The Content Corner: Can You Leverage Cornerstone Content?

Dec 21, 2015

If you have a website, then you most likely have cornerstone content—though you may not think of it in that way or even considered it. Just as in architecture, a cornerstone is a basic and essential part of any online presence. Cornerstone content is also important to any new visitors to your agency site, even if you are operating a fairly small or minimally viable website.

Properly developed (and frequently maintained) cornerstone content pages can help users answer a lot of initial questions and quickly establish a trusted relationship with your brand/agency/site.

Cornerstone concept of a pyramid of cubes; all are gray except one foundation corner cube that glows in gold

What is Cornerstone Content?

As I said before, even minimal websites have or should have at least a few pages of cornerstone content. The most common of these include the About and Contact pages. These are great basic examples of what cornerstone content is. In my opinion, no professional (or probably even personal) site should exist without these two pages if the site is open to the public and you are sharing content with users. For public sector agencies, these pages are even more critical.

These two pages are your site’s version of networking at a party or conference. They can quickly give a visitor a quick overview of why the site exists, why you do what you do and (commonly for us federal folks) what our agency’s mission is. The Contact page serves as a business card that a user can leverage if they see something they like or have a deeper issue or question. But this is cornerstone content at its most basic; other examples of cornerstone content are best described as hubs or category pages such as this one for content or even The Content Corner.

The Anatomy of a Cornerstone Page

One cornerstone example comes from the National Park Service (NPS) cornerstone page about historical preservation. By breaking a cornerstone example into its smaller parts, hopefully you can identify existing pages that exist on your site or create new ones where fitting.

Keywords

One of the first and more critical things to consider before deciding to create a cornerstone content page is to find out what are the topics that your users are frequently looking for. By doing a small amount of keyword research, you can quickly identify some of the main topics that you should make sure you turn into a cornerstone page. These keywords should also help you determine the best headline for your page, how your refer to it in your navigation and what is the best SEO title for the page (if and when the SEO title can and should differ).

Introduction

As with the NPS example, your cornerstone page should help give the user a quick (and interesting) overview of the topic the page is centered around and hopefully encourage the user to explore deeper. NPS provides a nice overview of the scope of their many preservation efforts and then follows up with examples.

Honestly, the meat of any cornerstone page should be links to other content already created for the topic. This happens to be a great way to leverage your evergreen content and can also allow the full content pillar to be shared in one easy-to-access location. Your cornerstone page should not just be a list of links, however. Each link should carry a small description (10 words or so) to help the user understand and evaluate whether they are interested in the content being shared (should they click the link?).

Media

On one of the cornerstone pages I’ve created in the past, we embedded an introductory video that provides a quick overview of the content we are sharing via the links and explanations I mentioned above. Another common tactic (that is used by NPS) is to include a thumbnail image with each link shared. This is the same reason it is preferable to have a thumbnail image for blog posts: Users like images. They draw a user in and usually generate higher click-thru rates than links without images. Other blog/content best practices can also be leveraged, such as including bullet points and keeping your sentences and paragraphs succinct.

Meet Me on the Corner

So you took the effort to build several fabulous cornerstone content pages based on your site’s most often searched-for topics, but now what? One of the most critical things you should do is make sure the new cornerstone pages are linked appropriately and prominently in your main navigation. There is a reason why proto-cornerstone pages like About and Contact generally appear very prominently on a site and more often than not appear in two places (header and footer). Be sure that a new visitor to your site can easily find these popular topics and you will hopefully save them the effort of searching.

You should also promote these pages as you would any of your other content by linking to them where appropriate (email newsletters, social media) and cross-linking to them within your own content. I cross-link my Content Corner posts frequently, not as a humblebrag, but to hopefully help users find additional resources on topics of interest. Cornerstone pages perform that same function—but better—because they can provide a user a full range of content based around a single topic.

By following the SEO guidelines as discussed above, these cornerstone pages should also begin to appear more prominently in search engine results pages (SERP). Again, this allows more users to find your resources and also helps them quickly solve their problems or answer their questions. Have you had success with cornerstone content? Share with us in the comments section.You’ve just finished reading the latest article from our Monday column, The Content Corner. This column focuses on helping solve the main content issues facing federal digital professionals, including producing enough content and making that content engaging.