Most businesses that claim to have a content marketing strategy actually have a posting schedule. The two are not the same. A posting schedule tells you when to publish. A strategy tells you why, for whom, about what, and what success looks like. Without these foundations, content production is expensive busywork. Keyword research is the starting point that connects your content topics to what your audience is actually searching for.
1. A clearly defined audience
Every piece of content should be written for a specific person, not a vague demographic category. Define your primary audience by their role, their problems, their current level of awareness about your solution, and the questions they ask before they make a buying decision. Content written for a specific person is always more compelling than content written for everyone.
2. Measurable goals tied to business outcomes
Content marketing goals should connect to actual business results — qualified leads, trial sign-ups, consultation requests, sales. "Increase brand awareness" is too vague to be useful as a primary goal. "Generate 15 qualified enquiries per month from organic search within 12 months" is specific, measurable and directly tied to revenue.
3. A keyword and topic cluster strategy for SEO
If organic search is part of your distribution plan (and for most Australian businesses it should be), your content topics should be informed by what your audience is actually searching for. A topic cluster approach groups a pillar piece of comprehensive content around a main topic, supported by several related pieces that go into more depth on specific subtopics. This structure signals topical authority to Google.
4. A content calendar with realistic production capacity
The fastest way to kill a content programme is to set an ambitious publishing schedule that the team cannot sustain. Be honest about how much quality content you can consistently produce with your available time and budget. One genuinely useful, well-researched piece per week beats three rushed posts. Consistency matters more than volume.
5. A distribution and promotion plan
Content without distribution is a tree falling in an empty forest. For each piece of content you produce, plan specifically how you will get it in front of the right people: organic social sharing, paid promotion, email distribution, outreach to relevant publications, partnership with industry contacts. The creation is only half the work.
6. A review and measurement process
Review your content performance quarterly. Which pieces are driving organic traffic? Which are converting visitors into leads? Which topics generate the most engagement from the right audience? Use this data to double down on what is working and stop producing the types of content that are not moving your defined metrics.

Maria oversees content strategy and campaign coordination at Web Like Web, ensuring every piece of content is delivered on time, on brief and aligned with client business goals. She brings structure and strategic thinking to content marketing that produces measurable results.