Build it like
an architect.
Most people approach websites like interior decorators — deciding on colour schemes and content topics while ignoring whether the structure beneath any of it can hold weight. That’s why they plateau.
Look at my site’s structure ↗
“Most sites don’t fail because the content is weak.
They fail because the ground underneath it was never set.”
What holds
everything up.
Before a word of content is written, two things have to be in place: a clearly scoped domain, and load-bearing pillar pages. Miss either, and everything built above it is weight on unstable ground.
The foundation answers the question Google asks first — what is this site actually about? The pillars define the core topics that absorb authority and anchor the whole structure beneath them.
“Pillar pages don’t rank because they’re long. They rank because everything else points to them.”
| Without this layer | Architecture First |
|---|---|
| Random URL structure — no clear topic ownership | Every URL reinforces the domain’s core intent |
| Pillar pages that exist but absorb nothing | Pillars as authority anchors — every cluster feeds back to them |
| Pages competing with each other in search | Clean topic boundaries, no keyword cannibalization |
| Google uncertain what the site actually covers | Topical authority readable by Google and AI systems alike |
Every brick
has a job.
Cluster content isn’t decoration — it distributes structural load. Each supporting page answers a sub-question, captures long-tail traffic, and reinforces the pillar it belongs to.
Keywords are the bricks. Individually small. Strategically placed, they form walls. The mistake most people make is chasing them like collectibles instead of placing them where the structure needs them.
“Keywords don’t rank pages. Placement does.”
| Random approach | Architecture First |
|---|---|
| Cluster pages built without a pillar to report to | Every cluster page has a clear parent — and links to it |
| Keywords targeted by volume, not structural fit | Keywords placed where they strengthen topical depth |
| Long-tail content that captures traffic but feeds nothing | Long-tail entries that build both intent coverage and authority flow |
| Content gaps found by guessing | Gaps identified by what the structure needs — not just what ranks |
What connects.
What moves people.
Internal linking is the mortar. Without it, walls don’t connect, authority doesn’t flow, and pages stay isolated from each other — and from Google. This is where most sites quietly break down.
Rooms are user journeys. Learn. Compare. Decide. Act. A page without a clear next step isn’t content — it’s a dead space. Every room should have a door that leads somewhere intentional.
“Internal links aren’t navigation. They’re structural glue.”
| Without this layer | Architecture First |
|---|---|
| Pages that exist but pass no authority anywhere | Every page networked — authority flows deliberately through the site |
| Users bounce at dead-end pages | Every room leads somewhere — lower bounce, stronger conversion paths |
| Google crawls pages without understanding their relationship | Crawl paths reinforce topical hierarchy Google can follow |
| User journey treated as UX — not SEO | Intent stages mapped to pages: Learn → Compare → Decide → Act |
The roof is
what you earn
last.
Navigation controls movement — for users and for Google. Clear pathways reduce friction, reinforce hierarchy, and tell crawlers exactly what matters most. This is where UX and SEO stop being separate disciplines.
Authority is the roof. It doesn’t come from a single great page. It’s what happens when the structure beneath it holds together — consistently, over time, across the whole domain.
“Authority isn’t built on one page. It’s what happens when the whole structure holds together.”
| Weak roof | Architecture First |
|---|---|
| Navigation built around admin logic, not user flow | Navigation designed around how users move — and how Google crawls |
| Authority concentrated on one or two pages | Authority distributed across the structure — resilient by design |
| Algorithm update wipes ranking | Structural sites survive updates — depth protects what surface can’t |
| Backlinks that land on pages with nowhere to go | Links land where they pass authority — and the structure receives it |
Most sites look complete.
Very few are structurally sound.
If you’re building content on an unstable foundation, everything you publish is risk. Send me a brief about your site — I’ll tell you where the structure is holding and where it isn’t.

