Problem-pain-solution content engine designed to convert readers into profile signups. Five launch posts, one per pet type, targeting low-competition long-tail keywords with clear commercial intent.
The Core Thesis
PetMatch exists to solve one problem: pet owners waste money on wrong products because recommendations aren’t personalized. Every blog post exists to surface a specific frustration, prove that personalization is the fix, and drive the reader into the free 30-second profile creator at /onboarding.
The blog is not a content hub. It’s a diagnostic funnel disguised as helpful advice.
1. Content Model
Every post follows the same conversion architecture. This keeps the blog scalable and internally consistent while maximizing signup potential.
1
Pain Hook
2
Why It Happens
3
What to Check
4
Product Fix
5
CTA to Profile
Post Structure (Every Article)
Empathetic hook naming the exact frustration (2 sentences max)
“Why This Happens” section with 3 to 5 causes, written with authority
“What to Check Today” actionable checklist the reader can do immediately
“Products That Actually Help” section organized by solution type (food, supplements, toys, grooming, habitat)
CTA block: “Stop guessing. Get AI-matched products for [pet name] in 30 seconds.”
FAQ section (4 to 6 questions, targeting People Also Ask variations)
CTA Placement Rules
Three CTA touchpoints per post, minimum:
After the intro hook (soft, inline text link)
Mid-article after the product section (button block matching site style)
End of article (full-width card with headline, subhead, and button)
CTA copy should always reference the specific pet type: “Get personalized food picks for your dog” beats generic “Try PetMatch.” Make it feel like the next logical step after reading the diagnosis.
Word Count
1,500 to 2,000 words per post. Long enough to rank and build authority, short enough to hold attention. No padding.
2. SEO Targeting Strategy
Rule: Never target broad head terms. “Dog food” and “cat toys” are death sentences for a new domain. Every keyword must combine pet type + symptom/problem + context modifier. That’s where low competition and high conversion intent live.
Keyword Selection Criteria
Each post targets one primary long-tail keyword and two to three secondary variations. Selection is based on:
Factor
Target
Keyword difficulty
Under 30 (ideally under 20)
Monthly search volume
100 to 1,000 (sweet spot for new domains)
Search intent
Problem-solving with product tie-in potential
SERP quality
Forums, thin content, or outdated articles ranking on page 1
CTA bridge potential
Natural path from problem to “personalized product match”
Modifier Strategy
After the first five posts rank, expand each topic by adding modifiers: “at night,” “after eating,” “in new home,” “for senior pets,” “won’t stop,” “suddenly.” These spawn additional low-competition pages that interlink back to the pillar post.
Schema and Technical SEO
Every post should include Article schema, FAQ schema for the FAQ section, and proper internal linking. Publish on a /blog/ URL structure. Submit sitemap to Google Search Console and Bing Webmaster Tools after each publish.
3. Blog Design (Matching PetMatch Site)
The current site is clean, modern, rounded, and uses soft neutrals with vibrant accent pops. The blog must feel like a natural extension, not a separate editorial section bolted on.
Visual Alignment
Element
Match To
Background
Light neutral (#FAFAFA or white)
Cards
White with subtle border, 16px border radius (matches site’s rounded style)
Typography
Same sans-serif stack as site (clean, modern weight)
Accent colors
Purple primary (#7C3AED), green for success states, warm for alerts
Pet emojis
Use liberally in headings and CTAs (site already uses ππ±π¦π π°)
Spacing
Generous white space, minimal text density per section
Mobile
Mobile-first, responsive, same breakpoints as main site
Blog Index Page Layout
Hero banner: “Real pet problems. Real product solutions.” with CTA button to onboarding
Filter chips by pet type: π Dog, π± Cat, π¦ Bird, π Fish, π° Rabbit
Post cards in a 2-column grid (3 on desktop). Each card: pet emoji, title, pain-point teaser, read time, “Read + Get Matched” link
Sticky sidebar or bottom bar: “Create your free pet profile” CTA
Individual Post Layout
Hero with pet emoji + keyword-rich H1 + read time badge
Table of contents (jump links, collapsible on mobile)
Numbered/bulleted sections with checklist-style formatting
Embedded product recommendation cards (mirror the Golden Retriever sample card style from homepage)
“Happy Pet Parent” testimonial quote box pulled from existing site testimonials
End CTA block: full-width, matching site’s purple accent gradient
Navigation
Add “Blog” to the main top nav, positioned between the current links and the profile CTA button. Keep it one word. No dropdown submenu needed until you have 15+ posts.
