| name | content-pillars |
| description | Define content pillars that align with business goals and audience needs. Use when building or restructuring a content program. |
| origin | ECM |
Content Pillars
When to Activate
- Building a content marketing program from scratch
- Existing content feels scattered, reactive, or unfocused
- A new product or audience expansion requires rethinking content strategy
- Content team is growing and needs shared strategic direction
- Auditing existing content reveals no clear thematic structure
- Content is being created but not driving measurable business outcomes
First Questions
- What are the top three business goals content should support? (Awareness, leads, retention, SEO, thought leadership?)
- Who are your primary audience segments, and what do they care about?
- What topics does your brand have genuine expertise and authority in?
- What questions do your customers ask most frequently?
- What content exists today, and which pieces perform best?
- Who are your content competitors (not product competitors — who else is educating your audience)?
- How many content pieces can you realistically produce per month?
What Content Pillars Are
Content pillars are three to five core themes that anchor all content creation. Every piece of content maps back to a pillar. They serve three functions:
- Strategic filter. Should we create this? Does it fit a pillar? If not, probably no.
- Audience contract. Readers know what to expect from your brand.
- SEO architecture. Pillars map to topic clusters that build domain authority.
Content pillars are NOT:
- Product feature categories (that is a product marketing structure, not a content strategy)
- So broad they include everything ("business," "technology," "innovation")
- So narrow they run out of content ideas within a quarter
How to Derive Content Pillars
Content pillars live at the intersection of three circles:
┌─────────────────┐
│ Business Goals │
│ What we need │
│ to achieve │
└────────┬────────┘
│
┌────────────┼────────────┐
│ │ │
┌───▼────┐ ┌───▼────┐ ┌───▼────┐
│Audience │ │ SWEET │ │ Brand │
│ Needs │◄─┤ SPOT ├─►│Expertise│
│What they│ │Pillars │ │What we │
│care about│ │live │ │know │
└─────────┘ │ here │ └────────┘
└────────┘
Process
- List business goals that content should drive (generate leads, reduce churn, build awareness, recruit talent).
- Map audience needs through customer research, sales call analysis, support ticket themes, search query data, social listening, and community questions.
- Identify brand expertise — what does your team know deeply enough to create valuable, original content about?
- Find the overlap. Topics that serve a business goal AND address an audience need AND leverage brand expertise are your pillar candidates.
- Consolidate and name. Group related topics into three to five named pillars. Name them clearly (not cleverly — clarity beats creativity here).
Pillar Validation Criteria
For each candidate pillar, score 1-5:
| Criterion | Score |
|---|
| Relevance. Does the audience actively seek content on this topic? | |
| Authority. Can we create genuinely valuable content here, not just surface-level? | |
| Volume. Can we generate 20+ content ideas under this pillar? | |
| Business impact. Does this pillar connect to a measurable business outcome? | |
| Differentiation. Can we say something different from what already exists? | |
| Longevity. Will this topic still matter in two to three years? | |
Pillars scoring below 3 on any criterion need rework.
Content Pillar Template
## Pillar: [Name]
### Definition
[One sentence explaining what this pillar covers]
### Business Goal Connection
[Which business goal this pillar serves and how]
### Target Audience
[Which audience segment(s) this pillar primarily serves]
### Core Topics Under This Pillar
1. [Topic]
2. [Topic]
3. [Topic]
4. [Topic]
5. [Topic]
### Content Formats That Work Here
- [Blog posts, guides, videos, podcasts, infographics, tools, etc.]
### SEO Cluster
- Pillar page: [broad topic page]
- Cluster pages: [specific subtopic pages that link back to pillar]
### Key Questions We Answer
- [Question 1]
- [Question 2]
- [Question 3]
### Sample Content Ideas (First Quarter)
1. [Specific title or topic]
2. [Specific title or topic]
3. [Specific title or topic]
4. [Specific title or topic]
Examples
B2B SaaS (Project Management Tool)
| Pillar | Business Goal | Audience Need |
|---|
| Team Productivity | Drive trial signups | "How do I get my team to work more efficiently?" |
| Remote Work Best Practices | Build awareness | "How do distributed teams stay aligned?" |
| Project Management Frameworks | SEO/thought leadership | "What methodology should we use?" |
| Product Updates & Tips | Reduce churn, drive adoption | "How do I get more out of this tool?" |
D2C (Sustainable Fashion Brand)
| Pillar | Business Goal | Audience Need |
|---|
| Sustainable Living | Build brand affinity | "How do I reduce my environmental impact?" |
| Style & Outfit Inspiration | Drive purchases | "How do I look good with sustainable clothes?" |
| Behind the Supply Chain | Build trust | "How do I know this brand is actually ethical?" |
| Community Stories | Social proof, loyalty | "Who else shops here, and why?" |
Pillar Distribution Across Channels
Not every pillar performs equally on every channel. Map pillar emphasis by channel:
| Pillar | Blog | Email | Social | Podcast | Video |
|---|
| Pillar 1 | High | Medium | High | Low | Medium |
| Pillar 2 | Medium | High | Medium | High | Low |
| Pillar 3 | High | Low | Low | High | High |
| Pillar 4 | Low | High | High | Low | Medium |
This prevents every channel from having the same content mix and lets you optimize for each platform's strengths.
Pillar Content Ratio
Distribute production effort across pillars intentionally:
- Primary pillar (the one most tied to revenue): 30-40% of content
- Secondary pillars: 20-25% each
- Experimental/seasonal: 10% for trending topics, experiments, and timely content that may not fit a pillar but is worth pursuing
Review the ratio quarterly. If a pillar is underperforming, reduce investment. If one is overperforming, double down.
Common Pitfalls
- Too many pillars. More than five dilutes focus. Three is often enough.
- Pillars = product categories. Content pillars should reflect audience interests, not your product's navigation.
- No "so what" for the audience. A pillar named "AI" means nothing. "How to Use AI Without Losing Your Team's Trust" is a pillar.
- Set and forget. Pillars should be reviewed every six to twelve months as business goals and audience needs evolve.
- No content ideas test. If you cannot brainstorm 20 content ideas for a pillar in 15 minutes, it is too narrow.
Quality Gate
Before finalizing content pillars: