Topical Clusters

Organize your content strategy around pillar pages and supporting content.

9 min read

Topical Clusters

Topical clusters organize your content into interconnected groups that signal expertise to search engines. Instead of publishing isolated pages, you build a web of related content around core topics — with a pillar page at the center, cluster pages covering subtopics, and supporting pages providing depth. WISEROWS automates the internal linking between them.

Why Topical Clusters Matter for SEO

Search engines have evolved beyond matching keywords to evaluating topical authority. A site with 50 interlinked pages about "headless CMS" ranks better for that topic than a site with a single comprehensive page, because the depth and breadth of coverage signals expertise.

Topical clusters formalize this strategy:

  • Pillar pages rank for broad, competitive keywords (e.g., "headless CMS")
  • Cluster pages rank for specific subtopics (e.g., "headless CMS vs traditional CMS")
  • Supporting pages capture long-tail queries (e.g., "what is content federation")
  • Internal links pass authority from cluster pages up to the pillar and across to siblings

Note
Google's helpful content guidelines specifically reward sites that demonstrate depth of expertise on a topic. Topical clusters are the structural implementation of this principle.

Cluster Structure

Every topical cluster has three tiers of content, each with a distinct SEO role:

3 of 3
Role
Purpose
Linking Behavior
Typical Content
PillarComprehensive overview of the broad topicLinks to ALL cluster and supporting pagesUltimate guides, cornerstone content, topic hubs
ClusterIn-depth coverage of a specific subtopicLinks to pillar + up to 3 sibling cluster pagesComparison pages, detailed guides, tutorials
SupportingFocused content on narrow, long-tail queriesLinks to pillar + 1 cluster pageGlossary terms, FAQ pages, niche how-tos

How Internal Linking Works

WISEROWS computes an internal linking map for each cluster automatically based on member roles and link priorities:

  • Pillar pages receive the most internal links (from every member), concentrating authority
  • Cluster pages link to the pillar (passing authority up) and to 3 related siblings (distributing authority horizontally)
  • Supporting pages link to the pillar and to the highest-priority cluster page, keeping the link structure clean without over-linking

Tip
Set link priorities on cluster members to control which pages link to each other. Lower numbers get higher priority. This is especially useful when you have 20+ cluster pages and want to ensure the most important subtopics are interconnected.

Creating a Topical Cluster

1

Define the pillar topic

Go to SEO > Topical Clusters and click New Cluster. Enter:

namestringrequired
The cluster name (e.g., "Headless CMS").
slugstringrequired
A URL-safe identifier, unique within your project.
targetKeywordstring
The primary keyword the pillar page targets.
clusterKeywordsstring[]
Related keywords the cluster aims to cover. Use these to identify content gaps.
descriptionstring
A brief description of the cluster's scope and purpose.
internalLinkingStrategystring
Notes on your linking approach (e.g., "Hub and spoke — all pages link to the pillar guide").
2

Add member content

Add existing entities to the cluster and assign their roles. You can add content from any entity type — glossary terms, blog posts, comparison pages, guides — as long as they relate to the cluster topic.

Each member gets:

  • A role (pillar, cluster, or supporting)
  • An optional link priority (lower numbers = higher priority in the linking map)
3

Review the linking map

WISEROWS computes the internal linking map based on roles and priorities. Review which pages link to which, and adjust priorities if the connections don't match your strategy.

4

Track progress

Monitor which content exists, which is still planned, and which is published. The cluster health dashboard shows completeness metrics.

Building a Cluster: Real-World Example

Here is how you would build a topical cluster for "Programmatic SEO" from scratch:

Step 1: Plan the Content Map

Pillar:     "The Complete Guide to Programmatic SEO" (guide)
Cluster:    "Programmatic SEO vs Traditional SEO" (comparison)
            "How to Scale Content with AI" (guide)
            "Programmatic SEO Tools Comparison" (comparison)
            "Programmatic SEO for E-commerce" (guide)
            "Building a Content Pipeline" (guide)
Supporting: "What is Programmatic SEO" (glossary)
            "Content Template" (glossary)
            "Dynamic Landing Pages" (glossary)
            "Search Intent" (glossary)
            "Long-tail Keywords" (glossary)
            "Content Velocity" (glossary)

Step 2: Create Content with Buckets

Use content buckets to generate each content type:

  • Create the glossary terms using the Glossary Term bucket (6 supporting pages)
  • Create the comparison content using the Comparison Page bucket (2 cluster pages)
  • Create the guides using the Guide bucket (1 pillar + 3 cluster pages)

Step 3: Assemble the Cluster

  1. Create the "Programmatic SEO" topical cluster
  2. Add the complete guide as the pillar page
  3. Add comparison and guide pages as cluster members
  4. Add glossary terms as supporting members
  5. Set link priorities: comparison pages get priority 1-2 (they link to the pillar most prominently), guides get priority 3-5

Use the computed linking map to add internal links within your content. The pillar page should link to all 11 other pages. Each cluster page links to the pillar and to 3 siblings. Each glossary term links to the pillar and to the highest-priority cluster page.

Cluster Health Monitoring

The cluster health dashboard tracks four metrics:

4 of 4
Metric
What It Measures
Healthy Target
Has PillarWhether a pillar page has been designatedYes (every cluster needs one)
Total MembersNumber of content pieces in the cluster8-25 for most topics
Content CompletenessPercentage of members in Approved or Published status80%+
Role DistributionBalance of pillar, cluster, and supporting content1 pillar, 3-7 cluster, 5-15 supporting

Warning
A cluster without a pillar page cannot function properly. The pillar is the authority hub that all other pages link to. Always create your pillar content first, even if it starts as a draft.

Content Planning with Clusters

Use clusters as a content planning tool, not just an organizational one:

Identify Content Gaps

Compare your cluster keywords against your actual content. Keywords without corresponding pages represent content gaps — topics you should cover to strengthen your cluster.

Cluster keywords: headless CMS, composable commerce, content mesh,
                  API-first architecture, MACH stack

Published content: headless CMS (pillar), composable commerce (cluster)

Gaps: content mesh, API-first architecture, MACH stack

Track Status Across Content Types

A cluster might span multiple content types (glossary terms, blog posts, comparison pages). The cluster view shows the status of each piece regardless of its entity type, so you can see at a glance:

  • Which subtopics have published content
  • Which are in review
  • Which are still in draft
  • Which are missing entirely

Plan Your Publishing Order

Publish in this order for maximum SEO impact:

  1. Pillar page first — Establishes the topic hub
  2. Cluster pages next — Build internal links to the pillar
  3. Supporting pages last — Fill in long-tail coverage and add more internal links

Tip
When combining topical clusters with content buckets, use the cluster to define what to write and the bucket to define how to create it. Plan your cluster keywords first, then use bucket templates to generate the actual content for each keyword.

Linking Strategy Patterns

Hub and Spoke (Default)

The standard cluster model. Everything connects through the pillar.

  • Pillar links to all cluster and supporting pages
  • Cluster pages link back to pillar + siblings
  • Supporting pages link back to pillar + one cluster page

Best for: Most topics. Clean, predictable structure.

Mesh Network

Every page links to every other page in the cluster (or as many as practical). More aggressive but harder to maintain.

Best for: Small clusters (under 10 pages) where every page is closely related.

Tiered Authority

Multiple pillar pages with sub-pillars. Used for very broad topics.

  • Main pillar: "E-commerce" (links to sub-pillars)
  • Sub-pillar: "E-commerce SEO" (links to its own cluster)
  • Sub-pillar: "E-commerce Analytics" (links to its own cluster)

Best for: Large sites covering broad industry topics.

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