Boost Your Blog’s SEO with ChatGPT: Unleashing the Power



Are you ready to unlock the untapped potential of your blog? Imagine a world where your words effortlessly captivate readers, where your content soars to the top of search engine rankings, and where your blog becomes an authoritative voice in your niche. Now, ask yourself, what if I told you there’s a secret weapon at your fingertips, waiting to revolutionize your SEO strategy? Enter ChatGPT, the master of words, the guide through the labyrinth of search engine optimization. With its ingenious algorithms and intuitive prompts, ChatGPT holds the key to unleashing your blog’s true power. Join us on a journey as we explore the incredible possibilities and ask ourselves, what can ChatGPT do for SEO? Let’s find out together.

ChatGPT applied to SEO can help organize websites, find keywords, create outlines, create summaries, write articles, and suggest images and other article enhancements. Some of these jobs require outside websites to help but all can be done for free and bring you more traffic and links. 

This article has a sister article where you can create an entire topical website including categories and suggested articles using ChatGPT. I suggest that you read it as well.

In this article, I am going to show you how to find relevant keywords that have validated search volume and low keyword difficulty. We will then use these keywords to do research, create an article outline, and write an article that is optimized for SEO.

Table of Contents

Picking Keywords, Measuring Difficulty, and Search Volume – A Quick Overview

ChatGPT can only help is with one of these tasks, picking keywords, but we have some free tools available that can help with the rest.

Keyword Difficulty

To measure keyword difficulty we can use an external tool like Ahrefs Free Keyword Difficulty Tool or Google itself. In other words, ChatGPT simply does not have the data that it needs to do a keyword difficulty analysis. Another option is to do the keyword difficulty analysis “by hand”. You can read a description of how to do that analysis here.  I also cover it later in the article.

Search Volume

Besides keyword difficulty, ChatGPT can’t determine search volumes. We will be using Google Trends to validate search volume and Youtube video views when available.

It’s important for any SEO project to,

  • Have a good idea of what keywords you’re going after
  • Measure how competitive are those keywords, and
  • Determine what keywords’ approximate search volumes are.

In this article, I’m going to show you how you can use ChatGPT and some other free tools to do all three of these necessary steps.

In addition, we’re going to cover using ChatGPT to build an SEO-optimized article based on research. This is the type of organizational task where ChatGPT excels.

ChatGPT Can’t Pull Search Engine Data

As I’ve already mentioned ChatGPT cannot be used to determine either search volumes or search competition for keywords or keyword phrases. That is simply not in its database at this point.

ChatGPT Just Doesn’t Have the Data

Even sites like Ahrefs are making educated guesses at both search volume and search competition. Those guesstimates are better when the search volume is high and when the competition is high or non-existent.

So why can’t ChatGPT do the same thing? In general, at the moment ChatGPT does not have a way to analyze the data that you would get from a search and compare it to incoming links and site authority. That’s what’s going to determine how competitive a search is.

As far as search volume goes and ChatGPT may have some data and its database as regards to search volumes. However, that data is not necessarily fresh or accurate because most tools are guessing. It is also not useful for making the call whether to write an article or not.

Why Not Blast Out Hundreds Of Articles?

Hitting The Bullseye Makes a Huge Difference in SEO

Since it’s possible to create large amounts of content using large language models (LLMs), you might decide to just create hundreds of articles. That’s a mistake most of the time. Why?

There are 4 possible outcomes

  1. If you create lots of plain vanilla articles for search terms that are very competitive you simply will never end up in the top positions in Google.

You need to be in the top 3 results on Google to get more than 10% of the traffic.

Google Search FeatureClick Through Rate
Ad Position 12.1%
Ad Position 21.4%
Ad Position 31.3%
Ad Position 41.2%
Search Position 139.8%*
Search Position 218.7%**
Search Position 310.2%
Search Position 47.4%
Search Position 55.1%
Search Position 64.5%
Search Position 73.4%
Search Position 82.6%
Search Position 92.4%
Search Position 10 (if present)2.2%
*If snippet, then 42.9%
**If snippet, then 27.4%

2. If you create lots of articles for keywords or keyword phrases that have no search volume you’ll win a position on the search engine but it won’t make any difference.

