Semantic OS vs Topical Map AI

SemanticOS vs Topical Map AI: Which Tool Actually Builds Topical Authority in 2026?
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Tool Comparison · Koray SEO · 2026

SemanticOS vs Topical Map AI: Which Tool Actually Builds Topical Authority in 2026?

By Ayonchy.com · Semantic SEO Platform Review ·

SemanticOS is a 50+ module AI semantic SEO platform built natively on the Koraynese framework. It executes the entire entity-first pipeline — Source Context, EAV Architecture, Topical Map, Koraynese-compliant briefs, intent-progressive linking, topical audits, competitor map reversal, SERP entity intel, Author E-E-A-T scoring, multilingual adaptation, programmatic SEO, plus an advanced suite covering Query Fan-Out, SPO Triple Auditing, Information Responsiveness, Semantic Content Network, Knowledge Graph Alignment, Predicate Coverage, Cost-of-Retrieval Scoring, Definitive Term pages, Macro-Context Drift Tracking, Anchor Intent Audit, Authority Transfer Simulation, and SERP Reasoning Maps. Topical Map AI generates clustered keyword maps + content briefs from a single topic input, starting at $37–$56/month. SemanticOS runs the full Koraynese pipeline. Topical Map AI runs one early step of it.

01 →What is SemanticOS?

SemanticOS is an AI-powered semantic SEO operating system built on the Koray Tuğberk GÜBÜR (Koraynese) framework. It contains 50+ integrated modules across an 8-step workflow plus two advanced toolkits. It generates topical maps, EAV architectures, Koraynese-compliant content briefs, full validation audits, and entity-graph diagnostics. It runs on Gemini, OpenAI, or Claude. Project data is portable, exportable, and shared across every module inside one workspace.

SemanticOS is not a keyword tool. It is not a content writer bolted onto a brief generator. It is a complete semantic SEO operating system built around one specific methodology — the Koraynese framework developed by Koray Tuğberk GÜBÜR. Every module in the platform addresses a distinct layer of that framework, from the initial domain and entity setup through to live-page drift auditing on published URLs.

The tool is built and maintained by Ayonchy.com — an active SEO consulting practice serving e-commerce, legal, healthcare, and local service clients. The system prompts inside the tool are Koraynese-aligned, written by a practitioner with client-side execution experience, not generated by a SaaS product team optimising for trial conversion.

Pricing starts at $39/month (Starter), $79/month (Pro), $149/month (Agency), with a $999 lifetime deal. Every plan includes commercial use rights. The Agency plan adds white-label PDF exports, bulk URL audit, GBP optimizer, and access to the full 50-module library. There is also a 2-hour free trial — no card required.

50+Integrated Modules
8Workflow Steps
12Advanced Koray Tools
$39Starting Plan / Month

02 →What modules make up SemanticOS?

