Topic Clusters & Topical Authority
Topic clusters organize content around broad topics, with a central "pillar" page linked to multiple detailed "cluster" pages. This structure signals topical authority to search engines and helps users navigate related content.
This lesson covers the seven cluster and authority areas (leaves 5.2.1–5.2.7): pillar pages, cluster articles, supporting pages, hub and spoke planning, internal linking between clusters, entity coverage planning, and authority coverage scoring.
After this lesson you can build topic cluster architectures with pillar pages and cluster articles, implement hub-and-spoke linking, and score your authority coverage against competitors.
Why This Matters
- Topic clusters help search engines understand that you are an authoritative source on a broad topic, not just a collection of individual pages.
- Clusters improve internal linking distribution and pass equity across related content.
- Well-structured clusters increase the likelihood of ranking for both head terms (through the pillar) and long-tail terms (through cluster pages).
Pillar Pages
A pillar page is a comprehensive guide to a broad topic, linking to more specific cluster pages.
Pillar page characteristics:
| Characteristic | Description |
|---|---|
| Broad topic coverage | Covers the topic at a high level, with links to detailed subtopics |
| Comprehensive | Intended to be the best single resource on the topic |
| Internal linking hub | Links to all cluster pages within the topic area |
| Rank for head terms | Targets broad, higher-volume keywords |
| Evergreen | Regularly updated to maintain freshness |
Pillar page structure:
- Intro defining the topic and its importance.
- Table of contents linking to sections (and cluster pages).
- Brief overview of each subtopic, with a link to the cluster page.
- FAQ or additional resources section.
- Internal links to all related cluster pages.
Pillar page examples:
| Topic | Pillar Page Title | Cluster Pages |
|---|---|---|
| Email marketing | "Complete Guide to Email Marketing" | Deliverability, Segmentation, Automation, Analytics |
| Content SEO | "Content SEO: The Complete Guide" | Topic clusters, Content briefs, Content optimization, Gap analysis |
Cluster Articles
Cluster articles cover specific subtopics in detail, linking back to the pillar page.
Cluster article characteristics:
| Characteristic | Description |
|---|---|
| Specific topic focus | Covers one narrow subtopic in depth |
| Comprehensive detail | Provides thorough treatment of the subtopic |
| Links to pillar | Every cluster article links back to the pillar page |
| Ranks for long-tail queries | Targets more specific, longer-tail keywords |
| Supports pillar authority | Passing relevance signals back to the pillar |
Cluster article structure:
- Intro establishing the subtopic and its relevance.
- Comprehensive coverage of the subtopic.
- Contextual link back to the pillar page.
- Links to sibling cluster articles where relevant.
Supporting Content
Supporting content provides additional depth on specific aspects of cluster topics.
Supporting content types:
| Type | Purpose | Links To |
|---|---|---|
| Extended guides | Deeper coverage of a cluster subtopic | Cluster article |
| Case studies | Real-world application | Cluster article or pillar |
| Templates/workbooks | Practical tools | Cluster article |
| Research/reports | Original data | Pillar page |
| FAQs | User question coverage | Cluster or pillar |
| Infographics/visual assets | Visual summary | Cluster or pillar |
Supporting content hierarchy:
Pillar Page
├── Cluster Article 1
│ ├── Supporting: Extended Guide
│ └── Supporting: Case Study
├── Cluster Article 2
│ ├── Supporting: Template
│ └── Supporting: FAQ
└── Cluster Article 3
├── Supporting: Research Report
└── Supporting: Infographic
Hub and Spoke Planning
Hub and spoke planning designs the linking structure between the pillar (hub) and cluster pages (spokes).
Hub and spoke design principles:
| Principle | Implementation |
|---|---|
| One hub per topic cluster | Each cluster has exactly one pillar page |
| Spokes link to hub | Every cluster article explicitly links back to the pillar |
| Hub links to spokes | The pillar page links to every cluster article |
| Spokes may link to each other | Contextual links between related cluster articles |
| No spoke links to external topics | Cluster pages should not dilute the topic focus |
| Hub lives at a clean URL | /email-marketing/ not /blog/email-marketing-guide |
Linking density:
| Link Type | Quantity |
|---|---|
| Hub → cluster links | 1 link per cluster article (contextual) |
| Cluster → hub links | 1-2 links per cluster article (contextual + optional sidebar) |
| Cluster → cluster links | 1-2 links to related cluster articles |
Internal Linking Between Clusters
Cross-cluster linking connects related topics across different cluster areas.
