The Fractional CMO Show

SEO Content Gap Analysis: What Your Competitors Know That You Don’t Episode

RiseOpp, Inc. Season 2 Episode 8

Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.

0:00 | 21:40

What Your Content Strategy Is Missing explores how SEO content gap analysis helps uncover hidden opportunities your competitors are already capturing.

In this podcast, we break down how to move beyond guesswork and build a data-driven SEO roadmap using competitor insights, keyword clustering, and intent-based content planning.

Whether you are a marketer, founder, or SEO professional, you will learn how to systematically expand your topical authority, close visibility gaps, and capture high-value organic traffic.

👉 Read the full guide: 

SEO Content Gap Analysis: The Complete Technical Guide


SPEAKER_00

Imagine um spending weeks cooking this massive feast. Like you meticulously plan the menu, you set a beautiful table, you light the candles, pour the wine.

SPEAKER_01

Sounds great so far.

SPEAKER_00

Right. But then you sit down, only to realize you never actually sent out any invitations.

SPEAKER_01

Oh no. So the food is perfect, but nobody is coming to dinner.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. And according to a massive REST study of what 14 billion web pages, which is featured in our source material today, that is the brutal reality for 96.55% of all pages on the internet.

SPEAKER_01

Which is just a staggering number when you really think about it.

SPEAKER_00

It's mind-blowing. They receive absolute zero traffic from Google. So we are diving into a comprehensive guide today titled SEO Content Gap Analysis, a technical guide to organic growth. And the mission of this deep dive is to help you, the listener, look at how data-driven competitive intelligence can reveal exactly what your audience is searching for.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, and crucially, what your website is completely missing. Because the scale of that failure rate, you know, the 96%, it forces a complete re-evaluation of how digital content is produced. Aaron Powell Right.

SPEAKER_00

Like what are we all doing wrong?

SPEAKER_01

Well, when you analyze why those pages just sit in the dark, the data shows it rarely has to do with the quality of the writing itself. I mean they fail structurally.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Structurally. Meaning what exactly?

SPEAKER_01

Meaning they miss actual search demand or they misjudge the psychological intent behind a user's query, or uh the root domain simply lacks the topical authority required by search algorithms to even compete. Okay. Got it. So content gap analysis is basically the diagnostic blueprint to isolate those specific failures. It replaces the assumption of what an audience wants with, you know, empirical proof of what they are already actively looking for.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell And that brings us to the fundamental flaw the guide points out in traditional content creation. Because in most marketing departments, a team sits around a conference table looking at an editorial calendar, essentially brainstorming topics they assume will sound interesting. Aaron Powell Right.

SPEAKER_01

The classic what should we write about today meeting.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. But the source cites braided research showing that 68% of all trackable online experiences begin with a search engine. So if you're just guessing what people want to read, you are deliberately disconnecting yourself from the primary engine of digital discovery.

SPEAKER_01

You're just hoping to get lucky, really.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

But let me push back on this a little bit. If we abandon the brainstorm and we only write what a tool tells us people are searching for, does data-driven SEO just turn writers into robots? I mean, it feels like we were saying pure creativity is dead.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell No, not at all. Creativity isn't dead, it is just being weaponized.

SPEAKER_00

Weaponized. I like that.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, because the traditional brainstorm is highly inefficient. It asks the wrong starting question. Like I said, it asks, what should we write about today? Content gap analysis forces the team to ask a different question. Where does demand already exist that our competitors are capturing and we are ignoring?

SPEAKER_00

Oh, okay. That's a big shift in perspective.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Right. You still need exceptional creativity to craft a compelling, engaging piece of media. The difference is you are applying that creative energy to a topic where the audience is mathematically guaranteed to exist.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell I see. It's like the difference between throwing darts in a pitch black room hoping you hit the board versus, you know, just turning on the lights.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Exactly. Turn the lights on first.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell So let's look at the actual mechanics of these gaps. Because once the lights are on, what are we looking for? The source breaks down four specific types of gaps, and they go way beyond simply uh missing a vocabulary word.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell They do, yeah. The foundational layer is the keyword gap.