So it’s very important to include a step where we determine what articles are worth writing.

No Search Volume = No Search Traffic

Keep in mind as well that if you write lots of articles that are basically the same thing as everyone else it’s going to be very hard to stand out from the crowd. Your articles will not be significantly more useful than that of your competitors.

3. If you’re the first to arrive in a market you may still be able to use the technique of blasting hundreds of articles but it’s likely is someone with a more useful article eventually beat you. Putting time into editing and making your content better is worth it.

4. You do an excellent job of creating an article that brings in lots of traffic and helps people.

Quality still matters. Make genuinely helpful articles and people will come and they will also link to you.

From personal experience, the posts where I did the research and spent the time consistently get more links (increase site authority), and get more traffic.

You Still Need To Do a Search Analysis

So what is search analysis? Search analysis is a method that I learned from a group called Income School you can take a look at their site here and their youtube videos here. The gist is that you need to verify that what you are trying to write an article for has both.

  • Enough Search Volume to be worthwhile
  • Low enough Competition that you have a chance of placing in the top 5 on Google.

You can use the tool that I mentioned before on Ahrefs Keyword Difficulty, to determine keyword difficulty if they are tracking the keyword.

Ahrefs search volume numbers are a good estimate usually, 

but for search volume < 10,000 a month Ahrefs is not reliable.

This is really important. Why?

The searches that are most likely to have low competition and high enough volume to justify writing an article or creating content for them, have less than 10,000 searches a month!

So how can we find keywords and keyword phrases that meet that criteria?

ChatGPT and Google Trends!

  • ChatGPT can help us figure out phrases that are most likely to be searched for a given Search Intent
  • Google Trends can help us to find keywords that have real search volume.

Search Volume Analysis

Lets take a look at an example.

In a previous article that you can find here, I explained how to create a topical website, ChatGPT Prompts for that, and more, feel free to take a look. I created an example of a site for decorative candy. Following that example, one category included the topic. “How to price your candy products“.

If we look at that in the USA on Google trends for the last 5 years we see, Nada… This means that there are less than 1,000 searches a month for this EXACT search query.

But wait a minute, if I were setting up a candy-making business I am pretty sure this would be something that I might search….

It turns out that Google Trends does not have the same semantic search as Google. In other words, we need to write down the search exactly like someone would type it into Google. 

So how can we do that? Well, we have this great tool called ChatGPT!

Search Query

If you prefer to use ChatGPT here is the prompt.

This prompt helps us find search keywords or phrases that have similar search intent to a query and are more likely to be typed into Google. You can use the tool above or you can paste in the prompt below.

Please act as a psychologist that studies search engine behavior.

Use these rules as well as any others that you determine relevant to streamline a search query {SUBJECT} while retaining most of its intent.

Rules:

Eliminate unnecessary words: Cut out any ‘fluff’ words that do not directly contribute to the core meaning of the query. This usually involves removing filler words or prepositions.

Use common language and phrases: Most people use everyday language in their search queries, not technical or overly specific terms. Try to anticipate what the average person would type.

Use action words: Including action words like “how to”, “learn to”, “get”, “find”, “make”, etc., can help attract users who are looking for instructions or guides, pricing, determining, and gerunds, in general, are also used to create action phrases.

Keyword focus: Maintain the main keywords of the original query as much as possible, these are often the subject of the query. Synonyms of the main verbs also may be used.

Prioritize common language and phrases: People typically use casual, everyday language in their search queries. Avoid using overly technical or specific terminology unless it is directly related to the search intent.

The goal is to find searches that have measurable amounts of search volume that are directly related to a query. Often the “measurable” query will be what a beginner would type to find information about a subject, it will be the most popular related search query.

