Enter your topic or target keyword
Type the keyword or topic you want to rank for — "how to start a podcast", "best CRM for small business". Add your target audience if you have one; it sharpens the angle and the writing guidelines.
“Brief well once. Rank for months.”
Editor's note
Enter your topic or target keyword and the word count you’re aiming for. The generator classifies search intent, builds a keyword cluster with priorities, drafts five distinct title tags and a meta description, lays out a complete heading outline with the keywords each section should carry, and adds FAQ and internal-link ideas.
Tagged
§ Section I
Type the keyword or topic you want to rank for — "how to start a podcast", "best CRM for small business". Add your target audience if you have one; it sharpens the angle and the writing guidelines.
Leave search intent on auto-detect unless you have a specific strategy, and pick the word count you're aiming for. The outline scales to the length — an 800-word answer post gets a different structure than a 3,500-word pillar page.
You get a chosen primary keyword, a prioritized keyword cluster, five title options with character counts, a meta description, a full H2/H3 outline with keywords mapped to each section, People-Also-Ask FAQs, internal-link ideas, and topic-specific writing guidelines.
§ Section II
Turn a keyword list into writer-ready briefs in minutes. Consistent brief structure means consistent content quality, whoever ends up writing the piece.
Scale brief production across clients without the hour of manual SERP analysis per piece. Deliver the brief as part of your content strategy retainer.
You know your product but not SEO structure. The brief tells you what a ranking article on your topic must cover, in what order, with which keywords — so your domain expertise lands in a format search engines reward.
Stop receiving "write something about X" requests. Generate the brief yourself, align with whoever owns SEO on the outline, then write against a clear spec.
§ Section III
No — the cluster and intent classification come from the model's knowledge of how people search the topic, not a live keyword database. For most content planning that's enough to structure the piece correctly; if you run volume-driven programs, validate the cluster against your keyword tool and keep the outline.
Modern search ranks topical coverage, not single keywords. The cluster lists the related phrases, question forms, and long-tail variants one strong article should cover — mapped into the outline section by section so coverage happens naturally instead of by stuffing.
A page that mismatches intent doesn't rank no matter how well-written: searchers wanting a comparison bounce off a tutorial, and vice versa. The brief classifies the dominant intent and shapes the title, outline, and FAQs to match it.
Yes — the outline plus writing guidelines make a strong prompt skeleton for any AI writer, including xeviora's AI Writer. The combination of a structured brief and a humanization pass is the practical workflow for content that reads well and ranks.
A focused approach beats bulk: generate briefs for the 5-10 topics closest to your product, publish, and watch what ranks. Each brief costs 4 credits, so a quarter's content plan costs less than a coffee.