SemanticOS organises its 50+ tools into three layers: an 8-step Workflow (Domain → Source Context → EAV → Keyword Research → Topical Map → Content Briefs → Internal Links → Audit), a Tools suite (Entity Drift, GSC Sync, Competitor Radar, Schema Library, Author Builder, and more), and an Advanced suite of Koraynese-grade modules covering query networks, SPO parsing, retrieval cost, KG alignment, and authority transfer.
LayerModuleWhat It Does
WF·01Domain InputSet domain, business model, geography — the semantic context anchor for every downstream module
WF·02Source ContextDefine Central Entity, audience segments, monetization, content moat, topical borders
WF·03EAV Architecture Koraynese CoreMap Entity → Attribute → Value chains with P1/P2 attribute priorities — the structural layer keyword tools cannot produce
WF·04Keyword ClusteringSERP-validated clustering with intent classification, volume + CPC + trend per cluster
WF·05Topical Map Koraynese CorePillar–Cluster–Supporting–Bridge–Trust map with semantic-distance bands, trust-signal taxonomy, publishing order
WF·06Content Briefs Koraynese CoreKoraynese-compliant briefs with macro context, rhythm pattern, entity throttle, lexical frame, evidence tier, schema
WF·07Internal LinksIntent-progressive linking matrix; informational → commercial → transactional flow with anchor recommendations
WF·08Audit ModeSite-wide gap, dilution, cannibalization sweep with 90-day remediation plan
TL·01Entity Drift AnalyzerCompare claimed entity identity vs Google’s perceived identity; surface drift articles and passages
TL·02Cannibalization Detector5-axis entity-first analysis: primary entity, intent, SERP target, scope, funnel position
TL·03Topical Gap HeatmapP1/P2 attribute coverage matrix per entity with severity tiers and suggested article titles
TL·04Competitor RadarCluster coverage diff vs up to 3 competitor domains; white-space + cannibalization scoring
TL·05Intent Conflict DetectorCompare declared funnel stage vs detected intent from real query data
TL·06Author Builder (E-E-A-T)Google QRG-aligned audit across Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness — 0–100 per dimension
TL·07Schema LibraryAuto-generated JSON-LD for Article, Product, FAQ, HowTo, DefinedTerm, Person, Organization
TL·08GSC Sync + PPRSearch Console integration with Pillar Page Rank composite scoring per cluster
TL·09NLP Term InjectorInject NLP-confirmed semantic terms into existing articles at the right density
TL·10Brief → Draft PipelineConvert any brief into a publish-ready Koraynese-compliant draft, grounded in live SERP + PAA
AD·01Query Fan-Out Koray-AdvancedFull semantic network of queries across 14 archetypes + 7 edge types with explicit URL decisions
AD·02SPO Triple Auditor Koray-AdvancedParses articles as Google’s NLU would; scores retrieval-friendliness per triple
AD·03Information Responsiveness Koray-AdvancedAudits coverage of the complete user-question set across 17 axes
AD·04Semantic Content Network Koray-AdvancedRenders site as a semantic graph with 8 edge types + authority transfer simulation
AD·05KG Alignment Check Koray-AdvancedDiffs claimed entity attributes vs Google’s Knowledge Graph (Wikipedia / Wikidata proxy)
AD·06Predicate Coverage Map Koray-AdvancedMaps canonical predicates across 11 families per entity
AD·07Cost-of-Retrieval Scorer Koray-Advanced12-dimension score with verbatim worst-offender quotes and inline rewrites
AD·08Definitive Term Builder Koray-AdvancedGenerates schema:DefinedTerm pages with full JSON-LD and predicate matrix
AD·09Macro Context Drift Tracker Koray-AdvancedFetches LIVE page, diffs vs original brief, paragraph-classifies drift
AD·10Anchor Intent Audit Koray-AdvancedAudits every internal link for progression, anchor quality, reverse-link risk
AD·11Authority Transfer Sim Koray-AdvancedSimulates authority flow through link graph + planned publishing order
AD·12SERP Reasoning Map Koray-AdvancedInfers Google’s reasoning shape + winning-page blueprint per target query

Three workflow modules form the Koraynese core no competing tool replicates: EAV Architecture, Topical Map, and Content Briefs. Together they produce what the Koraynese framework requires — a site-wide entity-to-content system, not a list of keywords to target.

Twelve Koray-Advanced modules extend that core into territory no other tool addresses today. The Cost-of-Retrieval Scorer alone — a 12-dimension auditor that scores how cheap your content is to extract for AI Overviews, with verbatim worst-offending sentences quoted and rewrites supplied — has no parallel in any keyword-mapping platform.

03 →What is Topical Map AI?

Topical Map AI is a dedicated topical authority mapping tool. It generates 800–1,200 semantically clustered keywords from a single topic input in under two minutes. It includes content briefs per cluster. Plans start at $37/month. The agency plan adds white-label PDF exports. It does not produce EAV architecture, Koraynese-compliant briefs, competitor analysis, SERP entity intelligence, internal linking matrices, E-E-A-T scoring, semantic distance scoring, predicate coverage maps, KG alignment checks, or any of the 12 Koray-Advanced modules.

Topical Map AI solves one problem well: it converts a topic into a clustered keyword set quickly. A blogger entering a new niche can get a content roadmap in under two minutes without manual keyword research. An agency can white-label the PDF output for client presentations.

The scope ends there. Topical Map AI does not map entities. It does not produce EAV chains. It does not audit existing site content for dilution or gaps. It does not score a new topic for border risk before you publish. It does not build an internal linking architecture. It does not produce Person schema. It does not simulate authority transfer through your link graph. It generates keyword maps and standard briefs. That is its function.

