← Back to insights
Guide · #412

Opus 4.7 Prompt Library: 10 Prompts Every Founder Should Have

10 reusable Claude Opus 4.7 prompts for SEO, content, and technical tasks. Copy-paste templates founders actually use to ship organic visibility fast.

Filed
March 21, 2026
Read
23 min
Author
The Seoable Team

Prerequisites: What You Need Before You Start

Before diving into these prompts, make sure you have:

  • A Claude Opus 4.7 account. Go to Claude.ai or use the API. Introducing Claude Opus 4.7 from Anthropic covers what's new in this model—better instruction following, stronger coding, and faster creative output. That's why these prompts work.
  • Your domain name and current traffic data. You'll need this for SEO audits and keyword roadmaps. If you don't have it, grab your Google Search Console data first.
  • Your target audience in one sentence. The prompts work better when you're specific about who you're building for.
  • 10-15 minutes per prompt. These aren't fire-and-forget. You'll paste, review, iterate. That's the point.

If you're completely new to SEO, start with Onboarding Yourself to SEO: A Self-Paced Founder Track first. These prompts assume you know what a keyword is and why rankings matter.

One more thing: Opus 4.7 follows instructions literally. That's its superpower and why these prompts are written the way they are. Don't skip the brackets or structure—they matter.

Why Opus 4.7 Is the Right Model for These Tasks

There's a reason we're using Opus 4.7 and not ChatGPT, Gemini, or cheaper alternatives. How to Prompt Claude Opus 4.7 Differently Than 4.6 breaks down the differences, but here's the founder version:

Opus 4.7 reads instructions like a technical founder reads code. If you say "output JSON," it outputs valid JSON. If you say "respond in exactly 3 sentences," it does. That precision cuts iteration time in half.

For SEO work, that matters. You're asking it to analyze your domain, find keyword gaps, or structure content in specific ways. Sloppy output = wasted time. Opus 4.7 doesn't give you sloppy output.

The tradeoff? It costs more than ChatGPT ($0.015 per 1K input tokens, $0.075 per 1K output tokens as of launch). For a founder doing this once or quarterly, that's $5–15 per use. Compare that to a $5,000 agency SEO audit. The math is obvious.

If you're looking to build an AI stack around this, The Busy Founder's AI Stack for SEO: Three Tools, Zero Bloat walks through exactly how to pair Opus 4.7 with other tools without bloat.

Prompt 1: Domain Audit & Technical SEO Gaps

What it does: Analyzes your domain's current state and surfaces technical SEO issues you're missing.

When to use it: Every quarter, or right after you've made major site changes.

You are an expert SEO auditor with 15 years of technical SEO experience. 
Your job is to audit a domain and identify the top 5 technical SEO gaps 
that are costing it organic visibility.

Domain: [YOUR DOMAIN]
Current monthly organic traffic: [NUMBER]
Target industry: [INDUSTRY]

For each gap, provide:
1. The issue (one sentence)
2. Why it matters (how it impacts rankings)
3. The fix (specific, actionable steps)
4. Estimated impact (traffic uplift if fixed)

Prioritize by impact. Ignore cosmetic issues. Focus on things that actually 
block crawling, indexing, or ranking.

Output as numbered list. Be direct. No fluff.

How to use it:

  1. Replace [YOUR DOMAIN] with your actual domain (e.g., myapp.com).
  2. Fill in your current monthly organic traffic from Google Search Console.
  3. Paste the full prompt into Claude.
  4. Review the output. It will likely surface crawl issues, missing schema, or indexation problems.
  5. Pick the top issue and fix it before moving to the next one.

Pro tip: If you're not sure what your current traffic is, check Reading the Google Search Console Performance Report Like a Founder. That guide shows you exactly where to find the number in 5 minutes.

Once you've audited, check your schema setup. Organization Schema: The 5-Minute Trust Signal Most Founders Skip walks you through adding the schema that Google and AI engines use to understand your brand. Opus 4.7 can help you structure it, but you need to know what it is first.

Prompt 2: Keyword Roadmap (30, 60, 90 Days)

What it does: Generates a prioritized keyword roadmap that shows you what to target when.

When to use it: At the start of a new SEO push, or quarterly when you're planning content.

You are a keyword strategist for [INDUSTRY]. You understand search intent, 
competition, and volume. You know which keywords move the needle for founders.

