(Reading time: 11 – 18 minutes)
Pillar content is the foundation, the cornerstone of any content-driven website, including blogs. If your website were a fleet, the pillar content forms the flagship. Creating, publishing and maintaining pillar content is critical for founding an influential, widely-read blog.
But it’s not strictly necessary for getting started.
Website In A Weekend was started without having developed pillar content. The first post (post id 1) on Website In A Weekend was the first version of this article and contained only links to the top 6 results for the search “Pillar Content” on Google.
That was far too short. How much value are you going to find in a short article about pillar content? This article now runs over 2200 words at the current revision. Much more useful.
Between that first version (early 2009) and now, 512 articles have been published on Website In A Weekend, many of which could qualify in length and depth as pillar or flagship content. For example, the article “Choose 3 to 7 Posting Categories to More Effectively Focus Your Writing” provides a great method for generating categories in a bottom-up fashion, by sorting article titles according to like topics. Creating your pillar content can be done in the same way: use your categories to write longer, in-depth articles that cover the entire category as one topic.
Here’s how to do it.
First, put on some excellent music that gets you in a creative mood. My personal choice for the moment is Ben Watt’s Buzzin’ Fly 4. Ben Watt, formerly of “Everything But The Girl,” regularly produces high quality disks chock full of superb, melodic, deep house.
Buzzin’ Fly, the whole series, has just the right amount of uptempo and melody to drive my productivity really high.
You might want to fix yourself a cup or tea or whatnot as well. This is going to be intense. My faux Danish designer coffee mug is already full with a 4 shot of Catahoula Sumatra espresso and heavy cream, made stovetop in my Bialetti Moka Express (love that thing!), so I’m a little ahead of you already.
We’re going to break this down step-wise; let’s get on with it…
Creating pillar content from categories
Given that you have finished the the title and category exercise linked to above, here’s how to create pillar content:
- Make a list of these categories.
- Add a single topic sentence for each of these categories. This topic sentence should be around 125 – 140 characters long to fit in a Tweet and an SEO meta description.
- Write an introductory or teaser paragraph for each category.
Here’s mine:
- Getting Started
- Getting started with self-hosted WordPress is easy: WordPress is free, and most hosting companies have automatic installation.
- Building Traffic
- Building traffic to your website requires a host of techniques ranging from free search engine optimization to paid advertising, and many techniques in between.
- Creating Content
- Creating high-quality content to attract and retain loyal readers is an easy-to-learn skill, but requires hard work and dedication.
- Extending WordPress
- WordPress is easily extended in several ways, from installing pre-programmed plugins, to writing customized code using the easily learned PHP scripting language.
- Making Money
- WordPress makes an excellent small business website platform for businesses ranging from pure internet marketing to locally-owned brick-and-mortar hair salons.
- Maintaining WordPress
- Maintaining WordPress is so easy many people immediately several WordPress blogs!
- Being Social
- New social networking tools integrate well with WordPress to enhance your presence on the web.
- Securing WordPress
- WordPress is incredibly secure considering the huge number of WordPress installations (over 15 million) and the size of the source code to WordPress.
If you’re reading along as write this article, you will notice that my category names listed in this article don’t match my category names for the Website In A Weekend blog… yet. That’s a future task that’s going to require a bit of web server magic. Expect to see an article on it in the future, once I update the blog categories. As an exercise, tell me the difference between those above and those on the blog, and I’ll give you 30 minutes of free WordPress or writing coaching. Send me a link to the rhetorical device I’m using, get an hour… 2 hours for the Latin name (offer expires Midnight PST Feb 4, 2010).