A keyword map is not a topical authority strategy. It is the starting point of one. The Koraynese framework requires several additional layers — entity identification, semantic structuring, content brief alignment, gap auditing, predicate coverage, KG alignment, retrieval-cost optimisation, and internal linking — before a site earns topical authority signals. Topical Map AI covers the first output. SemanticOS covers every layer.

04 →What is EAV Architecture and why does Topical Map AI not produce it?

EAV Architecture (Entity → Attribute → Value) is the structural map of what entities exist within a topic, what attributes define each entity, and what specific values answer each attribute query. It is a core element of the Koraynese framework. It defines the semantic completeness of a content network. Topical Map AI produces keyword clusters. Keyword clusters do not map entities, attributes, or values.

Google’s knowledge graph operates on entities, attributes, and values — not keywords. A page that ranks for “what is a heat pump” is not valuable because it contains the phrase “heat pump.” It ranks because it addresses the entity (heat pump), its attributes (efficiency rating, operating temperature range, refrigerant type), and their values with factual accuracy.

SemanticOS module WF·03 produces this structure explicitly. Given a domain and central entity from the previous two steps, it maps the full EAV chain with P1 (primary) and P2 (secondary) attribute priorities. That output then feeds every downstream module — the topical map enforces entity targeting, the briefs lock the lexical frame to EAV-listed terms, the SPO Triple Auditor checks article triples against the EAV, the Knowledge Graph Alignment Check diffs the EAV against what Google’s KG asserts.

Topical Map AI does not produce EAV architecture. It clusters keywords by topic. The distinction is methodological: one approach produces what a search engine needs to assign topical authority; the other produces a list of articles to write.

“Rank topics, not keywords. Write as long as necessary and as short as possible. Build trust through structured, semantic, and easily retrievable content.”

— Koray Tuğberk GÜBÜR, Holistic SEO & Digital

05 →How do SemanticOS content briefs differ from Topical Map AI briefs?

SemanticOS briefs follow 20 explicit Koraynese laws: question-based H2 headings, 40-word extractive answers under every H2, semantic rhythm pattern enforced across sections, entity throttle caps per supporting entity, lexical injection frame, excluded entities with redirect URLs, evidence tier standard, replacement-probability target, dual-layer brief (strategic + operational), AI control mechanisms, schema_json_ld block, 3-pass alignment framework, and an auditable self-fingerprint. Topical Map AI produces standard keyword-organised briefs.

The Koraynese content brief is not a template. It is a set of structural requirements derived from how Google’s NLP systems parse and evaluate documents. A Koraynese brief specifies the heading as a user query, the opening sentence as the direct extractive answer, the body as entity-attribute elaboration, and the entire document as a single macro context with explicit boundaries. The output is optimised for NLP parsing, passage ranking, featured snippet extraction, and AI Overview citation.

SemanticOS briefs feed downstream modules. The Article Writer pulls the brief’s lexical frame and excluded entities into the generation prompt. The Cannibalization Detector reads the brief’s intended scope to flag overlap with siblings. The Macro Context Drift Tracker treats the brief as the contract to audit the live page against six months later. The SPO Triple Auditor checks article output against the brief’s EAV references.

Topical Map AI produces briefs containing headings, subheadings, and keyword suggestions. They are useful as outlines. They are not built on Koraynese authorship rules and do not enforce extractive-answer structure or entity throttling.

06 →Which Koray-Advanced modules exist in SemanticOS that have no equivalent anywhere?

Twelve advanced Koraynese modules in SemanticOS have no equivalent in Topical Map AI, MarketMuse, Surfer SEO, or any other current SEO tool. These cover query-network mapping, SPO triple parsing, information responsiveness, semantic graph rendering, Knowledge Graph alignment, predicate coverage, retrieval cost, DefinedTerm pages, macro-context drift, anchor intent flow, authority transfer simulation, and SERP reasoning inference.

