# seo-content-writer

SEO Content Writer


Overview
SEO Content Writer is the skill of producing a page that earns qualified search demand because it answers the right question in the right format. For a one-person company, good SEO writing is not about hitting density targets. It is about matching intent, structuring the page for fast comprehension, adding proof, and making the next action obvious.

When to Use This Skill
Use this when you are drafting a new skill page, refreshing a page that already has impressions, turning a customer question into a publishable asset, or writing a comparison, checklist, or guide that needs both ranking potential and commercial usefulness.

What This Skill Does
This skill helps you turn a topic brief into a page with a clear angle, a strong opening answer, useful structure, and enough evidence to compete. It also keeps the page aligned to one job so it does not drift into broad, generic content that ranks for nothing and converts nobody.

How to Use
Step 1: Start with the query family. List the exact buyer questions, not just the headline keyword.
Step 2: Define the page format. Decide whether the best page is a guide, checklist, comparison, audit, template, or decision memo.
Step 3: Write the opening answer first. In the first paragraph, say what the topic is, who it is for, and what practical outcome the reader should expect.
Step 4: Build the structure around decisions, not filler. Use sections like "when to use this," "what good looks like," "common mistakes," and "what to do next."
Step 5: Add proof and specifics. Use examples, numbers, screenshots, buyer language, or named comparisons so the page sounds earned rather than autogenerated.
Step 6: Finish with a related action. Link to the adjacent skill, next decision, or implementation step that naturally follows this page.

Output
The output should include:
A search-intent-matched title
A direct opening answer
A clean section structure
Concrete proof or examples
A next-step CTA or related skill path

Common Mistakes
Do not write the title before you know the page format.
Do not stuff synonyms into every paragraph.
Do not copy the same generic framework onto every topic.
Do not publish a page that sounds polished but says nothing specific.
