| name | pillar-content-architecture |
| description | How to design a content hub that earns topical authority. Pillar topic selection, cluster planning, internal linking architecture, URL structure, pillar and cluster page anatomy, topical authority signals for SEO and AEO/GEO, and the maintenance discipline that distinguishes intentional hubs from accidental orphans. Triggers on pillar content, content hub, topic cluster, topical authority, content architecture, hub and spoke, pillar page, cluster page, content silo, internal linking strategy. Also triggers when a content set is not ranking despite individual piece quality, when a pillar was launched without a cluster, or when content has accumulated without an architecture. |
| category | content |
| catalog_summary | Hub-level content architecture: pillar topic selection, cluster planning, internal linking, URL structure, pillar and cluster page anatomy, topical authority signals, refresh discipline |
| display_order | 1 |
Pillar Content Architecture
A senior content architect's playbook for designing content hubs that earn topical authority.
Most content programs accumulate accidentally. Pieces ship one at a time, internal linking happens (or does not) in editing, similar topics get covered by multiple pieces with no coordination, and six months later the team has a content set that looks like a sitemap but feels like a yard sale. Search engines see disconnected pages; AI engines see scattered citations; readers cannot tell which piece is the entry point and which is the reference.
This skill is the discipline of intentional hub architecture. It assumes you have decided which topic areas to invest in (see content-strategy) and have keyword data (see seo-keyword). It does not write any individual piece (see content-brief-authoring for per-piece work and content-and-copy for execution). What it does is design the structure: which topic gets a pillar, which subtopics get cluster pieces, how the pieces link to each other, where they live in the URL hierarchy, and what topical authority signals the architecture is engineered to produce.
When to use this skill: launching a new content hub, restructuring an existing content set into a hub, deciding whether a piece should be a pillar or a cluster, or auditing why a content area is not ranking despite individual piece quality.
What this skill is for
This skill spans hub-level content architecture. It composes with five sister and adjacent skills, and the distinction between them is what keeps each one sharp.
content-strategy is program-scope: multiple topic pillars, editorial calendar, governance, formats. Decides what topic areas to invest in across a quarter or year.
seo-keyword is upstream-input: keyword research that surfaces candidate pillar topics with volume, difficulty, and intent data.
- This skill is hub-scope: one pillar plus its cluster, the architecture that ties them together. The structural decisions, not the per-piece content.
content-brief-authoring is per-piece scope: brief for one content artifact. Each cluster piece (and the pillar itself) gets briefed via that skill.
content-and-copy is execution scope: writing the piece itself.
seo-content-gap-audit is audit-side: finds missing pieces in an existing content set after the fact. This skill prevents the gaps; that skill catches the ones that emerge.
The clean composition: content-strategy decides which topics, seo-keyword surfaces opportunities, this skill designs the hub, content-brief-authoring briefs each piece, content-and-copy writes each piece, seo-content-gap-audit later catches what slipped. Six skills, sequential.
The audience: SEO content strategists, content architects, in-house teams designing content hubs, agencies running topical authority programs. The voice is senior content architect to junior content marketer. Concrete, opinionated, honest about what makes a hub earn authority versus decorate the sitemap.
Pillar vs cluster vs orphan content
The keystone distinction. Three categories of content in any program.
Pillar. Comprehensive piece covering a major topic area. 2,500 to 5,000 words plus. Anchors the topical authority claim for the topic. Receives links from cluster pieces; links out to cluster pieces selectively, not as a footer dump. The pillar is the entry point for the topic and the reference the cluster orbits.
Cluster. Narrower piece covering a specific facet of the pillar topic. 800 to 2,000 words. Links up to pillar; may link sideways to other clusters in the same hub when a connection is natural. Each cluster answers one specific question within the pillar's scope.
Orphan. Piece that does not connect to a pillar or cluster. May rank or convert on its own merits, but does not compound into topical authority. Some orphans are fine by design (release-note pages, customer stories, one-off campaigns); most orphans are accidents.
The pathology. Most content programs are 80% orphans, 15% accidental clusters, 5% accidental pillars. The discipline is moving toward 70% intentional clusters, 20% intentional pillars, 10% standalone-by-design. Same total content volume; different architectural outcome.
