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6 Foolproof Methods for Creating Top Content on Any Topic We'd all love to show up first in Google for something. Here are some pointers.

By Jeffrey Kranz

This story originally appeared on Buffer

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We'd all love to show up first in Google for something.

There's likely at least one golden search term or keyword you're striving for —and we've all heard plenty of different get-to-the-front-page-of-Google formulas.

It can get a little dizzying keeping all the approaches straight.

But it can be done. If you're willing to invest some time, resources and brainpower, you can create the top content on any topic.

To share exactly how, I made an infographic mapping out not one, but six foolproof, can't-miss strategies that real-life people (including me!) have used to top the charts for specific keywords.

These methods draw on advice and examples from Neil Patel, Brian Dean, the folks right here at Buffer, Noah Kagan, and a few others.

Check out the flowchart for a high-level overview of how to create the top content on any topic, then read on as I get down into specific how-tos for each method.

6 strategies to rank for any search term

Flowchart magic by Laura Kranz (my wife and partner at GradLime).

A quick look at each option

I'll overview each of these approaches, then drill down into how to choose the right one.

  1. Do the research and write the first article of its kind

Occasionally you'll stumble across a search term idea and find that nobody's tried to rank for it. There are no really satisfactory results in sight. When that happens, you have the rare opportunity to write the first piece of content on the matter.

  1. Write something far better than the #1 result

This is probably what you'll end up doing most of the time. Someone will have an adequate piece out there that gets ranked first—but it could be more thorough, more current, more visually appealing, etc. That's where you come in! Pull out the stops and write the end-all, authoritative, ultimate post on that topic.

  1. Write an authoritative article from an alternative perspective

Sometimes the #1 result is really, really well done—but you and the people in your niche have a different perspective or conclusion on the matter. In those cases, you write the article your audience needs to read.

Think of it this way: if #2 is all-around better, #3 is narrower.

  1. Write the ultimate list of awesome articles

When it's clear that most of the space on the first results page is occupied by awesome content (some of which may be yours!), it's time to go broader. Make the ultimate list of ultimate articles, giving people a detailed look at what's out there.

You're doing the work of pulling all the awesome content together, trimming the overlap, and saving the people searching for the term the time it takes to research all the awesome articles out there.

  1. Try a new format

Don't rewrite already-amazing articles. Instead, find ways to add value by presenting them in new formats. Put the high-ranking awesome content into an infographic, make a video walkthrough, or host a webinar—add value by putting that awesome content into a different format.

  1. Outsource it

If you know you want to rank for a keyword and you don't have time to create an original article, find a top-notch copywriter and/or designer to create it for you.

A step-by step guide to creating top-ranking content

We can pull this information off a lot better if we understand the rationale behind these steps. So let's work through this infographic step-by-step.

Step 1: Determine the search term you want to focus on

Take a minute to think about a particular keyword that sums up what you're all about or has proven to be how people might be searching for you or your brand online.

For example, for Buffer this might be a term like "social media scheduling," "social media management tools," or even "schedule my tweets." Keep this keyword or phrase in mind as we walk through this together.

It helps to make sure people are actually searching for that word. To find out, jump into Google Adwords' Keyword Planner (or one of these alternatives) to see just how often people are Googling that term.

Here's an example: In my spare time I run a Bible literacy blog. Before I wrote my piece, "The 5 shortest books of the Bible, in order," I looked up the search volume for keywords relevant to that topic. Here's what Google says:

(Granted, the graph covered an earlier time span back when I wrote that article.)

One note on niche industries: If you're trying to gain traffic in a really small market, or if you're trying to create a new market, this isn't going to be as helpful. There won't be a lot of search data surrounding something that doesn't exist yet, or something that only 100 people in the world will ever be interested in.

Not sure which search term to target?

There's always the FAQ trick. Think of a question your customers ask you often. It might be as simple as, "How much does your product cost?" (This was a real money-making question for Marcus Sheridan).

Have your target search term in mind? Great! Let's go to step 2.

Step 2: Google that search term (in an incognito window!)

The next step is to see just what content Google serves up when someone searches for that term. But don't just open a new tab and Google this term.

Instead, Google that term while you're in incognito or private browsing mode. In Chrome, just hit Ctrl+?Shift+Nfor Windows or ?+? Shift+N for Mac. (Not in Chrome? Use one of these methods.)

Why the extra step? Because incognito mode strips out some of the skewed results you might see when you're logged in, based on your Google account. You want a more objective view, right?

Step 3: Evaluate the search results

This one's not so straightforward, but it's the most important step in this process. If you're going to have a page 1 result, you need to know what you're up against. Once we get a good view of the frontier, we'll know where to stake our claim, so to speak.

The first thing to do is open up all the organic results on the first page. Don't worry about the ads (that's another post).

Now we evaluate each one.