Known Examples of User Behavior:

how to whistle a tune —> whistle a tune
how to whistle a tune —> learn to whistle
how to whistle a tune —> how to learn to whistle
how to price your candy products —> pricing candy
how to price your candy products —> how to price candy
how to price your candy products —> determine candy price
how to price your candy products —> price candy
how to price your candy products —> costing candy
how to price your candy products —> price candy products

Please apply your rules and examples to {SUBJECT} and suggest how it would be modified when searched on Google while retaining as much search intent as possible, give several examples of how the query might be modified with the list being ordered as most popular first. The goal of the list is not to find the shortest query but the most popular one in terms of search volume.

{SUBJECT} = How to price your candy products

When optimizing the search query “How to price your candy products” while retaining its intent and considering user behavior, here are several modified versions ordered by popularity:

“Price candy products”
“How to price candy”
“Determine candy price”
“Price candy”
“Costing candy”


By applying the rules and examples provided, these modified queries maintain the core meaning and intent of the original query while using common language and action words. They eliminate unnecessary words, focus on the main keywords (“price,” “candy,” “products”), and prioritize everyday language and phrases commonly used in search queries. These modifications aim to streamline the search query while still capturing its essence and aligning with user behavior.

So we can now check the list that ChatGPT created against Google Trends to see what we get. One of the searches is listed below. “How to price candy.” ChatGPT does a good job at finding keyword phrases that are related to the original search query that have search volume.

ChatGPT after a lot of testing though still failed to find the term that has the most search volume, “pricing candy”. It often found “Pricing candy products”, but it failed to drop the “products”. Keep this in mind when you use this tool. 

  • You may also choose to take a successful search term and put it back into the prompt or tool above to see what it generates.

Based on the trends results “How to Price Candy”, gets 10,000+ searches a month, (it has a graph and some map data, and related queries). If it only had a search graph it would still be more than 1,000 searches a month and for most cases still worth looking at. (This measure was created by Income School and is based on their data.)

Why? Because we will not be trying to hit a single search term but multiple terms as we saw above. The combined search volume will be 10,000 searches a month or more. That’s enough to justify an article.

If your Google Trends Data has Search Graph, the search query gets 1,000+ searches a month.

What does Ahrefs have to say about the search “how to price candy”?

Oops. From the Google data, we know that there is good volume ( 10 thousand+ searches a month) but Ahrefs still does not have any data.

That should not make you feel anxious. Google Trends is the gold standard but it does mean that we have to do the competition analysis by hand.

So let’s do the search on Google and see what we get.

(You need to do this search on a browser that you are not logged in on to avoid your search history affecting the results.).

Analyzing the Google SERP

From the table on clicks vs position in the Google Search Engine Results Page (SERP) we saw that being in position #1 is great for traffic. What is interesting about this search is that there is no competition for #2 for videos and position #2 for articles! 

That’s fantastic for us because it means that position #2 should be super easy for us to get! All we really need to do is put up a good article or video and we should be able to rank.

We can also validate the amount of traffic even better for the search, “How to Price Candy” and related searches because Youtube tells us how many times a video was viewed!

456,000 views in 2 years!!! Yep, this is definitely a great topic to write about or create a video around.

What about competition?

None of the sites in the SERP are huge in the space, (well-known brands). Based on this look I rate the competition as low. If we were able to get a number from Ahrefs it would be around a 10 out of 100. 

So now that we have a search query with PROVEN TRAFFIC and LOW COMPETITON where do we go next?

Use ChatGPT and the Competiton To Find More Keywords and Topics (Subheadings)

We will be creating some type of content based on the primary search query, “How to price candy”. We want to create a useful resource that brings real value. To do that we should find other things that people are searching for related to our article. 

One way to do that is to take an existing article and have ChatGPT summarize it for us. We can then look at the topics in the summary and see if there are.

  • Topics that we need to cover in our resource (article)
  • Other search queries that we should be including in our Sub-Headings

Why should we put other related keywords in the Sub-Headings? There are a few reasons,

  • Google knows that those keywords are related and seeing them gives your article more authority
  • It makes long-tail terms related to those keywords more likely to show up in SERPS for your article
  • By covering related topics you are serving your readers better
  • Major topics will end up with their own articles and you can then link your current article to them easily. (Internal Linking between related articles creates topical authority).

We will be building an outline that we can use with ChatGPT to create an article, see how here. Or that we can use ourselves to create an article. (I also cover this later in the article).