Cross-cluster linking strategy:
| Scenario | Example | Linking Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Directly related clusters | Email deliverability and email authentication | Contextual links between relevant articles |
| Loosely related clusters | Email marketing and CRM integration | Occasional contextual links where relevant |
| Unrelated clusters | Email marketing and social media marketing | Minimal cross-linking (maintain topic focus) |
Cross-cluster linking rules:
- Link when content naturally relates (e.g., deliverability and list hygiene).
- Do not force links between unrelated topics.
- Use contextual in-content links (not navigation links).
Entity Coverage Planning
Entity coverage ensures the cluster addresses all the key concepts, people, places, and things that an authoritative resource on the topic should cover (from Lesson 1.7.4).
Entity coverage by topic:
| Topic | Required Entities | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Email deliverability | SPF, DKIM, DMARC, sender reputation, bounce rate, spam complaints, mail transfer agent | "The guide covers SPF, DKIM, and DMARC authentication protocols." |
| Email segmentation | Demographic, behavioral, psychographic segmentation; RFM analysis; segmentation tools | "The guide explains behavioral segmentation based on customer purchase history." |
| Email automation | Trigger, drip campaign, workflow, lead scoring, personalization | "The guide covers automated welcome sequences and abandoned cart workflows." |
Entity coverage audit:
- List all entities a comprehensive resource on the topic should cover.
- Check each entity against current cluster content.
- Identify missing entities and plan content additions.
- Check competitor clusters for entity coverage gaps.
Authority Coverage Scoring
Authority coverage scoring measures how thoroughly your cluster covers a topic compared to competitors.
Scoring factors:
| Factor | Measurement | Score (1-5) |
|---|---|---|
| Content volume | Number of pages in your cluster vs competitor | 1 = far fewer, 5 = far more |
| Content depth | Average word count per page | 1 = thinner, 5 = significantly deeper |
| Entity coverage | Percentage of key entities covered | 1 = <30%, 5 = 100% |
| Internal linking density | Average number of internal links per page in cluster | 1 = minimal, 5 = extensive |
| Freshness | Average age of content in cluster | 1 = 2+ years, 5 = all < 6 months |
| Backlinks to cluster | Total referring domains to cluster pages | 1 = few, 5 = many |
Scoring workflow:
- Score each factor for your cluster.
- Score each factor for top 3 competitor clusters.
- Compare scores to identify gaps.
- Plan improvements for factors where you score below competitors.
Workflow
- Select pillar topics: 5-20 topics based on business relevance and search demand.
- Build cluster structure: For each pillar, define 5-15 cluster articles.
- Create pillar page: Comprehensive overview linking to all cluster articles.
- Create cluster articles: Detailed coverage of each subtopic, linking back to pillar.
- Add supporting content: Extended guides, case studies, tools, templates.
- Implement linking structure: Hub-and-spoke linking, cross-cluster links.
- Evaluate entity coverage: Fill entity gaps in cluster content.
- Score authority: Measure coverage against competitors and improve.
Common Mistakes
A pillar page that is too shallow undermines the entire cluster. The pillar must be genuinely comprehensive enough to be the definitive resource on the broad topic — merely linking to cluster pages is not enough.
- Pillar page is too shallow: The pillar must be comprehensive enough to justify being the hub of the cluster.
- No internal linking between clusters: Clusters should be linked where topics naturally overlap.
- Cluster articles do not link back to pillar: Without backlinks, the pillar does not receive the equity and relevance from cluster articles.
- Choosing pillar topics that are too broad: "Marketing" is too broad for a single pillar. "Email marketing" is a better scope.
- Not updating pillar content: An outdated pillar signals low authority. Refresh the pillar regularly.
Checklist
- Pillar topics are defined (5-20, based on business relevance and demand).
- Each pillar has 5-15 linked cluster articles.
- Pillar page is comprehensive (targets head terms).
- Each cluster article links back to the pillar page.
- Pillar page links to all cluster articles.
- Cross-cluster links exist where topics relate.
- Entity coverage is complete for each cluster.
- Authority coverage is scored and compared to competitors.
- Clusters are reviewed and refreshed quarterly.