A checklist for writing a checklist? Why not. Learn how to master this content type, including how to tie your article to a keyword for SEO.
You probably make checklists all the time without even knowing it.
Shopping lists. Grocery lists. Chore lists. To-do lists for completing projects.
So it makes sense to take that extremely familiar format, apply it to a common problem or task your audience faces, and publish it on your blog.
That’s content your readers can put to use immediately. So if you’re looking for more ideas for helpful content to add to your website, look no further and write a checklist article.
How is a checklist blog post useful for SEO?
When considering how a checklist blog post might help your SEO, think keywords.
No matter your industry, your audience has problems and questions relevant to what you sell that they’re researching on search engines.
Problems like, “how to plan Thanksgiving dinner,” “how to load film into a 35mm camera,” or “how to write a meta description.”
If you can find such a problem, one that’s relevant to what you sell and can be helped or solved with a checklist, and tie that problem to a keyword you can win in search results…
That’s a recipe for targeted leads coming your way.
Here’s an example: This photography website is targeting beginner film photographers with an introductory checklist of the first steps for their new hobby.
Your 5-step checklist for writing a checklist article
A checklist for writing a checklist? Why not.
Here’s how to write your new checklist article, step by step, including how to tie your article to a keyword for SEO.
1. Choose an actionable topic based on an audience-specific goal or problem
Technically, any topic that helps the reader achieve a goal or solve a problem can be turned into a checklist.
Just make sure the topic is:
- Actionable, with clear steps needed to complete the action.
- Audience-relevant, i.e., it’s a goal or problem they’re actually worried about.
Most how-to topics can be turned into checklists because you must follow certain steps or do specific tasks to arrive at a particular result. The reader can “check” those off as they go. For example:
Topic | End goal |
How to bake bread | Bake a delicious loaf |
How to balance a checkbook | Manage finances smartly |
How to prep for a party | Throw an unforgettable get-together |
Ultimately, you’re creating a checklist because your reader needs to do something, but they don’t necessarily know the right steps or actions to take to accomplish their task. You can help them do it with your checklist.
2. Tie it to a keyword
If you want to bring more traffic and leads to your website, you should optimize your checklist blog post with a keyword that maps to your topic.
For example, say you sell party supplies and your topic is “party planning checklist.” Could that also be your keyword to target in the blog post?
To find out, you should use an SEO tool (like Mangools KWFinder, Semrush, or Ahrefs) to research that topic/keyword and find out its keyword difficulty (or KD, a measure of how hard it would be to rank for that keyword) and search volume (the average number of searchers who look up that keyword over a specific amount of time).
If the keyword is indeed too difficult to rank for, you could search for variations or synonyms to target instead.
For instance, if you look up “party planning checklist” in Semrush, you’ll see it has a KD of 69 (difficult).
However, looking at the list of related terms, you’ll see “bachelorette party planning checklist” has a KD of 29 (easy).