So let’s pull the transcript from the youtube video about pricing candy and summarize it. You can find a full article about how to do that here. And you can use the tool below to summarize the video transcript or an article. (More information on how to summarize an article here). 

Summarize Text Tool and Prompt For ChatGPT

Text To Summarize

Acting as an expert at creating concise but detailed summaries please use the content below.

I would like you to follow these steps.

1) Create a list of the most important topics found in the content. Send this to me as a response.

2) Using your generated topic list, focus on each topic and summarize all the data in the content about each of those topics separately. State each topic and create a bulleted list. Send me this list as a response.

{TEXT}

Summary of the Youtube Video on Pricing Candy. The summary has 2 parts, the first part determines the topics that are covered. The second part of the summary gives a focused summary about each of those topics. This gives us a much better topical summary 

1) Pricing strategy for selling snacks at school

2) Importance of calculating profit margins

3) Selling bigger sized snacks for bigger profits

4) Current snack loadout and prices

5) Mistakes to avoid when pricing snacks

6) Super secret methods for maximizing profits, including using bundles and offering discounts to build hype.

Pricing Strategy:

  • Proper pricing is key to success when selling candy at school.
  • Buy low, sell high – calculate the true cost of snacks and sell them for a profit margin.
  • Sell only the most profitable snacks to increase sales and profits.

Bigger Sized Snacks:

  • Selling bigger sized snacks can result in bigger profits and higher average order values.
  • Offer bigger sizes for a higher price to increase profits.

Current Snack Loadout:

  • Current snacks and prices include Twinkies and cupcakes for 50 cents each, two ounce hot and spicy chips for $1 each, and big power eight bottles for $2 each.
  • Plan to raise prices and restock with bigger snacks.

Mistakes to Avoid:

  • Charging too little or too much for snacks.
  • Be aware of competition and adapt prices accordingly.

Super Secret Methods:

  • Use bundles to disguise higher prices and increase profits.
  • Offer discounts to build hype and eliminate competition.
  • Believe in your new prices and don’t let classmates discourage you.

Analysis Of The Youtube Summary

So lets take a look what we can learn from the video transcript.

Profit Margin – Ok, so if we take a look at the summary we can see that profit margin is something that we will want to cover in our resource. There is nothing specific there to candy and that is a huge topic. It also is a necessity if we are going to help people.

“Bundle Candy” – Although Google based on this search seems to be giving “bulk candy” as the search intent, we see that it also includes that video that we summarized. Google trends shows that “bundle candy” gets more than 1,000 searches a month.  

Profitability – This fits in with profit margin but it’s seperate. It’s a great place to create a table where we show what types of candies or snacks are the most profitable. People link to resources like this. “candy profit” although it is a competitive keyword gets 1,000+ searches per month.

“How to Market Candy” – There is moderate competition for this keyword phrase and has search volume (Google Trends) it deserves it’s own article but,… It is important to include here because the cost of marketing is part of the price of the product. We can include a table of different marketing methods and their costs. 

Mistakes to Avoid – Analyzing the Competition – Also a biggy and dependent on the market, (we may need to focus the article on a particular market).

“Sell Candy” – This is also a huge search 10,000+ searches per month. It deserves an article of it’s own. I would rate the search as moderate competition, Ahrefs rates it as 8 out of 100. It would be a major article and an important one for our website. 

Competitors

While doing this research on the Youtube video I came across a couple of sites that are in this space and that have competing articles. (This is part of the benefit of doing your own research on Google for competition).

taluspay.com – This is a payment processor so them showing up is fun, and we should be able to beat them pretty easily. A quick summary of their content shows it’s really generic as well.

starterstory.com/homemade-candy-price-calculator – This is a site all about people who started their own companies including candy companies. It is not specific to candy and probably beatable by a focused website but it has some excellent content that we can learn from. They do have a calculator that is pretty simple to create using a plugin. So we may want to consider adding that.

I suggest that you pull summaries of 2-3 good articles as background that we are going to give ChatGPT to be able to write an excellent article outline. Since Pricing is important for all businesses we should also look at “How to Price Products” for the best article availabe as well.