4. Internal Linking Plan
Every post links to three destinations:
Onboarding page (/onboarding) via CTA buttons and inline text links
Two other blog posts (cross-pet or related pain points) once more content exists
Homepage via a “How PetMatch Works” contextual link within the product recommendation section
As the blog grows, build internal link clusters around each pet type. Dog posts link to other dog posts. Cross-pet links happen only when the topic genuinely overlaps (allergies, first-time owner mistakes, senior pet care).
5. The Five Launch Posts
Post 01 β π Dogs
Why Is My Dog Itching So Much? Common Causes and What Actually Helps
Primary Keyword
why is my dog itching so much
Intent
Problem-solving, product discovery
Secondary Keywords
dog itchy skin remedies, dog scratching no fleas
Why This Wins
Massive pain point, strong product tie-in to food, supplements, grooming
dog itching causesitchy dog remediesdog allergies skindog scratching but no fleashypoallergenic dog food
Outline
Why Is My Dog Itching So Much? Common Causes and What Actually Helps
The 5 Most Common Reasons Dogs Won’t Stop Scratching (environmental allergies, food allergies, fleas/parasites, yeast/bacterial infections, dry skin)
How to Tell What’s Causing Your Dog’s Itch (location-based diagnostic: paws = environmental, ears/rear = food, tail base = fleas)
What to Check Today (flea inspection, food elimination basics, skin condition assessment)
Products That Actually Help (limited-ingredient food, omega-3 supplements, medicated shampoo, calming chews, grooming tools by coat type)
FAQ: 5 to 6 People Also Ask variations (when to see a vet, can food cause itching, best supplements, seasonal vs year-round)
CTA Bridge: “Every dog’s skin reacts differently based on breed, age, and environment. Instead of guessing which food or supplement might work, let PetMatch AI analyze your dog’s full profile and match them to products other owners with similar dogs actually use.”
Post 02 β π± Cats
Cat Stopped Using the Litter Box? Why It Happens and How to Fix It Fast
Medical vs Behavioral: How to Tell the Difference (frequency changes, vocalization, posture cues)
The Fix Checklist (box cleaning schedule, litter swap protocol, location audit, adding boxes for multi-cat homes)
Products That Solve This (unscented clumping litter, self-cleaning boxes, calming diffusers, enzyme cleaners, covered vs uncovered box comparison)
FAQ: when to call the vet, how many litter boxes per cat, best litter for sensitive cats
CTA Bridge: “The right litter box setup depends on your cat’s breed, temperament, and living situation. PetMatch AI factors in all of it and recommends the exact products that work for cats like yours.”
Post 03 β π¦ Birds
Why Is My Bird Screaming All Day? What It Means and How to Stop It
Primary Keyword
why is my bird screaming
Intent
Problem-solving, enrichment product discovery
Secondary Keywords
how to stop parrot screaming, bird behavior problems
Why This Wins
Underserved niche, very low competition, strong enrichment product tie-in
bird screaming all dayparrot screaming for attentionbird boredom signsbest toys for parrotsbird enrichment ideas
Outline
Why Is My Bird Screaming All Day? What It Means and How to Stop It
Normal vs Problem Screaming (morning/evening contact calls vs all-day distress)
The Enrichment Fix (foraging toys, rotation schedule, out-of-cage time, social interaction rules)
Products That Reduce Screaming (foraging toys, puzzle feeders, swings, shredding toys, cage upgrades by species)
FAQ: best cage size by species, how many toys, when screaming means vet visit
CTA Bridge: “A cockatiel needs completely different enrichment than an African Grey. PetMatch AI matches toys, food, and cage accessories to your specific bird’s species, age, and activity level.”
Post 04 β π Fish
Why Do My Fish Keep Dying? Beginner Mistakes That Kill Fish (and How to Fix Them)
Primary Keyword
why do my fish keep dying
Intent
Urgent problem-solving, beginner education
Secondary Keywords
fish tank beginner mistakes, how to keep fish alive
Why This Wins
Guilt + confusion = high engagement, strong product tie-in to test kits, filters, conditioners
why do my fish keep dyingfish tank cycling for beginnersnew fish tank cloudy waterfish tank setup mistakesbest water test kit fish
Outline
Why Do My Fish Keep Dying? Beginner Mistakes That Kill Fish (and How to Fix Them)
The #1 Mistake: Skipping the Nitrogen Cycle (explain tank cycling in plain language)
5 Other Common Killers (overfeeding, wrong tank size, incompatible species, temperature swings, no water testing)
How to Save Your Fish Right Now (emergency water change protocol, testing steps, feeding reset)
Products Every Fish Owner Needs (water test kit, dechlorinator, proper filter by tank size, thermometer, substrate)
FAQ: how often to change water, tank cycling timeline, best beginner fish species
CTA Bridge: “A 10-gallon betta tank needs completely different equipment than a 55-gallon community setup. PetMatch AI recommends the right filters, food, and maintenance products based on your exact tank and fish species.”
