The research that makes or breaks every page you write
Before you write any important page on your site, you need to know three things: what your customers are searching for, what your competitors have already published, and what Google expects to see on a page about this topic. Without that research, you are guessing. And guessing means you either write a page that ranks on page 7 or one that answers the wrong question entirely.
What an SEO content brief includes
This workflow generates a comprehensive research document for one topic:
- Primary and secondary keywords with search volume and difficulty, so you know what terms to target
- Search intent analysis showing whether people searching this term want to buy, learn, compare, or solve a problem
- Competitor content audit revealing what the top-ranking pages cover, how long they are, and what structure they use
- Recommended outline with headings, subheadings, and content suggestions based on what ranks
- Content gaps showing topics that competitors miss, which is your opportunity to outperform them
Fifteen credits per brief. That sounds like more than other workflows because this is deeper research. An SEO agency charges $300 to $800 for the same deliverable.
Why this prevents wasted effort
The most expensive content is content that does not rank. You spend hours writing a page, publish it, and nothing happens. No traffic, no leads, no calls. A content brief eliminates that risk by telling you exactly what to write before you start. Think of it as a blueprint for a page that Google already wants to show.
Who this is for
If you are about to write a new service page, a blog post about an important topic, or a location landing page, start with a brief. It takes minutes to generate and saves hours of guesswork. You do not need to be an SEO expert to follow the recommendations — they are written in plain language with clear action steps.
