Blog Post Generator
— From Idea to SEO-Optimized Draft in Minutes
For niche site owners and content marketers targeting Google page one. Get a properly structured draft with H1, H2s, and meta description — from any video or article URL — in under a minute.
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1. Full Article Structure
Expands your core ideas into a comprehensive blog post with properly formatted H2s, H3s, and engaging paragraphs.
2. SEO Optimized
Naturally integrates keywords and follows best practices for on-page SEO to help your content rank higher.
3. Drives Traffic
Crafts compelling introductions and strong conclusions designed to reduce bounce rate and keep readers on your site.
Who is this for?
Built for niche site owners, content marketers, and bloggers who need consistent, SEO-optimized articles without spending hours writing from scratch. Google ranks articles with proper heading hierarchy (H1 → H2 → H3), keyword placement in the intro and meta description, and comprehensive coverage of the search intent. This generator outputs that structure by default — with H2 subheadings every 200–300 words, a keyword-optimized H1, and a meta description you can paste directly into your CMS.
Why use a Blog Post Generator?
Core Benefits
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Cure Writer's Block Never stare at a blinking cursor again.
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Quality Over Fluff Base your posts on real videos, not generic AI prompts.
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Algorithm Friendly Hooks and CTAs designed to keep users reading.
Blogs build SEO authority, but long-form writing eats time.
Start from a source link and generate a structured post with headings and flow.
Edit and publish in minutes instead of starting from a blank page.
How It Works for Blog Posts
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Extract content from any format Paste a YouTube video URL and the AI processes the transcript. Paste an article or Reddit thread and it extracts the core arguments. The result is a rich content brief that no generic AI prompt could produce — because it's grounded in real source material.
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Generate an SEO-optimised structure The output is structured with a proper H1, introduction, H2 subheadings every 200–300 words, and a conclusion with a CTA. This heading hierarchy is exactly what Google uses to understand what a page is about and rank it accordingly.
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Edit, publish, and rank The raw Markdown output is ready to paste into any CMS — WordPress, Ghost, Notion, or Webflow. Use the built-in preview and editor to refine the draft, then publish. The entire workflow from URL to publish-ready post takes under 5 minutes.
tips_and_updates Blog SEO Best Practices
- arrow_right Target 1,200–2,000 words for informational posts. Google consistently ranks longer, more comprehensive articles for informational queries. Thin posts under 600 words rarely appear on page one for competitive keywords.
- arrow_right Put your primary keyword in the H1, intro, and meta description. Google needs to see the target keyword in these three places to confidently rank your page for that query — without it, even great content struggles to rank.
- arrow_right Add a TL;DR at the top. A 2–3 sentence summary at the start signals to skimmers that the article delivers on its promise, dramatically reducing bounce rate — a key ranking factor.
- arrow_right Include 3–5 internal links. Linking to related posts on your site improves crawlability, passes authority, and keeps readers engaged longer — all positive signals for search rankings.
- arrow_right Use subheadings every 200–300 words. H2 and H3 tags break up the content for skimmers, signal topic coverage to Google, and often appear as featured snippet targets for long-tail question queries.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long should a blog post be to rank on Google? expand_more
For most informational queries, 1,200–2,000 words is the sweet spot. Posts under 800 words rarely rank for competitive keywords because they can't cover a topic comprehensively enough to satisfy search intent. However, length should serve depth — a focused 1,000-word post almost always outranks a padded 3,000-word one where 2,000 words add no value.
How do I repurpose a YouTube video into a blog post? expand_more
Paste the YouTube URL into this generator. The AI processes the video's transcript and turns it into a structured blog post with an SEO-optimised H1, subheadings, and a conclusion. This works because YouTube videos often contain dense, expert-level content that translates directly into high-quality written articles — without the "written by AI" blandness of prompt-only generators.
What's the best structure for a blog post? expand_more
The structure that consistently performs well:
- 1.H1 with your target keyword — signals to Google exactly what the page is about.
- 2.TL;DR or key takeaways box — hooks skimmers and reduces bounce rate.
- 3.Brief intro (100–150 words) — explains why the topic matters before diving in.
- 4.Body with H2s every 250 words — improves scannability and signals topic coverage to Google.
- 5.Practical examples or data points — adds credibility and depth generic AI can't provide.
- 6.Conclusion with a CTA — tells the reader what to do next.
This generator outputs this structure by default — publish with minimal editing.
How do I write a blog post meta description that gets clicked? expand_more
A high-CTR meta description has three elements: the target keyword (placed near the start), a clear benefit statement, and a soft call-to-action. Keep it under 155 characters or Google will truncate it. Avoid passive voice and filler words like "In this article, we will..." — instead, lead with the value: "Learn exactly how to [outcome] without [common obstacle]." This generator outputs a ready-to-use meta description with each draft.
Should I use H2 or H3 tags to structure my blog post? expand_more
Use H2 tags for your main topic sections — each H2 should represent a distinct sub-topic that could stand alone. Use H3 tags for subsections within an H2 when you need to break a complex section into steps or sub-points. Never skip heading levels (e.g., going from H2 to H4) — Google's crawlers use heading hierarchy to understand page structure, and skipping levels signals poor content organization. For most blog posts, 3–5 H2s with optional H3s under complex sections is the right structure.
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