Post 05 β π° Rabbits
Rabbit Chewing Everything? Why They Do It and How to Redirect the Damage
Primary Keyword
rabbit chewing everything
Intent
Problem-solving, product discovery
Secondary Keywords
rabbit chewing furniture, best chew toys for rabbits
Why This Wins
Specific pain (destroyed furniture/cords), strong product tie-in to hay, chew toys, enclosure upgrades
The Difference Between Normal and Problem Chewing (healthy filing vs destructive targeting of furniture, cords, baseboards)
How to Redirect Chewing Today (hay access audit, bunny-proofing basics, enrichment rotation)
Products That Save Your Furniture (timothy hay varieties, apple wood sticks, willow balls, puzzle feeders, cord protectors, enclosure upgrades)
FAQ: how much hay per day, safe vs toxic woods, when chewing signals dental problems
CTA Bridge: “A Holland Lop has different chewing needs than a Flemish Giant. PetMatch AI recommends the right hay, toys, and habitat products based on your rabbit’s breed, age, and living space.”
6. Publishing Order and Cadence
Week
Post
Reason
Week 1
π Dog Itching
Highest search volume, largest pet owner audience, strongest product variety
Week 2
π± Cat Litter Box
Second largest audience, high urgency pain point, strong conversion potential
Week 3
π° Rabbit Chewing
Underserved niche, very low competition, passionate owner base
Week 4
π Fish Dying
Beginner audience = high signup potential, guilt drives action
Week 5
π¦ Bird Screaming
Lowest competition of all five, positions PetMatch as multi-pet authority
One post per week for five weeks. After publishing, share on social with pet emojis, submit to Google Search Console, and monitor which posts convert best to profile signups.
7. Conversion Tracking
The blog exists for one metric: profile signups from /onboarding. Everything else is secondary.
What to Track
Metric
Tool
Why It Matters
Blog β Onboarding click rate
GA4 event tracking on CTA buttons
Measures whether CTA placement and copy convert
Onboarding completion rate from blog
GA4 funnel
Tells you if blog visitors actually finish the profile
Organic keyword rankings
Google Search Console
Validates keyword targeting is working
Traffic by post and pet type
GA4
Identifies which pet categories drive the most signups
Bounce rate per post
GA4
Flags content that isn’t engaging enough to hold readers
Key insight: If dog content converts at 3x the rate of fish content, double down on dog pain-point posts. Let the data drive the content calendar after the first five posts. Don’t publish evenly across pet types if one type is clearly winning.
8. Post-Launch Expansion
Next 5 Posts (Weeks 6 to 10)
Based on which pet type converts best, expand with modifier variations:
Pet
Expansion Topics
π Dog
“Dog won’t stop licking paws,” “best food for dogs with allergies,” “dog itching at night”
π± Cat
“Cat stopped eating wet food,” “cat zoomies at night,” “best calming products for cats”
π¦ Bird
“Bird plucking feathers,” “best toys for parakeets,” “bird cage setup for beginners”
π Fish
“Cloudy fish tank fix,” “best filter for 10 gallon tank,” “betta fish not eating”
π° Rabbit
“Rabbit not eating hay,” “best hay for rabbits,” “rabbit GI stasis signs”
New Pet Types
Add Hamster and Reptile posts once the first five are indexed and generating traffic. Suggested starters:
πΉ “Hamster Running on Wheel All Night? What It Means and Whether to Worry”
π¦ “Reptile Not Eating? When It’s Normal and When to Worry”
Content Repurposing
Turn each blog post into a short social clip (pain point + “PetMatch solves this”), a Pinterest graphic (checklist format), and an email to existing matched users who own that pet type.
9. Content Planning Spreadsheet
All 15 blog posts mapped with keywords, problems, CTA bridges, and product tie-ins. Filter by pet type. Click any row to expand full details.