The reading model. Search engines and AI engines both read internal-link graphs to infer topical authority. A pillar with 12 well-linked cluster pieces signals depth on a topic. 12 orphans on the same topic signal scattered, less-authoritative coverage. The architecture is the signal.
Detail and decision tree in references/pillar-cluster-decision.md.
Topic selection for pillar pages
Not every topic deserves a pillar. The five-criterion selection framework:
- Search volume justifies the investment. Pillar topic has enough monthly volume to support a 3,000 to 5,000-word effort plus 8 to 15 cluster pieces. Sub-100 monthly searches usually does not.
- Topic has natural facets. You can identify 8 to 15 distinct subtopics that could each be their own piece. If you can only think of 3, it is probably a cluster, not a pillar.
- Commercial relevance. The topic connects to your business model. A pillar without commercial signal is content marketing for content marketing's sake.
- Competitive feasibility. Top 10 SERP for the pillar keyword is achievable. If the SERP is dominated by Wikipedia, government sites, and Fortune 500 brands, your pillar will rank position 47 no matter how good it is.
- Editorial commitment. The team will maintain the pillar (refresh annually, add new clusters, update statistics). Pillars are not ship-and-forget; they are 5-year commitments.
The "everything is a pillar" anti-pattern. Teams call any 3,000-word piece a pillar. Length does not make a pillar. The architecture does. Pillar is the role a piece plays in the hub structure, not the word count.
Detail in references/topic-selection-criteria.md.
Cluster planning
Once a pillar is selected, plan its cluster:
- Cluster size. Typically 8 to 15 pieces for a strong hub. Below 5 reads thin; above 25 becomes unmanageable; sweet spot is 10 to 12.
- Cluster facets. Each cluster piece covers one facet of the pillar topic. Facets are surfaced from keyword research (long-tail variations of pillar keyword), "people also ask" data, sub-headings in top-ranking pillar pages on the SERP, competitor cluster maps, and first-party customer questions (sales calls, support tickets).
- No facet duplication. Two cluster pieces should not target overlapping queries. If they do, consolidate to one piece.
- Cluster heterogeneity. Clusters should cover the topic from multiple angles (definition, how-to, comparison, examples, common mistakes, costs, alternatives, case studies) rather than 12 variations of "what is X."
- Sequence. Ship pillar first (or alongside the first 3 to 5 clusters). The link graph will not form without the pillar in place; clusters that link to a non-existent pillar are orphans-in-waiting.
Detail in references/cluster-planning-patterns.md.
Internal linking architecture
The hub's internal-link graph is what actually produces topical authority signals. The architecture has three directions:
Pillar to cluster (top-down). Pillar links out to each cluster piece via contextual anchors, typically once per cluster from within the pillar's body. Do not bury cluster links in a "related reading" footer; weave them into the relevant section of the pillar where the reader's curiosity peaks.
Cluster to pillar (bottom-up). Every cluster piece links up to the pillar at least once, typically in the first 200 words and again in the closing section. Bottom-up is the discipline that makes the pillar compound; without it the pillar is just a long article.
Cluster to cluster (lateral). Selective lateral linking when one cluster naturally references another. Do not force lateral links; an "everyone links to everyone" cluster is messy and dilutes anchor text relevance.
Anchor text discipline. Vary the anchor text. "Click here" is dead; exact-match keyword stuffing is dead; descriptive natural-language anchors are alive. The brief for each piece (see content-brief-authoring) specifies anchor text per outbound link.
The "linking inventory" pattern. Maintain a sheet (or database row, or dbt model) tracking every link in the hub, who links to whom, and the anchor text used. Audit quarterly to catch broken links, anchor-text drift, and missing connections that should exist.
Detail in references/internal-linking-architecture.md.
URL structure and information architecture
URL patterns matter for both crawl clarity and reader navigation. Decision factors:
Subfolder vs subdomain. Subfolder is the default (example.com/hub-topic/cluster-piece) for SEO consolidation; both pillar and cluster live on the same domain authority. Subdomain is appropriate only for genuinely distinct properties (docs.example.com, community.example.com).
