Add section to content-architecture.md explaining how to leverage site footer for internal linking to comparison/alternative pages. Covers minimum approach (index links) and recommended approach (dedicated columns with top 8 competitors per format). Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
7.2 KiB
Content Architecture for Competitor Pages
How to structure and maintain competitor data for scalable comparison pages.
Centralized Competitor Data
Create a single source of truth for each competitor:
competitor_data/
├── notion.md
├── airtable.md
├── monday.md
└── ...
Competitor Data Template
Per competitor, document:
name: Notion
website: notion.so
tagline: "The all-in-one workspace"
founded: 2016
headquarters: San Francisco
# Positioning
primary_use_case: "docs + light databases"
target_audience: "teams wanting flexible workspace"
market_position: "premium, feature-rich"
# Pricing
pricing_model: per-seat
free_tier: true
free_tier_limits: "limited blocks, 1 user"
starter_price: $8/user/month
business_price: $15/user/month
enterprise: custom
# Features (rate 1-5 or describe)
features:
documents: 5
databases: 4
project_management: 3
collaboration: 4
integrations: 3
mobile_app: 3
offline_mode: 2
api: 4
# Strengths (be honest)
strengths:
- Extremely flexible and customizable
- Beautiful, modern interface
- Strong template ecosystem
- Active community
# Weaknesses (be fair)
weaknesses:
- Can be slow with large databases
- Learning curve for advanced features
- Limited automations compared to dedicated tools
- Offline mode is limited
# Best for
best_for:
- Teams wanting all-in-one workspace
- Content-heavy workflows
- Documentation-first teams
- Startups and small teams
# Not ideal for
not_ideal_for:
- Complex project management needs
- Large databases (1000s of rows)
- Teams needing robust offline
- Enterprise with strict compliance
# Common complaints (from reviews)
common_complaints:
- "Gets slow with lots of content"
- "Hard to find things as workspace grows"
- "Mobile app is clunky"
# Migration notes
migration_from:
difficulty: medium
data_export: "Markdown, CSV, HTML"
what_transfers: "Pages, databases"
what_doesnt: "Automations, integrations setup"
time_estimate: "1-3 days for small team"
Your Product Data
Same structure for yourself—be honest:
name: [Your Product]
# ... same fields
strengths:
- [Your real strengths]
weaknesses:
- [Your honest weaknesses]
best_for:
- [Your ideal customers]
not_ideal_for:
- [Who should use something else]
Page Generation
Each page pulls from centralized data:
- [Competitor] Alternative page: Pulls competitor data + your data
- [Competitor] Alternatives page: Pulls competitor data + your data + other alternatives
- You vs [Competitor] page: Pulls your data + competitor data
- [A] vs [B] page: Pulls both competitor data + your data
Benefits:
- Update competitor pricing once, updates everywhere
- Add new feature comparison once, appears on all pages
- Consistent accuracy across pages
- Easier to maintain at scale
Index Page Structure
Alternatives Index
URL: /alternatives or /alternatives/index
Purpose: Lists all "[Competitor] Alternative" pages
Page structure:
- Headline: "[Your Product] as an Alternative"
- Brief intro on why people switch to you
- List of all alternative pages with:
- Competitor name/logo
- One-line summary of key differentiator vs. that competitor
- Link to full comparison
- Common reasons people switch (aggregated)
- CTA
Example:
## Explore [Your Product] as an Alternative
Looking to switch? See how [Your Product] compares to the tools you're evaluating:
- **[Notion Alternative](/alternatives/notion)** — Better for teams who need [X]
- **[Airtable Alternative](/alternatives/airtable)** — Better for teams who need [Y]
- **[Monday Alternative](/alternatives/monday)** — Better for teams who need [Z]
Vs Comparisons Index
URL: /vs or /compare
Purpose: Lists all "You vs [Competitor]" and "[A] vs [B]" pages
Page structure:
- Headline: "Compare [Your Product]"
- Section: "[Your Product] vs Competitors" — list of direct comparisons
- Section: "Head-to-Head Comparisons" — list of [A] vs [B] pages
- Brief methodology note
- CTA
Index Page Best Practices
Keep them updated: When you add a new comparison page, add it to the relevant index.
Internal linking:
- Link from index → individual pages
- Link from individual pages → back to index
- Cross-link between related comparisons
SEO value:
- Index pages can rank for broad terms like "project management tool comparisons"
- Pass link equity to individual comparison pages
- Help search engines discover all comparison content
Sorting options:
- By popularity (search volume)
- Alphabetically
- By category/use case
- By date added (show freshness)
Include on index pages:
- Last updated date for credibility
- Number of pages/comparisons available
- Quick filters if you have many comparisons
Footer Navigation
The site footer appears on all marketing pages, making it a powerful internal linking opportunity for competitor pages.
Option 1: Link to Index Pages (Minimum)
At minimum, add links to your comparison index pages in the footer:
Footer
├── Compare
│ ├── Alternatives → /alternatives
│ └── Comparisons → /vs
This ensures every marketing page passes link equity to your comparison content hub.
Option 2: Footer Columns by Format (Recommended for SEO)
For stronger internal linking, create dedicated footer columns for each format you've built, linking directly to your top competitors:
Footer
├── [Product] vs ├── Alternatives to ├── Compare
│ ├── vs Notion │ ├── Notion Alternative │ ├── Notion vs Airtable
│ ├── vs Airtable │ ├── Airtable Alternative │ ├── Monday vs Asana
│ ├── vs Monday │ ├── Monday Alternative │ ├── Notion vs Monday
│ ├── vs Asana │ ├── Asana Alternative │ ├── ...
│ ├── vs Clickup │ ├── Clickup Alternative │ └── View all →
│ ├── ... │ ├── ... │
│ └── View all → │ └── View all → │
Guidelines:
- Include up to 8 links per column (top competitors by search volume)
- Add "View all" link to the full index page
- Only create columns for formats you've actually built pages for
- Prioritize competitors with highest search volume
Why Footer Links Matter
- Sitewide distribution: Footer links appear on every marketing page, passing link equity from your entire site to comparison content
- Crawl efficiency: Search engines discover all comparison pages quickly
- User discovery: Visitors evaluating your product can easily find comparisons
- Competitive positioning: Signals to search engines that you're a key player in the space
Implementation Notes
- Update footer when adding new high-priority comparison pages
- Keep footer clean—don't list every comparison, just the top ones
- Match column headers to your URL structure (e.g., "vs" column →
/vs/URLs) - Consider mobile: columns may stack, so order by priority