurate, fact-checked information
- Update content when information changes
- Be transparent about limitations or caveats
- Include proper citations and references
Phase 4: Content Outline Creation
Building a Comprehensive Structure
Your outline should include:
- Working title (optimize later)
- Target keyword and related keywords
- Search intent summary
- Unique angle (what makes your content different)
- H2 sections covering all subtopics searchers expect
- H3 subsections for detailed breakdowns
- Key points to cover in each section
- Original elements (data, examples, case studies)
Finding Subtopics to Cover
Comprehensive content covers what searchers expect. Find subtopics by:
- Analyzing competitor content - What do top pages include?
- Reviewing "People Also Ask" - Common questions to answer
- Checking related searches - Additional angles to cover
- Using content gap analysis - Keywords competitors rank for
Outline Template
# [Working Title with Keyword] Target Keyword: [primary keyword] Secondary Keywords: [list 3-5] Search Intent: [informational/commercial/etc.] Unique Angle: [what makes this different] ## Introduction - Hook - Problem/opportunity statement - What reader will learn - [Establish expertise/experience] ## H2: [First Major Section] ### H3: [Subsection] - Key points - Example or data ### H3: [Subsection] - Key points ## H2: [Second Major Section] [continue pattern] ## H2: Examples / Case Studies - Real-world application 1 - Real-world application 2 ## H2: Common Mistakes / FAQs - Address common questions ## Conclusion - Summary - Next steps / CTA
Phase 5: Writing Optimized Content
The Writing Process
Step 1: First Draft Write freely without perfectionism. Focus on:
- Getting all ideas out
- Following your outline
- Maintaining your unique angle
Step 2: Optimization Pass Ensure SEO elements are in place:
- Primary keyword in first 100 words
- Keywords used naturally throughout
- Proper header structure (H1 → H2 → H3)
- Sufficient depth on each section
Step 3: Readability Pass Make content easy to consume:
- Short paragraphs (2-4 sentences)
- Bullet points and numbered lists
- Tables for comparing information
- Visual breaks every 300-400 words
Writing Best Practices
| Do This | Avoid This |
|---|---|
| Write in active voice | Passive constructions |
| Use "you" directly | Third-person distance |
| Break up long sections | Walls of text |
| Include specific examples | Vague generalizations |
| Define technical terms | Unexplained jargon |
| Show, don't just tell | Abstract claims without proof |
Content Quality Checklist
- Does it fully answer the searcher's question?
- Is it more comprehensive than competitors?
- Does it include original insights or data?
- Is the information accurate and current?
- Would an expert approve of this content?
- Is it actually helpful to the reader?
Phase 6: On-Page Optimization
Title Tag
The most important on-page element.
Best practices:
- Include primary keyword (preferably near the beginning)
- Keep under 60 characters
- Make it compelling (not just keyword-stuffed)
- Match search intent
- Stand out from competitors
Title tag formulas:
[Number] [Adjective] Ways to [Desired Outcome] How to [Achieve Result] in [Timeframe] [Topic]: The Complete Guide for [Year] [Topic] vs [Topic]: [Angle] What Is [Topic]? [Benefit or Hook]
Meta Description
Doesn't directly impact rankings but affects click-through rate.
Best practices:
- Stay under 155-160 characters
- Include primary keyword naturally
- Add a call-to-action
- Expand on the title (don't repeat it)
- Address the searcher directly
Meta description template:
Learn [what they'll learn]. This guide covers [key topics] to help you [achieve outcome]. [CTA like "Read more" or "Get started"].
Header Structure
Proper header hierarchy helps both users and Google understand your content.