So you can see we already found 3 competitors and figured out 2-3 other articles that we should write. We found keywords that should be in our sub-headings and got some excellent tips that we can pass on. We also have summaries and our own analysis that we can now add to an article outline.

Creating An Outline Using Our Research

For creating an outline you can use the tool below or ChatGPT. ChatGPT has the benefit that you can send in a prompt ask it to “remember” the information and then use it to help you to write the outline in the next prompt. If the amount of information that you want to use though is less than 2,000 words (click the link to use wordcounter).

Create an Outline Tool Based On Summaries and Keyword Research

Article Topic
Sub-Heading Keywords
Summary Data
Number Of Subheadings (Suggested 8)

If you prefer to use ChatGPT here is the prompt.

As a content expert please help me to create a highly detailed outline about {ARTICLE_TOPIC}.

Use Markdown Language

Make sure that the subheadings contain these keywords, (they are comma delimited), {SUB-HEADING_KEYWORDS}.

Use the information in the summary data, to help create the outline, {SUMMARY_DATA}. However the outline should be unique and not reflect greatly on any summary.

The target content should include {NUMBER_OF_SUBHEADINGS}

{ARTICLE_TOPIC}

{SUB-HEADING_KEYWORDS}

{SUMMARY_DATA}

{NUMBER_OF_SUBHEADINGS}

So this is the outline that I got from the tool.

“How to Price Candy”

1. Introduction

  • Brief overview of the article

2. The Importance of Profit Margin in Pricing Candy

  • Explanation of what profit margin is
  • Discussion of why a solid profit margin is crucial for the candy business
  • The role of profit margin in pricing decisions

3. Homemade Candy Price Calculator: A Handy Tool for Candy Makers

  • Introduction to the Candy Price Calculator tool
  • Explanation of how the calculator works
  • Benefits of using a calculator to determine prices

4. The Role of Understanding Your Customer in Pricing Candy

  • Explanation of why understanding your customers is essential for pricing
  • How to gather information on customer demographics, buying habits, and price sensitivity
  • The role of customer surveys in pricing decisions

5. Understanding Costs: The Backbone of Profitability

  • Discussion of the various costs involved in candy making
  • The importance of creating a comprehensive expense spreadsheet
  • How understanding costs impacts pricing and profitability

6. Bundle Candy: A Strategy to Increase Candy Profit

  • Explanation of what bundling is and how it can increase profit
  • Tips on how to effectively bundle candy products
  • The impact of bundling on candy prices

7. Creating Revenue Goals for Your Candy Business

  • The importance of setting financial targets
  • Steps to calculate the estimated price per product to achieve revenue goals
  • How revenue goals guide pricing decisions

8. Mistakes to Avoid: Overlooking the Importance of Analyzing the Competition

  • Explanation of why competitive analysis is vital in pricing
  • Common mistakes candy businesses make when analyzing competitors
  • How to effectively analyze competitors and adjust candy prices accordingly

9. The Art of Selling Candy: From Pricing to Profit

  • The relationship between pricing and selling candy
  • Tips on how to sell candy effectively considering the pricing
  • The impact of effective selling on candy profit

10. How to Market Candy: Adding Value to Your Pricing Strategy

  • Explanation of why marketing is essential for a candy business
  • Overview of different marketing strategies and their costs
  • How marketing adds value to your candy pricing strategy

11. Conclusion

  • Recap of the key points covered in the article

Creating A ChatGPT Article Using The Outline

It is possible to use the outline above to create a podcast, Youtube video, a series of TikTok videos, and more. I will include some additional prompts below to create these other media, but all of them will follow a similar pattern as this one. 

  • Paste in your prompt and the outline.
  • Request a point (subheading) of the article to be written
  • Save that section of the article

We can only write one section of the article at a time because ChatGPT only puts out 550 words max. Most articles for SEO purposes will be at least 1,000 words and I suggest 1,500 as the minimum.

After you have the written sections you will need to continue to edit the article to add anecdotes, plugin calculators, spreadsheets, tables, infographics, etc… Remember that the point is to create an article that is a helpful article not just throw something up.

