# Dooley Playbook: How to Build Topical Authority in SEO

A practical guide for SEO managers and content leads: the Dooley Playbook breaks down the content, technical, and measurement habits that create lasting topical authority and reduce migration risk.

## Highlights

- Framework-first analysis: signal, structure, cadence
- Implementation-focused checklists for content and migrations
- Measurement specs for topic-level organic performance

## Key metrics

- Framework approach: Framework-driven — Content, technical, measurement aligned to a repeatable playbook
- Migration-safe: Preservation-focused — Prioritizes long-term topical authority over short-term wins
- Actionable outputs: Checklists & prompts — LLM-ready prompts and dashboards for operational teams

## Why this guide matters

SEO programs at scale struggle with sustained topical authority, content cannibalization, and migration risk. This guide teaches the Dooley Playbook—an applied framework that coordinates content strategy, technical foundations, and measurement so teams can scale high-quality pages while protecting organic value during redesigns and consolidations.

- Who this helps: SEO managers, content leads, technical SEOs, growth teams, and consultants.
- Three core themes you’ll learn: content strategy for clusters, technical audit and migration safety, and measurement for attribution.
- Practical outputs: a 7-step implementation checklist, LLM prompts for audits and briefs, and a dashboard spec.

## Why the Dooley Playbook works — signal analysis

Dominant pages and clusters share consistent, measurable signals. The Dooley Playbook targets the combination of relevance, structure, and operational cadence that search engines reward.

- Topical relevance: clear topical scope per cluster and alignment of on-page content with query intent.
- Internal linking & hub signals: pillar pages with context-rich links to supporting content that signal hierarchy to crawlers.
- Freshness cadence & content maintenance: predictable updates and versioning for evolving topics.
- Technical performance: crawlability, correct canonicalization, and structured data where applicable.
- Authority links: targeted external endorsements for high-impact pages rather than shallow quantity.

## 7-step Content Playbook (implementation checklist)

Use this checklist to replicate the Dooley Playbook across topics and teams. Each step includes the minimum deliverable to mark it complete.

- 1) Topic selection: map business intent to search demand; pick cluster seeds with clear commercial or informational intent.
- 2) Pillar definition: create a single canonical pillar page that defines the topic, linked to supporting articles.
- 3) Cluster mapping: inventory existing pages, identify gaps and cannibalization, and declare primary page owners.
- 4) Canonical strategy: decide canonical vs. redirect vs. merge for near-duplicate content and implement at scale.
- 5) Content briefs: produce intent-driven briefs with H2 outlines, subtopics, and suggested internal links.
- 6) Internal linking plan: enforce hub-and-spoke linking rules and anchor-text guidelines in editorial workflows.
- 7) Monitoring cadence: weekly rank and traffic checks for core pages, monthly health sweeps, and quarterly prune/merge reviews.

## Technical audit prompts for LLMs (prioritize fixes & risks)

Use these prompts with your LLM or automation layer to generate prioritized technical fixes and a migration risk score. Each prompt is designed to produce a short prioritized list and remediation steps.

- Prompt A — Crawlability & indexing: "Given crawl report X and sitemap Y, list the top 10 crawlability issues with severity (high/medium/low), affected URLs, and one-line remediation for each."
- Prompt B — Canonicalization & redirect mapping: "Analyze the URL set Z and recommend canonical tags, 301/302 redirect actions, and a rollback-safe redirect plan ranked by traffic impact."
- Prompt C — Hreflang & international: "For the provided language variants and page matrix, detect mismatches, suggest hreflang fixes, and estimate risk to localized rankings."
- Prompt D — Structured data & rich results: "Scan pages for schema issues, recommend required structured data additions, and list which pages should be prioritized to gain SERP features."
- Prompt E — Log-file prioritization: "From crawl logs, identify high-frequency crawl paths, blocked resources, and pages that consume crawl budget; prioritize fixes by crawl volume and organic traffic."

## Content brief generator prompt (copy-ready)

Drop this prompt into your LLM to generate an SEO content brief that editors and writers can execute immediately.

- Prompt — Content brief: "Create an SEO content brief for keyword: {TARGET_KEYWORD}. Include: search intent, 3 primary user questions, an H2 outline with recommended word targets per section, 6 related subtopics to cover, 4 suggested internal links (with rationale), meta title (<=60 chars) and meta description (<=155 chars). Flag any pages that should be canonicalized to this brief."
- Expected output: intent summary, H2 outline, suggested CTAs, internal link list, and metadata ready for CMS copy-paste.

## Migration-safe consolidation: decision steps

Consolidating thin or overlapping pages is high-risk if done without a clear preservation plan. Use these steps to decide merge vs. delete and to execute safe redirects.

- Inventory and tag: list pages by traffic, conversions, backlinks, and topical fit.
- Define target host page: pick the strongest page by link equity and intent fit as the consolidation target.
- Merge vs. delete rules: merge when overlapping intent and backlink support exist; delete only if duplicates with no value.
- Redirect mapping: create one-to-one 301 map where possible; for multi-source merges, choose the target with most inbound equity and implement rewrite rules carefully.
- Preservation checks: update internal links, preserve structured data, and keep a rollback-ready redirect plan.
- Post-migration monitoring: track traffic, rankings, and crawl errors daily for the first two weeks, then weekly for the quarter.

## Measurement & KPIs — dashboard spec

A measurement approach aligned to the playbook helps teams prove value and iterate. Below is a dashboard spec you can hand to analysts or a BI tool.

