Let's be honest: there's no silver bullet for enrollment marketing. But there is a process — a proven, repeatable framework that gives your university a real shot at ranking on the first page of Google for non-branded keywords, showing up in AI-generated search summaries, and building genuine trust with prospective students who've never heard of you.
Non-branded keywords are search terms that don't include your school's name — phrases like "best social work graduate programs" or "how to become a licensed counselor." These are the searches occurring at the very top of the funnel by students who are just beginning their journey. If your content answers their questions, your university earns a seat at the table before the competition even shows up.
The answer isn't more ad spend or a flashier homepage. It's developing a blog content strategy built around the questions your future students are already asking. Here's a step-by-step guide to building one.
Before you write a single word, get crystal clear on who you're writing for. Are you targeting prospective graduate students for a specific program? Undergrad transfers? Working adults considering online options? The more specific your audience, the more useful — and visible — your content will be.
Build out a persona matrix for each audience segment. Include:
Unlike paid digital advertising, where you can layer demographic and behavioral targeting onto your message, organic content marketing for education requires you to become the answer to a question your audience is already asking. You're not interrupting them — you're showing up when they need you.
Think of yourself less as an admissions marketer and more as a content strategist building long-term trust with a brand-new audience. That means proactively answering their questions, addressing their pain points, and positioning your university as the most helpful, credible source in the room.
To do that well, you need to conduct keyword research.
Before you open a single tool, start with what you already know. What questions do prospective students ask you repeatedly? What concerns come up in every info session, campus tour, or inquiry email? Those questions are keywords — and you're already sitting on a goldmine of them.
From there, your best free research tool is your own browser. Google the questions you're hearing and pay close attention to the search results page itself: the "People Also Ask" section, the autocomplete suggestions, and the related searches at the bottom. These features show you exactly how real students are phrasing their questions — and they're free, real-time keyword research hiding in plain sight.
Once you have a working list of questions, tools like Answer the Public can help you expand and validate your ideas. What you're looking for in a strong keyword is simple:
Example: You want to promote your social work program. You Google "social work" and discover that "characteristics of a social worker" gets approximately 1,000 searches per month with low competition. That's a blog post waiting to be written — and from that one seed keyword, you'll surface dozens of related phrases, each one a potential piece of content reaching a prospective student at a different stage of their decision.
Human-first content that directly and honestly answers the questions real people are asking will always outperform content built backward from a keyword spreadsheet. Start with what you're hearing, then let the tools confirm it.
For a deeper dive into how to choose the right keywords for your institution, read: The Philosophy Behind Keyword-smithing Content.
Your keyword research isn't just a to-do list but a map for your content. Each keyword cluster you identify becomes a topical pillar, and each keyword becomes a blog post within that pillar.
Aim to develop 3–4 blog posts per topic cluster. Going back to the social work example, you might produce:
Why does the cluster approach matter? Because each post can link to the others, creating a web of internal links that signals topical authority to Google — and increasingly, to AI search tools like Google's AI Overviews, ChatGPT, and Perplexity. These platforms are looking for sources that demonstrate deep, comprehensive expertise on a subject, not just a single page with surface-level information.
Once you've mapped out your topic clusters and post ideas, it's time to build a content calendar — because a great idea unpublished or at the wrong time is a missed opportunity.
A few principles for higher ed content calendars:
Here's the good news: you probably don't need to start from scratch in creating your content. Most universities are sitting on a goldmine of repurposable content — program pages, email campaigns, social posts, brochures, virtual tour scripts, and more. Don't overlook your faculty, either; leveraging their expertise can elevate a good blog post into a genuinely authoritative one. Together, that's often 60–70% of what you need.
From there, your job is to add depth, answer the specific question behind your target keyword, and structure the post so both readers and AI tools can easily parse it. That means clear H2 and H3 headers, short paragraphs, bulleted lists, bolded key terms, and internal links to related posts, program pages, and high-value resources like financial aid and scholarship information.
Write with a real human voice. Prospective students can tell when they're reading a brochure masquerading as a blog. Be direct, be helpful, be honest.
This step didn't exist in the old playbook. It does now.
AI search tools — Google's AI Overviews, ChatGPT, Perplexity, and others — are fundamentally changing how prospective students find information. Instead of clicking through a list of ten blue links, they're getting synthesized answers generated directly from web content.
AI tools favor content that is well-structured, comprehensive, and directly answers a specific question. To succeed today, blogs must include elements for easy parsing, like:
Required reading: 30 Days of SEO + AI Visibility Tips Wrapped Into One Blog
Publishing is the beginning, not the end.
Set up Google Analytics and Google Search Console to monitor how your posts are performing. Key metrics to watch include organic search traffic, average position in Search Console, click-through rate, and time on page.
SEO growth doesn't happen overnight — give new posts at least 60–90 days before making major changes. But if a post has been live for several months and isn't gaining traction, it's time to revisit it. Common fixes include adding more depth to your content, strengthening your internal link structure, updating outdated statistics, and adding an FAQ section to capture conversational AI queries.
Blogs let universities answer the specific questions prospective students are already searching for — questions that program pages rarely address. They create ongoing opportunities to rank for new keywords and build trust with audiences who are still in the early stages of their decision-making process.
The college or grad school search is a long, research-heavy process. Blogging lets your institution show up throughout that entire journey, not just when someone already knows your name. It builds credibility and keeps your university top of mind long before an application is submitted.
Yes — significantly. Each post is a new indexed page and a new opportunity to rank. A consistent blogging strategy targeting non-branded, long-tail keywords helps universities capture high-intent traffic, and internally linked blog clusters signal topical authority to Google across your entire domain.
AI Overviews and tools like ChatGPT and Perplexity now synthesize answers directly from web content — which means your post can gain visibility without earning a click. Blogs that are well-structured, comprehensive, and formatted with FAQs and clear headers are most likely to be cited.
For most targeted posts, aim for 1,000–1,500 words. More than word count, aim for content depth. Focus on thorough coverage of one topic, leaving no stone unturned for the reader and robots crawling your piece. Length only helps when the content is substantive — padding for word count won't fool Google or AI tools.
For most higher ed teams, two to four posts per month is a sustainable and effective cadence. Consistency matters more than volume — one well-optimized post per month will outperform four rushed ones every time.
Blogging is still one of the highest-ROI marketing tactics available to higher education institutions, but only when it's done with intention, strategy, and an understanding of how search has evolved.
If you're ready to make your institution visible in today's search landscape and build a blogging strategy that actually moves the needle, check out our guide: The SEO + AI Visibility Playbook for Graduate Enrollment.