Tool and Prompt For Writing a Section of an Outline

Tone
Point Of View
Outline
Section To Write

Acting as a SEO content writing expert consider read the outline {OUTLINE}. Using a {TONE} tone and writing with the {POINT_OF_VIEW} point of view. Write out the {SECTION_TO_WRITE} include anecdotes, stories, suggestions for images to be included, infographics to include, tables, and calculators or prompt form generators to include.

{TONE} = Helpful Business Owner

{POINT_OF_VIEW} = First Person

{SECTION_TO_WRITE} = 2. The Importance of Profit Margin in Pricing Candy

{OUTLINE} = “Outline of the Article “How to Price Candy” (paste in the whole thing)

The Importance of Profit Margin in Pricing Candy

Hello there! I’m a small business owner just like you, and today I’d like to talk to you about a crucial factor that has greatly impacted my candy business: profit margin.

Now, you might be wondering, what is a profit margin, and why is it so important for my candy business? Let me explain.

Profit margin is the percentage of your revenue that turns into profit after you’ve subtracted your costs. It’s like a financial health check for your business. You see, a robust profit margin can be the difference between thriving and barely surviving in the world of candy-making. It’s not just about making candy; it’s about making a profit from your delicious creations.

Let’s imagine a scenario together. Picture this: you’re making the most delectable, mouth-watering candy in town. Your customers love it, and you’re selling it like hotcakes. But at the end of the day, when you look at your financials, you realize you’re barely breaking even. You’ve forgotten to factor in all your costs – from the cost of sugar, flavorings, and other ingredients, to packaging, utilities, and labor. And what about those unexpected costs that pop up now and then, like equipment repairs?

This is where the importance of a solid profit margin comes into play. When you price your candy, you need to ensure that the price covers all your costs and leaves room for profit. That’s the money you get to take home or reinvest back into your business to make it even better!

When we talk about pricing decisions, the profit margin is at the heart of it all. It’s the guiding light that helps you navigate through financial uncertainties. It ensures that every candy sold contributes to your financial well-being, rather than taking away from it.

For the visual learners out there, let’s include a simple infographic here to illustrate the concept of profit margin. It could be a pie chart showing revenue, costs, and profit, or a flowchart showing how revenue is divided into costs and profit.

And for those who love numbers, how about including a handy profit margin calculator right here? Enter your cost price, and selling price, and let the calculator do the rest. Not only will it show your profit margin, but it can also highlight if your prices need to be adjusted.

Remember, my fellow candy makers, running a business is not just about the passion for making delightful candy. It’s about ensuring that this passion can sustain you, bring you profits, and let you continue doing what you love.

In our next section, we’ll dive into a fantastic tool that has helped me a lot – the homemade candy price calculator. But for now, take a moment to reflect on your profit margins. Are they contributing to your candy business’s sweetness, or are they leaving a bitter taste? Remember, the key to a successful candy business is not just in the making; it’s also in the pricing!

Does that section of our article still need work? Yes! but you can already see that the way we asked for it to be written includes suggestions for a profit margin calculator and an infographic. There is also a little rewriting that you will need to do. 

Conclusion

Overall I think that this method of writing an SEO-optimized article can speed up the process, create an article that will get links, and be very helpful to your readers. Google has stated that they don’t care about articles being written by AI, but they need to be helpful.

If you put in the time to do this right your articles will shine and you will have created great resources.

Prompts Used In The Article

Google Trends is great for validating search traffic but you need the exact search that people are using for a search query. This prompt helps you to find them.

Exact Search Keyword Finder For Using Google Trends

 Please act as a psychologist that studies search engine behavior.

Use these rules as well as any others that you determine relevant to streamline a search query {SUBJECT} while retaining most of its intent.

Rules:

Eliminate unnecessary words: Cut out any ‘fluff’ words that do not directly contribute to the core meaning of the query. This usually involves removing filler words or prepositions.

Use common language and phrases: Most people use everyday language in their search queries, not technical or overly specific terms. Try to anticipate what the average person would type.