SPEAKER_00

Trevor Burrus, Right. Right. And this is just the direct missing link.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Precisely. Like you sell project management software, your competitor ranks for remote team collaboration strategies, and you don't even have a page addressing that concept. It's the most basic gap.

SPEAKER_00

Simple enough. But the second type, the topical gap, that seems much more insidious.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Ross Powell It is, definitely. Because a topical gap deals with entity salience and how search algorithms evaluate domain-wide expertise. You have to remember, search engines do not evaluate pages in a vacuum.

SPEAKER_00

They look at the whole site.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. They evaluate the architecture of your entire site. So if you run a digital marketing blog and you publish like 50 articles about link building, but you completely ignore technical SEO or conversion rate optimization, you are signaling to the algorithm that your expertise in digital marketing is fractured.

SPEAKER_00

It's incomplete.

SPEAKER_01

Right. You are missing core semantic entities associated with the broader topic. And your competitors who demonstrate comprehensive coverage of the entire subject, well, they will be rewarded with higher baseline atority across all their pages.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, so it's like claiming to be a master mechanic, but your garage doesn't have any tools for working on transmissions. The algorithm just isn't going to trust you with the car.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell That is a perfect analogy, yes.

SPEAKER_00

All right. So the third type is the SRP feature gap. SRLP being the search engine results page for the listener. This is missing out on visual dominance, right? Like feature snippets, video carousels, or those people also ask drop downs.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, the big visual elements that grab the eye.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell But wait, let me push back again here. If I am looking at my analytics and I see I am already ranking organically at, say, position two or three for a highly competitive keyword, why do I really need to care about a feature gap? I mean, I am already on the first page.

SPEAKER_01

Because in modern search, ranking does not equal visibility.

SPEAKER_00

Really?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. The mechanics of the results page have fundamentally changed over the years. If a competitor captures a massive video carousel or a featured snippet paragraph right at the top of the screen, they are dominating the pixel real estate.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, I see. They push everything else down.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. Even if you are technically ranking at position two, that rich visual feature pushes your standard blue text link below the fold, especially on a mobile device.

SPEAKER_00

Wow. So you're there, but no one sees you.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell You have the ranking, but the click-through rate plummets because you are functionally invisible. So closing a feature gap requires restructuring your existing content. You know, adding structured schema markup, building FAQ lists, embedding multimedia, things to reclaim that visual dominance.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Which leads us directly into the fourth type, which is the competitive content gap.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

This is where you've targeted the right keyword, you're competing for the snippet, but the competitors page is just fundamentally superior. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. Their content is just better structurally or visually.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell And search engines are actively reading the engagement signals to determine that, right? Like if users click my page, bounce after three seconds, and then spend five minutes on the competitor's page because it has, I don't know, better data visualization or a clearer layout, the algorithm will eventually flip our rankings.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell That is exactly what happens. It's the mechanism of dwell time and pogo sticking.

SPEAKER_00

Pogo sticking.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. When a user clicks your link, realizes it's not what they want, and immediately bounces back or pogo sticks to the search results. Google sees that as a failure to satisfy search intent. So diagnosing a competitive content gap requires stripping away your own ego, really, and auditing your content against the top three results to see where your page lacks depth, utility, or formatting advantages.

SPEAKER_00

Well, diagnosing these four gaps manually across thousands of URLs sounds impossible without drowning in spreadsheets.

SPEAKER_01

Yep.

SPEAKER_00

But thankfully, the guide outlines a highly structured, seven-step professional workflow.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, you definitely need a system.

SPEAKER_00

And the very first step forces a re-evaluation of who you are actually fighting. The guide makes a big distinction between a business competitor and a search competitor. Which, if you're a B2B software company listening to this, your instinct is probably to run a gap analysis against the other software company across town.

SPEAKER_01

Which will often skew your entire data set right from the start.

SPEAKER_00

Really? Why is that?

