When most people talk about SEO, they talk about rankings.
They talk about traffic numbers, backlinks, Domain Authority, and which keywords a page is ranking for this month. And while those things absolutely matter, they are almost always the result of something much less visible — something that happens long before any page is published or any article is written.
That thing is the early-stage work: keyword planning, content mapping, competitor research, and setting content standards that keep the whole project consistent as it grows.
In my experience, this is often the hardest and most underrated part of any SEO project. It is also the part that most people skip, rush through, or simply do not know how to approach properly.
This post is about what that process actually looks like, why it matters, and specifically about one piece that almost nobody talks about in SEO: content standards.

The Beginning of an SEO Project Is Messier Than It Looks
When you start an SEO project from scratch, the first instinct for a lot of people is to jump straight into writing content or fixing technical issues. And sometimes you do need to do both of those things early. But without a clear plan and structure underneath everything, the effort tends to scatter.
You end up with pages that compete against each other for the same keywords. You publish content with no clear intent. You write blog posts without knowing whether anyone is actually searching for the topic. And three months in, you have a lot of content but not a coherent strategy.
The early stage is where you avoid all of that.
When I started working on the SEO project for Unique Home Care NI, a local home care business in Northern Ireland, one of the first things I did was build a full SEO research and keyword planning sheet. This included competitor analysis, market research, keyword grouping by intent, content mapping, and the early foundations of what would become the content and SEO standards for the site.
It was time-consuming. It required a lot of back-and-forth between tools, data, and thinking. But it also made every decision after that point much cleaner and much more intentional.
What Keyword Planning Actually Involves
Keyword research gets talked about a lot in SEO, but keyword planning is a different and more specific skill.
Research is about finding keywords. Planning is about deciding what to do with them.
Here is what that process looked like in practice:
1. Start with Competitor Research
Before touching any keyword tool, I looked at competitors. What are they ranking for? What pages are performing well? What content gaps exist that they have not addressed?
This gives you a realistic baseline for what is actually possible in the market, and it often surfaces keyword opportunities that you would not have found by starting from scratch.
2. Group Keywords by Intent
Not all keywords are equal, and not all keywords belong on the same page.
One of the most important decisions in keyword planning is understanding search intent. Is the person searching to learn something? Are they comparing options? Are they ready to take action?
Keywords with informational intent belong in blog content and guides. Keywords with commercial or transactional intent belong on service pages or landing pages. Mixing them up leads to pages that do not fully satisfy the user and do not perform as well in search.
For Unique Home Care NI, this meant clearly separating service-level keywords like “home care Belfast” or “live-in care Northern Ireland” from informational keywords like “how to choose a home care provider” or “what does a care assessment involve.” Each group needed different content, a different page structure, and a different tone.
3. Map Keywords to Pages
Once you have grouped keywords by intent, the next step is assigning them to specific pages on the site, whether existing pages or new ones that need to be created.
This is called keyword-to-page mapping, and it is one of the most practical outputs of early-stage SEO work. It tells you:
- Which page targets which keyword
- Which keywords are the primary focus and which are secondary
- Whether any pages are competing for the same keyword (keyword cannibalisation)
- Which pages still need to be created
This alone prevents a huge amount of wasted effort later in the project.
4. Plan Content Around the Structure
Once the mapping is in place, content planning becomes much more straightforward. You know what each page needs to do, who it is written for, and what questions it needs to answer.
For blog content especially, this is where a content calendar starts to take shape: topics that are genuinely useful to the target audience, structured around keywords that people are actually searching for, and written with a clear goal in mind.
The Thing Most People Skip: Content Standards
This is the part I want to spend the most time on, because in my experience it is the most overlooked part of SEO content work, especially for smaller projects and local businesses.
Content standards are the rules and guidelines that define how every piece of content on a website should be written, structured, and optimised. They are what keep the site consistent, readable, and professionally optimised as more content is added over time — whether by you, a client, a freelancer, or a team.
Without content standards, what often happens is this: the first few pages are optimised carefully and consistently. Then, as more pages and blog posts are added, consistency starts to slip. Headings get written differently. Meta descriptions get forgotten. Internal links become inconsistent. The keyword focus gets blurry. And slowly, the quality and coherence of the site’s content starts to decline.
Content standards prevent that from happening.

What Content Standards Actually Cover
Here is what a solid set of content standards for an SEO project should define:
On-page structure
- How H1, H2, and H3 headings should be used and structured
- Where the primary keyword should appear (title, H1, first paragraph, meta description)
- Recommended word count ranges for different page types
- Whether and how to include a FAQ section or structured data
Writing style and tone
- The voice and tone of the brand
- How sentences and paragraphs should be structured for readability
- What to avoid: jargon, passive voice, filler phrases, overly formal language
- Whether content should be written in first or third person
Keyword usage
- How to use the primary keyword naturally throughout the content
- How to use synonyms, related terms, and semantically connected phrases
- How to avoid keyword stuffing or unnatural phrasing
Internal linking
- Which pages should be linked to from which content
- How anchor text should be written (descriptive and natural, not generic like “click here”)
- How often internal links should appear per page
Images and media
- File naming conventions for SEO
- Alt text guidelines (descriptive, relevant, not keyword-stuffed)
- Image size and compression requirements for page speed
Meta titles and descriptions
- Character limits: roughly 60 characters for titles, 155 for descriptions
- What to include: primary keyword, location if relevant, a clear value proposition
- What to avoid: duplicate meta descriptions, generic titles, keyword repetition
URL structure
- Short, descriptive, lowercase slugs
- No unnecessary stop words
- Consistent structure across page types
Why This Matters More Than People Think
The projects that perform well consistently over time are almost always the ones with a clear structure and consistent standards from the beginning.
It is not always the sites with the most backlinks. It is not always the sites with the most content. It is the sites where everything was thought through deliberately, where every page knows what it is for, and where the content was built to a consistent standard.
For Unique Home Care NI, content standards meant that every service page was structured the same way, every blog post followed the same writing and optimisation approach, and every new piece of content added to the site was consistent with everything that came before it. That consistency builds trust with both users and search engines over time.
A Note on Tools
Good planning work is not about using the most tools. It is about knowing what each tool is for and using the outputs to make decisions.
For this project, I used Semrush for keyword research and competitor analysis, alongside other SEO and AI tools to help shape the content direction and validate keyword opportunities. But the tools were always in service of the thinking, not a replacement for it.
A spreadsheet full of keywords means nothing without a plan for how to use them. A content calendar means nothing if the content is not written to a clear standard. Tools produce data. You still have to decide what to do with it.
Where to Start
If you are starting an SEO project, or if you are a few months in and things feel disorganised, here is where I would suggest beginning:
- Do the competitor and market research before you do anything else
- Group your keywords by intent, not just by volume
- Map keywords to specific pages so nothing is competing with itself
- Write your content standards down, even in a simple document, before you start publishing
- Build your content calendar around the structure, not the other way around
The early stage takes longer than most people want it to. But it is the part that makes everything after it faster, cleaner, and more effective.