“SEO starts with keyword research.”
This is not wrong. But to make the search engines notice you, just keyword research is not enough. When the website owners plan to optimize their website, the SEO starts with keyword tools, competition volume, and formulas.
At WEMASY, content comes first before the keywords. We know that the search engines care about how well your content fits what people are searching for. Our strategy starts by building content systems that the target audience looks for and that the search engines can easily understand, connect, and rank the website.
Content is the Tree. Keywords Are Just the Leaves.
Think of your content as a tree.
Roots & Trunk: The real foundation
The roots and trunk are the real foundation. Here, it is represented by the core topic and intent. It’s the reason your content exists. It answers a real question, solves a real problem, and is structured in a way that makes sense to the reader.
The branches:
The branches are the flow of your information. They support and extend your core idea in meaningful, structured ways. Some of the examples are your subtopics, formats, and content types, like blog posts, guides, knowledge-based articles, glossary entries, and more.
The leaves:
These are your keywords, and like the leaves, the visible tips show up in search engine results.
They’re what people see, but they only exist if the rest of the tree is healthy.
Most people make the mistake of trying to grow the leaves first. They chase keywords before building a strong foundation. But without roots (intent) and branches (structure), the leaves don’t grow but fall off.
If your content doesn’t genuinely help or inform the user, the keywords won’t stick. So focus on the roots of your tree and grow it well. The leaves come in at a later stage.
Start with Data and not Keywords
At WEMASY, we don’t open a keyword planner first.
We start with a simple question: “What is the user looking for?”
We build the base content around the topics people are looking for, and not search terms. Topics that people care about. Questions they’re already asking. Problems they’re actively trying to solve.
With this, our page and domain authority increase because we will have content that is:
Structured clearly
Solving for real user needs
Part of a larger, organized cluster
The search engine notices that we are not just building isolated content pieces but a content ecosystem around the topic. That improves crawling, internal linking, and semantic understanding, making it easier for the site to rank across multiple related queries.
Here are the steps we follow:
Collect real questions from user conversations, communities, and search behavior
Organize those questions into topic clusters — like SEO, link building, or website building
Create content in formats like blogs, glossaries, feature pages, and more.
When you follow this practice, you become the go-to source of information for the user, and the search engine builds your visibility in this way.
Do we Optimize? We would rather Observe.
Once our content is ready, we publish it and let it breathe without optimizing it.
In my practice, I’ve learned that the search engine is already doing its job by matching our content to real-world queries, even ones we didn’t plan for. When your content is built on strong topics and structure, that’s exactly what starts to happen.
But do we sit idle? We don’t. We observe. Here’s what we do.
We monitor performance using tools like Google Search Console or our analytics dashboard.
We look at
Which pages are getting impressions
What search queries are triggering them
Where we’re ranking, even if it’s page 2 or 3
Search engines today are smart. They don’t just look for exact keywords anymore. They look at the meaning of your content and try to match it to what people are searching for, even if the wording is different.
So when we publish content that’s well-structured and built around real topics, the search engine:
Starts testing it for different search queries
Watches how users interact with it
Decides whether or not the content is a good match for those queries
This helps us see what Google sees and how it’s understanding and categorizing our content.
Search Engines Find Content Even Without Keyword Targeting
When you write content that’s genuinely useful and focused on what the user wants to know, the search engine does more than just look for exact keywords. It understands the meaning behind your content and starts matching it with different ways people search for the same thing.
Let’s take an example here.
You have a blog with the name of the topic: “How to build a website yourself.”
The search engine might also show it for searches like “DIY website builder” or “Create your site.” That’s because it sees the intent is the same, and if users engage with your content, it keeps showing it more.
This is the approach we are taking to build visibility and rank better. We are building content that answers real questions, not chasing keyword lists. The search engine connects the dots for the content that it feels is worth connecting to.
Focus on intent. Structure it well. Let the search engine do the rest.