Product/Service: [WHAT YOU SELL]
Target audience: [WHO BUYS]
Current organic traffic: [TRAFFIC NUMBER]
Domain authority (or "unknown"): [DA]

Create a 90-day keyword roadmap with:

**Day 1-30 Keywords (Quick Wins):**
- 5 keywords with low competition, 100-500 monthly searches
- Each with: keyword, search intent, why it ranks, content type

**Day 31-60 Keywords (Foundation):**
- 5 keywords with medium competition, 500-2000 monthly searches
- Each with: keyword, search intent, why it ranks, content type

**Day 61-90 Keywords (Scalable):**
- 5 keywords with higher competition, 2000+ monthly searches
- Each with: keyword, search intent, why it ranks, content type

For each keyword, estimate:
- Months to rank (based on current DA)
- Content length needed
- Backlinks required (or "none if content is strong")

Output as markdown table. Prioritize keywords that feed into each other 
(e.g., blog post ranks, then product page ranks on the back of it).

How to use it:

  1. Fill in your product/service in one sentence. Be specific. "SaaS for developers" is too vague. "API monitoring tool for Node.js teams" is right.
  2. Define your target audience. This shapes which keywords matter. A founder building for other founders needs different keywords than a founder building for enterprises.
  3. Paste your current organic traffic number from Google Search Console.
  4. If you know your domain authority, include it. If not, type "unknown" and Opus will estimate based on your traffic.
  5. Run the prompt. You'll get a 30/60/90 breakdown of what to target.

Next step: Once you have the roadmap, use The Busy Founder's Crash Course in Search Intent to validate that you understand what each keyword means. A keyword roadmap is only useful if you understand the intent behind each search.

After that, move to Prompt 3 to turn these keywords into content briefs.

Prompt 3: Content Brief for AI-Generated Blog Posts

What it does: Turns a keyword into a detailed content brief that tells an AI (or a writer) exactly what to produce.

When to use it: Before you generate any blog post, product page, or guide.

You are a content strategist writing briefs for SEO blog posts. Your briefs 
are so detailed that an AI model can write a first draft in one pass.

Target keyword: [KEYWORD]
Search intent: [INTENT - informational, commercial, navigational]
Target audience: [AUDIENCE]
Current top-ranking articles: [PASTE 2-3 TITLES]

Create a content brief with:

**Content Structure:**
- H2 sections (in order)
- Key points to cover in each section
- Why each section matters for ranking

**SEO Requirements:**
- Target keyword placement (intro, H2s, conclusion)
- LSI keywords to naturally include (list 5)
- Recommended word count
- Meta description (160 chars)

**Unique Angle:**
- What the top 3 results are missing
- Your unique perspective or data
- Why your version will rank better

**Call-to-Action:**
- What action should the reader take?
- Internal links to include (if you know them)

Output as markdown. Be specific. No generic advice.

How to use it:

  1. Pick one keyword from your roadmap (start with a Day 1-30 quick win).
  2. Identify the search intent. Type "informational" if people are learning, "commercial" if they're comparing solutions, "navigational" if they're looking for a specific product.
  3. Paste the titles of the top 3 Google results for that keyword.
  4. Run the prompt. You'll get a detailed brief.
  5. Feed that brief into The Busy Founder's Brief Template for AI-Generated Content to see how to turn it into an AI prompt that generates the actual article.

Warning: Don't skip the "Unique Angle" section. That's what separates a blog post that ranks from one that gets buried. If your angle is the same as the top 3 results, you won't outrank them.

Prompt 4: Competitive Content Gap Analysis

What it does: Finds the content your competitors are ranking for that you're not.

When to use it: Monthly, or when you're planning a content sprint.

You are a competitive analyst. Your job is to find content gaps.

Your domain: [YOUR DOMAIN]
Your competitors: [COMPETITOR 1, COMPETITOR 2, COMPETITOR 3]
Your industry: [INDUSTRY]

For each competitor, list:

**Content they rank for that you don't:**
- Keyword (with estimated monthly searches)
- Their article title
- Why it ranks (backlinks, domain authority, content quality)
- Your opportunity (can you rank for this too?)

**Content you rank for that they don't:**
- Keyword (with estimated monthly searches)
- Your article title
- Why you rank (what you did right)

**Shared keywords where you rank lower:**
- Keyword
- Their position / Your position
- Why you're losing (content gap, backlinks, freshness)
- How to outrank them

Prioritize by traffic potential. Ignore keywords that don't matter for your business.

Output as markdown. Be honest about what's beatable and what isn't.