SPEAKER_01

Because in organic search, your biggest rival for high-value traffic might not sell software at all. It might be a massive tech review aggregator or a media publisher or an educational wiki.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, like a site that just reviews different tools.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. They do not compete with your actual product, but they are absolutely monopolizing the search visibility you require to acquire customers. Identifying competitors based purely on algorithmic visibility rather than your business category is the only way to build an accurate baseline.

SPEAKER_00

That makes a ton of sense. So once you know who is actually spieling your traffic, I feel like the instinct is to immediately start building brand new pages to fight back. But the guide suggests looking inward first in step two, specifically auditing existing content.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, always look at what you already have.

SPEAKER_00

And there is this fascinating Orbit Media Survey cited here showing that 80% of bloggers report strong results from simply updating and optimizing older posts.

SPEAKER_01

It's one of the highest ROI activities in SEO.

SPEAKER_00

But why? Why does updating an old article yield better algorithmic results than publishing a brand new, shiny one? Updating old content is like renovating a solid house instead of building a new one from scratch. But why does the algorithm prefer it?

SPEAKER_01

It really comes down to URL history and established link equity. Think about it. When you publish a brand new page, it sits in a sandbox. It has zero inbound links, zero behavioral data, and search engines have to test it cautiously.

SPEAKER_00

It has no reputation.

SPEAKER_01

Right. But an older page, even an underperforming one, is already indexed. It likely has existing internal links from your own site, maybe a few external backlinks. The foundation is already there.

SPEAKER_00

So you just build on it.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. By running a gap analysis on that existing URL and injecting the missing semantic entities, restructuring the headers, maybe updating the data, you leverage its historical authority. And the algorithmic response to that is often significantly faster and more pronounced than starting from scratch.

SPEAKER_00

That is such a great takeaway. But moving into stecks four and five of the workflow, the guide introduces clustering and intent, and it warns heavily against content cannibalization.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, cannibalization is a huge issue for a lot of sites.

SPEAKER_00

It suggests grouping queries by meaning rather than isolated keywords. But wait, let me challenge this strategy for a second. If I take all my research and put it onto one giant clustered pillar page about, let's say, email marketing, aren't I losing out on the chance to rank for 10 different long tail keywords with 10 highly specific individual articles?

SPEAKER_01

I see why you'd think that, but no. Think of your website's authority like a voting system. Okay. If you publish 10 separate articles targeting slight variations of the exact same concept like email marketing strategy, how to plan an email campaign, and email marketing tips, you are essentially running 10 candidates from the same political party in a local election.

SPEAKER_00

Oh wow, you split the vote.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. They split the vote. You are diluting your site's link equity and your keyword focus across multiple weak URLs. Search engines use natural language processing or NLP to understand semantic relationships.

SPEAKER_00

So the algorithm knows they mean the same thing.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. The algorithm knows those queries mean the exact same thing to the user. By clustering those variations into one comprehensive authoritative page, you consolidate your link equity.

SPEAKER_00

So you consolidate the power instead of fracturing it.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. That single mega page becomes powerful enough to rank for the primary keyword and all the associated long tail variations simultaneously.

SPEAKER_00

That is brilliant. But as we move to step six, which is prioritizing opportunities, we run into the harsh reality of domain authority. Because how do we know our search competitor isn't just a giant? Like if I run this analysis and discover a massive keyword gap, but the top three results are Wikipedia, Forbes, and a government database, I'm never going to outrank them, regardless of how well I cluster my content.

SPEAKER_01

And that is exactly why step six is vital. That is the crux of strategic prioritizations. A gap only matters if you have the mathematical probability of actually closing it.

SPEAKER_00

Right. Don't fight battles you can't win.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. You have to evaluate the competitive difficulty metrics against your own domain's historical authority. If a topic is completely dominated by digital giants, it goes to the very bottom of your roadmap.

SPEAKER_00

So what's the sweet spot?

SPEAKER_01

The sweet spot of gap analysis is identifying high-value, moderate competition topics where the current ranking pages show weakness. Like maybe they have thin content or slow load times or a mismatch in search intent. You reverse engineer the intent of top pages without blindly copying their structure.

