Topic clusters + pillars
📖 5 min readUpdated 2026-04-18
A topic cluster is a broad pillar page ("Guide to Dog Training") surrounded by narrow cluster pages ("How to Crate Train a Puppy," "Stop Leash Pulling," etc.) that all interlink. It's the canonical architecture for modern content SEO.
The model
Pillar page
(broad topic)
/ | \
/ | \
Cluster Cluster Cluster ...
Page 1 Page 2 Page 3
Each cluster page links BACK to the pillar.
Pillar links to every cluster.
Cluster pages link to each other where related.
Why it works
- Concentrates authority. Backlinks spread across many pages dilute. Topic clusters funnel internal signals to the pillar.
- Signals topical expertise. Google sees multiple pages on related subtopics all interlinking = coherent topical authority.
- Covers the full search landscape. Each query variation has its own dedicated cluster page; the pillar captures broader terms.
- Internal linking dense where it matters. Topic clusters create natural, extensive internal linking by design.
The pillar page
A long, high-quality overview of the broad topic. 3,000-6,000 words. Covers key concepts, common questions, and links out to every cluster page that dives deeper.
The pillar targets the broadest, highest-volume, highest-competition query in the topic. It's the authority page, the one that backlinks concentrate on.
Cluster pages
Narrower, more focused. 800-2,500 words typically. Each one targets a long-tail query or specific subtopic.
Cluster pages link back to the pillar (upward authority pass) + link to 2-5 related cluster pages (lateral relationship signals).
Example: "Email Marketing" topic cluster
- Pillar: "The Complete Guide to Email Marketing" (5,000 words, targets "email marketing")
- Cluster pages:
- "How to Build an Email List"
- "Email Subject Lines That Get Opened"
- "Best Time to Send Marketing Emails"
- "Email Segmentation Guide"
- "B2B vs B2C Email Marketing"
- "Email Deliverability: Avoiding Spam Folders"
- "Email Marketing Metrics That Matter"
- "Cold Email vs Email Marketing"
- "Email Marketing Tools Compared"
- "Email Automation Workflows"
How to build a cluster from scratch
Step 1: Pick a pillar topic
Broad enough to support 8-15 cluster pages. Relevant to your audience. Commercially valuable.
Step 2: Cluster keyword research
Use SERP-similarity clustering. Every query that could reasonably live in this topic area. Group them into 8-15 clusters.
Step 3: Write the pillar first
The pillar comes first because it links to all the clusters. Write it as a definitive, broad guide.
Step 4: Publish cluster pages
One per week or more, depending on resources. Each cluster links to the pillar (prominently) + to 2-3 related clusters.
Step 5: Update the pillar
Each time a cluster is published, add a link from the pillar to it. The pillar becomes denser and more useful over time.
Step 6: Measure
Track pillar rankings, the sign the cluster is working. Pillars often rank for dozens or hundreds of queries as topical authority builds.
Common mistakes
- Orphan clusters. Cluster pages published without linking to/from the pillar. Just thin content in disguise.
- Too broad a pillar. "Marketing" is not a pillar, it's a whole category. Pick scope you can own.
- Clusters that overlap. Two cluster pages targeting the same queries = cannibalization inside your own cluster.
- Forgetting to link laterally. Cluster-to-cluster links are powerful. Don't skip.
- Pillar that's too shallow. If the pillar is thin, it can't support the cluster. Pillars should be your best, most comprehensive content.
When NOT to do topic clusters
- If the topic has fewer than 5 searchable subtopics, don't force the structure, one strong article is fine.
- If your site is tiny (under 20 pages total), focus on foundational content first.