Koray-Advanced — Modules Found in SemanticOS Only

Query Fan-Out GeneratorAD·01

Maps the full semantic network of queries across 14 archetypes (Definitional, Procedural, Diagnostic, Evaluative, Comparative, Conditional, Temporal, Local, Branded, Negation, Cost, Risk, Outcome, Identity) with explicit URL decisions per node.

SPO Triple AuditorAD·02

Parses articles as Google’s NLU does, extracts every clear Subject-Predicate-Object triple, scores retrieval-friendliness and KG-plausibility, flags pronoun subjects and hedged predicates with rewrites.

Information Responsiveness AuditAD·03

Compiles the complete user-question set a definitive page must answer across 17 axes, then audits coverage with per-question remediation: add as H2, H3, FAQ, or spin off.

Semantic Content NetworkAD·04

Renders the site as a semantic graph (not hub-spoke) with 8 edge types: parent_of, sibling, prerequisite, comparative, predicate_shared, attribute_shared, intent_progressive, disambiguation.

KG Alignment CheckAD·05

Diffs the site’s claimed entity attributes against what Google’s Knowledge Graph would model. Surfaces aligned / site-only / KG-only attributes, sameAs gaps, disambiguation needs.

Predicate Coverage MapAD·06

Maps every canonical predicate across 11 families per entity (Causal, Effectual, Procedural, Compositional, Temporal, Comparative, Conditional, Locative, Authorial, Evidential, Definitional). Predicates are how Google connects entities.

Cost-of-Retrieval ScorerAD·07

12-dimension score: answer position, heading-question rate, extractive-answer-per-H2, payload density, rhythm consistency, named-entity density, predicate specificity, schema completeness, units on objects, list/table usability, paragraph predictability, internal-link cheapness.

Definitive Term BuilderAD·08

Produces schema:DefinedTerm pages — entity anchors of a topical map. Each term gets a 40w definition, parent-class chain, predicate-coverage matrix, common misconceptions, full JSON-LD.

Macro Context Drift TrackerAD·09

Fetches the LIVE page via Jina Reader, diffs against the original brief’s macro context, paragraph-classifies (on_context / adjacent / drifted / cannibalising / border_leak) with per-paragraph edit prescriptions.

Intent-Progressive Anchor AuditAD·10

Audits every internal link’s source-target intent flow, anchor quality (named-entity, intent-signal, specificity, over-optimisation), flags reverse links and duplicate-anchor cannibalization.

Authority Transfer SimulatorAD·11

Simulates authority flow through your link graph plus planned publishing order. Surfaces prerequisite violations, premature pillars, orphan supporters; prescribes a 4-phase reorder.

SERP Reasoning MapAD·12

Infers what Google is REASONING — not what top-10 say. Mandatory passport entities + predicates, absent-entity opportunities, reranker stability, winning-page blueprint with AIO citation strategy.

Why These 12 Matter

Topical authority in 2026 isn’t won by publishing more articles — it’s won by publishing articles structured for cheap retrieval, predicate coverage, and KG-alignment. These twelve modules instrument that exact problem. No competitor currently audits any of them as a first-class workflow.

07 →How do SemanticOS and Topical Map AI compare across all key dimensions?