This is where things get a little subjective. There are plenty of metrics you can use to evaluate a page's quality: grade level, word count, images, social shares, etc. (I wrote another post entirely on this topic, and even made a template you can use to evaluate pages the way I do.)

But really this all comes down to one question: Are any of them satisfactory?

Or, is there at least one article that would completely satisfy someone searching for that term?

Sometimes the answer is a clear "No." But you're more likely to find at least one result that would satisfy the person Googling the search term in question. Once you've looked them all over, you're ready to choose one of these 6 specific strategies.

Step 4: Pick a strategy

1. Do the research and write the first article of its kind

When there's nothing satisfactory on page 1, you have a rare opportunity.

You can be the first person to write the article that answers the question the searcher has in mind. There's no real competition: the only question is, "Who will write it?"

If you're already an expert (or THE expert) on the subject, then the answer is, "You!"

But I find that often I'm not the one with all the necessary information I'd need to write a very helpful article. That's when I have to ask myself, "Is it worth my time to research this material and write the article the world needs?"

If it is worth your time to do the research (heads-up: it could take 20+ hours), then you're still the one who should be pulling this off.

And while we're on the topic of research …

Do it well, and let it show.

Because if this really is a search term you want to rank for, odds are someone else will want to rank for it, too. They might even be writing that article now. So you need to make yours top-notch:

  • Pull in screenshots that demonstrate what you're talking about
  • Quote experts
  • Cite case studies
  • Embed videos
  • Use charts, graphs, and full-scale infographics to make your content more learnable

Knock it out of the park!

2. Write something far better than the #1 result

If there's at least one piece of content that would reasonably satisfy the person searching, then we come to another question:

Is the first result absolutely awesome?

An awesome result goes beyond just satisfying the searcher: an awesome result is going to blow their mind. You've seen awesome articles before. They're the articles that scroll for days, and each paragraph makes you feel smarter and smarter.

Hint: awesome content is usually long content.

Neil Patel ran one of my favorite SEO articles to date on how content length affects ranking and conversion. Here's what he found:

  1. The top 10 results for most keywords are at least 2,000 words long.
  2. Longer content gets more backlinks.
  3. Neil's longer content (>1,500 words) got 68.1% more tweets and 22.6% more Facebook likes than his shorter posts.
  4. Longer content gives you a better shot at ranking for long-tail keywords.
  5. Longer content converts better, too.

It's not always the case, but long, rich, meaty content tends to win.

If you want a great example, Google "How to get backlinks." The #1 result is Brian Dean's post, "How to Get Backlinks with Guestographics."

This really is an awesome post. Brian spells out every single step, gives thorough advice all the way, and shows how it works for him.

If the first post isn't awesome, be the one to write it better.

It totally works.

For example, remember how I was researching the "shortest book of the Bible" for my blog? The post that was getting all the traction for that search term at the time went live in 2001 and hadn't changed much since.

I put together a post almost twice as long, more specific to the search term and that delivered information in a more learnable way compared to the former leader's list. I say "former leader" because as of today, my post is the number one article answering that question.

This approach is what Brian Dean (the guy who wrote that aforementioned awesome post on how to get backlinks) calls the "Skyscraper technique:"

Have you ever walked by a really tall building and said to yourself:

"Wow, that's amazing! I wonder how big the 8th tallest building in the world is."

Of course not.

It's human nature to be attracted to the best.

And what you're doing here is finding the tallest "skyscraper" in your space…and slapping 20 stories to the top of it.

All of a sudden YOU have the content that everyone wants to talk about (and link to).

This is the approach you'll take more often than not. It takes a lot of research, writing, and promotion, but that's pretty much how it is when you're out to make the best content.

3. Write an authoritative article from an alternative perspective

Strategy #2 is a proven method. So proven, in fact, that sometimes others in your space may have already used it.

But you don't always have to top the leading article. This is especially true if:

  1. You're not competing for the same readership as the site with the top piece, or
  2. You have a different conclusion or perspective than the top piece

If either of those are true, then your mission changes: Write an authoritative article from a different perspective.

For example, let's say you'd really like to gain a few clients by doing inbound audits. It would be really cool to rank for "How to do an inbound audit," right?

Well, you're going to have a rough time, because Eli Overbey and Noah Kagan are the #1 result.

I've read that post. It's legit. I honestly don't know if I can write a better one.

But Eli's inbound audits set the standard for the world. I'm really just trying to set the standard for a super, super narrow niche.

In this case, I don't really need to have written the end-all, inbound audit article. I need to write the authoritative article on how seminaries should do inbound audits.

Bottom line: If you can't own the whole Internet for that search term, focus on owning it for your own niche.

4. Write the ultimate list of awesome articles

It's not too common to get a page full of amazing material. But you'll know it when you do. To see my favorite example, Google search the phrase, "Ideal length of a blog post." You'll get this:

Neil Patel and Kevan Lee (and the Buffer bloggers in general) make terrific content. In this case, there's plenty of fantastic stuff for people to find when they're searching for the ideal length of a blog post.

