SEO Channel Strategy
When to Use
The startup is evaluating SEO as a channel or rebuilding an existing SEO strategy. Before starting, verify:
- There is some existing search demand for the category, OR the user accepts that long-tail-only is the path
- The user can commit to a months-long time horizon (SEO compounds slowly)
- A content production capability exists (in-house or freelance)
Context & Input Gathering
Required Context (must have — ask if missing)
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Product category and target audience: what people might search for
→ Check prompt for: product name, category description, ideal customer
→ If missing, ask: "What does your product do, and who searches for products like yours?"
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Competitor list: who else ranks for the relevant terms
→ Check prompt for: competitor names, category incumbents
→ If missing, ask: "Who are the main competitors already ranking for terms in your category?"
Observable Context
- Current organic traffic: if any
- Domain authority: new domain vs established
- Content production capacity: in-house writers, freelance budget
Default Assumptions
- Only 10% of clicks go beyond the first 10 search results — page 1 or nothing
- Test fat-head keywords via SEM first before committing to SEO investment
- Long-tail requires template + freelance production pipeline at scale
Sufficiency Threshold
SUFFICIENT: category + audience + competitors known
PROCEED WITH DEFAULTS: category known, use Keyword Planner to discover competitors
MUST ASK: category or product is unknown
Process
Use TodoWrite:
Step 1: Check For Existing Search Demand
ACTION: Use Google Keyword Planner (or equivalent tool) to check search volume for category terms. If there's zero or near-zero volume, the category is too new for SEO to work via fat-head. Users need to already be searching for something.
Example disqualifier: Uber in its early days — nobody was searching for "alternatives to taxi cabs via phone app" because the category didn't exist yet. SEO couldn't create that demand.
WHY: SEO is demand fulfillment, not demand creation. No search demand = no SEO opportunity. Spending SEO resources on a category nobody searches for produces zero traffic regardless of how perfect the content is.
IF no existing search demand → SEO is not a primary channel. Return to Bullseye.
Step 2: Evaluate Fat-Head Feasibility
ACTION: For the category terms with search demand, check:
- Monthly search volume — is it meaningful? Use the 10% capture test: if you captured 10% of monthly searches, would that actually matter for your traction goal?
- Competitor strength — use Open Site Explorer (Moz) or equivalent to check competitor backlink counts. High competitor link counts = very hard to rank on page 1.
- Page-1 feasibility — realistic check. Only 10% of clicks go beyond page 1. Ranking 12 is worthless.
Test fat-head keywords via SEM first: buy a few hundred dollars of Google Ads on the target terms. If they convert well, SEO is worth pursuing. If they don't convert on paid, SEO won't rescue them.
WHY: Page-1 ranking is the actual goal, not "ranking." Ranking 2nd or 3rd page produces near-zero traffic. If the competition is too strong for page 1, long-tail is the better strategy. The SEM pre-test is cheap validation — it saves months of SEO work on keywords that wouldn't have converted anyway.
Step 3: Make the Binary Fat-Head vs Long-Tail Decision
ACTION: Based on Steps 1-2, apply the binary decision:
Fat-Head Strategy if:
- Existing category search demand is high
- Your product directly describes what people search for
- Competition is beatable (you can plausibly rank on page 1)
- SEM pre-test showed those keywords convert
Long-Tail Strategy if:
- Fat-head is too competitive
- Your product has niche use cases or specific buyer personas
- You can produce large volumes of targeted content
- Long-tail aggregates to meaningful volume in your category
Write the strategy decision to seo-strategy.md.
WHY: The binary is not "do both" — at early stage, you have to commit resources to one or the other. Fat-head requires link building and authority; long-tail requires content production at scale. These are different operational patterns. Splitting effort means under-investing in both. Choose one, execute it, revisit in 6 months.
Step 4: Design Keyword Evaluation Process
ACTION: For the chosen strategy, build a keyword evaluation pipeline:
Fat-head process:
- Use Google Keyword Planner for volumes on category terms
- Check Google Trends for trajectory and geography
- Use Open Site Explorer for competitor backlink counts
- Validate via SEM paid test ($500)
- If all checks pass → pursue SEO
Long-tail process:
- Use Keyword Planner for long-tail variants (add modifiers like location, use case, persona)
- Check own analytics for existing long-tail traffic
- Analyze competitors with
site:domain.com to see their long-tail coverage
- Create standard landing page template
- Hire freelancers to produce targeted content per keyword bucket
- Add geographic modifiers for local variants
WHY: Both strategies need rigorous keyword evaluation — but the rigor is different. Fat-head needs competitive analysis because you're attacking crowded terms. Long-tail needs scale tooling because you're producing hundreds of pages. Designing the process upfront prevents reactive keyword picking.
Step 5: Plan Content Production Pipeline (Long-Tail)
ACTION: If pursuing long-tail, design the production pipeline:
- Template: a standard landing page layout that fits every long-tail keyword
- Freelance sourcing: Upwork, Elance, specialized content agencies
- Quality control: checklist for on-page SEO (title, H1, meta description, word count, internal links)
- Geographic modifier system: for local variants, use template + city-specific data
- Content calendar: weekly production targets
Long-tail strategy economics: $3-10 per article via freelancers, compounds over time as pages rank.
WHY: Long-tail doesn't work without scale. Writing 10 long-tail pages produces 10 visitors/month. Writing 1,000 produces meaningful traffic. The pipeline is what makes 1,000 possible without each page being bespoke. Founders who skip the pipeline write 20 pages manually and give up.
