Majestic

  • Site Explorer
    • Majestic
    • Récapitulatif
    • Domaines référents
    • Backlinks
    • * Nouveaux
    • * Disparus
    • Contexte
    • Intitulé de lien
    • Pages
    • Sujets
    • Link Graph
    • Sites liés
    • Outils Avancés
    • Author ExplorerBeta
    • Summary
    • Similar Profiles
    • Profile Backlinks
    • Attributions
  • Comparer
    • Récapitulatif
    • Backlink History
    • Flow Metrics History
    • Sujets
    • Clique Hunter
  • Outils pour les liens
    • Mon Majestic :
    • Activité récente
    • Rapports
    • Campagnes
    • Domaines vérifiés
    • OpenApps
    • Clés API
    • Mots-clés
    • N-grams Near Links
    • Keyword Checker
    • Search Explorer
    • Outils pour les liens
    • Bulk Backlinks
    • Neighbourhood Checker
    • Envoyer des URL
    • Expérimental
    • Regroupement d’index
    • Link Profile Fight
    • Liens mutuels
    • Solo Links
    • Rapport PDF
    • Typo Domain
    • TLD Checker Nouveaux
  • Free SEO Tools
    • Démarrer
    • Backlink Checker
    • Majestic Million
    • Modules d'extension Majestic
    • Google Sheets
    • Post Popularity
    • Social Explorer
  • Assistance
    • Blog Lien externe
    • Assistance
    • Démarrer
    • Outils
    • Subscriptions & Billing
    • Questions fréquentes
    • Glossaire
    • Guide de style
    • Vidéos didactiques
    • API Reference Guide Lien externe
    • Nous contacter
    • About Backlinks and SEO
    • SEO in 2026
    • The Majestic SEO Podcast
    • All Podcasts
    • What is Trust Flow?
    • Link Building Guides
  • Compte gratuit
  • Tarifs
  • Login
  • Language flag icon
    • English
    • Deutsch
    • Español
    • Français
    • Italiano
    • 日本語
    • Nederlands
    • Polski
    • Português
    • 中文
  • Démarrer
  • Login
  • Tarifs
  • Compte gratuit
    • Récapitulatif
    • Domaines référents
    • Carte
    • Backlinks
    • Nouveaux
    • Disparus
    • Contexte
    • Intitulé de lien
    • Pages
    • Sujets
    • Link Graph
    • Sites liés
    • Outils Avancés
    • Récapitulatif
      Pro
    • Backlink History
      Pro
    • Flow Metrics History
      Pro
    • Sujets
      Pro
    • Clique Hunter
      Pro
  • Bulk Backlinks
    • N-grams Near Links
    • Keyword Checker
    • Search Explorer
      Pro
  • Neighbourhood Checker
    Pro
    • Regroupement d’index
      Pro
    • Link Profile Fight
      Pro
    • Liens mutuels
      Pro
    • Solo Links
      Pro
    • Rapport PDF
      Pro
    • Typo Domain
      Pro
    • TLD Checker Nouveaux
      Pro
  • Envoyer des URL
    • Summary
      Pro
    • Similar Profiles
      Pro
    • Profile Backlinks
      Pro
    • Attributions
      Pro
  • Rapports personnalisés
    Pro
    • Démarrer
    • Backlink Checker
    • Majestic Million
    • Modules d'extension Majestic
    • Google Sheets
    • Post Popularity
    • Social Explorer
    • Démarrer
    • Outils
    • Subscriptions & Billing
    • Questions fréquentes
    • Glossaire
    • Vidéos didactiques
    • API Reference Guide Lien externe
    • Nous contacter
    • Messages
    • The Company
    • Guide de style
    • Conditions générales
    • Privacy Policy
    • RGPD
    • Nous contacter
    • SEO in 2026
    • The Majestic SEO Podcast
    • All Podcasts
    • What is Trust Flow?
    • Link Building Guides
  • Blog Lien externe
    • English
    • Deutsch
    • Español
    • Français
    • Italiano
    • 日本語
    • Nederlands
    • Polski
    • Português
    • 中文

Expand your understanding of clustering

Gianluca Fiorelli

Gianluca Fiorelli advises that, to truly understand and deliver for your customer in 2026, you should be revisiting how you utilise clustering at every touchpoint.

@gfiorelli1    
Gianluca Fiorelli 2026 podcast cover with logo
More SEO in 2026 YouTube Podcast Playlist Link Spotify Podcast Playlist Link Audible Podcast Playlist Link Apple Podcast Playlist Link

Expand your understanding of clustering

Gianluca says: “Rethink the concept of clustering.