Driving category content with teasers
Now that you have your categories with one sentence definitions, it’s time for Step 2: digging deeper into each category. Using the technique explained in “Writing For Readers — 5 writing styles for maximum impact,” use each of the list items above as a sectional header for one or more paragraphs. Each of these paragraphs will serve as an “abstract” or “executive summary” teaser, explained in the article “Writing Effective Teasers: Inspiring people to [Read more...]“. Use the topical sentence from above as a basis for your summary (we’re going to use this topical sentence again, so don’t lose it). At the end of each summary, provide a link to a full-length article going in depth for each category. These long articles will form the basis for your pillar content.
Onward!
Getting Started
Getting started with self-hosted WordPress is easy: WordPress is free, and most hosting companies have automatic installation. Probably the highest hurdle for most people is simply deciding to take action… once you have decided to take action, you will be surprised at how easy it really is!
Website In A Weekend has a whole series of articles on getting started with WordPress, you should read them all.
Building Traffic
Building traffic to your website requires a host of techniques ranging from free search engine optimization to paid advertising, and many techniques in between. The easiest way to start building traffic is to create high quality content, get that content indexed by search engines (see related articles here), and let time take it’s course. Longevity is important on the internet, and the longer your content is on the web, the better search engines are going to like your website.
There are many other ways to build traffic, including paid advertisement, organic backlinking by people inspired by your content, backlinking from comments and posts you have made on other forums, and many other ways.
But in the long term, engineers from Google assert that quality content rises to the top. You may be able to get top search results without quality content, but you won’t keep top billing without quality content.
Creating Content
All writers, whether on the internet or off, agree that long term success comes from unceasingly delivering high-quality content. You’re only as good as the last piece people read. Fortunately, creating high quality content isn’t that difficult to learn. However, it is a skill, and it does take practice. On the internet, your primary “readers” are, initially, search engine crawlers. So your content has to satisfy their demands as well (WordPress makes this easy, as noted by Google engineer Matt Cutts).
Watch for an upcoming article on how to develop your own system for rapidly creating high-quality content. In the meantime, a whole series of articles on productivity at There Is NO Box will get you started.
Extending WordPress
WordPress is easily extended in several ways, from installing pre-programmed plugins, to writing customized code using the easily learned PHP scripting language. Plugins are the most common ways to extend WordPress capabilities, and there are thousands of plugins to choose from.
For those wanting to go deeper, writing custom plugins is not difficult, and there’s even a book just published: WordPress Plugin Development Beginner’s Guide. The author, Vladimir Prelovac, is an expert WordPress developer and a great theme designer.
For those wanting to get to the bottom of all this WordPress stuff, the source code is Free Software, and you may examine it, change it, learn from it however you will. Fortunately, WordPress is founded on PHP and MySQL, which are relatively easy to learn to program, even for non-programmers.
Check out the articles on recommended plugins here on Website In A Weekend, and watch for upcoming articles on plugin development and WordPress core tweaks.
Making Money
WordPress makes an excellent small business website platform for businesses ranging from pure internet marketing to locally-owned brick-and-mortar hair salons. Using WordPress frees small business owners from paying for trivial changes to their websites, such when they raise the price of a haircut.
Marketers are able to rapidly switch copy, which is useful for introducing new products, and for testing existing sales copy to determine best conversion rates.
The money-making capabilities of WordPress have hardly been exploited, so watch for more articles on this topic in the future.
Maintaining WordPress
I put my first web page up in 1994. There has been a lot of technology developed in the last 15 years, but I firmly believe that WordPress is as much a “game changer” as Google has been, and as Twitter is shaping up to be. It’s not just the ease of use which WordPress excels at. Compared to previous web development platforms, and with current competitors such as Drupal and Joomla, for it’s powerful capabilities WordPress is incredibly easy to operate and maintain:
- Upgrades for the main platform are now automatically delivered.
- WordPress-hosted plugins are automatically updated
- Plugins for backing up files and the database are a few clicks away, and backups can be easily stored via email.
In fact, maintaining WordPress is so easy many people operate several WordPress blogs.
Nevertheless, WordPress does require simple and systematic maintenance, which will be discussed in a future article.
