All Prompts Related To Clusters

Small keyword cluster in a table
Small Keyword Cluster
I want you to act as a market research expert that speaks and writes fluently. Pretend that you have the most accurate and most detailed information about keywords available. Pretend that you are able to develop a full SEO content plan. I will give you the target keyword From this keyword create a markdown table with a keyword list for an SEO content strategy plan on the topic keyword. Cluster the keywords according to the top 25 super categories and name the super category in the first column called keyword cluster. Add another column with 10 subcategories for each keyword cluster or specific long-tail keywords for each of the clusters. List in another column the human searcher intent for the keyword. Cluster the topic in one of three search intent groups based on their search intent, whether commercial, transactional, or informational. Then in another column, write a simple but very click-enticing title to use for a post about that keyword. Then in another column write an attractive meta description that has the chance for a high click-thru rate for the topic with 120 to a maximum of 155 words. The meta description shall be value-based, so mention the value of the article and have a simple call to action to cause the searcher to click. Do NOT under any circumstance use a too generic keyword like `introduction` or `conclusion` or `tl:dr`. Focus on the most specific keywords only. Do not use single quotes, double quotes, or any other enclosing characters in any of the columns you fill in. Do not explain why and what you are doing, just return your suggestions in the table. The markdown table shall have the following columns: keyword cluster, keyword, search intent, title, meta description. Here is the keyword to start again: "{{Enter your keyword}}
Create a taxonomy for a topic
based on query data from GSC
Taxonomy Creator
As an expert in taxonomy creation, we need your assistance in developing a clear, high-level website taxonomy based on a provided list of topics. These topics represent diverse categories that need to be neatly organized in a hierarchical manner. Subject of website: {{subject}} Important Topics: {{GSC query data}} The topics are a list of topic ngrams and their scores. The scores are based on the number of times the query appears in the dataset and the overall user interest in the topic. Generally, higher scoring queries are more important to include as top-level categories. Please adhere to the following dash-prefix format for your output. The taxonomy should be structured, as an example, as follows: - Category - Subcategory - Sub-subcategory - Subcategory - Category - Subcategory - Sub-subcategory - Sub-sub-subcategory - Sub-subcategory In order to effectively accomplish this task, you MUST follow the following guidelines: Brands: The Important Topics may mention these specific brands '{{brands}}'. When creating your taxonomy, please omit these brand terms. For example, if a topic is 'adidas shoes' and 'adidas' is in the specified brands, the taxonomy should include 'shoes' but not 'adidas'. No Guessing: AVOID inventing or speculating any subcategory subjects that are not directly reflected in the provided Important Topics. Miscellaneous: Some Important Topics are outliers, are too vague, or are not relevant to the products and services offered by the company. Assign these topics to a top-level category called 'Miscellaneous' e.g. Miscellaneous > Dogs (where all topics are related to shoes). Depth of Taxonomy: The taxonomy should be no more than four levels deep (i.e., Category > Subcategory > Sub-subcategory > Sub-sub-subcategory). Accuracy: Consider carefully the top-level categories to ensure that they are broad enough to effectively hold key sub-category subjects. Readability: Ensure that category names are concise yet descriptive. Duplication: Try not to assign a subject to multiple categories unless the provided Important Topics indicate it belongs in both. Output: Only output the taxonomy. DO NOT include commentary. Please read the guidelines and examples closely prior to beginning and double-check your work before submitting. Start!


Explore Random Prompts

An email outreach template
optimized for reply conversion.
Applicable to many different
partnership and sales pitches.
Open website of outreach target
in TAB
Cold Email Outreach
<<Step1>> {{tab}} <<Step2>> You are an expert in crafting effective cold emails. Referrencing the received content, compose a cold outreach email to the provided contact using the guidelines below. Refer to the Context section for the purpose of the email. Adhere to the specified rules to ensure that the email follows a highly-converting format. Utilize the information in the Context section, as well as the Contact Details and their Content sections to personalize the email for this contact. Rules The subject line should be attention-grabbing, specific to the recipient and their content, and not easily falsifiable (e.g., avoid using easily faked first names). Begin the email with a strong relational anchor. Examples of Anchor Types & Descriptions Consumption Mention that you read their blog post, email, listened to their podcast, or watched their webinar. Inform them that you have purchased their product. Share a specific benefit you derived from their content. Promotion Notify them that you have shared their content. Let them know that you have endorsed their product. Express your admiration for them and give them positive feedback. Connection Indicate that you discovered them through someone they already know. Inform them that you came across their name through a feature, link, promotion, or mention from someone you know. Suggest getting an introduction from a mutual friend. Mention that you have attended the same conference. Highlight that you have been an affiliate for the same person. State that you have promoted the same content. Share that you have been featured by the same person. Mention that you know them or have met them in person. Find a website that you both link to. Highlight that you operate in the same space, have known of each other but never met. Reference someone they know because you have worked with that person. Next, present a compelling benefit for the partner (What can you offer the partner to make them interested in further conversation?). Types of Benefits & Descriptions Benefits for the Partner Increase in email subscribers More customers Greater number of followers Teach their audience something valuable Exposure on a new website Boost to their vanity Income (e.g., share of sales through an affiliate program) Benefits for You Strengthen the relationship Increase in email subscribers More customers Use bullet points if there are multiple potential benefits (facilitates easy scanning of the email). Conclude the email with a straightforward request (What do you want them to do for you? Provide a clear and easy ask). In most cases, use "Are you interested?" (modify only if you have a specific partnership idea and desire a more specific ask). Context: Purpose: {{Enter why you outreach to them}} Contact details My name + role: {{Enter your Name and role}} Their Email: {{Their EMail}} Their Name: {{Their name}}

Not what you are looking for?

Check out all our prompts or make your own.

Explore Our Categories

Need personalized help?

Ask for help in our facebook group.

Why people love SEOTraffic.ai

No testimonials yet. Check our facebook group for actual user feedback.
No testimonials yet. Check our facebook group for actual user feedback.
Mark
No testimonials yet. Check our facebook group for actual user feedback.
Little Rocket Ship

Scraping Prompt? Get our browser plugin!