Solutions · Content teams
The content-ops platform that thinks at portfolio level.
If you're running a content marketing operation with 200+ pages, manual portfolio review stops scaling. Slope reads every page, every GSC query, every link, and surfaces the four expensive content problems that human review systematically misses: decay, thin clusters, internal linking, cannibalization.
What we find
The four expensive content problems.
Each of these is a rule family in Slope's opportunity engine. None of them is solvable manually at scale.
Content decay is invisible until it's catastrophic.
A page sliding from rank 4 to rank 8 won't show up in your monthly review. By the time it does, you've lost 6 months of compounding traffic. Slope catches it the day it starts.
You don't know which clusters are thin.
Competitors with 12 pages on a topic eat you alive when you have 2. Slope shows you cluster-by-cluster comparisons + suggests the missing pieces.
Internal linking is a chore nobody owns.
Every new post should link to and from existing ones — but tracking that across 200+ pages is impossible manually. Slope's internal-linking opportunities point to the exact pages that should link to each other.
Cannibalization slowly bleeds you.
Two articles competing for the same query both lose to a focused competitor. Slope surfaces these pairs and recommends consolidation vs differentiation.
Workflow
How a content team actually uses Slope
- Connect your content repo. If you write Markdown/MDX in a GitHub repo (Hugo, Astro, Eleventy, Next.js, etc.), Slope can push refresh-this-page issues directly. If your CMS is WordPress / Webflow / Sanity, we file the issues for tracking and you handle the actual edit in-CMS.
- Triage weekly. Sit down Monday with the digest email or the Opportunities page. Approve the wins (usually 5-15 per week for a 200-page site), file them in your editorial calendar.
- Writers refresh decay candidates first. Refresh ROI beats new-content ROI 5-10x. Slope's content_decay opportunities come with the exact metrics (before/after windows, position drop) so writers have evidence-based briefs.
- Internal linking lands as bulk. Each new article you publish triggers "X existing pages should link to this" suggestions. Treat them as a 30-min weekly housekeeping task.
Free your editorial brain from the toil.
Slope handles the portfolio review. You spend time on the writing that compounds.