Being Social
New social networking tools integrate well with WordPress to enhance your presence on the web. For example, you can Add a Twitter Widget to Your New Blog and have each post show as a tweet automatically.
Other tools include Facebook and Digg, which allow to reach a much larger audience than you would through simple, organic search. In fact, as explained in How To Make It Easy To Catch People Stealing Your Articles, social media can help make sure your article aren’t totally ripped off without credit.
Watch for more articles on social media in the future.
Securing WordPress
WordPress is incredibly secure considering the huge number of WordPress installations (over 15 million) and the size of the source code to WordPress. Part of this security results from WordPress being open source. While open source allows malicious hackers to examine WordPress for weakness, open source also allows programmers from around the world to learn the code and fix hacking exploits incredibly rapidly. The popularity of WordPress coupled with open source means that no matter hour of the day or night, someone, somewhere, is programming WordPress.
Making security even easier for you are a variety of plugins to check your WordPress installation, keep spammers from pillaging your comments, keep deadbeats from registering, and many more. More articles coming soon.
Small bricks make big buildings
Creating pillar content isn’t really all that difficult. If you can write a title, you can write 100 titles. If you can sort stamps, you can create categories. Then, as I’ve just shown, it’s practically paint-by-numbers.
Here’s what really cool: once you develop a system for content creation, you will find it hard to tear yourself away from your computer! Writer’s block disappears. You will generate more ideas than anyone could possibly execute in a lifetime of work. Finding a way to get it all down “on paper” as fast and as accurately as possible becomes your most difficult challenge. This is what’s known as a “High Quality Problem.”
Check the articles on productivity at There Is NO Box to get some killer ideas for creating your own “brick building” process.
Many ways to create pillar content
In closing, this bottom-up approach is just one process for creating pillar content. There are many other ways, and you will likely work out your own unique method as you get practice. You may already have a fine collection of long articles ready to serve as flagship content. In that case, each article can be summarized to a teaser, and the teasers presented in a page similar to this page for driving content to those articles.
Remember I asked you above to save that topic sentence? Each teaser can be summarized by a single descriptive sentence which helps drive SEO when used as a web page’s description. Think of your title as one half your sales pitch, your description as the other, but not a less important half.
More information from the web
Here are some top article found recently found when searching Google on the terms “pillar content”:
- David Risley has one of the best articles on launching a blog. It used to be ranked very high for pillar content, and as you can read, pillar content is part of good launch plan.
[Update 1/8/2010] Note: Risley’s article ranked in the top 8 as recently as August 2009. It’s now down at page 10 on Google. But the article is still superb! What happened is that “pillar content” turned into a “hot search term” and was hijacked by SEO experts… who game Google with -excuse me – BULLSHIT articles containing pathetically useless information to get that coveted front page of Google search results.
The take home: if you are serious about digging up good, solid information on popular search terms, be prepare to dig very deeply into Google. Because the top 100 results often get eaten up by SEO sharks.
- Yaro Starak, who probably coined the term “pillar content,” offers an excellent article on writing pillar content. Yaro’s article was published in 2008, but it’s still highly relevant in 2012.
- Need to take a blogging break? Maya found that the strength of her pillar content kept traffic alive while she was gone.
- A great article on Daily Blog Tips about pillar content.
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First published January 26, 2009
Updated: January 8, 2010
Updated: January 11, 2012
This should be an e-book of it’s own!
Awesome tips here, you know what this is something I should really pay more attention too, I just write what I’m passionate about not really thinking what is pillar or not. I can see by the results you are getting that I should pay more attention to this.
James, you have barely scratched the surface.
Bear in mind my results are heavily influenced by these facts: 1. I don’t really do much promotion, either in commenting or on twitter, and 2. my design is crap.
I’ll be heavily investing in both design and promotion in the near future.
.-= Dave´s last blog ..DIY WordPress: Thesis Theme Custom Splash Page =-.
