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Authority Content Strategy

authority-content-strategy

Plans content strategies for building authority with research pieces, original frameworks, and data studies.

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When to Use This Skill

Use this skill when you need to:

  • Plan a content strategy specifically designed to build authority and expert positioning
  • Create original research, frameworks, and data-driven content that gets cited
  • Design a content system that elevates you from practitioner to recognized expert
  • Build a library of reference-worthy content that attracts media, speaking, and partnerships

DO NOT use this skill for general content marketing, social media scheduling, or SEO blog strategies. This is for authority-building content — the kind that gets quoted, shared by peers, and referenced in industry conversations.


Core Principle

AUTHORITY CONTENT IS NOT ABOUT PUBLISHING MORE — IT IS ABOUT PUBLISHING CONTENT SO ORIGINAL AND EVIDENCE-BASED THAT OTHER PEOPLE CITE YOU AS THE SOURCE, TURNING YOUR NAME INTO A REFERENCE POINT FOR YOUR DOMAIN.


Phase 1: Brief

Required Inputs

Input What to Ask Default
Domain "What specific topic do you want to be the authority on?" No default — must be provided
Current authority level "Are you currently known in your space? How?" Unknown — building from scratch
Existing content "What content have you already published?" Blog posts and social media
Data access "Do you have access to proprietary data, customer insights, or industry data?" Customer insights from own business
Content capacity "How much time per month can you invest in authority content?" 10 hours/month
Distribution channels "Where will you publish and promote?" Blog + LinkedIn + email newsletter

GATE: Confirm the brief before proceeding.


Phase 2: Strategy

Authority Content Hierarchy

## Content Tiers (from highest to lowest authority)

### Tier 1: Original Research (quarterly)
- Industry surveys and reports
- Data studies from your own customer or audience base
- Benchmark reports with proprietary data
- Annual "state of" reports
→ These get cited, linked to, and covered by media

### Tier 2: Original Frameworks (monthly)
- Named systems, models, or methodologies
- Visual frameworks (matrices, pyramids, cycles)
- Decision-making tools
- Step-by-step processes with original naming
→ These get adopted and attributed to you

### Tier 3: Deep Analysis (bi-weekly)
- In-depth case studies with real numbers
- Contrarian analysis of industry trends
- Teardowns of successful strategies
- Predictions with supporting evidence
→ These get shared and debated by peers

### Tier 4: Commentary (weekly)
- Hot takes on industry news
- Responses to popular content
- Short-form insights and observations
→ These keep you visible between big pieces

Content Calendar

## Quarterly Authority Content Plan

**Month 1:**
- Week 1-2: Publish Tier 3 deep analysis
- Week 3: Tier 4 commentary (2-3 posts)
- Week 4: Tier 2 framework piece

**Month 2:**
- Week 1: Tier 4 commentary (2-3 posts)
- Week 2-3: Tier 3 case study
- Week 4: Tier 4 commentary + promote existing pieces

**Month 3:**
- Week 1-2: Tier 1 original research (data collection + writing)
- Week 3: Publish and promote Tier 1 piece
- Week 4: Tier 4 commentary on the research findings

GATE: Present the content hierarchy and calendar for approval.


Phase 3: Build

Original Research Playbook

## How to Create Original Research

**Step 1: Choose the question**
What does your industry wonder about but nobody has measured?
Example: "What is the actual email open rate for solopreneur newsletters in 2025?"

**Step 2: Collect data**
- Survey your audience (minimum 100 responses for credibility)
- Analyze your own customer data (anonymized)
- Scrape public data sources
- Partner with a complementary business for larger datasets

**Step 3: Analyze and visualize**
- Find the 3-5 most surprising or useful findings
- Create charts and graphics for each finding
- Write headline-worthy insight statements

**Step 4: Package and publish**
- Full report (PDF, gated behind email opt-in)
- Blog post summarizing key findings (ungated)
- Social media graphics with individual data points
- Press release or pitch to industry publications

**Step 5: Distribute**
- Email to your full list
- Share on all social channels
- Send to journalists and bloggers who cover your space
- Present findings at events and on podcasts

Framework Creation Guide

## How to Create a Named Framework

**Step 1: Identify the process you already use**
What do you do repeatedly for clients or in your own business that gets results?