How to use it:

  1. List your top 3 competitors. These are companies targeting the same keywords and audience as you.
  2. Paste the prompt and run it.
  3. Opus will generate a gap analysis. The output won't be perfect (it doesn't have real-time search data), but it will give you a framework to validate manually.
  4. For each gap, open Google and search the keyword. See who actually ranks. Compare the top 3 results to your competitor's article. That's your real gap.
  5. Pick 3 gaps you can close in the next 30 days. Add them to your content calendar.

Next step: Once you've identified gaps, use Prompt 3 to brief out the content. Then use Prompt 5 to generate the actual post.

Prompt 5: AI Blog Post Generation with SEO Structure

What it does: Generates a complete, SEO-optimized blog post from a brief.

When to use it: When you have a content brief and need a first draft fast.

You are an expert SEO writer and technical founder. You write blog posts 
that rank and convert.

[PASTE YOUR CONTENT BRIEF FROM PROMPT 3 HERE]

Now write the complete blog post:

**Requirements:**
1. Follow the structure in the brief exactly
2. Include the target keyword in: intro (first 100 words), at least 2 H2s, conclusion
3. Naturally include all LSI keywords (don't force them)
4. Write for [AUDIENCE] - use language they speak
5. Include specific examples, numbers, or data (not generic advice)
6. Add a strong CTA at the end
7. Aim for [WORD COUNT] words
8. Use short paragraphs (2-3 sentences max)
9. Use bold for key terms
10. Add internal links where relevant (I'll add URLs later)

Write the post now. Make it good enough to publish.

How to use it:

  1. Generate a content brief using Prompt 3.
  2. Copy the entire brief output.
  3. Paste it into the template above where it says [PASTE YOUR CONTENT BRIEF...].
  4. Fill in the audience and word count.
  5. Run the prompt.
  6. Opus will generate a full blog post in 2-3 minutes.
  7. Edit for your voice and brand. Add internal links. Publish.

Pro tip: If the post feels generic, it's because your brief was generic. Go back to Prompt 3 and sharpen the "Unique Angle" section. Feed that back into Prompt 5. Iterate until it feels like something only you could write.

Once you have content, you need to know how to measure if it's working. GA4 Events for SEO: What to Track Beyond Pageviews shows you what to track so you know if your content is actually converting.

Prompt 6: Search Intent Validator

What it does: Confirms that your content matches what people are actually searching for.

When to use it: Before you publish any piece of content.

You are a search intent expert. Your job is to make sure content matches 
what searchers actually want.

Keyword: [KEYWORD]
Your article title: [YOUR TITLE]
Your article intro (first 100 words): [PASTE INTRO]

Top 3 current results for this keyword:
1. [TITLE] - [URL]
2. [TITLE] - [URL]
3. [TITLE] - [URL]

Analyze:

**Search Intent (what people actually want):**
- Primary intent type (informational, commercial, navigational, transactional)
- Specific sub-intent (e.g., "how to" vs "best tools" vs "comparison")

**Does your article match?**
- Yes / Partially / No
- If no: what's missing?

**Content Format Match:**
- Do the top 3 results use the same format? (blog post, guide, comparison, tool, etc.)
- Does your format match?
- If not: should you change yours?

**Unique Value:**
- What are the top 3 results missing?
- Does your article fill that gap?
- If not: what should you add?

**Ranking Potential:**
- On a scale of 1-10, how likely is your article to rank in the top 3?
- Why or why not?
- What would push it to a 9 or 10?

Be honest. If the article won't rank, say so.

How to use it:

  1. Pick a keyword you're targeting.
  2. Write your article (or at least the intro and title).
  3. Look up the top 3 Google results for that keyword. Copy the titles and URLs.
  4. Paste everything into the prompt above.
  5. Opus will validate whether your content matches the intent.
  6. If it says "Partially" or "No," revise before publishing.

Why this matters: Most SEO fails because the content doesn't match what people are searching for. A guide on "how to set up X" won't rank for "best X tools" even if it's well-written. This prompt catches that before you waste time.

For more on this, read The Busy Founder's Crash Course in Search Intent. It's 10 minutes and will save you weeks of wasted content.

Prompt 7: Meta Description & Title Tag Generator

What it does: Generates CTR-optimized title tags and meta descriptions.

When to use it: Before publishing any page, or when auditing existing content for CTR improvements.

You are a conversion copywriter. You write title tags and meta descriptions 
that make people click.