I wouldn’t say learning to create “high quality content” (i.e. to be a decent writer) is an easy skill to learn. You’re completely right when you say it takes hard work and dedication. I’d never call it “easy”.
And in my experience, even if you have a system for content creation, it doesn’t mean you’ll always be enthusiastic about writing. Writers block is still there, it’s just that having a system (and more importantly, a higher purpose which begets motivation) makes it easier to overcome the writer’s block.
And I respectfully disagree about what you say about Google Search results. In my experience, SEO sharks certainly don’t down the top 100 search results. Google works incredibly hard to blacklist and remove any spammy blogs from results, allowing actual decent content to rise to the top. I’ve actually seen the quality of my results go UP in the last 5 years.
Despite some of these thoughts, I think the overall spirit of your post is dead-on.
.-= Byteful Traveller´s last blog ..Create with Passion or DIE =-.
Hi Bytes.
Great points! Yes, writing is really hard. I like building systems to make it easier.
Your experience with Google differs from mine.
Between the sharks and the recyclers (people who more or less rewrite what they read elsewhere), I regularly poke down into SERPs to the 100-200 level. And I find good stuff down there.
But that’s my experience, and we all have different tales to tell.
.-= Dave´s last blog ..Saturday Morning Surfing: Passion is NOT Enough – Your Landlord Doesn’t Give a Rat’s Patootie =-.
Dave, just want to add that I throw in some Dark Side Of The Moon to get creative (playing now) because I am a Rock and Roll slash Blues guy.
Second, I can’t stress enough to new bloggers, find blogs in your niche and network with them. Stop thinking of them as competition and think of them as colleagues. If they are actually direct competition, then broaden your niche. For example, I started in blogging to promote my fence contracting business. It was hard to network with fence blogs, well there weren’t any 2yrs ago, so I looked to DIY and other construction related blogs and forums to get involved in, it paid off BIGTIME!
Point is, get out and promote your site right from the start, even before it launches!
Nice article Dave!
.-= Keith´s last blog ..Do You Blog Engage? =-.
Keith, you’re spot on. We’re not really competing at our level. We’re just trying to stay alive long enough for the A-listers to get bored and move on, or stop paying attention, or make some slip up so we can slip in. There is a lot of value in maintaining close ties. We can all lift ourselves up together. It’s all about the network.
You might like some of the newer ambient, down tempo and dub like Pitch Black Bird Soul http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=92aWX2YsDEY or Ape to Angel http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RcJDiYYYRA8 Extended jams.
Phuture Primitive is darker and downer: Here’s Hyper-Sence http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hcb8WCaZAEw
Love me some Floyd too, everything from Umma Gumma through Animals. I think I like Meddle or Wish You Were Here best.
Had James Cotton as a fare once, when I was driving night cab in Austin. Picked him up at Antones. Of course.
All that being said, I love me some Heart, and Avatar brought back memories of Yes albums.
.-= Dave´s last blog ..MasterMind Power III: The 5 Ws Of a Successful Mastermind Group =-.
Thanks for the music tips Dave. Yes and Heart bring back memories of high school too!
.-= Keith´s last blog ..Article Promotion =-.
Hi Dave,
I’m not sure what serves as pillar posts on my site and what isn’t. I just write like James does and hope to get indexed by Google and attract more readers. My traffic is growing so I’m not sure if I need to add to my approach or not.
.-= Gordie´s last blog ..Short-Term Gains Are Shorter Term Than You Think. =-.
Gordie,
Nearest I can figure, neither you nor James have any real “pillar content” or foundational or flagship or cornerstone, or whatever kind of content you want to call it.
That’s not really a big deal, but having it can help you out in the future quite a bit.
For example, Website In A Weekend has 101 pillar content articles. These are articles that I continue to revise, behind the scenes. Sometimes revising a little, sometimes a lot. But it’s ongoing work. As the years pass, these articles age like fine wine. Their permalinks start to accrue real value.
