The Search-Ready Content Vault
You publish a post, and nothing happens. Not because the writing is bad, but because nobody chose the topic against what you can realistically win, nobody structured it before the sentences started, and nobody checked it before it went live. So the post sits there. The next one sits next to it. Months of work end up as an archive nobody searches for, and you have no way to tell which step broke.
The Search-Ready Content Vault is a three-document system that takes a post from a keyword to a published, reviewed page. It removes the guessing between those two points.
Your Search Growth Runway: How to Use the Content Engine is where you start. Six pages, four chapters — What You Are Holding, The Order to Use It, How to Get Real Results From This, and What Good Looks Like — plus a five-item checklist. It tells you which document to open first, what order the pieces run in, and what a finished piece of content is supposed to look like before you go looking for it yourself.
The Search-Ready Content Vault is the engine: 26 pages holding 40 fill-in-the-blank AI prompts, organized into six stages. Stage 1, Target, finds topics you can actually win. Stage 2, Blueprint, builds the structure before you write a sentence. Stage 3, Draft, covers the topic and still sounds like a person. Stage 4, Optimize, handles the details that decide whether anyone clicks. Stage 5, Distribute, treats publishing as separate from promotion — because it is. Stage 6, Iterate, makes old content earn again. A chapter on how to use the vault opens it, and a closing chapter, Running the Line, shows you how to keep the whole thing moving.
The Publish-Ready Review: 40 Checks Before Your Content Goes Live is the pass you make before anything ships. Ten pages, 50 checklist items, six phases: Substance, Structure, Search, Voice, Trust, and Launch. It hunts the weak spots an AI draft reliably leaves behind. Then the Ship-or-Hold Score tells you whether the piece is ready or needs another pass, and a final chapter turns the review into a habit instead of a one-time exercise.
This is for anyone writing content that is meant to be found — a solo operator, a small team, a marketer who is tired of publishing into silence. Forty-two pages, three documents. When you finish, you have a repeatable line: a topic you chose on purpose, a structure you set before writing, a draft that reads like a human wrote it, and a reviewed page you can put live without wondering what you missed.