Create Compelling Content
That Ranks & Converts
From SEO-optimized blog posts to viral listicles, our intelligent prompt generator helps content creators, marketers, and copywriters produce engaging articles that drive traffic and engagement.
18,500+ prompts generated
10+ content types
SEO-optimized
4.9/5 from 1,850+ writers
How to get better blog prompts without making them sound forced
A lot of weak AI articles start with weak instructions. If the prompt is too vague, the output usually turns into generic advice, flat introductions, and filler paragraphs that do not feel useful to readers. A better prompt gives the model a clear topic, audience, search intent, structure, and writing angle so the first draft is already close to something you would actually publish.
Start with the reader
Before you focus on keywords, define who the article is for. A beginner-friendly post for small business owners needs a very different tone and depth than a blog aimed at senior marketers or technical teams.
Be clear about the goal
Good article prompts explain what the content should do. You might want to educate, rank for a search term, support a product page, collect leads, or move readers toward a soft call to action.
Guide the structure
If you already know the format you want, say it directly. Telling the AI to create a how-to post, comparison article, listicle, or expert-style guide usually produces a tighter result with less cleanup later.
What to include in a strong article prompt
- Main topic and angle: define what the article is about and why this version of the topic matters.
- Search intent: mention whether the reader is researching, comparing options, solving a problem, or ready to buy.
- Audience level: note whether the piece is for beginners, intermediate readers, or experienced professionals.
- Format and length: set expectations for headings, sections, list items, FAQs, examples, and approximate word count.
- Brand voice: specify whether the writing should feel conversational, expert-led, practical, persuasive, or editorial.
Quick answers before you generate
What makes a blog post prompt better than a basic topic idea?
A topic tells the AI what to write about. A complete prompt tells it how to approach the topic, who the piece is for, what structure to follow, and what outcome you want from the article.
Should I include SEO keywords directly in the prompt?
Yes, but keep it natural. Use the main keyword, a few supporting phrases, and the reader intent. That usually works better than forcing a long, awkward keyword dump into the instructions.
Can this generator help with different article formats?
Yes. You can shape prompts for tutorials, list posts, comparison pieces, thought leadership articles, evergreen guides, and lead-generation content built around a clear CTA.
Examples you can copy and tweak
Beginner guide
Useful when you want a practical article that ranks and still feels readable to non-experts.
Write a beginner-friendly blog post about email marketing automation for small ecommerce brands. Use a clear, supportive tone, explain the biggest benefits first, include step-by-step setup advice, add common mistakes to avoid, and end with a soft CTA to try an automation checklist.
Comparison article
Good for middle-of-funnel readers who are evaluating tools or service options.
Create a comparison article for project management tools aimed at remote startup teams. Include a short intro, a side-by-side feature breakdown, pricing notes, best-fit use cases, pros and cons, and a conclusion that helps the reader choose based on team size and budget.
SEO list post
Helpful when you want fast-scanning content that can target a search query with strong headings.
Write an SEO-friendly list article titled around content promotion strategies for B2B SaaS companies. Use numbered sections, practical examples, internal linking suggestions, one FAQ block, and a confident but human tone that sounds like an experienced content marketer.
Common mistakes that make AI-written articles feel thin
- Using a broad topic with no angle, which often leads to generic intros and obvious advice.
- Skipping the audience detail, so the article ends up too basic or too advanced for the reader.
- Asking for SEO content without defining the search intent or the keyword context.
- Forgetting to request examples, steps, FAQs, or specific takeaways that make the article actually useful.
- Relying on the first draft without editing for clarity, originality, and brand voice.
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