Keyword: [KEYWORD]
Article title: [YOUR ARTICLE TITLE]
Article summary (1-2 sentences): [SUMMARY]
Target audience: [AUDIENCE]

Generate 5 options for each:

**Title Tags (55-60 characters):**
1. [OPTION 1]
2. [OPTION 2]
3. [OPTION 3]
4. [OPTION 4]
5. [OPTION 5]

Requirements: Include keyword naturally. Make people want to click. 
Be specific, not generic.

**Meta Descriptions (155-160 characters):**
1. [OPTION 1]
2. [OPTION 2]
3. [OPTION 3]
4. [OPTION 4]
5. [OPTION 5]

Requirements: Include keyword. Answer a question or promise a benefit. 
Make people want to click. Be specific.

For each option, note why it works (what makes it clickable).

How to use it:

  1. Grab the keyword, article title, and a 1-2 sentence summary.
  2. Paste into the prompt.
  3. Opus generates 5 title and 5 meta description options.
  4. Pick your favorite (or combine elements from multiple options).
  5. Update your page.

Pro tip: Title tags and meta descriptions don't directly impact rankings, but they impact click-through rate (CTR). Higher CTR = more traffic from the same ranking position. Over time, higher CTR also signals to Google that your content is relevant, which can improve rankings. This is why it matters.

Once your content is live, you need to monitor if it's actually getting clicks. Reading the Google Search Console Performance Report Like a Founder shows you exactly how to read your CTR data and spot opportunities.

Prompt 8: Internal Linking Strategy

What it does: Maps out which pages should link to which, and what anchor text to use.

When to use it: When you're publishing a new piece of content, or during a quarterly audit.

You are an internal linking strategist. You understand topical authority, 
user journey, and how to structure a site so Google understands it.

New article title: [TITLE]
New article keyword: [KEYWORD]
New article URL: [URL]

Existing content on your site:
[PASTE A LIST OF YOUR PAGES AND THEIR KEYWORDS]

Example format:
- Homepage | Brand, product overview
- /docs/setup | Installation, getting started
- /blog/api-best-practices | API design, best practices

Now create an internal linking plan:

**This new article should link TO:**
- 3-5 existing pages
- For each: anchor text, why the link makes sense (user journey, topical relevance)

**These existing articles should link BACK to this new article:**
- 3-5 existing pages
- For each: anchor text, why the link makes sense

**Topical cluster:**
- Is this article part of a cluster? (e.g., "API design" cluster)
- What other articles should be in this cluster?
- What pillar page should this cluster link to?

Output as markdown. Be specific about anchor text. No generic "click here".

How to use it:

  1. List all your current pages (homepage, blog posts, docs, product pages, etc.).
  2. For each, note the main keyword or topic.
  3. Paste your new article title, keyword, and URL.
  4. Run the prompt.
  5. Opus will map out the internal link structure.
  6. Add those links to your new article and update the existing articles to link back.

Why this matters: Internal links pass authority and help Google understand your site structure. They also guide users through your content. A well-linked site ranks better and converts better.

If you're building a larger content strategy, check out From Busy to Cited: A Founder's Roadmap From Day 0 to Day 100. It walks through how to build a full SEO strategy, including how to structure your content and internal links.

Prompt 9: Backlink Outreach Angle Generator

What it does: Generates specific outreach angles and email templates for backlink outreach.

When to use it: When you're ready to get backlinks (usually after your content is published and ranking for some keywords).

You are a PR and outreach specialist. You write emails that get responses.

Your article: [TITLE]
Your article URL: [URL]
Your article topic: [TOPIC]
Your target websites: [LIST 5-10 WEBSITES YOU WANT BACKLINKS FROM]

For each target website, generate:

**Why they should link to you:**
- What value does your article provide to their audience?
- Is there a specific angle or data point they'd care about?

**Outreach email (100-150 words):**
- Subject line
- Body (personalized, not generic)
- Why you're reaching out (specific to their site, not generic)
- What you're asking for (link, mention, etc.)

**Follow-up email (if they don't respond in 1 week):**
- Subject line
- Body (add new info or angle)

Make these emails feel genuine. No spam. No generic "check out my article" nonsense.

How to use it:

  1. Publish your article and let it rank for a few weeks.
  2. Identify 5-10 websites that would benefit from linking to it. These could be industry publications, competitor sites, resource pages, etc.
  3. Paste the prompt and run it.
  4. Opus generates personalized outreach angles and email templates.
  5. Customize each email slightly (use the person's name, reference something specific from their site).
  6. Send. Track responses. Follow up.