So let’s talk then. You have a stupendous amount of experience that you’re blind to, but I can see it. You should be able to “reverse-engineer” the last 7-8 years and found LSTD4U on that.
I’m still pretty foggy. Are you talking about my experience living in China?
.-= Gordie´s last blog ..Short-Term Gains Are Shorter Term Than You Think. =-.
Yep, and the whole decision making and process of getting to China from wherever you started from. Mentally, emotionally, physically.
.-= Dave´s last blog ..Lego Manta Warriors? Pantyliner Ads? It’s gotta be the Week in Review =-.
Okay, I understand. Thanks, man.
.-= Gordie´s last blog ..Short-Term Gains Are Shorter Term Than You Think. =-.
I heard about you from Kelly and can see why she raves!
This article was fascinating. I’ve been blogging since 2006 and yet my numbers are still not at all what I want them to be – possibly because I never really applied any kind of strategic thinking (or, let’s be honest, much thinking at all) about what to do about this. This is such a thoughtful and readable (surprisingly difficult combination) essay on the basics – thank you.
Thank you Lindsey. It has at least one more solid round of revision ahead of it. I spent most of a couple of days figuring out how to get it republished I didn’t get enough time on revising. Such is life.
What do you want your numbers to look like? You’re in an intensely competitive niche. (As I am here.) No need to answer, just something to think about, on several levels.
.-= Dave´s last blog ..MasterMind Power IV: Some MasterMind Examples =-.
I see how “pillar content” applies to information type sites (like yours, clearly), but not quite so much with a site like mine, in which the blog is just a marketing tool to exchange money for sheets of paper.
In my mind, my pillar content should be my latest print project, but that doesn’t quite fit into the notion of what pillar content is.
Gonna have to figure this out. There’s a lot of room here.
.-= Deacon´s last blog ..Free Art Friday, Eggs, and Marketing =-.
I see http://baddeacondesign.com with the potential to totally own the wood block print mindspace. Sure, you sell your stuff, but you might have a reseller cart specializing in the supplies people need. Who knows? Not the hugest market, but you might find you’re owning a bigger share of a bigger market than http://onlythevaliant.com.
Yeah, there’s not a lot of savvy competition out there for the woodblock space. OTV was easy, woodblock will be a little harder.
.-= Deacon´s last blog ..Free Art Friday, Eggs, and Marketing =-.
I have been slowly digesting this article since it was published, following the inks and really paying a lot of attention to the subjects of categories and pillar content.
It’s such good stuff, very helpful, and gives a guy a lot of work to do.
I am pulling back a bit on all the other tasks and promoting to focus on writing pillar content that will really establish my voice and purpose for my blog. thanks for giving me that advice more than once.
Let me know any way you feel I could improve this article, or any of the articles on the entire website. I’m going through and rewriting dozens of them.
.-= Dave´s last blog ..What the Heck is Pillar Content and Why Do I Need It? =-.
You might adjust the formatting on your teasers under the header “Driving category content with teasers” to make them more list-y like the topic sentences above them. I might be a little dense, but I actually read a few of them thinking “isn’t he veering off topic” before I realized what they were and why they were there.
I think I’ll start tackling these tonight.
.-= Carlos Velez´s last blog ..Guest Post For Website In A Weekend: Pre-Writing Is Your Friend – With Benefits (Part 1) =-.
Yeah, so, I spent most of the day trying to figure out how to move this forward in the RSS feed I never had time to rewrite it adequately!
Note there wasn’t an article yesterday? Same reason. And they do need to come forward in the feed, otherwise, what’s the point?
.-= Dave´s last blog ..Pre-Writing Is Your Friend – With Benefits (Part 1) =-.
That would be an interesting article itself…how to move an update forward in the feed.
.-= Carlos Velez´s last blog ..Guest Post For Website In A Weekend: Pre-Writing Is Your Friend – With Benefits (Part 1) =-.