Module 5 Lesson 5.2 — Your 30-Day Content Plan

Module 5 Lesson 5.2 — Your 30-Day Content Plan (A Simple System That Compounds)

Module 5: Content Strategy That Compounds

Lesson 18 of 28

Most people fail at content planning for one reason:

They try to plan like a machine… and then live like a human.

They make a huge plan, burn out, feel guilty, and stop.

SnipRank is a calmer approach.

Core idea:
The goal is not “perfect consistency”. The goal is compounding momentum.

The 30-Day Plan Rule

Your first 30 days of publishing should be designed to create:

  • clear topical focus
  • a foundation of evergreen content
  • easy internal linking
  • a site that feels like it’s about something

We do that by building content in clusters.

The SnipRank Cluster Method

Instead of choosing 30 random topics, we choose:

3 Core Topics (Pillars)

These are the main themes your site is built around.

7 Supporting Articles per Topic

These support each pillar with beginner questions, how-to guides, mistakes, and examples.

3 topics × 7 supporting posts = 21 posts.

Then you add:

  • 3 “definition” posts (one per topic)
  • 3 “mistakes” posts (one per topic)
  • 3 “checklist/template” posts (one per topic)

That brings you to a clean, powerful 30-day plan.

SnipRank principle:
A cluster plan makes your site feel intentional — which builds trust faster than random publishing.

Example 30-Day Plan (So You See It Clearly)

Let’s imagine a site about AI-ready blogging.

Core Topics

  • Content Structure
  • Internal Linking
  • Authority & Trust

Supporting Posts (examples)

  • What is content structure?
  • How to write headings that rank
  • How to build a content cluster
  • Internal links vs external links
  • How to write a trustworthy About page
  • Why most blogs fail
  • How to update old posts properly

Notice how everything connects. That’s the entire point.

How Often Should You Publish?

Here’s the honest answer:

Whatever pace you can maintain for 90 days without burning out.

Some people can publish daily. Most can’t.

A strong pace for most people is:

  • 2 posts per week (8 per month)
  • or 3 posts per week (12 per month)

If you publish slower, that’s fine — your plan just becomes a 60-day or 90-day plan instead of 30.

Common mistake:
People choose an ambitious pace to feel motivated… then crash and disappear.

The “Minimum Viable Plan” (If You’re Busy)

If you’re short on time, do this:

Minimum viable plan

  • Pick 2 core topics
  • Write 5 supporting posts for each
  • Write 2 checklist/template posts

That’s 12 posts that will outperform 50 random ones.

Action Step

Build your 30-day plan now:

  1. Choose your 3 core topics (pillars).
  2. For each topic, list 7 beginner questions people ask.
  3. Mark 3 posts that can become checklists/templates.
  4. Schedule your publishing pace (2x/week, 3x/week, etc.).

If you do this properly, you’ll never stare at a blank screen again.

What’s Next

In Lesson 5.3 we’ll talk about what to do when you’ve already got content — and it’s messy:

How to clean up old posts, organise them into clusters, and turn a random blog into a structured asset.