Pro tip: Backlinks take time. Don't expect a response rate above 5-10%. That's normal. Focus on quality over quantity. One link from a relevant, authoritative site is worth 100 links from random blogs.

Prompt 10: Quarterly SEO Performance Review

What it does: Analyzes your SEO progress and tells you what to do next.

When to use it: Every 90 days. This is your quarterly check-in.

You are an SEO strategist reviewing a founder's quarterly progress.

**Current State (90 days ago):**
- Organic traffic: [NUMBER]
- Ranking keywords: [NUMBER]
- Top 3 keywords: [KEYWORD 1], [KEYWORD 2], [KEYWORD 3]

**Current State (today):**
- Organic traffic: [NUMBER]
- Ranking keywords: [NUMBER]
- Top 3 keywords: [KEYWORD 1], [KEYWORD 2], [KEYWORD 3]

**What you shipped in the last 90 days:**
- [NUMBER] blog posts published
- [TECHNICAL FIXES] (e.g., "fixed crawl issues," "added schema")
- [OTHER WORK] (e.g., "improved site speed," "rewrote meta descriptions")

**Analyze:**

**Traffic Progress:**
- Are you growing? By how much? Is it the trajectory you want?
- Which traffic sources are growing (organic, referral, direct)?
- Which pages are driving the growth?

**Keyword Progress:**
- How many new keywords are you ranking for?
- Are you ranking higher for existing keywords?
- Which keywords moved the most?

**What's working:**
- What did you do that had the biggest impact?
- Why did it work?

**What's not working:**
- What didn't move the needle?
- Why?

**Next 90 Days (specific, actionable):**
- Top 3 priorities
- For each: what to do, why it matters, expected impact
- What to stop doing
- What to keep doing

Be direct. If you're not growing, say so. If you need to change strategy, say so.

How to use it:

  1. Pull your organic traffic data from Google Search Console for the last 90 days.
  2. Note how many keywords you're ranking for (use Google Search Console's Performance report).
  3. List the top 3 keywords driving traffic.
  4. List what you actually shipped (blog posts, technical fixes, etc.).
  5. Paste everything into the prompt.
  6. Opus generates a review and tells you what to do next.
  7. Use that to plan your next 90 days.

Why this matters: Most founders ship content but never check if it's working. This prompt forces you to measure and adjust. That's how you go from random content to a system that compounds.

For more on building a repeatable quarterly process, read The Quarterly SEO Review: A Founder's Repeatable Process. It's a template you can reuse every quarter.

How to Actually Use These Prompts: A Step-by-Step Workflow

Don't just copy these prompts and run them randomly. Use them as part of a system.

Week 1: Audit & Strategy

  1. Run Prompt 1 (Domain Audit) to find technical issues.
  2. Fix the top 3 issues before moving forward.
  3. Run Prompt 2 (Keyword Roadmap) to identify what to target.
  4. Pick your first 5 keywords (from the Day 1-30 section).

Week 2-3: Content Planning

  1. For each of your 5 keywords, run Prompt 3 (Content Brief).
  2. Run Prompt 6 (Search Intent Validator) to make sure your brief matches intent.
  3. Refine the brief based on the validator output.

Week 4: Content Creation

  1. Run Prompt 5 (AI Blog Post Generation) for each brief.
  2. Edit the posts for your voice and brand.
  3. Run Prompt 7 (Meta Description Generator) for title tags and meta descriptions.
  4. Run Prompt 8 (Internal Linking) to map out links.
  5. Add the links and publish.

Week 5-8: Optimization & Outreach

  1. Monitor your new articles in Google Search Console.
  2. Run Prompt 9 (Backlink Outreach) to generate outreach emails.
  3. Send outreach to 5-10 relevant sites.
  4. Monitor rankings and traffic.

Week 12: Review

  1. Run Prompt 10 (Quarterly Review) to assess progress.
  2. Plan your next 90 days based on the output.
  3. Repeat.

This workflow takes about 4-6 hours per keyword. That's fast compared to agency timelines, but it's not magic. You're still doing the work. The prompts just make the work clearer and faster.

If you want a more structured approach, SEO Bootcamp for Busy Founders: 14 Days, 14 Wins breaks down exactly what to do each day for 2 weeks. It's a more aggressive timeline, but it works.

Common Mistakes When Using These Prompts

Mistake 1: Skipping the research step.

Don't just paste your domain into Prompt 1 and expect it to work. Opus doesn't have real-time data about your site's crawl status or indexation. It's making educated guesses. Validate its output by checking Google Search Console, your server logs, and your robots.txt.

