Content Plan Generator
By CopyJumpEnter a topic and get a complete content plan: which articles to write, in what order, and how many visitors to expect. Real data, no SEO expertise needed.
Why This Approach Gets Traffic
Random blog posts don't rank. Google rewards sites that demonstrate expertise through connected, well-organized content around specific topics.
The strategy: Write a comprehensive main guide, surround it with 8-12 supporting articles on specific subtopics, and link them together. This tells Google you actually know your stuff.
How It Works
Enter what you want to be known for
Pick a topic your customers search for. The tool finds related article ideas automatically.
Get your content roadmap
See which articles to write first, which to save for later, and your comprehensive main guide.
Start with quick wins
The tool sorts articles by how easy they are to rank. Start with the easy ones to build momentum.
What You'll Get
How many visitors each article could bring.
Which topics are easy vs harder to rank for.
Quick wins first, then your main guide.
Making This Work for You
Your Main Guide is the Foundation
Think of it as the "ultimate guide" to your topic. It covers everything at a high level and links to your detailed articles. Aim for 2,500-3,500 words with clear sections.
What makes a good main guide
- - Covers the whole topic (think "complete guide to...")
- - Clear headings so readers can skim
- - Links to all your supporting articles
- - Addresses a topic lots of people search for
Supporting Articles Go Deep
Each supporting article focuses on one specific topic. They answer specific questions and link back to your main guide. Aim for 1,000-1,500 words each.
How to write supporting articles
- - Focus on one specific topic per article
- - Link to your main guide early in the article
- - Link to related supporting articles
- - Answer a specific question or solve a problem
Link Everything Together
Links tell Google your content is connected. Every supporting article links to your main guide. Your main guide links to all supporting articles. Related articles link to each other.
Linking tips
- - Use descriptive link text (not "click here")
- - Link within the content, not just at the end
- - Your main guide should have 8-15 internal links
- - Each supporting article needs 3-5 internal links
Start with Quick Wins
Not all articles are equal. Topics labeled "Easy to rank" have less competition. Start with those to build momentum and see results faster.
Pro tip: Write 3-4 quick win articles before publishing your main guide. This gives you content to link to right away.
Frequently Asked Questions
How does this help me get traffic?â–¼
Google rewards sites that show deep expertise on topics. Instead of random blog posts, you create connected content around one topic: a comprehensive main guide plus supporting articles on specific subtopics. All linked together. This signals expertise, and expertise ranks.
How many articles do I actually need to write?â–¼
8-12 articles is the sweet spot. Fewer than 5 doesn't show enough depth. More than 15 spreads your effort too thin. The tool gives you a prioritized list—start with quick wins and expand based on results. Quality matters more than quantity.
How accurate are the traffic estimates?â–¼
The estimates assume you rank well (top 5 in Google). Real traffic depends on your ranking position, content quality, and how well you match what people are looking for. Think of estimates as potential upside, not guarantees. The difficulty ratings help you understand what's realistic.
What does "Easy to rank" vs "Harder to rank" mean?â–¼
"Easy to rank" means less competition—fewer established sites targeting that topic. Quality content can rank in 2-3 months. "Harder to rank" means more competition from established sites—you'll need better content and more time (6+ months). Start with easy topics to build momentum.
Where does this data come from?â–¼
Real data from Google's Keyword Planner—the same tool SEO pros pay to access. Search volumes are monthly averages for the US market. We translate the raw data into plain English estimates you can actually use.
How long until I see results?â–¼
Content takes time to rank. "Easy to rank" topics can start appearing in search within 2-3 months. Harder topics take 6+ months. The compounding effect kicks in after 6-12 months when multiple articles start ranking together.
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