H1: Main Title (only one per page) H2: Major Section 1 H3: Subsection H3: Subsection H2: Major Section 2 H3: Subsection H2: Major Section 3
Header tips:
- Include keywords naturally (not forced)
- Make headers descriptive and specific
- Use headers to enable scanning
- Front-load important words
URL Structure
- Keep short and descriptive
- Include primary keyword
- Use hyphens between words
- Avoid dates (unless news content)
- Remove unnecessary words (a, the, and)
Good:
/seo-content-writing-guide/
Bad: /2024/01/15/the-ultimate-guide-to-writing-seo-content-for-your-blog/
Phase 7: Internal Linking
Why Internal Links Matter
- Help Google discover and understand new pages
- Pass link equity to important pages
- Keep users engaged on your site
- Build topical clusters
Internal Linking Best Practices
| Do | Don't |
|---|---|
| Link from relevant context | Force unnatural links |
| Use descriptive anchor text | Use "click here" |
| Link to related content | Link to random pages |
| Update old posts with links to new | Forget about older content |
| Prioritize important pages | Spread links equally |
After Publishing Checklist
- Add internal links from existing relevant content
- Link to related posts within the new content
- Update pillar pages to reference new content
- Check that important pages have sufficient internal links
Phase 8: E-E-A-T Review
Final Quality Check
Before publishing, verify:
Experience signals:
- Personal experience or case studies included
- Original images/screenshots where relevant
- Specific examples from real situations
Expertise signals:
- Author bio with relevant credentials
- Accurate, well-researched information
- Appropriate depth for the topic
Authority signals:
- Cites authoritative external sources
- Links to supporting evidence
- Positions author/brand as knowledgeable
Trust signals:
- Information is current and accurate
- Sources are properly cited
- No misleading claims
- Clear about any limitations or caveats
Examples
Example 1: B2B SaaS Blog Post
Context: Writing a blog post for a project management SaaS targeting "project management best practices"
Keyword Analysis:
- Primary: "project management best practices"
- Secondary: "project management tips," "how to manage projects effectively"
- Intent: Informational (people want to learn techniques)
- Difficulty: Medium-high (competitive but achievable)
E-E-A-T Approach:
- Experience: Include examples from real projects the team has managed
- Expertise: Author is a PMP-certified project manager with 10+ years experience
- Authority: Reference PMI standards and cite recognized methodologies
- Trust: Include data from industry studies, link to authoritative sources
Outline:
# 15 Project Management Best Practices That Actually Work [2024] ## Introduction - Hook: Why most projects fail (cite statistic) - Promise: Practices that prevent failure ## What Makes a Practice "Best"? - Evidence-based effectiveness - Scalability across project types ## H2: Planning Best Practices ### Define clear objectives with SMART goals ### Create a realistic timeline with buffers ### Identify risks before they become problems ## H2: Execution Best Practices ### Daily standups that don't waste time ### Document decisions, not just tasks ### Build in regular check-ins ## H2: Team Management Best Practices ### Match tasks to strengths ### Create psychological safety ### Celebrate small wins ## H2: Tools and Systems Best Practices ### Choose tools that match your workflow ### Automate repetitive tasks ### Maintain a single source of truth ## H2: Case Study: How [Company] Reduced Project Delays by 40% - Real example with specific results ## H2: Common Mistakes to Avoid - Planning paralysis - Skipping stakeholder alignment - Ignoring early warning signs ## Conclusion - Summary of key practices - CTA: Try our project management tool
On-Page Optimization:
- Title: "15 Project Management Best Practices That Actually Work [2024]"
- Meta: "Discover proven project management best practices from PMP experts. Learn planning, execution, and team management techniques that reduce delays and improve outcomes."
- URL:
/project-management-best-practices/
Example 2: E-Commerce Category Page
Context: Writing SEO content for a category page selling running shoes
Keyword Analysis:
- Primary: "best running shoes"
- Secondary: "running shoes for beginners," "cushioned running shoes"
- Intent: Commercial (researching before buying)
- Format needed: Buyer's guide with product recommendations
E-E-A-T Approach:
- Experience: Staff have tested shoes; include first-hand impressions
- Expertise: Partner with a podiatrist or running coach for expert input
- Authority: Link to running publications, shoe testing methodology
- Trust: Honest pros/cons, clear affiliate disclosure, real customer reviews
Content Structure:
# Best Running Shoes of 2024: Tested by Runners ## Quick Picks: Our Top Recommendations [Table with top picks by category] ## How We Test Running Shoes - Miles run in each shoe - Testing on different surfaces - Runner profile (foot type, experience) ## Best Overall: [Shoe Name] - Expert verdict (2-3 sentences) - Pros and cons (bullets) - Best for: [runner type] - [Image with runner wearing shoes] ## Best for Beginners: [Shoe Name] [Same structure] ## Best Cushioned: [Shoe Name] [Same structure] ## Best Value: [Shoe Name] [Same structure] ## How to Choose Running Shoes ### Understanding Your Gait ### Cushioning vs. Responsiveness ### When to Replace Running Shoes ## Expert Tips from [Podiatrist Name] [Quote and advice from expert] ## FAQ - How often should I replace running shoes? - What's the difference between road and trail shoes? - Do expensive shoes make a difference? ## Methodology - How we selected shoes to test - Our testing process - Our scoring criteria
Trust Signals:
- "Reviewed by [Podiatrist Name], DPM"
- Real testing methodology disclosed
- Customer reviews integrated
- Clear affiliate disclosure
Checklists & Templates
Pre-Writing Research Checklist
KEYWORD RESEARCH □ Primary keyword identified □ Search volume verified □ Keyword difficulty assessed □ Business relevance confirmed □ Secondary keywords listed (3-5) SEARCH INTENT ANALYSIS □ Top 10 results analyzed □ Dominant content format identified □ Common subtopics noted □ Content gaps identified □ Unique angle determined E-E-A-T PLANNING □ Experience element identified (what can you share?) □ Expertise element identified (credentials, knowledge) □ Authority signals planned (sources, citations) □ Trust signals planned (accuracy, transparency)
Content Brief Template
CONTENT BRIEF Target Keyword: ____________________ Secondary Keywords: ____________________ Word Count Target: ____________________ Content Type: ____________________ SEARCH INTENT What searchers want: ____________________ Content format needed: ____________________ COMPETITOR ANALYSIS Top 3 competing URLs: 1. ____________________ 2. ____________________ 3. ____________________ What they do well: ____________________ What's missing: ____________________ UNIQUE ANGLE Our differentiator: ____________________ Original data/experience: ____________________ REQUIRED SECTIONS □ ____________________ □ ____________________ □ ____________________ E-E-A-T REQUIREMENTS Author credentials: ____________________ Expert review needed: □ Yes □ No Original elements: ____________________ Sources to cite: ____________________
On-Page SEO Checklist
TITLE TAG □ Primary keyword included □ Under 60 characters □ Compelling and clickable □ Matches search intent META DESCRIPTION □ Under 155 characters □ Includes keyword naturally □ Has call-to-action □ Expands on title HEADERS □ Only one H1 (page title) □ H2s for major sections □ H3s for subsections □ Keywords in headers (naturally) CONTENT □ Keyword in first 100 words □ Keywords used naturally throughout □ Comprehensive coverage □ Original insights or data □ Proper formatting (lists, tables) □ Images with alt text URL □ Short and descriptive □ Includes keyword □ Uses hyphens LINKS □ Internal links to related content □ External links to authoritative sources □ Anchor text is descriptive
E-E-A-T Audit Checklist
EXPERIENCE □ First-hand experience demonstrated □ Original photos/screenshots included □ Personal anecdotes or case studies □ Specific examples from real situations EXPERTISE □ Author bio with credentials present □ Expert review for YMYL topics □ Demonstrates deep topic knowledge □ Technical accuracy verified AUTHORITATIVENESS □ Cites recognized authorities □ Links to reputable sources □ References original research (if applicable) □ Industry recognition mentioned TRUSTWORTHINESS □ Information is accurate and current □ Sources properly cited □ No misleading claims □ Transparent about limitations □ Contact information accessible □ Privacy policy/terms present
Skill Boundaries
What This Skill Does Well
- Structuring audio production workflows
- Providing technical guidance
- Creating quality checklists
- Suggesting creative approaches
What This Skill Cannot Do
- Replace audio engineering expertise
- Make subjective creative decisions
- Access or edit audio files directly
- Guarantee commercial success
References
Primary Sources:
- Ahrefs Blog: "SEO Writing: 8 Steps to Create Search-Optimized Content"
- Google Search Quality Rater Guidelines
- Moz SEO Learning Center: On-Page SEO Guide
- Google Search Central: Creating Helpful Content
Additional Resources:
- Hemingway Editor (readability)
- Grammarly (grammar and clarity)
- Ahrefs/Semrush (keyword research)
- Clearscope/Surfer SEO (content optimization)
Related Skills
- skyscraper-technique - Building linkable content assets
- content-writing - General content writing principles
- copy-frameworks - Persuasive writing structures
- keyword-strategy - Comprehensive keyword research
- landing-page-copy - Conversion-focused page copy
- headline-formulas - Compelling title creation