Use action words: Including action words like “how to”, “learn to”, “get”, “find”, “make”, etc., can help attract users who are looking for instructions or guides, pricing, determining, and gerunds, in general, are also used to create action phrases.

Keyword focus: Maintain the main keywords of the original query as much as possible, these are often the subject of the query. Synonyms of the main verbs also may be used.

Prioritize common language and phrases: People typically use casual, everyday language in their search queries. Avoid using overly technical or specific terminology unless it is directly related to the search intent.

The goal is to find searches that have measurable amounts of search volume that are directly related to a query. Often the “measurable” query will be what a beginner would type to find information about a subject, it will be the most popular related search query.

Known Examples of User Behavior:

how to whistle a tune —> whistle a tune
how to whistle a tune —> learn to whistle
how to whistle a tune —> how to learn to whistle
how to price your candy products —> pricing candy
how to price your candy products —> how to price candy
how to price your candy products —> determine candy price
how to price your candy products —> price candy
how to price your candy products —> costing candy
how to price your candy products —> price candy products

Please apply your rules and examples to {SUBJECT} and suggest how it would be modified when searched on Google while retaining as much search intent as possible, give several examples of how the query might be modified with the list being ordered as most popular first. The goal of the list is not to find the shortest query but the most popular one in terms of search volume.

{SUBJECT} = How to price your candy products

Topically Summarize Text Prompt

Acting as an expert at creating concise but detailed summaries please use the content below.

I would like you to follow these steps.

1) Create a list of the most important topics found in the content. Send this to me as a response.

2) Using your generated topic list, focus on each topic and summarize all the data in the content about each of those topics separately. State each topic and create a bulleted list. Send me this list as a response.

{TEXT}

Create An Outline Prompt Based on Keywords and Summaries

As a content expert please help me to create a highly detailed outline about {ARTICLE_TOPIC}.

Use Markdown Language

Make sure that the subheadings contain these keywords, (they are comma delimited), {SUB-HEADING_KEYWORDS}.

Use the information in the summary data, to help create the outline, {SUMMARY_DATA}. However the outline should be unique and not reflect greatly on any summary.

The target content should include {NUMBER_OF_SUBHEADINGS}

So this is the outline that I got from the tool.

{ARTICLE_TOPIC}

{SUB-HEADING_KEYWORDS}

{SUMMARY_DATA}

{NUMBER_OF_SUBHEADINGS}

Write An Outline Section Using ChatGPT

Acting as a SEO content writing expert consider read the outline {OUTLINE}. Using a {TONE} tone and writing with the {POINT_OF_VIEW} point of view. Write out the {SECTION_TO_WRITE} include anecdotes, stories, suggestions for images to be included, infographics to include, tables, and calculators or prompt form generators to include.

{TONE} = Helpful Business Owner

{POINT_OF_VIEW} = First Person

{SECTION_TO_WRITE} = 2. The Importance of Profit Margin in Pricing Candy

{OUTLINE} = “Outline of the Article “How to Price Candy” (paste in the whole thing)

  

Click here to uncover the essential tips and tricks for creating Google click-optimized titles using ChatGPT that capture attention, drive traffic, and supercharge your online presence.

Don’t miss out on the opportunity to build topical authority using ChatGPT and enhance your Google EEAT (Experience Expertise Authority and Trustworthiness). Read our article now to unleash the full potential of topical clusters and leave your competitors in the dust. Take charge of your SEO destiny and make Google listen to your website’s success. Click here to get started!

Brainstorm Brilliance: Unleash the power of ChatGPT’s intelligent prompts to overcome writer’s block, generate fresh ideas, and spark your creativity. Find the perfect angles and perspectives for your articles.

Chris

Chris Chenault trained as a physicist at NMSU and did his doctoral work in biophysics at Emory. After studying medicine but deciding not to pursue an MD at Emory medical school Chris started a successful online business. In the past 10 years Chris's interests and studies have been focused on AI as applied to search engines, and LLM models. He has spent more than a thousand hours studying ChatGPT, GPT 3.5, and GPT4. He is currently working on a research paper on AI hallucinations and reducing their effects in large language models.

Recent Posts