Publish What Matters Most, First
Not all content is equally urgent. LLMRanky ranks every planned article by AI visibility impact — CRITICAL, HIGH, MEDIUM, LOW — so your team publishes the most impactful content first and closes the biggest competitive gaps before anything else.
Publishing order matters more than most teams realize. An article addressing a CRITICAL competitive gap published in Week 1 has four times the impact window of the same article published in Week 4. Priority-based scheduling ensures your highest-impact content reaches AI models as early as possible.
Four Priority Levels, Automatic Ranking
Each article is assigned one of four priority levels based on the severity of the AI visibility gap it addresses. CRITICAL means multiple competitors dominate this topic and you are completely absent — publish immediately.
HIGH priority indicates a significant gap where one or two competitors lead. MEDIUM covers topics with moderate competitive pressure. LOW addresses nice-to-have coverage that rounds out your authority.
The priority sort is automatic and data-driven. You do not need to manually rank articles — the system calculates priority based on competitive intensity, gap severity, and potential citation impact.
Random Publishing vs. Priority Scheduling
The order you publish determines how fast you close gaps.
Easiest First, Most Important Last
Without priority signals, content teams default to publishing the easiest articles first. Low-complexity, low-impact pieces go out while critical competitive gaps sit in the draft queue for weeks.
Every week a critical article stays unpublished is a week where competitors maintain their advantage in AI responses. The cost of delayed publishing compounds over time.
Biggest Gaps Closed First
CRITICAL articles are flagged and scheduled for Week 1. Your team knows exactly which content needs to go live first — no ambiguity, no negotiation about priorities.
As high-priority content gets published and gaps close, lower-priority articles naturally fill out your coverage. The schedule self-optimizes for maximum impact.
Priority Distribution Visualization
The priority chart shows the distribution of your planned content across all four levels. A plan heavily weighted toward CRITICAL and HIGH indicates significant competitive gaps that need urgent attention.
Over multiple planning cycles, the distribution should shift — more articles at MEDIUM and LOW levels indicate that your major gaps are closing and your content strategy is maturing.
This visual progression is one of the clearest indicators that your AI visibility optimization is working. Fewer CRITICAL items means fewer areas where competitors dominate unchallenged.
How Priority Scheduling Works
Gaps are scored, articles are ranked, schedules are optimized.
1. Score Each Gap
Each visibility gap is scored based on competitive intensity, the number of competitors cited, and the strategic value of the underlying question.
2. Assign Priority
Gap scores map to four priority levels: CRITICAL (top 15%), HIGH (16-40%), MEDIUM (41-70%), LOW (71-100%). Cutoffs are calibrated to your specific competitive landscape.
3. Schedule by Rank
Articles are distributed across weeks in priority order. CRITICAL and HIGH articles fill early weeks; MEDIUM and LOW articles complete the schedule.
Publish Your Most Impactful Content First
Stop publishing randomly. Let data determine which articles go out first — close the biggest competitive gaps before anything else.
Prioritize Content Now →