
- Ranks higher: Garrett Moon analyzed the first page rankings of 6 keywords and found that the top 5 results averaged more than 2,000 words.
- Gets more links: HubSpot analyzed ~6,000 articles and found 2000-word articles got both more backlinks and social shares
- Converts better: CrazyEgg found that long-form content converted 30% higher than short-form content.
But First, Download These Content Marketing Templates
It’s going to be awfully hard to launch some amazing long-form content if your implementation and team coordination is a mess. Download these free content marketing templates to help you get organized. You'll find:- A Content Plan Template to help you measure and learn from your success.
- An Email Marketing Template to distribute and communicate your new initiative.
- A Blog Calendar Template to plan every post ahead of time in one place.
1. Identify Most Linked-to Content: Ahrefs
I use a variety of criteria when determining whether old content has any value at all. This includes traffic (and traffic history) and social media shares page 2 rankings (as these have some potential) and I encourage everyone to look at all of these when doing content pruning. But for the sake of focus, in this tutorial, I'll limit myself to one: Backlinks. So why only one and why backlinks? Aren't backlinks going away? No, they are not going anywhere. Backlinks are the essence of the Internet: That's how all web pages are connected, how content is being discovered by search engines and human beings. And above all, backlinks are the strongest signal of quality.

2. Identify Your Lowest-Hanging Fruit: Finteza and Google's Search Console
At this point you want to find answers to two questions:- Which search queries are currently sending me most engaged traffic?
- Which queries have some potential to send me more traffic?

- Click "Average position" and CTR options to activate them (Keep "Total clicks" activated for more insight)
- Click "New" to add another filter and there type in your URL slug to filter results to your page:


3. Identify More Keywords to Optimize For: Serpstat
Another great thing about working on old content versus creating new content is being able to clearly see how you are doing as compared to your existing competitors. Specifically, you can see which queries are bringing them traffic and where you are lacking. Serpstat's URL vs URL section is a great tool for identifying just that: Which keywords your competing URLs are doing better than yours and which keywords you missed at all. Sometimes this analysis is called "Keyword Gap Analysis":
Recommended Listening:
How To Create Content That Ranks For 11,000+ Keywords
4. Identify How to Expand Your Article to Increase Its Rankings: Text Optimizer
Now that we have keywords you want to focus on, let's actually identify how to expand it. Run each of your keywords, one by one, in Text Optimizer to come up with the following:- Related concepts and associated terms to include into your content
- Related questions to break your articles into more logical sections

- Grab the list of questions from there
- Fill in the blanks with partially pre-written sentences
- Identify concepts that need additional research
- I also use this writing checklist to keep in mind additional things to check and include (like unique angles, stats, references, etc.) This keeps me very focused and organized.
- Here’s a good collection of content-friendly CTAs you may want to implement into your revised content to generate leads
- Furthermore, once you have all those new keywords to include in your content, follow these steps to expand and optimize it.
5. Put Old Content on Your New Editorial Calendar
Finally, this may be a daunting process, especially if you have been working on your blog for years. It's not a one-week project that can be rushed. Handling old assets should be taken seriously because there's a goldmine of opportunity there. Getting organized is key. I suggest putting your old content on your editorial calendar as you'd do with your new content. Turn the steps above into a checklist for each asset you are planning to create.
Takeaways
When you wrote that article 5-10 years ago, it must have been a great one (it accumulated some links for a reason!) But content marketing is evolving fast and so do your readers' needs and expectations. Therefore updating your old content to adapt it to today's standards is a great idea. Your old content is the goldmine of opportunities because it has already earned some links and collected some data you can work with.
- Find where to start: Identify your most linked-to content using Ahrefs "best by links" tool. Articles that have more backlinks are likely to rank higher, even more quite competitive forms, so it makes sense to invest your time and effort into those.
- Identify queries that already send you clicks and conversions (using Finteza and Google's Search Console). These are keywords you don't want to lose.
- Identify missed keyword opportunities (and topics you failed to cover) using Serpstat's URL vs URL tool
- Identify related questions (these are going to be your article sections) and related concepts (as well as those that need additional research) using Text Optimizer
- Put your old content revision and marketing on your editorial calendar using CoSchedule and include the above tools in the task checklist to keep the process streamlined.

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