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Demonstrating Expertise in Intros

Version 2.0 Standard: Premium

A reader decides whether to trust you within the first 100 words. If your introduction sounds like every other article on the topic, you are already at a disadvantage. Expertise is not claimed — it is demonstrated through specificity, original insight, and evidence of real knowledge. This lesson shows you how to embed credibility signals in your opening without turning it into a resume.


Part 1 — The Credibility Window

Why the First 100 Words Matter Most

flowchart TD
A[Reader Arrives] --> B{First 100 Words}
B -- Shows expertise --> C[Trust established\nReader commits]
B -- Shows generic knowledge --> D[Trust uncertain\nReader scans skeptically]
B -- Shows no expertise --> E[No trust\nReader bounces]

style C fill:#217346,color:#fff
style D fill:#F4A261,color:#000
style E fill:#8B0000,color:#fff
What Readers Look ForWhat It Sounds Like
Specificity"We tested 8 CRMs over 60 days" — not "there are many CRMs available"
Named credentials"After 5 years managing SEO for B2B SaaS companies..."
Insider knowledge"Here's what the official documentation doesn't tell you..."
Data ownership"Our analysis of 14,000 keywords found..."
Honest caveats"This approach works for teams of 5–20. For enterprise, the rules are different"

Part 2 — Expertise Signal Types

SignalHow to Deploy ItExample
Quantified experienceState how much, how long, or how many"After auditing 300+ landing pages..."
Named contextName the industry, tool, or framework"In B2B SaaS content marketing, specifically for PLG companies..."
Unexpected insightLead with something the reader likely doesn't know"Most SEO guides say link building is the hardest part. It's not — topical authority is"
Methodology mentionShow you have a process, not just opinions"We evaluated each tool using 5 criteria: setup time, deliverability, pricing, integrations, support"
Scope limitationDefine what this article is NOT about (shows precision)"This guide covers on-page SEO only. For technical SEO and link building, see [other guides]"

Part 3 — Bad vs. Good Examples

"CRM software is a valuable tool for businesses of all sizes. In this comprehensive guide, we will explore the best CRM platforms available in 2025. Whether you are a small business owner or an enterprise team, finding the right CRM can help you manage customer relationships more effectively. Let's dive in!"

(Zero expertise signals. "Businesses of all sizes" — no specific audience. "Let's dive in" — empty enthusiasm. A reader has no reason to trust this writer over any other writer or AI.)


Part 4 — AI Collaboration Guidelines

The "Expertise Opener" Prompt

Role: Content strategist Task: Rewrite this article introduction to embed expertise signals. Available credentials: [Paste your experience: team size, years, specific tests run, industries, data points] Rules:

  1. Lead with a specific, quantified credential (not "I'm an expert")
  2. Include one unexpected insight that shows insider knowledge
  3. Define the audience scope (who this is for and who it is NOT for)
  4. Do NOT use "comprehensive guide," "let's dive in," or start with a definition
  5. Keep under 100 words Input: [Paste current intro]

Part 5 — Output Checklist

Before moving to the next lesson, confirm every item below.
  • Credibility window: Your first 100 words contain at least 2 expertise signals.
  • Quantified credentials: Experience is stated with numbers, not vague time references.
  • Insider insight: At least one point in the intro shows knowledge beyond surface-level research.
  • Scope defined: The intro states who the article is for (and optionally, who it's not for).
  • No empty phrases: Zero instances of "let's dive in," "comprehensive guide," or "in this article."

Internal use only. Do not distribute externally. For questions or suggested updates, raise with the content lead.