u/Medical_Security9020

▲ 5 r/content_marketing+3 crossposts

I've been experimenting with AI for content writing and want to make sure the output is genuinely original and well-written — not just generic filler. Specifically looking for prompts that help with:

- Writing in a distinct, human tone
- Avoiding repetitive AI-sounding phrases
- Producing content that's actually useful and not just keyword-stuffed
- Structuring articles for SEO without being formulaic

What's working for you? Drop your favorite prompts or prompt structures below!

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u/Medical_Security9020 — 22 days ago

Do companies care more about degrees, certifications, real project experience, rankings achieved, content skills, technical SEO knowledge, or tools like SEMrush / Search Console?

For someone trying to build a career in SEO, what actually matters most when hiring?

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u/Medical_Security9020 — 23 days ago
▲ 13 r/Agentic_SEO+3 crossposts

I’m curious about what helps a site get picked up by AI tools when they provide answers with citations. Is it mainly SEO, authority, structured data, backlinks, content freshness, or something else?

Would love to hear from anyone who understands how this works.

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u/Medical_Security9020 — 26 days ago
▲ 33 r/SEO_tools_reviews+3 crossposts

While learning SEO, I found a better way to use AI for content writing.

Instead of asking for a full article with one prompt, I give the AI:

  • Basic info about the topic
  • Competitor article links for reference
  • Target keywords I researched
  • Audience reading level / English grade
  • Broad heading structure (H1/H2/H3)

Then I use the output as a draft and manually edit it afterward.

This gives me more relevant and readable content than generic prompts.

Anyone else using a similar workflow?

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