- Primary view: Organic sessions and conversions aggregated by topic cluster and pillar page.
- Rankings view: Top 20 keywords per pillar with intent tag (informational/commercial/navigational) and movement over time.
- Attribution notes: Use assisted conversions and session paths to attribute downstream value to clusters rather than single pages.
- Health signals: crawl errors, index coverage, canonical mismatch counts, and redirect volume by cluster.
- Cadence: daily alerts for severe drops; weekly trend reports and quarterly strategic reviews.

## Competitive research prompts

Use these prompts to extract competitor topical gaps, SERP feature opportunities, and backlink prospects for a given cluster.

- SERP gap prompt: "For keyword set K, list the top 10 competing domains, the SERP features present, and three content angles they don't cover."
- Backlink prospecting prompt: "Given competitor URL C, extract the top 25 domains linking to C, classify link intent (resource, editorial, directory), and suggest contact outreach angle for each."
- Feature-opportunity prompt: "Identify queries within the cluster that trigger featured snippets, people-also-ask, or video results and propose content types to capture these features."

## Executive summary for leadership

One-paragraph brief you can share with executives summarizing risk, opportunity, and investment required to adopt the Dooley Playbook.

- Paragraph: "Adopting the Dooley Playbook aligns content strategy, technical hygiene, and measurement into a repeatable program that reduces migration risk and builds sustainable topical authority. We recommend a focused pilot on one high-value cluster, a technical audit to remove immediate blockers, and an editorial resourcing plan for content consolidation and new pillar development. Investment provides a defensible topical presence and clearer attribution of organic value."

## Operationalizing across teams

Practical next steps for rolling the playbook into existing workflows without disrupting editorial cadence or engineering sprints.

- Run a 2-week audit: prioritize top 3 clusters with highest business alignment.
- Set up working groups: content owner, technical lead, analytics owner, and a migration steward.
- Integrate briefs into CMS: require canonical decisions and internal link recommendations in each brief.
- Automate monitoring: configure alerts for index coverage, ranking drops on pillar pages, and redirect errors.

### Checklist for content teams

A compact to-do list: select cluster, create pillar brief, assign author, and schedule internal-link update.

- Select cluster owner
- Publish pillar within 6 weeks
- Run internal linking sweep

### Checklist for technical teams

Immediate technical tasks to reduce migration risk and improve crawlability.

- Audit canonical tags
- Validate sitemap and robots
- Prepare redirect maps

## Workflow

1. Pilot cluster selection
Pick one cluster aligned to a clear business goal and moderate competition to validate the approach.

2. Technical audit
Run prioritized technical prompts to identify and fix crawlability, canonical, and redirect issues before consolidation.

3. Create pillar and briefs
Produce the pillar page and 3–6 supporting briefs using the content brief prompt; assign owners and publish on a gated schedule.

4. Consolidate and redirect
Execute merge or redirect plans with rollback testing and update internal linking to point to the new pillar.

5. Monitor and iterate
Use the dashboard spec to watch traffic, rankings by intent, and conversion attribution; iterate monthly.

## FAQ

### What do we mean by the 'Dooley playbook' — is it a person, a process, or a set of signals?

The 'Dooley playbook' is a process-oriented framework: a set of practices that combine signal analysis (what search rewards), structured content architecture (pillars and clusters), and operational cadence (how teams maintain and measure topics). It’s not tied to a single person but to repeatable actions and rules for decisions like merge vs. redirect.

### How quickly can topical authority improvements show up in search results?

Timing varies by topic competitiveness and technical health. Some improvements (indexing fixes, canonical corrections) can impact visibility in days to weeks; deeper authority gains from consolidated content and link acquisition typically emerge over months. The playbook emphasizes short-term preservation plus steady cadence for durable gains.

### Which technical issues most frequently block content from ranking?

Common blockers include crawlability problems (blocked resources or incorrect robots directives), canonicalization errors, inconsistent internal linking, missing or broken redirects after consolidation, and incorrect structured data. Prioritize fixes that affect high-traffic or pillar pages first.

### When should teams merge pages versus creating new pillar content?

Merge when pages share intent, have overlapping keyword footprints, and one page clearly holds most backlinks or traffic. Create new pillar content when the topic is broader than any existing page and requires a canonical resource to organize related subtopics.

### How do you measure whether a content cluster is delivering business value?

Measure cluster performance by aggregating organic traffic and conversions by topic cluster, tracking ranking improvements for intent-critical keywords, and monitoring assisted conversions in user paths that begin with cluster pages. Use dashboards that group pages by pillar and report intent-labeled ranking movement.

### What are the common migration mistakes that erase hard-won SEO gains?

Frequent mistakes include missing or incorrect redirects, changing canonical targets without preserving link equity, losing structured data, breaking internal linking patterns, and failing to monitor index coverage post-migration. The playbook prescribes redirect maps, rollback plans, and concentrated post-launch monitoring to avoid these errors.

### How should teams prioritize SEO effort across content, technical fixes, and link building?

Prioritize technical fixes that unblock indexing and preserve existing value first, then consolidate or improve content for pillar pages to prevent cannibalization, and finally focus on targeted link acquisition for pages where link equity will materially shift rankings. The Dooley Playbook recommends cross-functional decision-making based on impact and ease (effort vs. value).

## Related pages

- [Blog](/blog) — More articles on SEO strategy and playbooks.
- [Compare Texta](/comparison) — See how monitoring and visibility tools support migration-safe SEO.
- [Pricing](/pricing) — Plans for teams scaling SEO operations.
- [About Texta](/about) — Learn about the team and platform approach.

## Ready to adopt a migration-safe SEO playbook?

Start with a pilot cluster and a technical audit. If you want tooling to monitor topical performance and migration risk, compare options and build an operational dashboard to preserve and grow organic value.

- [Compare Tools](/comparison)
- [See Pricing](/pricing)