Three Editorial Guest Features
Why quarterly timing matters
Heritage tourism has strong seasonal search peaks. Spring brings the “Art Nouveau city break” searches; autumn brings “cultural weekend” and “architecture tour” queries. Each quarterly article is timed to match the dominant search intent of that period, maximising indexation before the peak.
Spring article
Timed for March–April publication. “Spring break”, “Art Nouveau city”, “Liberty architecture weekend” queries.
Summer article
Published June–July. “Architecture tour”, “heritage hotel”, “walking guide [city]” summer peak.
Autumn article
September–October. “Cultural weekend”, “off-season break”, “heritage travel” autumn surge.
Four steps per article
Brief from your quarterly review
Each article angle emerges from the previous quarter’s data. If “Art Déco hotels Vienna” drove the most traffic to your schede in Q1, Q2’s article targets that angle explicitly.
From GSC dataResearch and writing
CHO researches the heritage context, writes 600–1,200 words, runs the fact-check protocol. Every historical claim cited to a primary source.
2–3 weeksYour factual review
You receive the draft. Flag factual errors; request clarifications. No call needed — email response within 48 hours.
48-hour windowPublication and distribution
Published on CHO magazine, submitted to GSC, distributed in the CHO newsletter and Facebook community.
Within the agreed quarter