SemanticOS outperforms Topical Map AI across EAV architecture, Koraynese briefs, internal linking, topical auditing, competitor intelligence, SERP entity analysis, E-E-A-T scoring, multilingual adaptation, semantic distance, programmatic SEO, sitemap generation, and every Koray-Advanced module. Topical Map AI outperforms SemanticOS in initial map-generation speed and pre-built agency PDF deliverables.
DimensionSemanticOSTopical Map AI
FrameworkKoraynese — explicit, 20 enforced laws per briefGeneric semantic clustering
EAV Architecture✓ Dedicated module, P1/P2 attribute priorities✗ Not present
Topical Map Structure✓ Pillar–Cluster–Supporting–Bridge–Trust w/ semantic-distance bands✓ 800–1,200 keyword clusters
Content Briefs✓ 20 Koraynese laws + audit fingerprint✓ Standard outline briefs
Internal Linking✓ Intent-progressive matrix + anchor audit✗ Not present
Topical Audit✓ Gap + dilution + cannibalization + 90-day plan✗ Not present
Competitor Analysis✓ Topical-map reversal + Competitor Radar✗ Not present
SERP Entity Intel✓ Grounded entity gaps from live SERPs✗ Not present
Author E-E-A-T Audit✓ 4-dim QRG-aligned scoring + 90-day roadmap✗ Not present
Multilingual Mode✓ Topical map adaptation per country/language✗ Not present
Semantic Distance Scoring✓ Border-risk scoring 0–100✗ Not present
Programmatic SEO✓ Entity-variable URL + content blueprint✗ Not present
Schema Library✓ Article, Product, FAQ, HowTo, DefinedTerm, Person, Org✗ Not present
Query Fan-Out (AD·01)✓ 14 archetypes + 7 edge types✗ Not present
SPO Triple Auditor (AD·02)✓ Per-triple retrieval + KG scoring✗ Not present
Information Responsiveness (AD·03)✓ 17-axis question coverage audit✗ Not present
Semantic Content Network (AD·04)✓ Graph render with authority simulation✗ Not present
KG Alignment (AD·05)✓ Wikipedia/Wikidata diff + sameAs gap report✗ Not present
Predicate Coverage (AD·06)✓ 11-family canonical predicate map✗ Not present
Cost-of-Retrieval (AD·07)✓ 12-dim score + verbatim rewrites✗ Not present
DefinedTerm Pages (AD·08)✓ Glossary builder with full JSON-LD✗ Not present
Macro Context Drift (AD·09)✓ Live-page fetch + paragraph classification✗ Not present
Anchor Intent Audit (AD·10)✓ Reverse-link + duplicate-anchor detection✗ Not present
Authority Transfer Sim (AD·11)✓ Publishing-order reorder + prerequisite check✗ Not present
SERP Reasoning Map (AD·12)✓ Reasoning inference + winning-page blueprint✗ Not present
Live SERP Grounding✓ Jina + DataForSEO PAA across every modulePartial
GSC Integration✓ Search Console sync + Pillar Page Rank✗ Not present
Custom Writing Instructions✓ Voice/brand overrides on every generation, Koray laws preserved✗ Not present
Free Trial2 hours, no card requiredSubscription required
Starting Price$39/month (Starter)$37–$56/month
Lifetime Deal✓ $999 one-time, full Agency access for life✗ Not present
White-Label PDF Export✓ Agency plan ($149/mo)✓ Agency plan
Map Generation SpeedMulti-phase grounded generation (~45–90s)Under 2 minutes (single-shot)

08 →Which tool prepares pages for AI Overview citation?

SemanticOS — explicitly, across four modules. The Query Fan-Out generator tags AIO trigger probability per node. The SERP Reasoning Map declares AIO format cited per query. The Cost-of-Retrieval Scorer measures the 12 structural dimensions that decide AIO citation eligibility. The Information Responsiveness audit ensures the page actually answers what users ask. Topical Map AI does not surface AIO readiness as a first-class signal anywhere in its current toolkit.

AI Overviews are a generative re-ranking layer. Pages structured for cheap retrieval — answer-first openings, named-entity subjects, specific predicates, structured data, low semantic noise — are disproportionately cited. The Cost-of-Retrieval Scorer in SemanticOS quotes the worst-offending sentences in your draft verbatim and supplies inline rewrites that shift the score upward.

The SERP Reasoning Map goes one layer deeper: it tells you the format Google currently cites for AI Overviews on your target query (definition / list / table / step-by-step / comparison) and the answer-position required to be eligible. That data goes straight into the brief and the writer.

09 →How does the workflow inside SemanticOS compare to Topical Map AI?

SemanticOS runs an 8-step workflow plus on-demand access to 40+ deeper modules. Every step writes to one shared project, so every later module reads upstream context. Topical Map AI delivers a one-shot keyword cluster + brief output and ends. Users continue execution in other tools they assemble separately.
StepSemanticOSTopical Map AI
1Domain Input — set domain, geo, business modelTopic input
2Source Context — central entity, audience, content moat
3EAV Architecture — P1/P2 attribute priorities
4Keyword Research — SERP-validated clustering800–1,200 keyword clusters output
5Topical Map — Pillar/Cluster/Supporting + Trust layer
6Content Briefs — Koraynese-compliant, 20 lawsStandard briefs per cluster
7Internal Links — intent-progressive matrix
8Audit Mode — gap + dilution + cannibalization sweep
+40+ Tools + 12 Koray-Advanced modules on-demandWorkflow ends; bring other tools

10 →Who should choose which tool?