SPEAKER_00

Speaking of search intent, a structured workflow is great, but this entire methodology has to adapt based on the specific architecture of the business running the analysis, right?

SPEAKER_01

Oh, absolutely. One size does not fit all.

SPEAKER_00

Like a local plumber's website functions entirely differently than a global e-commerce brand. So let's look at how these gaps manifest across different business models. The guide notes that standard informational blogs typically suffer from severe structural fragmentation.

SPEAKER_01

They do, mainly because blogs are inherently chronological. You publish posts based on a weekly calendar, and over, say, three years, you end up with hundreds of disconnected articles just floating in the ether.

SPEAKER_00

Right, buried in the archives.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. So the gap for a blog isn't always missing topics, it is missing internal link architecture. The strategy there requires auditing the database, identifying those thematic clusters we talked about, and using highly optimized internal links to pass page rank between those fragmented pieces. You're trying to create a centralized hub of authority.

SPEAKER_00

Now, e-commerce sites seem to have the exact opposite problem. Their internal linking is usually heavily structured around product categories, but their gap is almost entirely informational.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, they focus purely on the transaction.

SPEAKER_00

Right. They build thousands of pages designed to sell a specific product, but they completely ignore the top of the funnel. Like if you are an online retailer selling premium hiking boots, your site is entirely focused on the transaction. But you have no content capturing the queries of users searching for, like how to choose hiking boots or waterproof versus breathable hiking gear.

SPEAKER_01

And that is a massive missed opportunity. By ignoring those top-of-funnel informational queries, the e-commerce site is surrendering the entire research phase of the customer journey.

SPEAKER_00

Because people don't just wake up and buy boots.

SPEAKER_01

Right. Consumers rarely search for a specific product SQ code. They spend weeks researching solutions to a problem. And if an e-commerce brand allows a third-party review site, or worse, a competitor to answer those early stage informational questions, that competitor establishes the brand trust.

SPEAKER_00

Oh man. So by the time they're ready to buy, it's too late.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. By the time the user is ready to execute a transactional search, their brand preference is already locked in elsewhere.

SPEAKER_00

So interesting. Now the B2B Sauce model software as a service operates in reverse of that. Sauce companies are notoriously obsessed with top-of-funnel educational content. They publish endless beginner guides and glossaries.

SPEAKER_01

Lots of educational fluff, yes.

SPEAKER_00

But the guide highlights a massive gap in the mid-to-bottom funnel, specifically the consideration phase. And here's where it gets really interesting to me. Publishing exclusively top-of-funnel awareness content is like going on a first date, spending the entire dinner talking about your philosophical views on marriage, and then immediately proposing.

SPEAKER_01

That is a terrifying first date.

SPEAKER_00

Right. You haven't allowed the other person to weigh their options or understand how you actually compare to everyone else they are dating. You need that mid-funnel comparison content to actually date the customer.

SPEAKER_01

It's true. And that is the exact friction point for Sauce. They excel at the awareness stage, educating the user on the nature of the problem. But when that user transitions to the consideration stage and searches for something like alternative to X software or comparison pages.

SPEAKER_00

The SAS site has nothing.

SPEAKER_01

Nothing. They refuse to acknowledge their competitors. And this creates a vacuum. The user is forced to leave the proprietary ecosystem and go to a site like G2 or Captera to find comparison data.

SPEAKER_00

And you lose control of the narrative.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. So advanced gap analysis for SAS requires building dedicated, objective comparison pages that intercept those mid-funnel queries. It keeps the user engaged on your domain while they make their purchasing decision.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, let's bring it down to the hyper-local level really quickly. For local service businesses, roofers, plumbers, legal practices, the guide suggests the gap is often foundational trust and location specificity. Aaron Powell Right.

SPEAKER_01

Local SEO is a totally different beast.

