Where to Start with Kristina Halvorson
Kristina Halvorson is widely recognized as the leading voice in content strategy. She is the CEO and founder of Brain Traffic, a content strategy consultancy that has worked with organizations ranging from startups to Fortune 500 companies. She created Confab, the Content Strategy Conference, which became the premier event for content professionals worldwide. Her book Content Strategy for the Web is considered the foundational text of the discipline, the book that gave content strategy a name, a framework, and a professional identity. Halvorson’s work emphasizes that content is not just a marketing deliverable. It is something that requires planning, governance, and ongoing care, much like any other business asset.
Start here
Content Strategy for the Web
Kristina Halvorson & Melissa Rach · 224 pages · 2012 · Moderate
Themes: content strategy, content governance, content audit, web content, organizational process
The book that defined content strategy as a discipline, offering a practical framework for planning, creating, delivering, and governing useful content.
Why Start Here
This is Kristina Halvorson’s defining work and the book that put content strategy on the map. Before its publication, most organizations treated web content as an afterthought, something that got dumped into a CMS without much thought about quality, consistency, or long-term maintenance. Halvorson and co-author Melissa Rach changed that by providing a clear framework for thinking about content as a strategic business asset.
The book introduces the Content Strategy Quad, a model that breaks the discipline into four areas: substance (what content you need and why), structure (how content is organized and displayed), workflow (how content gets created and maintained), and governance (who makes decisions about content and how). This framework gives teams a shared language for conversations that previously felt impossibly vague.
The second edition expanded the original with new case studies, updated examples, and a deeper treatment of content governance, the part most organizations struggle with the most.
What to Expect
A concise 224-page guide that balances theory with practical advice. The writing is clear and occasionally witty. Halvorson does not assume you work in a specific industry or have a particular job title. The book is useful for anyone involved in planning, creating, or managing content: marketers, UX designers, product managers, and editors alike. It reads quickly but rewards careful study.