Topical Map AI is suitable for bloggers and content marketers who need a fast keyword cluster as a starting point and a white-label PDF for a client deck. SemanticOS is built for SEO consultants, agencies, and technically oriented strategists who execute the full Koraynese semantic SEO pipeline — entity architecture, briefs, audits, KG alignment, AIO readiness, authority simulation — inside one workspace.
SemanticOS — What You Get
  • EAV Architecture — the entity layer no keyword tool produces
  • Koraynese-compliant briefs with 20 enforced laws + audit fingerprint
  • Competitor Radar — reverse-engineer competitor topical maps
  • SERP Entity Intel — grounded entity gaps from live SERPs
  • Topical Audit — gap + dilution + cannibalization + 90-day plan
  • Intent-progressive internal linking + anchor flow audit
  • Author Builder — 4-dimension QRG-aligned E-E-A-T scoring
  • 12 Koray-Advanced modules (Query Fan-Out, SPO Triples, CoR, KG Alignment, etc.)
  • AI Overview readiness across 4 dedicated modules
  • Multilingual topical map adaptation
  • Programmatic SEO blueprint at scale
  • Schema Library — Article / Product / FAQ / HowTo / DefinedTerm / Person / Org
  • Custom writing instructions — voice control, Koray laws preserved
  • 2-hour free trial — no card required
  • $999 lifetime deal — full Agency access forever
Topical Map AI — What You Don’t Get
  • No EAV Architecture
  • No Koraynese-law-enforced brief structure
  • No competitor topical map analysis
  • No SERP entity intelligence
  • No topical audit or dilution detection
  • No internal linking matrix or anchor audit
  • No E-E-A-T or Person schema strategy
  • No semantic distance / border-risk scoring
  • No multilingual topical adaptation
  • No programmatic SEO blueprint
  • No schema library
  • No SPO triple auditing
  • No KG alignment or predicate coverage
  • No Cost-of-Retrieval scoring or AIO readiness
  • No macro-context drift tracking on live pages
  • No authority transfer simulator
  • No SERP reasoning map
  • Single function — keyword map + standard briefs only

11 →What is the final comparison between SemanticOS and Topical Map AI?

SemanticOS is a 50+ module Koraynese semantic SEO operating system covering the entire entity-first pipeline plus 12 advanced modules no competing tool has built. Topical Map AI generates keyword clusters and standard briefs at $37–$56/month. The tools are not equivalent. They solve different scopes of the same problem.

Topical Map AI answers the question: what keywords should I cover for this topic? SemanticOS answers the question: what entity structure, content architecture, brief specification, audit process, KG-alignment posture, internal linking matrix, retrieval-cost score, and AI-Overview readiness does my site need to build defensible topical authority in this domain?

The first question is useful. The second question is what produces actual topical authority — the kind that survives algorithm updates, earns AI Overview citations, and compounds in search visibility over months and years.

Practitioners who need to execute semantic SEO at the level the Koraynese framework requires — not just generate a keyword map — need a tool built for that level. SemanticOS is that tool. Topical Map AI is not. The two are positioned in different categories despite sharing some overlapping outputs.

Run the Full Koraynese Pipeline with SemanticOS

50+ modules. EAV Architecture. Koraynese briefs. Competitor reversal. SERP entity intel. E-E-A-T. Semantic distance. Programmatic blueprints. Plus 12 advanced modules — Query Fan-Out, SPO Triples, Cost-of-Retrieval, KG Alignment, Authority Transfer Simulator, SERP Reasoning Map.

Open SemanticOS →

Tool: SemanticOS is built and maintained by Ayonchy.com. Built on React 18 + TypeScript + Vite with Gemini, OpenAI, and Claude provider support. This comparison article is written by the same team. Topical Map AI pricing and feature data reflects publicly available documentation as of 2026 ($37–$56/month starting plans). The Koraynese framework refers to the semantic SEO methodology developed by Koray Tuğberk GÜBÜR of Holistic SEO & Digital.

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