Hub URL pattern. /hub-topic/ for the pillar, /hub-topic/cluster-piece/ for clusters. Avoid /blog/cluster-piece/ if the goal is hub authority; the URL itself signals topical grouping to crawlers and readers.
Slug conventions. Short, descriptive, keyword-aware but not stuffed. /seo-content-strategy/keyword-research-for-pillars/ not /the-ultimate-guide-to-seo-content-strategy-keyword-research-for-pillar-pages-2026/.
Breadcrumbs. Surface the hub structure in breadcrumb navigation. Helps readers see where they are; helps crawlers see the hierarchy.
The "/blog/ trap." Teams put pillar and clusters under /blog/ because that is where the CMS folder is. This works structurally but loses the URL signal that says "these pieces belong together as a topical hub."
Detail in references/url-structure-patterns.md.
Pillar page anatomy
A pillar page does specific work. The standard sections:
- Hero. Defines the topic, signals scope ("The complete guide to X for Y audience"), establishes authority quickly.
- TL;DR or executive summary. 150 to 250 words at the top. AI engines often cite this section verbatim. Treat it as the citation-ready summary, not as a marketing intro.
- Comprehensive body. Covers the topic's major facets, with internal-link callouts to cluster pieces for deep dives. The body is not a comprehensive treatment of every facet; it is a guided tour with depth links.
- Use cases or examples. Anchor the abstract topic to concrete instances.
- Common mistakes / FAQ. AI-citation friendly section with structured Q&A. Pair with FAQ schema markup.
- Closing or next steps. Directs reader into the cluster (which piece to read next based on intent).
- Schema markup. Article or HowTo schema depending on intent; FAQPage schema for the FAQ section.
Pillar length. 3,000 to 5,000 words is the typical range. Pillar quality is comprehensiveness AND depth, not just word count. A 6,000-word pillar that covers 3 facets is worse than a 4,000-word pillar that covers 12 facets.
Detail in references/pillar-page-anatomy.md.
Cluster piece anatomy
Cluster pieces have a different shape:
- Hero. Focused on one specific question or task, not broad.
- Pillar callout. Link up to pillar in the first 200 words. Typical phrasing: "This piece covers X. For the broader context on Y, see our guide to [pillar topic]."
- Focused body. Answers the specific question with depth, but does not expand into adjacent facets (those have their own cluster pieces).
- Lateral callouts (selective). When relevant, link to 1 or 2 sibling cluster pieces.
- Closing. Link back to pillar OR to the next logical cluster piece in a reader journey.
Cluster length. 800 to 2,000 words typical. A cluster piece longer than 2,500 words is probably a mini-pillar that should either get promoted to its own pillar or be split into two cluster pieces.
Detail in references/cluster-piece-anatomy.md.
Topical authority signals
Signals that make hub architecture compound into authority. The two-engine view: pillars and clusters serve search engines and answer engines together, not as competing optimizations.
SEO signals:
- Internal-link graph density on the topic (PageRank flow within the hub)
- Comprehensive entity coverage across pillar plus clusters (mentioned entities, statistics, citations)
- URL structure clarity
- Breadcrumb hierarchy
- Schema markup (Article, HowTo, FAQPage as appropriate)
- E-E-A-T signals: author credentials, expertise demonstrated, trust signals on every piece
AEO and GEO signals:
- Answer-paragraph format directly under H2 headings (40 to 60 words, citation-ready)
- TL;DR section on pillars (highly citable; AI engines extract it verbatim)
- FAQ schema (still cited heavily by AI engines including Perplexity and ChatGPT)
- Specific statistics with cited sources
- Named experts and named methods (entities AI engines weight heavily for citation)
- Distinctive POV that AI engines can attribute to your brand
The two-engine optimization is complementary, not competing. Both reward depth, structure, and entity coverage. The hub architecture creates more surface area for both signal types than scattered orphan content can.
Detail in references/topical-authority-signals.md and the seo-aeo-geo skill for AEO/GEO strategy at the program level.
Maintenance and refresh patterns
Hubs decay if not maintained. The discipline:
- Annual pillar refresh. Every 12 months, audit the pillar against current SERP, update statistics, add new sections for emerged facets, prune sections that no longer matter, refresh internal-link callouts to cluster pieces (since the cluster has likely grown).
