A keyword list isn't a plan. Only when keywords are structured – by topics, intents, and funnel phases – does an architecture emerge that builds rankings systematically. Without this structure, SEO remains a guessing game: individual pages may rank briefly, but the overall picture stays fragmented.
From list to architecture
Keyword architecture means: every keyword has a clear assignment to a page, a topic cluster, and a phase in the customer journey. This prevents cannibalization and gaps. The crucial difference from a simple keyword list: the architecture defines not just *which* keywords are relevant, but *where* they live, *how* they connect to each other, and *when* they activate in the funnel.
The cannibalization problem
One of the most common SEO issues: multiple pages competing for the same keyword. A SaaS company with a blog post, feature page, and landing page on the same topic dilutes its own authority. Keyword architecture solves this through clear ownership:
- One page per primary keyword – unambiguous assignment without overlaps
- Secondary keywords as support – complement the main page without competing
- Internal linking as hierarchy – signals to Google which page carries the authority
Topic clusters and pillar structure
We organize keywords into thematic clusters with central pillar pages and supporting cluster content. This structure signals topical authority to search engines and strengthens internal linking.
A concrete example: for a consulting firm in digitalization, a cluster might look like this:
- Pillar page: "Digital Transformation for Mid-Market Companies" (main keyword, high competition)
- Cluster content: "Step-by-Step ERP Migration", "Change Management in Digitalization", "Calculating ROI of Digital Processes", "Cloud vs. On-Premise for SMBs"
- Supporting assets: Checklists, case studies, glossary entries
Each cluster piece links back to the pillar page and to each other – creating a dense semantic network.
Long-tail vs. short-tail strategy
A strong keyword architecture balances competitive short-tail keywords with specific long-tail terms. Short-tail keywords like "marketing agency" have high search volume but enormous competition. Long-tail keywords like "B2B marketing agency for mechanical engineering Munich" have less volume but higher conversion probability and are faster to rank.
Our strategy: use long-tail keywords as an entry point to generate early rankings and traffic. The domain authority built in the process flows upward through the cluster structure, strengthening the more competitive short-tail positions.
Intent-based mapping
Not every keyword has the same intent. We distinguish between informational (knowledge), navigational (orientation), and transactional (action) search intents and assign each the right page type:
- Informational: Blog articles, guides, glossaries → "What is content marketing?"
- Navigational: About us, contact, product overviews → "[Brand] pricing"
- Transactional: Landing pages, offer pages, demos → "hire content marketing agency"
- Commercial investigation: Comparison pages, case studies, reviews → "best content marketing agencies 2025"
Keyword architecture and site structure
Keyword architecture determines the information architecture of the website. URL structure, navigation, breadcrumbs, and internal linking follow the keyword logic. If the keyword architecture specifies "Digital Transformation > Change Management > Employee Training," this is reflected in the URL hierarchy /digital-transformation/change-management/employee-training/.
A living structure
Keyword architectures aren't a one-time project. Search behavior changes, new topics emerge, competitors shift the playing field. We recommend quarterly reviews: which clusters perform, where are new opportunities, which keywords are losing relevance? This keeps the architecture current and competitive.