Methodology

Last updated: April 18, 2026

This page explains how info100.cc decides what to publish and how each page is built. Our method is designed for usefulness first: answer the real question, remove noise, and provide clear next steps.

1. Topic Selection

We prioritize topics using three signals: recurring user questions, long-term search intent, and decision value. If a question repeatedly appears over time, it is a good candidate for evergreen content.

2. Search Intent Mapping

Each page starts with intent mapping. We define whether the user wants a definition, comparison, process, or recommendation framework. The article is then structured around that intent rather than around arbitrary word count targets.

3. Content Structure

Most pages follow a repeatable structure: short direct answer, context section, practical steps, common mistakes, and FAQ. This layout helps both readers and search engines understand the page quickly.

We also use heading hierarchy and table-of-contents anchors to improve page navigation.

4. Quality Review

Before publication, each page is checked for factual consistency, readability, duplicated passages, broken links, and weak claims that are not properly qualified. Pages that fail checks are revised before going live.

5. Internal Linking

We link related pages when those links add context or help users continue learning. Internal links are selected for relevance, not volume. We avoid forced link stuffing.

6. Freshness and Updates

Published pages can be improved over time as terminology changes, better examples become available, or important context evolves. Update frequency depends on topic volatility. Stable evergreen pages may need lighter updates than fast-moving topics.

7. Publishing Controls

Draft generation tools may produce candidate outlines or full draft text, but publication requires an editorial decision. We use staged workflows to reduce accidental publication of low-value or incomplete pages.

8. What We Avoid

We avoid thin pages with no original value, spun duplicates, misleading titles, and content that exists only to hold ad inventory. If a page does not genuinely help the reader, it should not be published.