We usually think of clustering as something that is only for creating content, especially in the informational space. However, we know that we need to be visible along the entire search journey and customer journey. This means we must be visible with our informational content, but also our commercial, navigational, and transactional content – to use the classic definitions for intent.

When you cluster, you need to do so for different types of clusters. The first one is still clustering for topics: entity search, and so on. Then, it is also interesting and very effective to start clustering these queries and segments for other things, like the buyer personas that are implied by these queries. You can cluster them by sentiment, in order to understand the urgency and needs that are implied by those searches.

We know that search is multi-modal, so some content is better served using video, some with visuals like images, infographics, etc., and others with written content. If you know the SERP features that are more common for a query, you can also cluster them by preferred format.

Last but not least, you should target the entire customer journey, which is synonymous with micro moments: I want to go, I want to buy, I want to know, etc. You should also cluster that initial group of queries and topics by the micro-moments that they specifically target. This goes further than classic clustering for a topic and becoming a topical authority. It's also about serving other things and being more effective for your visibility.

If you are visible with content that responds to an urgency and targets a specific, appropriate micro-moment, and is presented in the format that people prefer for consuming that kind of information, then you are going to have greater success. You will be sending better user signals, which we know are extremely important for Google, and consequently, because of how LLMs use Google search to retrieve information, that will also help you obtain visibility on LLMs like ChatGPT, Perplexity, etc.”

Can you explain more about how clustering for micro-moments works, and why that is beneficial for SEO?

“Let me give you an example. Let's say that someone is interested in minifigures, and they are searching for information about how to paint a Space Marine for display, not for a game. Obviously, you would need to have content that makes Google understand that you are an expert on the topic.

You will have done your keyword research, maybe even used the query fan-out to expand your keyword research, and you have created a cluster. You know that this question is not a search in isolation. Someone searching for how to paint a Space Marine for display is probably also going to look for information like the best airbrush for painting acrylic or oil, what brand of acrylic paint to buy, etc.

There is a very large spectrum of topics that are related to this simple first query, which can be the start of a more complex journey – and not all of these queries will be informational. Many queries might initially be looking for theoretical information, then that ‘I want to know’ becomes ‘I want to do’. If they want to do something, then they need something: ‘I want to buy,’ which becomes ‘I want to go to a place where I can buy something.’

However, if they want to buy something, before that, they may need more information specific to that line of products, like acrylic paints that they want to buy. Then, the final micro-moment will be the transactional ‘I want to buy’ moment.

When you are considering micro-moments and doing this clustering for the entire query space around your topic, you are able to create content, and an infrastructure of content, that correctly targets all the different search intents and micro-moments. That makes you more visible in more queries, all along a potential search journey – both inside Google and jumping back and forth between Google and ChatGPT. This is the advantage.”

How do you target queries that haven’t been searched before, and you don't know are being searched?

“That is obviously quite a sizeable challenge, which would require investigating thousands of prompts. It would also be very expensive, if you consider how much these tools usually cost.

That's another reason why it’s a good idea to cluster by buyer persona. You can do this with a tool like ChatGPT, OpenAI, or Claude. You upload the buyer persona that has been defined by you or the client (it’s better if it’s by the client), and you can say, ‘Considering this content and this cluster that I have created, and knowing what the buyer personas are, tell me which queries best suit each buyer persona.’

By doing this, you can create specific content on the same topic for someone who is an expert, but also for someone who is a beginner, for example. That enables you to create an architecture of content that has the possibility and opportunity of being visible to a wider audience of people.

Now, you are not only creating one piece of content targeting a universal persona; you are eventually creating content that targets specific personas, in order to also be visible in a very personalised search.

How you create that content is another story. It can be different, separate pieces of content, or it can be chunks inside a single piece of content, where one is speaking to a certain persona and another is speaking to a different kind of persona.

For instance, let's say that you have a landing page about a Safari in Kenya, but you are targeting different types of personas: young couples without kids, mature couples without kids, families with kids, and older senior couples. You don’t need to create four different landing pages; you can have one landing page, but you can create modules inside that page that specifically talk about and sell these tours to each specific target.”

Does chunking the content on pages potentially dilute the impact of that content, if aspects of it are not relevant to some buyer personas?

“That is a risk, but this is where the content creation process is so important.

You have to brief the person who is going to create the content to say, ‘You have to create this content targeting this specific person.’ In your content, you have to call out the characteristics of a persona so that, when someone is searching (especially in LLMs, where they are detailing their personal situation, because that’s how conversational search works), those LLMs will retrieve the correct content, not the incorrect one.

