Industry Guide SEO Content Framework
| Attribute | Details |
|---|---|
| Best For | Niche authority |
| Simple Structure | Overview → Use cases → Best practices |
| Funnel Stage | TOFU / MOFU |
| Popularity | 59 (Scale 1–100) |
| Est. Share | 1.8% of Demand |
| Intent | Informational |
What This Guide Is For
This framework is your repeatable system for producing Industry Guide content — "[Topic] for [Industry]", "SEO for Healthcare", "Marketing for Restaurants". The core value is verticalized expertise. The reader does not want a generic guide — they want advice tailored to their specific industry's constraints, regulations, audience, and competitive landscape.
What the reader needs: Generic advice filtered through their industry's reality: regulatory constraints, typical customer behavior, industry-specific channels, and real examples from their vertical.
What the writer must deliver: Industry-specific research (not generic advice renamed), real examples from that vertical, regulatory or compliance notes, and industry-specific tool recommendations.
This format targets Informational intent (TOFU/MOFU) at roughly 1.5% of demand. It captures highly qualified traffic — someone searching "[topic] for [industry]" has both intent and context.
Part 1 — The SEO Logic Behind Industry Guides
What an Industry Guide Actually Needs to Do
An Industry Guide has one job: take generic expertise and apply it to a specific industry's reality. "SEO" is generic. "SEO for healthcare" must address HIPAA compliance, local search for clinics, medical E-E-A-T requirements, and patient acquisition funnels.
Google ranks Industry Guides that demonstrate vertical expertise (not rebranded generic content), industry-specific examples, and regulatory awareness.
Why Industry Guides Fail
Generic advice with an industry label
"Email marketing for restaurants: build your list, send campaigns, track results" is generic advice with "restaurants" appended. Industry-specific: "Collect emails at point-of-sale using QR codes on receipts. Send weekly specials on Tuesday (restaurant industry data shows highest open rates)."
No regulatory awareness
Healthcare content must address HIPAA. Financial content must address compliance disclaimers. If your industry guide ignores regulations, it's incomplete.
Part 2 — The Framework
Step 1 — Define Your Inputs
| Input | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Topic | General expertise | SEO |
| Industry | Specific vertical | Healthcare |
| Keyword | "[Topic] for [Industry]" | seo for healthcare |
| Industry constraints | Regulations, norms | HIPAA, medical E-E-A-T, location-based search |
| Industry examples | Real companies in the vertical | Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, local practices |
| Industry channels | Where this industry's audience lives | Google My Business, Healthgrades, medical forums |
Step 2 — Page Structure Template
# H1: [Topic] for [Industry]: The Complete Guide ([Year])
## Intro
→ Why [topic] is different for [industry]
→ What generic advice misses
## H2: Why [Industry] Is Different
→ Regulatory constraints
→ Audience behavior
→ Competitive landscape
## H2: [Topic] Strategy for [Industry]
### H3: [Tactic 1 — Industry-Specific]
### H3: [Tactic 2 — Industry-Specific]
...
## H2: Industry-Specific Tools and Channels
## H2: Case Studies from [Industry]
## H2: Common Mistakes in [Industry]
## H2: FAQs
Step 3 — The Tactic-Writing Template
- Template
- Bad vs. Good
### [Tactic Name]
**Generic approach:** [How this is normally done]
**For [industry]:** [How this changes for this vertical]
**Regulatory note:** [Compliance considerations if applicable]
**Example:** [Real company from this industry]
| Bad | Good | |
|---|---|---|
| Tactic | "Build backlinks" | "Build backlinks from medical directories (Healthgrades, Zocdoc) and hospital association websites. Avoid patient testimonials as social proof — HIPAA restricts using patient information" |
| Example | "A healthcare company improved SEO" | "Cleveland Clinic's blog ranks for 50,000+ health keywords by publishing condition-specific pages written by credited physicians (E-E-A-T compliance)" |
Step 4 — Output Checklist
| Item | Requirement | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Industry-specific | Not generic advice with industry label | ☐ |
| Regulatory notes | Compliance addressed | ☐ |
| Industry examples | Real companies from vertical | ☐ |
| Industry channels | Platform-specific advice | ☐ |
| Industry constraints | Acknowledged and addressed | ☐ |
| FAQ | Industry-focused questions | ☐ |
Part 3 — AI Collaboration Guidelines
- AI Failure Patterns
| Pattern | What AI Does | What to Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Generic + label | Appends industry name to generic advice | Require industry-specific tactics |
| Missing regulations | Ignores HIPAA, GDPR, etc. | Add regulatory notes per section |
| No examples | Generic mention of "companies" | Require named, real industry examples |
| Wrong channels | Suggests inappropriate channels | Verify industry-specific platforms |
Quick Reference Card
| Phase | Key Rule |
|---|---|
| Before writing | Research the industry's constraints, regulations, and real examples |
| While writing | Every tactic must be industry-specific, not generic with a label |
| Before submitting | Regulatory awareness, real examples, industry channels |
| Working with AI | AI defaults to generic — force industry-specific detail |
Internal use only. Do not distribute externally.