SPEAKER_00

They might underinvest in SEO entirely or they rank for electricians in Chicago, but they lack pages for the specific suburbs and they completely lack the educational content that builds trust before the phone call. Things like roof repair cost estimates or why is my breaker panel buzzing?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Because local search relies heavily on proximity and relevance signals. If a local business only has a homepage and a contact form, they provide zero semantic context to the algorithm regarding the breadth of their services or their geographical radius. Building out dedicated service area pages and localized educational content directly feeds the algorithm the geographic and topical entities it needs to trigger those local map pack rankings.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, so to execute this customized strategy at scale across thousands of potential keywords, human intuition clearly needs to be paired with serious computational power. What does the professional tech stack look like?

SPEAKER_01

Well, the guide breaks it down into distinct categories. For the heavy lifting of domain comparison, the core keyword tools it points to are platforms like Arefs, Semrush, and Moz.

SPEAKER_00

And what are they doing? Exactly.

SPEAKER_01

They are the foundational macroanalysis tools. They crawl the web and map the backlink overlap between your domain and the competitors you identified back in step one. You input three competing domains, and the software cross-references their ranking databases to instantly isolate the exact queries where your competitors hold shared visibility, but your domain ranks null.

SPEAKER_00

Wow, instantly. Then you have the research tools like Google Search Console for finding your own weak pages and Google Trends for emerging topics.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, and tools like Answer the Public or also ask for finding those specific question-based queries.

SPEAKER_00

Right. And then you move to the microanalysis, the technical and optimization tools. Things like Screaming Frog or Sightbulb are mentioned for crawling structural issues. But I'm absolutely fascinated by the semantic optimization tools mentioned, like Surfer SEO, ClearScope, and Market Muse. Which is wild. But here is my concern. If we can literally use a tool like ClearScope to just mathematically prove a page, doesn't they just leave us with raw data? Like, are we just feeding an outline into a tool and ensuring we hit the exact frequency of required words, creating a mathematically optimized word salad?

SPEAKER_01

That is a very valid concern. And you've identified the exact trap that junior SEO teams fall into. They treat optimization tools as madlibs.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly, just filling in the blanks.

SPEAKER_01

But the guide explicitly emphasizes that tools only generate raw data. It requires a structured editorial template to transform that data into an actual strategy. If you hand a writer a list of 50 NLP entities and tell them to stuff them into a document, the resulting content will be completely unreadable.

SPEAKER_00

Right. No human will want to read it.

SPEAKER_01

And user engagement will tank and the page will fail regardless of its semantic density. The professional workflow demands that the research is completely useless unless it is translated into a comprehensive content brief. Ah, the brief. That brief dictates the required subtopics, the psychological search intent, the structural header hierarchy, and the necessary internal links. It's integrated into a strict editorial calendar. It provides the architectural blueprint, but the human writer must still pour the concrete and build a house that a real person actually wants to live in.

SPEAKER_00

I love that. The blueprint is not the building. That is a crucial distinction. Well, we have covered a massive amount of technical ground today to synthesize the core value for you listening. Whether you are managing a fragmented niche blog, an e-commerce empire leaking topophonal traffic, a B2B sauce company ignoring the consideration phase, or a local service business trying to dominate a geographic radius content gap analysis replaces pure editorial guesswork with a definitive data-backed roadmap.

SPEAKER_01

It really does. It shows you exactly what your audience needs at every stage of their journey that your competitors are already providing. You isolate the structural voids in the market and you build the exact content required to fill them.

SPEAKER_00

It's powerful stuff. But I want to leave you with a final forward-looking question to mull over on your own. Throughout this entire deep dive, we have talked entirely about analyzing current search engine results pages, matching competitor text, and capturing traditional blue links. The current paradigm, yeah. But we are watching the rapid deployment of AI overviews and generative chatbots directly answering user queries on the search page itself. As large language models synthesize information without requiring a click, what happens next? Will the future of content gap analysis force us to analyze what an AI model is missing in its underlying training data rather than what a human is typing into a search bar?

SPEAKER_01

Wow. Doing gap analysis on neural networks instead of competitor domains. That is a profound shift to consider.

SPEAKER_00

Something to really think about as you plan your next editorial roadmap. Thank you so much for joining us on this deep dive. The data is out there waiting for you. It's time to stop setting the table in the dark, turn on the lights, find the gaps in your market, and finally send out the right invitations to your feast.