In terms of classic search, there is also strong personalisation there, and it's going to get even stronger. That won’t be a problem, especially if you are creating different pieces of content, because you can specify in the H1/H2/H3, with classic on-page SEO, and use wording that clearly calls out a specific type of person.”

How do you create content that has different information for LLMs to draw from for different personas, but is also relevant for real users?

“It’s challenging, but it is less difficult when it has been carefully thought through, and you have a landing page that clearly presents the intended characteristics.

For instance, in the case of a landing page about a Safari, you can create four classic blog posts, with one saying the things that you, as a tour operator, can offer to young couples without kids – more adventure, more specific experiences – compared to a blog where you are talking directly to a family with teenagers or kids.

There, you might say, ‘You are on Safari, but you are also in a glamping site that is going to offer you all kinds of solutions for your kids. You are not going to be abandoned, and you are not going to have security issues.’

All of the work that you have done before will have indicated to you that, for instance, when you have a family with kids or more mature couples looking to go on Safari, their worries are mostly related to security, health, vaccines, and this kind of information. A young couple without kids would not really think about this; they’re really thinking more about contact with nature and living the adventure.

You will have retrieved all of this information when you did your topic research, and then you clustered by buyer persona based on that information.”

Gianluca, what's the key takeaway from the tip you shared today?

“Clustering is not just for informational content. Visibility is becoming the real challenge, and the real necessity – even more than traffic, because traffic from search engines is shrinking, and let’s not even talk about LLMs.

To be visible, you must be visible along the entire customer and search journey, and have the most effective mentions and search snippets.”

Gianluca Fiorelli is an International and Strategic SEO Consultant. Find out more over at ILoveSEO.net.

@gfiorelli1    

Also with Gianluca Fiorelli

Gianluca Fiorelli 2025 podcast cover with logo
2025 Additional Insight
Do not forget to prepare for Agentic Search
Gianluca Fiorelli discusses the evolution of SEO in 2025, emphasizing the importance of agentic search, where AI platforms integrate with websites to facilitate conversational search and direct actions.
Majestic SEO Podcast - the Majestic SEO podcast cover
Majestic SEO Podcast
#48: Setting an SEO Strategy for 2024
Katherine Nwanorue, Gianluca Fiorelli, Kevin Indig and Gemma Fontané discuss how they pull together an SEO strategy and how you should too.

Choose Your Own Learning Style

Webinar iconVideo

If you like to get up-close with your favourite SEO experts, these one-to-one interviews might just be for you.

Watch all of our episodes, FREE, on our dedicated SEO in 2026 playlist.

youtube Playlist Icon

Podcast iconPodcast

Maybe you are more of a listener than a watcher, or prefer to learn while you commute.

SEO in 2026 is available now via all the usual podcast platforms

Spotify Apple Podcasts Audible

Book iconBook

This is our favourite. Sometimes it's better to sit and relax with a nice book.

The best of our range of interviews is available right now as a physical copy and eBook.

Amazon US Amazon UK

Don't miss out

Opt-in to receive email updates.

It's the fastest way to find out more about SEO in 2026.


Pouvons-nous améliorer cette page pour vous ? Donnez-nous votre opinion

Fresh Index

Adresses URL différentes recensées 226 697 688 288
Adresses URL différentes trouvées 758 562 320 710
Plage de dates 08 févr. 2026 – 08 juin 2026
Dernière mise à jour Il y a 50 minutes

Historic Index

Adresses URL différentes recensées 4 502 566 935 407
Adresses URL différentes trouvées 21 743 308 221 308
Plage de dates 06 juin 2006 – 26 mars 2024
Dernière mise à jour 03 mai 2024

SOCIAL

  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • Facebook
  • Bluesky
  • Twitter

ENTREPRISE

  • Blog Lien externe
  • Présentation
  • Conditions générales
  • Règlement en matière de confidentialité
  • RGPD
  • Nous contacter

OUTILS

  • Tarifs
  • Site Explorer
  • Comparer les domaines
  • Bulk Backlinks
  • Search Explorer
  • Developer API Lien externe

MAJESTIC POUR

  • Trust Flow
  • Valeurs de Flow Metric
  • Link Context
  • Backlink Checker
  • Découverte d’influenceurs
  • Entreprise Lien externe

PODCASTS & PUBLICATIONS

  • The Majestic SEO Podcast
  • SEO in 2026
  • SEO in 2025
  • SEO in 2024
  • SEO en 2023
  • SEO en 2022
  • All Podcasts
top ^