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cornerstone content

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Cornerstone Content

Cornerstone content is the set of evergreen pages your team most wants search engines and visitors to understand first. These pages usually carry the clearest strategic positioning, the strongest internal-link support, and the broadest ownership over important topics.

01
Cornerstone content defines which evergreen pages deserve the most authority, maintenance, and internal-link support.
02
It works best when tied to a content pillar and topic-cluster strategy instead of standing alone.
03
Choosing cornerstone pages helps teams stop spreading authority across too many near-duplicate broad pages.

What counts as cornerstone content

Cornerstone content is usually your highest-priority evergreen page on a strategic topic. It should be broad enough to orient readers, strong enough to attract links, and central enough that supporting pages naturally link back to it.

In many marketing sites, cornerstone pages include major product-use-case pages, strategic guides, and the strongest pillar pages tied to recurring business intent.

Why teams need to choose cornerstone pages deliberately

Without a clear cornerstone strategy, broad-intent pages tend to multiply. Teams end up with several pages covering the same concept, each too weak to become the authoritative version.

Deliberate cornerstone selection tells the team which pages deserve the clearest brief, the strongest proofs, and the tightest supporting-link structure.

How cornerstone content differs from supporting pages

A supporting page answers a narrower question, showcases an example, or handles a specific decision point. A cornerstone page owns the broader framing and routes users toward those narrower pages when appropriate.

That means the cornerstone page should explain the concept, define the key sections, and give readers a clear path into related supporting content or product pages.

How to choose cornerstone pages

The best candidates are the pages that match durable business themes and deserve long-term authority.

  • Pick topics that matter to your product story, not just temporary traffic spikes.
  • Favor pages that can support multiple related long-tail pages, examples, or comparison angles.
  • Connect cornerstone pages to internal links, use cases, and conversion paths before scaling supporting content.
  • Review whether the page can stay evergreen with updates instead of needing a full rewrite every few weeks.

A practical maintenance rule

Treat cornerstone pages like owned assets. Refresh them when your product, proof, or topic structure changes, and use them to keep supporting content anchored to the same strategic story.

FAQ

Questions teams ask before switching

01

Can a content pillar also be cornerstone content?

Yes. Many cornerstone pages are also pillar pages because they own the broad topic and support a cluster of narrower pages.

02

How many cornerstone pages should a marketing site have?

Only a limited number. Too many cornerstone pages usually means the team has not decided which broad pages matter most.

03

Should cornerstone content link to pricing or product pages?

Often yes. If the topic supports a business decision, the page should connect readers to use cases, tools, comparisons, or pricing instead of ending as an isolated guide.

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Cornerstone Content Guide for Marketing Teams | AI Marketing