Writing
Generator für SEO-Content-Prompts
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
An SEO content prompt generator turns a target keyword into an outline built to rank and to genuinely help the reader. Enter the keyword and the search intent, and it lays out the on-page elements that matter — title tag, meta description, H1, an intro that answers the question fast, H2 sections covering the expected subtopics, an FAQ for related queries, internal links, and a matching call to action. Writers and SEO specialists use it to structure content around what searchers actually want and to match the page to informational, commercial, or transactional intent. Modern SEO rewards the page that best answers the query, not the one that repeats the keyword most. Fill the outline with your real subtopics, answer the core question in the first hundred words, and let intent decide whether the page teaches, compares, or converts.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Enter your target keyword.
- Choose the search intent.
- Fill the H2 sections with real subtopics.
- Answer the core question in the first 100 words.
Use Cases
- •Outlining an SEO article around a keyword
- •Structuring content to match search intent
- •Covering the subtopics searchers expect
- •Planning title tags, meta, and on-page elements
- •Briefing writers on SEO best practice
Tips
- →Match the page to the search intent.
- →Use the keyword naturally, never stuffed.
- →Cover the subtopics searchers expect to see.
- →Answer the question fast, then add depth.
FAQ
why does search intent matter so much
Because the same keyword can want very different pages. Informational intent wants a thorough answer, commercial wants comparisons and proof, transactional wants a fast path to action. Matching the page to the intent is what makes it rank and convert.
should i just repeat the keyword everywhere
No. Keyword stuffing hurts more than it helps. Use the keyword naturally in the title, H1, and intro, then cover the topic thoroughly with related terms. Search engines reward the page that best answers the query, not the one that repeats it most.
why answer the question in the first 100 words
Because readers and search engines both reward a fast, direct answer. Front-loading the core answer satisfies the searcher immediately and signals relevance, while the rest of the page adds the depth that keeps them reading and ranks the page.
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