**Step 2: Structure it**
Break it into 3-5 clear steps or components. Name each one.

**Step 3: Name the framework**
Use a memorable name: "The [Adjective] [Noun]" or "The [Number]-[Action] [System]"
Examples: "The Leverage Loop," "The 3-Phase Launch System," "The Authority Flywheel"

**Step 4: Visualize it**
Create a diagram — cycle, pyramid, matrix, or flowchart

**Step 5: Teach it everywhere**
Use the framework in blog posts, talks, social content, and client work until it becomes synonymous with your name

Case Study Template

## Case Study: [Title]

**Situation:** [What the client or company was facing — with context and numbers]
**Challenge:** [The specific problem to solve]
**Approach:** [What strategy or framework was applied — reference your own if applicable]
**Results:** [Measurable outcomes with specific numbers]
**Key insight:** [One takeaway that the reader can apply to their own situation]
**Timeline:** [How long it took to achieve these results]

Phase 4: Polish

1. Authority Indicators Dashboard

## Track Monthly
- Content pieces published per tier
- Backlinks earned (especially from industry sites)
- Social shares and saves (quality over quantity)
- Media mentions or interview requests
- Speaking invitations received
- Times your framework or data was cited by others
- Email list growth from authority content
- Inbound leads attributing content as the source

2. Content Quality Standards

## Authority Content Must-Haves
- [ ] Original data, analysis, or framework (not rehashed advice)
- [ ] Specific numbers and evidence (not opinions)
- [ ] Professional visuals (charts, diagrams, graphics)
- [ ] Cite sources for any external data used
- [ ] Include a clear methodology section for research pieces
- [ ] Offer a unique perspective not found in existing content
- [ ] Written for experts and ambitious practitioners (not beginners)

3. Distribution Amplification

## Maximize Each Piece of Authority Content
1. Publish on your owned platform (blog/newsletter)
2. Create 5-10 social posts highlighting different insights
3. Pitch the findings to 3-5 relevant podcasts
4. Send to 5-10 journalists or bloggers who cover your space
5. Present the findings in a webinar or live event
6. Reference in all future content and speaking
7. Update annually with new data (creates a recurring franchise)

Example 1: Marketing Consultant Authority Strategy

Domain: Content marketing ROI for B2B SaaS
Tier 1: Annual "State of B2B Content Marketing" report (survey of 500 marketers)
Tier 2: "The Content Revenue Framework" — 4-step model connecting content to pipeline
Tier 3: Monthly teardown of a SaaS company's content strategy (with public data)
Tier 4: Weekly LinkedIn commentary on content marketing trends

Example 2: Business Operations Authority Strategy

Domain: Systems and automation for solopreneurs
Tier 1: "The Solopreneur Efficiency Report" — survey of 300 solopreneurs on time usage
Tier 2: "The Leverage Stack" — framework for deciding what to automate, delegate, or eliminate
Tier 3: Bi-weekly case study of a solopreneur who reduced hours while growing revenue
Tier 4: Weekly LinkedIn posts challenging hustle culture with data

Anti-Patterns

  • Publishing rehashed advice — if your content could have been written by anyone who Googled the topic, it is not authority content.
  • No original data — opinions without evidence are blog posts. Authority content is backed by numbers.
  • One big piece, no consistency — a single research report does not build authority. Consistent publishing across all tiers does.
  • No visual framework — ideas without visual structure are forgettable. Create diagrams people can screenshot and share.
  • Ignoring distribution — the best research in the world is useless if no one sees it. Spend as much time distributing as creating.
  • Targeting beginners — authority content speaks to peers and advanced practitioners. If beginners are your only audience, you are not building authority, you are building a following.

Recovery

  • No data access: Survey your audience. Even 50 responses from a targeted audience produce citeable insights.
  • No original framework yet: Document what you already do. Every experienced practitioner has a process — naming it and visualizing it creates a framework.
  • No time for research: Start with Tier 3 (case studies and analysis). They require less data collection and still build authority.
  • Content is not getting picked up: Improve distribution first. Most authority content fails because of distribution, not quality. Pitch it directly to people who should see it.

View source on GitHub →