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FREE · AI BLOG WRITER

Blog writer

Turn a topic or a few notes into a blog outline or a full first draft. Pick the format, set the length, tone, and audience, add the keywords you are targeting, and read the result as it streams in. It is built to get you past the blank page, not to replace your judgement: the draft is a starting point you edit, fact-check, and make your own.

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How the blog writer works

You give the tool a brief in the editor. That can be as small as a headline, but the more you tell it, the better the result. A good brief names the angle you want, the two or three points the post must cover, and who it is for. Then you choose a format: an outline, which returns headings and talking points only, or a full draft, which writes the whole post. For drafts you also set a length, and for both you set a tone and, if you like, an audience and a list of keywords. Press Generate and the text streams in as Markdown so you can start reading and editing before it finishes.

Under the hood the model reads your brief, plans a structure that fits the topic, and writes to the shape and length you asked for. It is told to lead with substance over filler, to weave any keywords in naturally rather than stuffing them, and never to invent figures or sources. Where a specific statistic would strengthen a point but it has none, it leaves a marked placeholder for you to fill in rather than making one up. That is the honest framing of any AI writing tool: it produces a competent first draft from what you give it, and the quality of the draft tracks the quality of your brief and the editing you do afterward.

Outline first, or straight to a draft?

The two formats serve different moments, and using them in sequence usually beats reaching for the draft straight away.

  • Outline is the planning step. As a blog outline generator it returns a working title, the section headings, and a few bullets under each describing what that section covers. It is fast, it is easy to rearrange, and it lets you catch a weak structure before you have invested in paragraphs. Use it when you are still deciding what the post should argue.
  • Full draft is the writing step. It produces the introduction, developed sections, and a conclusion in one pass. Use it once you are happy with the angle, or when you already know the shape and just want the blank page filled so you can edit rather than compose from nothing.

The reliable workflow is to generate an outline, edit the headings until the structure is right, paste the corrected outline back into the editor as your brief, and then generate the draft. You end up steering the post rather than accepting whatever the first draft happened to produce.

Writing a brief that gets a good draft

The brief is the single biggest lever you have. A one-word topic forces the model to guess at everything, and it tends to guess toward the generic. A few specific lines pull it toward the post you actually want.

  1. State the angle, not just the subject.“Composting” is a subject. “How to compost in a small flat without smell” is an angle, and it produces a focused post instead of a survey.
  2. List the points to cover. Three or four bullets on what the post must include keep the draft on track and stop it drifting into filler.
  3. Name the audience. Telling it the reader is a complete beginner, or a seasoned professional, changes the vocabulary and the examples more than the tone setting does.
  4. Add your keywords. Drop in the terms you are targeting so they appear naturally in the headings and body, which saves an editing pass later.
  5. Set the tone and length to the channel. A persuasive 400-word post for a landing page and a neutral 1,300-word guide for a knowledge base are different jobs; set the controls to match.

A worked example

Suppose you type this brief into the editor and choose the outline format:

How to switch from renting to buying your first home. Audience: people in their late twenties who have never owned property. Cover: how much deposit you actually need, hidden costs beyond the price, how mortgage approval works, and the mistakes first-timers make. Keywords: first-time buyer, mortgage deposit, hidden costs.

The outline comes back with a working title, then sections such as “What deposit you really need,” “The costs nobody warns you about,” “How mortgage approval actually works,” and “Five mistakes first-time buyers make,” each with a few bullets describing the content, and a closing call-to-action suggestion. You edit the order, drop a section you do not want, then switch to the draft format and run it again. The draft fills each section with real paragraphs in the order you set, in a friendly tone aimed at the audience you named, with the keywords sitting naturally in the headings and body. What it will not do is quote a specific deposit percentage or a market statistic it cannot verify; where a number belongs it leaves a placeholder for you to add a current, sourced figure. That is exactly the behaviour to want, and the thing to check before you publish.

Editing the draft before you publish

A generated draft is the start of the work, not the end of it. Read it once for accuracy and fill in or remove every placeholder. Add the one thing the model cannot supply: your own experience, the specific example, the result you actually saw, the detail that proves you have done the thing you are writing about. Cut any sentence that says nothing. Tighten the introduction, because models tend to warm up slowly. Check that the keywords read naturally and pull any that feel forced. By the time you are done, the post should reflect your knowledge and your voice, with the draft having saved you the slow, mechanical part of getting words onto the page.

Honest limits

This is a drafting aid, and it is worth being clear about what that means. It does not browse the web, so it cannot pull in this week's news or a current price. It does not know your product, your customers, or your numbers unless you put them in the brief. It can write fluent prose about a topic it understands shallowly, which is precisely why the fact-checking step matters. And it is not a guarantee of ranking: search engines reward content that genuinely helps a reader, so the value comes from what you add to the draft, not from the draft alone. Used that way, as a fast first pass you then make accurate and specific, it removes the hardest part of writing without pretending to be the writer.

Frequently asked questions

Is the AI blog writer free?
Yes. The blog writer is free to use with no signup and no account. Write a topic or a short brief, choose whether you want an outline or a full draft, set the tone and length, and read the result as it streams in. There is no fixed limit on how many posts you can draft.
What is the difference between the outline and the full draft?
The outline mode is the blog outline generator: it returns a working title, five to eight section headings, and a few bullet points under each one describing what that section will cover, but no body paragraphs. It is the fastest way to plan a post or check that an angle holds together. The full draft mode writes the whole post, with an introduction, developed sections, and a short conclusion in clean Markdown. A common workflow is to generate the outline first, edit the structure, then switch to a draft.
How long are the generated blog posts?
You choose. The length control offers short (around 400 words), medium (around 800 words), and long (around 1,300 words). These are targets, not hard limits, so the actual count varies with how much your topic supports. A narrow how-to will land near the lower end even on the long setting, because padding it out would just add filler.
Can I control the tone and the audience?
Yes. Pick from neutral, friendly, professional, persuasive, or casual, and the writing adjusts its register accordingly. You can also name an audience, such as first-time homebuyers or junior developers, and the draft will choose vocabulary and examples that suit them. Naming the audience usually does more for relevance than the tone setting alone.
Will the blog writer invent facts or statistics?
It is instructed not to. The model is told never to fabricate statistics, quotes, studies, or named sources, and to leave a clearly-marked placeholder like [add a recent figure] where a specific number would help. That said, no AI writer is a fact-checker. Treat every draft as a first pass, verify any claim that matters, and add your own data and examples before you publish.
Is AI-written content bad for SEO?
Search engines judge content by whether it is helpful, original, and accurate, not by how it was produced. A draft you generate, then edit, fact-check, and improve with your own experience can rank perfectly well. A draft you publish untouched, with thin information and no first-hand detail, is the kind of content quality systems are built to demote. The honest use of this tool is as a drafting aid that saves you the blank-page step, not as a publish button.
How do I get a better draft from it?
Give it more than a headline. A few lines on the angle you want, the points to cover, and who it is for produce a far stronger result than a one-word topic. Add the keywords you are targeting so they appear naturally in the text. Generate the outline first to lock the structure, then expand the parts that matter and cut the parts that do not. The brief you write is the single biggest lever on quality.
Can I use the output commercially?
The text the tool produces is yours to edit and publish, including on commercial blogs. Because you are responsible for what you publish, the editing and fact-checking step is not optional: check claims, confirm any figures, make sure the post genuinely reflects your knowledge, and run it past your own brand and legal standards before it goes live.

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