- Cluster refresh as triggered. Clusters refresh when keyword performance drops, when a new sub-topic emerges, or when a cluster's links go stale.
- Cluster expansion. Add new cluster pieces as the topic surfaces new facets. A hub at year 1 might have 8 clusters; year 3 could have 18.
- Cluster pruning. Kill cluster pieces that fail to rank or get cited after 12 months. Redirect to the most-relevant remaining cluster or to the pillar. Pruning is not failure; it is hygiene.
- Hub lifecycle. Hubs themselves have a lifespan. After 5 to 7 years, even mature hubs may need wholesale restructuring as the topic landscape shifts.
The "set and forget" failure. Hub launches, ranks, drives traffic for 2 years, then decays without anyone noticing because nobody owns the hub long-term. Hub ownership is durable: single owner across 3 to 5 year horizons, not "the team that launched it."
Detail in references/content-refresh-patterns.md.
Common failure modes
Rapid-fire. Diagnoses in references/common-pillar-failures.md.
- "We have 80 blog posts but no rankings." Orphan content; no hub architecture.
- "Our 8,000-word pillar does not rank." Comprehensive but no cluster support; pillar without a hub is just a long article.
- "We launched the pillar, never built the cluster." Architecture half-built signals nothing.
- "Cluster pieces do not link to the pillar." Top-down link graph but no bottom-up; the pillar does not compound.
- "Two cluster pieces target the same keyword." Self-cannibalization; consolidate.
- "Pillar URL is /blog/the-ultimate-guide-to..." Losing the URL hub signal.
- "Our pillar is 12 sections of 'what is X'." Facet homogeneity; covers one angle 12 ways.
- "We cannot tell which piece to refresh first." No maintenance ownership; no signals being tracked.
- "Pillar ranks but does not get cited by AI engines." Missing AEO/GEO signals (no TL;DR, no answer paragraphs, no FAQ schema).
- "Hub launched 3 years ago; nobody owns it now." Lifecycle ownership gap.
- "We have 25 clusters and it is chaos." Over-built; sweet spot was 12.
The framework: 12 considerations for hub architecture
When designing or auditing a content hub, walk these 12 considerations.
- Topic earns the pillar. Search volume, facet count, commercial relevance, competitive feasibility, editorial commitment.
- Cluster size targets 10 to 12. Sweet spot, not the maximum.
- Facet heterogeneity. Definition, how-to, comparison, examples, mistakes, costs, alternatives. Not 12 variations of "what is X."
- No facet duplication. Clusters cover distinct queries; consolidate when they overlap.
- Pillar to cluster to pillar link graph. Top-down plus bottom-up plus selective lateral.
- Anchor text discipline. Varied, descriptive, natural-language. No stuffing, no "click here."
- URL structure signals the hub.
/topic/ not /blog/.
- Pillar anatomy includes TL;DR and FAQ. Citation-ready sections for AI engines.
- Cluster anatomy links UP to pillar early. First 200 words and closing.
- AEO/GEO and SEO together. Two-engine optimization, complementary not competing.
- Annual pillar refresh plus triggered cluster refresh. Maintenance is part of the architecture.
- Hub ownership is durable. Single owner across 3 to 5 year horizons; not "the team that launched it."
The output of the framework is an architecture document the team can reference at every stage: pillar selected, cluster planned, links specified, URLs chosen, page anatomies templated, refresh cadence set, owner named.
Reference files
Closing: architecture is the moat
Comprehensive content can be replicated. Authoritative sources can be cited. Individual pieces can be matched in quality by competitors with similar resources. What is harder to replicate is the compounding of an intentional hub built and maintained over years: the link graph, the entity coverage, the maintenance discipline, the topical depth signals that build over a 3 to 5 year horizon.
That is the moat. Architecture is the only part of content marketing that compounds reliably; everything else is execution that can be matched.
When in doubt about whether a hub is ready, ask: is the pillar selected against the five criteria, are the 10 to 12 clusters planned with facet heterogeneity, is the link graph specified top-down and bottom-up, is the URL structure clean, is the pillar anatomy templated with TL;DR and FAQ, is the refresh cadence set, and is the durable owner named? If yes to all of those, ship the hub plan and let the per-piece briefs and writers work.