Mistake 2: Using generic briefs.

If your content brief (Prompt 3) is generic, your blog post will be generic. Spend time on the "Unique Angle" section. That's where the ranking power comes from.

Mistake 3: Not validating search intent.

Prompt 6 is optional if you know search intent well. But most founders skip it and publish content that doesn't match what people are searching for. Don't skip it. It takes 5 minutes and saves you weeks of wasted content.

Mistake 4: Publishing without internal links.

New content without internal links is orphaned. Google crawls it eventually, but it takes longer to rank. Use Prompt 8 to map out links before you publish.

Mistake 5: Expecting overnight results.

These prompts help you create good content fast. But ranking takes time. New content usually takes 4-12 weeks to rank, depending on your domain authority and competition. Don't judge the system after 2 weeks.

Integrating These Prompts Into Your Broader SEO Stack

These prompts work best when paired with other tools. The Busy Founder's AI Stack for SEO: Three Tools, Zero Bloat shows you exactly how to combine Opus 4.7 with ChatGPT and Seoable for a complete SEO system.

The rough idea:

  • Opus 4.7 (these prompts): Strategic work—audits, keyword roadmaps, content briefs, analysis.
  • ChatGPT 5.5: Quick tasks—social media captions, email copy, fast rewrites.
  • Seoable: Automation—domain audits in 60 seconds, 100 AI-generated blog posts, keyword roadmaps.

If you're just starting out, you don't need Seoable. These prompts alone will get you far. But if you're shipping a lot of content and need faster turnaround, Seoable automates the audit and content generation parts.

For more on building SEO habits that stick, read SEO Habits Every Busy Founder Should Build in 30 Days. These prompts are tools. Habits are what make them work.

When to Upgrade From These Prompts

These prompts are powerful, but they have limits. Here's when to upgrade:

You need real-time data.

Opus doesn't know your current rankings, real-time search volume, or competitor backlink counts. If you need that, use Ahrefs or Semrush. But for a founder on a budget, these tools are expensive ($99-500/month). Start with these prompts. Upgrade when you have revenue to justify it.

You're shipping 10+ pieces of content per month.

At that volume, manual prompting gets slow. Seoable generates 100 AI blog posts in 60 seconds for $99 one-time. That's faster than running these prompts 100 times.

You need ongoing optimization, not one-time audits.

These prompts are great for quarterly reviews and strategic work. But they're not continuous. If you want weekly monitoring, ranking alerts, and automated optimization, you need a platform. Again, Seoable or traditional SEO platforms handle that.

You need backlinks at scale.

Prompt 9 helps you write outreach emails. But it doesn't find link prospects, track responses, or manage campaigns. For that, use Ahrefs or hire a PR person.

For now, these prompts are enough. Use them. Ship content. Build organic visibility. Then upgrade when you hit the limits.

Key Takeaways: What to Remember

You now have 10 reusable prompts that cover the entire SEO workflow—from audits to strategy to content to outreach. Here's what matters:

  1. Opus 4.7 is literal. It follows instructions exactly. That's why these prompts work. Don't change the structure.

  2. These prompts are fast, not magic. They compress weeks of work into hours. But they still require your input—your domain, your keywords, your unique angle.

  3. Use them in order. Audit first. Strategy second. Content third. Don't skip steps.

  4. Validate the output. Opus doesn't have real-time data. It makes educated guesses. Check its work against Google Search Console, competitor research, and search results.

  5. Iteration is the point. Your first brief might be generic. Your first content might be thin. Run it through Prompt 6 to validate. Revise. Iterate. That's how you get ranking content.

  6. These prompts are 80% of the work. The other 20% is discipline—actually publishing, monitoring, and adjusting based on data. Most founders skip this part. Don't.

  7. Build habits, not one-offs. Run Prompt 10 (Quarterly Review) every 90 days. Make it a ritual. That's how you compound organic visibility over time.

You're ready. Pick your first keyword. Run Prompt 3. Generate your first brief. Publish your first post. Track the results. Repeat.

Organic visibility doesn't happen overnight. But it compounds. Six months from now, if you follow this system, you'll have 10-20 pieces of ranking content, 50-100 new keywords, and traffic that's growing without paid ads. That's the point.

Now ship.

Free weekly newsletter

Get the next one on Sunday.

One short email a week. What is working in SEO right now. Unsubscribe in one click.

Subscribe on Substack →
Keep reading