Ignorance Graph Analysis — What’s Included

The Ignorance Graph Analysis is a complete knowledge architecture engagement for a defined domain. Here is what is included, how the process works, and what you receive at the end.

Scope definition

The engagement begins with a scope call — typically 45 minutes — in which the target domain is defined precisely. The domain can be a market vertical, a content category, a product or service area, or a specific query cluster. Precision at this stage determines the quality of the analysis: too broad produces a shallow map; too narrow produces a limited one.

What is included

Consensus map

A precise description of the current SERP consensus for the target domain: minimum viable consensus, dominant framing, canonical vocabulary, and the exact boundary of established knowledge.

Gap-maximum map

A ranked inventory of information gaps in the domain, ordered by gap-maximum value. Each entry includes concept name, gap type, demand signal assessment, absence depth, and positioning rationale.

Entity architecture

For the top-ranked gaps: complete entity specifications including precise definition text, DefinedTerm schema template, internal linking map, external reference targets, and recommended deployment priority.

Deployment sequence

A layered publication plan that sequences entity deployment to maximize cascading authority signals — ensuring that each new entity strengthens the ones already deployed.

What is not included

The analysis does not include content production (the actual writing of pages), technical implementation (CMS setup, schema injection), or ongoing monitoring. These can be arranged as separate engagements.

Timeline

Standard delivery: 10–15 business days from scope confirmation. Complex domains or multi-vertical analyses may require additional time, confirmed at scoping.

Starting an engagement

Send a brief description of your domain and your current content situation to initiate a scope conversation. See Contact for the form and direct email.