A content audit of cwallet.com through the lens of topical authority. Built from a 2,195-URL Screaming Frog crawl. Verdict: the editorial volume is impressive, the topical structure is not. Cwallet is producing news, not building source ownership.
Cwallet ships a high volume of blog content, but topical authority asks a different question: does the content form a connected semantic network around a clearly defined central entity, with full coverage of the related sub-topics and bridging entities? On that test, cwallet.com fails. The blog reads like a news desk, not a source.
Where editorial effort actually goes (overlaps allowed). Comparative content is the gap.
Topical authority reframes SEO content from "rank for keywords" to "become the source for a topic." The site that owns the topic — proven by full coverage of central, supporting, and bridging entities, with consistent contextual hierarchy — wins. We're using these six concepts as the audit lens.
Every site has one (or two) core entities it wants to be the authority for. Every page either reinforces that anchor or dilutes it. Cwallet's central entity should be "non-custodial multi-chain crypto wallet with built-in trading."
A topical map is a hierarchical breakdown of every sub-topic, attribute, comparison, and use-case the central entity touches. A "map unit" is the cluster of pages that fully covers one branch — definitional + comparative + how-to + use-case.
You own a topic when your coverage is more complete than competitors' on every dimension Google considers (definition, types, comparison, examples, history, criticism). Coverage breadth × coverage depth.
Pages should sit in a parent → child → sibling structure that reflects topical relationships, with bidirectional internal links that carry contextual anchor text. Sidebar/widget links don't count — only contextual in-content links signal topical relationships.
A bridging entity connects two clusters (e.g., "crypto debit card" bridges wallet and real-world spending). Strong bridging content compounds authority because it's the only place two topics meet.
Off-topic content (Discord bots, Twitch growth) doesn't just under-perform — it weakens the site-wide signal that you are the source for the central entity. Pruning is as important as publishing.
Below is a proposed topical map for cwallet.com built from the central entity outward. Each node is a topical map unit — a cluster that should contain definitional, comparative, how-to, use-case, and listing content. Coverage status is measured against the current blog.
Coverage is measured by post count × content-type breadth × bridging coverage. Aim is not raw volume but completeness across definitional + comparative + how-to + use-case.
Each finding maps to a topical authority concept. Click to expand for diagnosis, evidence from the crawl, why it matters, and concrete remediation steps.
Sequenced for compounding authority gain: prune what dilutes (Phase 01), re-architect what exists into clusters (Phase 02), then fill the gaps with new content (Phase 03). Click a phase to see its actions.
/blog/ into a dedicated /id/blog/ path with proper hreflang./blog/author/official/ (10,169 wasted inlinks) with cluster-hub links.Pruning isn't optional for topical authority — every off-topic page weakens the site-wide signal of source ownership. Here's where to start.
Posts like "Best Discord Bot Tool To Distribute Crypto Prizes," "Best Tips To Grow Your Twitch Channel," "Unlocking the Potential of Your Online Coaching Community." Vestiges of an older positioning. Most sit at depth 13–14 and barely receive crawl. Either spin into a separate property or remove.
Posts with titles in Bahasa Indonesia ("Apakah $PUMP Siap…", "Bitcoin Tembus $80.000…") sitting alongside English content in /blog/. Move to /id/blog/ with proper hreflang, or to a dedicated subdomain. Right now they pollute the macro-language signal.
351 tag pages exist. Many are single-article (e.g., /blog/tag/do-crypto-addresses-expire/), language tags (bahasa-indonesia), or year tags (2025, 2026). Keep ~25 that map to topical clusters; noindex the rest.
Examples: "How to Choose The Right Crypto Wallet" appears in two near-identical versions. "What Are Layer-1 Scaling Solutions" and "Layer-2" overlap in scope. "Crypto Lending — How Does it Work" duplicates "What is Liquidation in Crypto Lending." Pick one canonical, 301 the others.
Posts like "Crypto Market Round-up: January 2023," "What Will Bitcoin Do in 2024" — when the prediction window has passed, these are negative-signal pages. Refresh with current data or 301 to a current equivalent.
"Cwallet's Cozy Card now supports…", "Cwallet 8-Year Anniversary…" — these read as press releases, not content. Either consolidate as changelog entries on the product page itself, or move to a dedicated /news/ section that doesn't pollute the educational blog.
Each cluster needs a pillar page — the canonical definitional answer that every post in the cluster supports and links back to. Here are the eight pillars cwallet.com needs and doesn't have.
Defines the central entity. Links to every cluster hub. Lives at /wallet/ or /learn/multi-chain-wallet/.
Pillar for spot, futures, P2P, technical analysis sub-topics. Connects to /trade product surface.
Pillar bridging stablecoin theory + Cwallet's $CC stablecoin product. Cluster gap is severe today.
Bridges wallet ↔ real-world spending. Cozy Card lives inside this pillar with comparative pages vs every competitor.
Pillar for staking, yield, lending, liquidity provision. Connects to /crypto-earn surface.
Critical pillar for a wallet brand. Today's 31 posts are scattered; needs a canonical hub with sub-topics for scams, phishing, recovery, multisig.
Bridges /crypto-tools/ surface (Tipbox, Bulk Pay, Giveaway) with creator/community use cases. Reframes the orphaned content-creator content into a coherent bridging pillar.
Reorganize 128 Bitcoin posts under a single hub with definitional + analysis + history. Today they're disconnected news.
The blog volume is already there. The structural rewrite — pruning, re-clustering, building pillars — is what converts effort into authority.
Jump to the findings →