Enter a keyword and turn it into a practical content plan with titles, headings, FAQs, keyword ideas, and a meta description.
This creates a planning draft from your input. Review the outline, add examples, and make the final page genuinely useful before publishing.
Instant planning result available. AI enhancement improves it when available.
Enter a keyword or topic above, choose your content type and audience, then hit Generate.
Generating your content brief...
Building your outline, keywords, and meta description.
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A working content plan for the topic.
Use the outline as a base, then add examples, proof, screenshots, and your own experience.
This is a planning draft, not a ranking promise. Remove weak sections and keep only what helps the reader.
How to use this tool
"SEO tips for new bloggers" gives a better brief than a broad keyword like "SEO".
Choose blog post, guide, landing page, or comparison so the outline fits the job.
Treat the headings as a starting point, then add examples, proof, and your own experience.
Use FAQs to answer real follow-up questions, not to stuff extra keywords onto the page.
About this tool
This content brief generator turns a keyword or topic into a practical page plan. It can suggest title angles, outline sections, search intent notes, FAQ ideas, internal link ideas, and draft meta copy.
The brief is not meant to replace research or writing. It is a starting structure. It helps you avoid opening a blank document and guessing what the page should cover.
Use it after you have chosen a keyword group. If you are still exploring topics, start with the keyword research tool first, then expand the topic with the related keywords tool.
Blog posts, service pages, simple guides, landing page drafts, FAQ planning, and content outlines.
Final copy, legal advice, guaranteed rankings, or publishing without human editing.
Use a specific keyword or page idea. A focused prompt usually creates a better brief.
Make sure the outline matches what the searcher wants, not just the keyword text.
Delete anything generic, repetitive, or not useful to the reader.
Improve the draft with examples, screenshots, experience, data, or product knowledge.
No. It is a planning draft. Review the structure, check the facts, and write the final page in your own voice.
It can help you plan a clearer page, cover useful subtopics, and avoid missing obvious questions. It does not guarantee rankings.
Enter the actual topic you want the page to target, such as how to do keyword research for free or best email marketing tips for small businesses.