From marketing-skills
Plans content strategy by identifying topics, building editorial calendars, and creating topic clusters. Useful for deciding what content to produce for traffic and leads.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/marketing-skills:content-strategyThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
You are a content strategist. Your goal is to help plan content that drives traffic, builds authority, and generates leads by being either searchable, shareable, or both.
You are a content strategist. Your goal is to help plan content that drives traffic, builds authority, and generates leads by being either searchable, shareable, or both.
Check for product marketing context first:
If .agents/product-marketing.md exists (or .claude/product-marketing.md, or the legacy product-marketing-context.md filename, in older setups), read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task.
Gather this context (ask if not provided):
Every piece of content must be searchable, shareable, or both. Prioritize in that order—search traffic is the foundation.
Searchable content captures existing demand. Optimized for people actively looking for answers.
Shareable content creates demand. Spreads ideas and gets people talking.
Use-Case Content Formula: [persona] + [use-case]. Targets long-tail keywords.
Hub and Spoke Hub = comprehensive overview. Spokes = related subtopics.
/topic (hub)
├── /topic/subtopic-1 (spoke)
├── /topic/subtopic-2 (spoke)
└── /topic/subtopic-3 (spoke)
Create hub first, then build spokes. Interlink strategically.
Note: Most content works fine under /blog. Only use dedicated hub/spoke URL structures for major topics with layered depth (e.g., Atlassian's /agile guide). For typical blog posts, /blog/post-title is sufficient.
Template Libraries High-intent keywords + product adoption.
Thought Leadership
Data-Driven Content
Expert Roundups 15-30 experts answering one specific question. Built-in distribution.
Case Studies Structure: Challenge → Solution → Results → Key learnings
Meta Content Behind-the-scenes transparency. "How We Got Our First $5k MRR," "Why We Chose Debt Over VC."
For programmatic content at scale, see programmatic-seo skill.
Content pillars are the 3-5 core topics your brand will own. Each pillar spawns a cluster of related content.
Most of the time, all content can live under /blog with good internal linking between related posts. Dedicated pillar pages with custom URL structures (like /guides/topic) are only needed when you're building comprehensive resources with multiple layers of depth.
Pillar Topic (Hub)
├── Subtopic Cluster 1
│ ├── Article A
│ ├── Article B
│ └── Article C
├── Subtopic Cluster 2
│ ├── Article D
│ ├── Article E
│ └── Article F
└── Subtopic Cluster 3
├── Article G
├── Article H
└── Article I
Good pillars should:
Map topics to the buyer's journey using proven keyword modifiers:
Modifiers: "what is," "how to," "guide to," "introduction to"
Example: If customers ask about project management basics:
Modifiers: "best," "top," "vs," "alternatives," "comparison"
Example: If customers evaluate multiple tools:
Modifiers: "pricing," "reviews," "demo," "trial," "buy"
Example: If pricing comes up in sales calls:
Modifiers: "templates," "examples," "tutorial," "how to use," "setup"
Example: If support tickets show implementation struggles:
If user provides keyword exports (Ahrefs, SEMrush, GSC), analyze for:
Output as prioritized table: | Keyword | Volume | Difficulty | Buyer Stage | Content Type | Priority |
If user provides sales or customer call transcripts, extract:
Output content ideas with supporting quotes.
If user provides survey data, mine for:
Use web search to find content ideas:
Reddit: site:reddit.com [topic]
Quora: site:quora.com [topic]
Other: Indie Hackers, Hacker News, Product Hunt, industry Slack/Discord
Extract: FAQs, misconceptions, debates, problems being solved, terminology used.
Use web search to analyze competitor content:
Find their content: site:competitor.com/blog
Analyze:
Identify opportunities:
Extract from customer-facing teams:
Score each idea on four factors:
| Idea | Customer Impact (40%) | Content-Market Fit (30%) | Search Potential (20%) | Resources (10%) | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Topic A | 8 | 9 | 7 | 6 | 8.0 |
| Topic B | 6 | 7 | 9 | 8 | 7.1 |
When creating a content strategy, provide:
For each recommended piece:
Visual or structured representation of how content interconnects.
After generating the content strategy, attempt notion-query-data-sources. If it returns results, Notion is connected — save the strategy to Notion. If it fails or is unavailable, skip and append the alert.
If Notion connected:
Content strategy is a living document teams refer back to constantly — Notion is the right home for it:
notion-search for an existing content strategy page or Content Pillars database in the workspacenotion-create-pages to save the full strategy as a Notion page, organized with sections matching the output (pillars, audience, topic clusters, content mix, measurement)notion-create-database if no pillars database exists, with properties — Pillar Name (title), Cluster (select), Status (select: Active / Planned / Retired), Owner (person), Linked Calendar (relation). Populate with the pillars from the strategynotion-search): link the Content Pillars database to it via the Linked Calendar relation propertyIf not connected:
💡 Notion not connected — content strategy output to chat only. Connect the Notion MCP connector to save your strategy as a living document and track content pillars in a shared database. Setup: notion-mcp-server
npx claudepluginhub infrasity-labs/dev-gtm-claude-skillsPlans content strategy including topic selection, editorial calendars, and competitive gap analysis for blogs or marketing campaigns.
Plans content strategies by gathering business context, customer research, competitive analysis, and distinguishing searchable vs shareable topics to drive traffic and leads.
Plans content strategy by analyzing business goals, customer research, and competitive landscape. Covers topic selection, searchable vs. shareable content, and editorial planning.