I used to dabble using AI to generate content for SEO and Google ranking. Whether using AI for SEO is good is a controversial spicy take - I won't debate it here. One pain point when using ChatGPT to write blog posts is that it is slow and manual. You had to copy, paste, click and wait, and do this repeatedly.
Latent Workers automates all of these. It searches the web in the backend to determine what blog content based on your specified keywords will be the most relevant. It can only insert external links to web pages into the blog itself. Also, it considers your recent 10 and 20 blog titles and content before it generates the next blog post - so there are no overlaps, and your blog posts appear to have continuity.
Also, it's vertically integrated into WordPress, and only WordPress for now. So, a 1-click run generates content straight into your WordPress, assuming that your WordPress blog post page template is already formatted nicely for end users.
So just feed it some SEO keywords, and you will get your nice blog content pages.
I absolutely love the continuity aspect you've integrated by considering the recent 10 and 20 blog titles – it's a unique touch that many auto-content generators overlook. But the Google algorithm is constantly evolving, so any idea on how to ensure that the generated blogs remain genuine enough, like, say, performing a reverse AI check? (I am doing my best to ignore your statement of not debating the AI for SEO topic...)
@wintoniak haha honestly, I'm getting a a lot of push back on how the new Google Search Algo will break such AI content model - those concerns are valid I think.
The continuity part is something I discovered on the fly with generic content creating methods - you start to get similar articles, which may look a bit foolish to the user.
In fact, I think a good use case of this is to publish to draft first, rather than publish to live. And get the user to hand edit over the last 20% of the article and insert actual anecdotes, so the final piece will appear to be more authentic.
@kimihito_tanaka That could be a future direction, could just release a general API or integrate other CMS. By any chance are you working with any CMS?
SEO is time-consuming and cumbersome even though it yields results. So, this tool seems great. Does this mean that once it's set up, it can easily be applied to site builders like Webflow?
@hikaru_nagashima Currently, it's only integrated to WordPress. Would you like to suggest the next platform integration for me? Is Webflow a good alternative for CMS users today?
Latent Workers