You might run into this situation, too. When that happens …

Write the ultimate list of awesome results

You don't have to write the deepest piece. Write the piece that brings all those pieces together.

This is what Brian Dean calls an "Expanded List Post," and it's part of another strategy he uses to jump to the top of search results. You're essentially writing the executive summary of all the awesome content out there.Here's how it works:

  1. Open a new post, and make a list of all the helpful pieces of content.
  2. Under each of those results, write a few paragraphs that tell:
    • The big takeaways or high-level steps
    • Why you included it in your master list
    • How it differs from the other list items
    • If appropriate, strengths and weaknesses
  3. Write a few introductory paragraphs at the beginning to set the stage.
  4. Write a conclusion paragraph that sums it up, gives your favorites, and asks for more potential list items in the comments.

The other post strategies we've talked about have been win-win posts: the readers win because you're satisfying their curiosity with terrific content. You win because you rank for those keywords. But this strategy is win-win-win:

  • Readers win because you're doing all the legwork for them. You're researching all the articles and giving them the survey of the best the Internet has to offer. That's really valuable.
  • The people who wrote the awesome content you sourced win. You're sending traffic their way, and telling them their content is valuable.
  • And of course you win, because you rank.

This is a fun type of piece to put together. But the next one might be the most fun of them all …

5. Put awesome content in a new format

Sometimes there's a lot of really well-written, thoroughly-researched blog content out there. If that's how it is for your golden keyword, then here's what you need to do:

Push that awesome content beyond the text.

Long-tail SEO is usually a writer's game. (After all, longer content tends to rank better and get more backlinks.) But as you look around the blogosphere, you'll find that very few of these awesome posts come with a short-form means of summing it all up.

That's fine for the readers who will set aside 15-20 minutes to read a blog post. But what about more visual learners? And what about the people who need to write their own TL;DR summaries and pass that awesome content on to the rest of their team?

You can give them an infographic.

Or a video, or a checklist, or anything that sums up the great content out there and presents it in a new way. Of course, give credit to the people whose hard-researched articles made your new piece possible. Then for bonus points, float that infographic (or whatever) past the people who made the great content that inspired it.

"Why rehash someone else's work?"

Well, the point is to not just rehash someone else's work. The point is to make their work even more valuable by making it easier for people to learn, remember, and share the material.

"Will that annoy the original authors?"

This is a fear I dealt with originally. The first time I pitched a blogger on making an infographic, I was kind of worried that he'd think, "Dude. Make your own stuff and leave my stuff alone."

I was wrong. He was totally on board, and it turned out to be a really fun time. He liked the interest that I took in his work, and was happy to post it on his own blog.

But that's nothing compared to the ultimate case study: Matt Ragland.

Remember that terrific post by Kevan Lee on the ideal length of everything online? My friend Matt Ragland was reading through it and realized that the content didn't just make a great post—it had a lot of potential as an infographic.

So he spent a little time (less than two hours) sketching up this infographic and sharing it in the comments:

As you can see, this sketch racked up a good deal of comment upvotes. This one comment pulled more than 2,000 visitors to his blog in 2014. And this sketch has been shared more than 300 times across the socialsphere.

Buffer's readers loved it. I asked Matt if he would do it again, and I think you can guess the answer.

That was just a comment …

Imagine what you could do with a full-length infographic (which Buffer went on to do with SumAll) or video that lives on your blog—or as a guest post on someone else's blog?

6. Outsource it

Finally, if you can't make any of this content, but you know you really should be ranking for it, then you need to find someone else to do it for you. Here's a guide to get started outsourcing quality content.

Step 5: Promote it!

Your epic content isn't going to start ranking on its own. Once you have your killer, authoritative piece, it's time to do the following:

  • Decide whether to run it on your own blog or as a guest post.
  • Reach out to anyone you mention positively in the article to let them know it exists.
  • Send a note of thanks to those whose work inspired or informed your piece.
  • Tell your email list about it.
  • Tell prominent bloggers who have written similar content about it.
  • Tell the major influencers in the market about it (I recommend using BuzzSumo for this).
  • Spread it on social media.

A few key takeaways

By this point you've noticed something about all these strategies for keyword ranking: each one makes a helpful contribution. After all:

  1. When you write the first piece, the contribution is obvious.
  2. When you write it better, you're adding more helpful content to the conversation.
  3. When you write a different take, you're adding a new perspective.
  4. When you write an expanded list post, you're giving people a summary of the awesome content out there.
  5. When you put it into a new format, you're making it easier to learn for others.

Which of these strategies is your favorite?

How about you? Which one of these do you tend to enjoy most? Which has worked for you? Or do you do something entirely different? I'd love to hear your thoughts in the comments!

Jeffrey Kranz is an inbound marketing consultant for higher education institutions and the founder of GradLime. He gets a kick out of making things "learnable." He lives in Colorado Springs, Colo.

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