Answer
Frameworks are the proprietary methods, models, and step-by-step processes you have developed as an expert. Documenting them in one place makes it easy to use them consistently across your content, website, and AI-generated materials, while also strengthening your authority and visibility online.
What counts as a framework?
A framework can be almost anything that represents your unique approach:
- A step-by-step methodology you guide clients through
- A decision matrix or scoring model
- A signature process with distinct phases
- A named system or blueprint
If you have given it a name and you use it repeatedly in your work, it belongs here.
How to add a framework
- Go to the Frameworks page in your dashboard.
- Click New Framework in the top right corner.
- Fill in the name, a short description, and the steps or phases of your framework.
- Set the trademark status: choose from unregistered (TM), applied for, or registered (R).
- Toggle Use in content on if you want this framework to be included in content generation.
- Click Save to add it to your library.
Let AI build a framework for you
Not sure where to start? Click AI Builder to have the platform generate a framework based on your expertise profile. You can review and edit the result before saving it.
Managing your frameworks
From the Frameworks overview you can:
- Edit any framework using the options menu on its card
- Toggle content use on or off directly from the card
- Delete a framework if it is no longer relevant
- Search through your library when your list grows
The dashboard also shows you three quick stats: total frameworks, how many are marked as proprietary, and how many are active in content generation.
Why this matters
Documenting your frameworks does more than keep things organized. When AI tools and search engines analyze your content, named and well-described frameworks signal genuine expertise. This is a key part of building your entity, the digital footprint that helps AI systems recognize and recommend you as an authority in your field.
Tips
- Give each framework a distinctive name. Named methods are far more memorable and searchable than generic descriptions.
- Use the trademark status field accurately. Even an unregistered TM symbol signals that you consider this intellectual property.
- Enable Use in content for frameworks you mention regularly so they appear automatically in generated content.
- Add steps with enough detail to be useful, but keep them scannable. Three to seven steps is a sweet spot for most frameworks.