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Blog Post Outline Generator

The hardest part of writing a blog post is often getting started, and a clear outline removes that friction by deciding the structure before you write a word. This tool generates a fixed eight-section outline tailored to the topic you enter, covering the introduction, the basics, a step-by-step section, common mistakes, tips, resources, an FAQ, and a conclusion with a next step. The only input is your topic. Each section heading is written around your topic so you get a useful starting frame rather than a generic blank template. The structure works for the vast majority of how-to and informational posts. Treat the outline as a guide, not a cage. Adapt sections to what your topic actually needs, cut anything that does not serve the reader, and reorder freely. The structure gets you moving; your examples, evidence, and voice fill it with the content.

Read the complete guide — 4 min read

How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Enter your blog post topic.
  2. Click Generate to produce an outline.
  3. Adapt the sections to fit your topic.
  4. Fill in each section to draft the post.

Use Cases

  • Structuring a blog post
  • Beating writer's block
  • Planning content before writing
  • Drafting an article faster
  • Organising a how-to guide

Tips

  • Treat the outline as a guide, not a cage.
  • Cut sections that do not serve the reader.
  • Reorder freely to fit your topic.
  • End with a clear next step.

FAQ

What sections does the generated outline include?

Eight fixed sections tailored to your topic: introduction, the basics and key terms, step-by-step approach, common mistakes, tips and best practices, tools and resources, an FAQ, and a conclusion with a next step. Adapt or cut any section that does not fit your post.

Why outline before writing?

An outline removes the friction of the blank page by deciding the structure up front. It keeps a post focused, makes drafting faster, and helps the reader follow your thinking from the problem you introduce to the conclusion you draw.

Should I follow the outline exactly?

No — treat it as a guide. Adapt sections to what your topic actually needs, cut anything that does not serve the reader, and reorder freely. The structure gets you moving; the writing shapes it into the final form.

How detailed should my outline be before I start writing?

Detailed enough to guide the draft without writing it twice. Section headings plus a brief note on what each covers is usually enough. Some writers add two or three bullets per section; do whatever gets you into the actual draft faster.

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