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'Topical Map' is nothing new. It has been quite a while. Peeps in the SEO space know what it is, and niche site owners and investors should be making the most out of it. We use it for each and every niche sites we work on.
What Is It Actually?
Topical map is a visual representation of the structure and hierarchy of the content on your website. It categorizes the content on your website into different topics and subtopics.
When you identify the relationships between topics and sub-topics, you build a logical structure for content throughout your website.
How It Helps With Ranking?
Simple. You improve your site's search engine visibility by helping search engines understand the context and relevance of each page. Implementing a topical map, you also help readers navigate your site easily and find the information they need efficiently.
In short, a topical map guides you to improve search engine rankings by optimizing your website's content throughout the site. It makes search engines understand what your site is really about.
Emulates Google's Understanding
Topical map is an effective tool to gain insight into the structure of topics and content. It provides an organized hierarchy of topics and sub-topics that is similar to how Google organizes queries. You make it easy on Google to understand what your site is about.
Helps You with Interlinking
Utilising topical map, you will find logical connections between related pieces of content. You can then easily build topical relevance through internal linking. This is something that signals search engines to consider your site as an authority on the topics. Plus, it enhances your overall site architecture.
Eliminates Cannibalization
Having a well-prepared topic cluster before you start posting contents ensures each page is targeting a unique keyword or phrase. Because, you get to have the whole list of keywords before you eyes. You can get rid of the duplicates and merge the similar intent keywords to eliminate the risk of cannibalization.
Saves a Shit Load of Time
Creating a topical map takes time, but it saves you more of it in the long run. How is that? Well, you get the whole keyword research for a topic done at once. So, your content strategy is ready for the next few months. You know how many contents you have to post, at what velocity and frequency, which articles interlinks to which, and so on.
You can use the time saved from these chores can be utilised in link-building and other stuff.
Less Link-building Required
When your site has better topical coverage and an overall good site architecture than the competitors, you don't need to look for as many links as your competitors got. You are very likely to be ranked with lesser links. Content coverage becomes your key advantage, so you can expect to stay out of Google's bad book for the upcoming updates. If you are affected by any chance(because Google is always messing), the damage will be minimum for sure.
Doesn't matter if we are adding a new site to our portfolio or want an existing site to expand into new topics, we always use topical maps to make our content tasks a breeze. What are your thoughts about topical maps?
What Is It Actually?
Topical map is a visual representation of the structure and hierarchy of the content on your website. It categorizes the content on your website into different topics and subtopics.
When you identify the relationships between topics and sub-topics, you build a logical structure for content throughout your website.
How It Helps With Ranking?
Simple. You improve your site's search engine visibility by helping search engines understand the context and relevance of each page. Implementing a topical map, you also help readers navigate your site easily and find the information they need efficiently.
In short, a topical map guides you to improve search engine rankings by optimizing your website's content throughout the site. It makes search engines understand what your site is really about.
Emulates Google's Understanding
Topical map is an effective tool to gain insight into the structure of topics and content. It provides an organized hierarchy of topics and sub-topics that is similar to how Google organizes queries. You make it easy on Google to understand what your site is about.
Helps You with Interlinking
Utilising topical map, you will find logical connections between related pieces of content. You can then easily build topical relevance through internal linking. This is something that signals search engines to consider your site as an authority on the topics. Plus, it enhances your overall site architecture.
Eliminates Cannibalization
Having a well-prepared topic cluster before you start posting contents ensures each page is targeting a unique keyword or phrase. Because, you get to have the whole list of keywords before you eyes. You can get rid of the duplicates and merge the similar intent keywords to eliminate the risk of cannibalization.
Saves a Shit Load of Time
Creating a topical map takes time, but it saves you more of it in the long run. How is that? Well, you get the whole keyword research for a topic done at once. So, your content strategy is ready for the next few months. You know how many contents you have to post, at what velocity and frequency, which articles interlinks to which, and so on.
You can use the time saved from these chores can be utilised in link-building and other stuff.
Less Link-building Required
When your site has better topical coverage and an overall good site architecture than the competitors, you don't need to look for as many links as your competitors got. You are very likely to be ranked with lesser links. Content coverage becomes your key advantage, so you can expect to stay out of Google's bad book for the upcoming updates. If you are affected by any chance(because Google is always messing), the damage will be minimum for sure.
Doesn't matter if we are adding a new site to our portfolio or want an existing site to expand into new topics, we always use topical maps to make our content tasks a breeze. What are your thoughts about topical maps?