Step 6: Avoid Black-Hat Tactics
ACTION: Document the anti-patterns to avoid — see references/black-hat-seo.md.
The biggest: don't buy links. Buying links is against search engine guidelines and produces severe ranking penalties when detected (which is increasingly reliable).
Other black-hat tactics to avoid: cloaking, keyword stuffing, hidden text, doorway pages, content spinning, comment spam.
WHY: Black-hat tactics can work in the short term (which is why they're tempting), but search engines detect and penalize them. The penalty often destroys organic traffic entirely — not just reduces it. "I rarely see startups fail because they didn't have a good idea. Where I see 90% of startups fail is because they can't reach their customers." — Rand Fishkin. Black-hat shortcuts are one of the ways that "can't reach customers" happens.
Inputs
- Product category
- Target audience
- Competitor list
- Content production capacity
Outputs
Four markdown files:
seo-strategy.md — Fat-head vs long-tail decision with reasoning
seo-keyword-plan.md — Evaluated keywords with volumes and difficulty
seo-content-pipeline.md — Content production plan (long-tail only)
seo-avoid-list.md — Black-hat tactics to explicitly avoid
Key Principles
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SEO is demand fulfillment, not demand creation. Without existing search volume, SEO can't work. WHY: If nobody searches for what you do, no amount of content will get you traffic. SEO depends on users already looking for something.
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Page 1 or nothing. Only 10% of clicks go beyond first 10 results. Ranking 12 is worthless. WHY: Organic click-through drops off precipitously by position. The game is page 1; second page is failure.
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Test with SEM before investing in SEO. SEM produces keyword validation in days. SEO takes months. Don't commit to SEO on keywords you haven't validated. WHY: Months of wasted SEO work on non-converting keywords is a common failure. $500 of SEM ads answers "does this convert?" in 2 weeks.
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Fat-head vs long-tail is binary at early stage. Pick one. Split effort = under-investment in both. WHY: These strategies have different operational patterns. Link building for fat-head is a different skill and tool set than content production at scale for long-tail.
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Long-tail needs a pipeline, not one-off writing. 1,000 pages beats 10 pages. Template + freelancers + quality control. WHY: Long-tail's value is aggregation. 10 pages produces a trickle; 1,000 pages produces traffic. The pipeline is what enables scale.
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Never buy links. The penalty is worse than the short-term benefit. WHY: Search engines detect paid links increasingly reliably. The penalty destroys traffic. The short-term gain is not worth the catastrophic long-term risk.
Examples
Scenario: New SaaS category with no search demand
Trigger: "We built AI-powered contract review for small law firms. Nobody searches for 'AI contract review for small law firms'. How do we SEO this?"
Process: (1) Check Keyword Planner — zero volume on the specific term. (2) Broaden: "contract review software" has volume but competitors are $50M companies. (3) Long-tail path: "contract review software for small law firms", "AI contract review tool for solo attorneys", "NDA review software". (4) SEM pre-test on 3 long-tail clusters — 2 convert. (5) Long-tail strategy: template landing pages + freelancer pipeline for 50 specific long-tail pages in Q1.
Output: Clear decision that fat-head isn't viable, long-tail path with specific keyword clusters and production plan.
Scenario: Established category with beatable competitors
Trigger: "We make a note-taking app. 'Note taking app' has 50k searches/month. Competitors: Evernote, Notion, Apple Notes. Should we do SEO?"
Process: (1) Keyword Planner confirms 50k/month. (2) 10% capture test: 5k visits/month. Meaningful? Depends on conversion — probably yes for early stage. (3) Competitor check: Evernote has 300k backlinks, Notion has 500k, Apple Notes dominates. Page-1 for "note taking app" is impossible without years of link building. (4) Fat-head infeasible → long-tail it is. (5) Long-tail clusters: "note taking app for [profession]", "note taking app with [feature]", "Evernote alternative for [use case]".
Output: Long-tail strategy with specific cluster plan, acknowledgment that fat-head is a 3+ year play.
Scenario: Buying links temptation
Trigger: "An agency offered to sell us 100 backlinks from finance blogs for $2,000. Our SEO hasn't been growing. Should we do it?"
Process: (1) Identify this as the black-hat temptation. (2) Explain the penalty: if Google detects paid links (which is increasingly reliable), you lose rankings across the whole site, not just for these keywords. (3) Recovery from penalties takes 3-6 months of disavow work. (4) Calculate expected value: short-term gain 3-month boost × 20% chance it works + long-term penalty worth $50k of lost traffic × 60% chance of detection = catastrophically negative EV. (5) Alternative: invest the $2,000 in 2-3 guest posts on relevant blogs via legitimate outreach.
Output: Clear rejection with EV calculation, alternative white-hat plan.
References
License
This skill is licensed under CC-BY-SA-4.0.
Source: BookForge — Traction: A Startup Guide to Getting Customers by Gabriel Weinberg and Justin Mares.
Related BookForge Skills
Install related skills from ClawhHub:
clawhub install bookforge-bullseye-channel-selection — Select SEO via Bullseye deliberately
clawhub install bookforge-sem-performance-optimization — Validate SEO keywords with SEM first
clawhub install bookforge-content-and-email-marketing — Content is the long-tail SEO production system
Or install the full book set from GitHub: bookforge-skills