AI SEO — Content Writing

Write SEO content
with AI. Without it
sounding terrible.

AI can write your SEO pages faster than you ever could manually. The problem is most AI content is immediately recognisable as AI content. Here's the workflow that produces content that actually ranks — and actually reads like a human wrote it.

✍️ Lindsay Campbell📍 Cape Town🕐 10 min read

Why most AI content fails

The problem isn't that AI writes badly. It's that AI writes generically. Given the same brief, every AI produces structurally similar content — confident-sounding paragraphs full of hedged claims, abstract benefits, and a tone that could be describing literally any business anywhere in the world.

This is a problem for two reasons. First, Google's systems are increasingly good at detecting thin, derivative content and ranking it accordingly. Second, your potential customers are not idiots — they can tell the difference between content that knows what it's talking about and content that sounds like it does.

The real issue

AI content fails not because it was written by AI, but because it was written without adequate input. Garbage in, garbage out. The fix is front-loading the process with specific, detailed, opinionated briefs — not editing mediocre output at the end.

What Google actually cares about

Google has never said it penalises AI content. What it has said, consistently and clearly, is that it rewards content demonstrating EEAT — Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness.

EEAT signals that AI struggles to produce on its own: first-hand experience of doing the thing, specific local knowledge (Cape Town prices, SA regulations, local market dynamics), named author credentials, original data or case studies, and opinions that are distinctly yours rather than a synthesis of everyone else's.

The workflow below is designed to make AI produce EEAT-rich content — by giving it the raw material it needs rather than expecting it to invent specifics it doesn't have.

The 6-step AI content writing workflow

01

Write the content brief first

Before prompting for content, write a brief: target keyword, target reader, what they need to know, what you want them to do next, your specific angle or opinion, and any SA-specific context. This takes 10 minutes and makes everything else faster.

02

Give the AI a voice brief

Before writing a single word of content, tell the AI who it's writing as, what the tone is, and what to avoid. This is the single most impactful step. See the voice brief prompt below.

03

Ask for structure first, not content

Ask the AI to propose an H2 structure and angle before writing. Review it. Change what's wrong. Only then ask it to write each section. This stops you editing 800 words of content that was structured wrong from the start.

04

Write section by section

Don't ask for a full article in one go. Ask for one H2 section at a time. This gives you control, lets you course-correct early, and produces better output than one massive generation.

05

Inject your specifics

After the first draft, add the things AI can't know: your actual prices, a specific client example (anonymised), your opinion on a controversial point, a SA-specific stat, a local reference. These details are what make content rank and convert.

06

Edit for rhythm, not just accuracy

AI writes in long, uniform sentences. Read your final draft aloud. Where you run out of breath, break the sentence. Where it sounds like a corporate memo, replace it with how you'd actually say it to a client. This pass takes 20 minutes and is non-negotiable.

The voice brief prompt — use this every time

Voice Brief

Set tone and style before writing anything

Before we write any content, here is the voice and style guide you must follow throughout this session:

WRITING FOR: [your business name] — [describe your business in one sentence]
AUDIENCE: [describe your target reader — who they are, what they know, what they're trying to figure out]
TONE: [e.g. direct, no-nonsense, dry humour / warm and practical / confident but not arrogant]
READING LEVEL: Write for a smart business owner who is not a marketing expert. No jargon without explanation.
LOCATION: South Africa — use South African spelling (e.g. "optimise" not "optimize"), local currency (rands), local references.

DO:
- Use short, direct sentences
- State opinions clearly ("the best approach is X" not "it could be argued that X")
- Include specific local examples where possible
- Answer the question in the first paragraph, then explain
- Use plain English equivalents of technical terms

DO NOT:
- Use the word "delve"
- Use the phrase "in today's digital landscape"
- Use the phrase "it is worth noting"
- Use the phrase "furthermore" or "moreover"
- Start sentences with "It is important to"
- Use hedge language like "potentially", "arguably", "one could say"
- Write three-sentence introductions before getting to the point
- Pad content with obvious filler

Confirm you understand this style guide before we begin.
Tip: Send this at the start of every new content session. Don't expect the AI to remember it from a previous conversation.

Words to ban from your AI

Add these to every voice brief. They're the clearest markers of unedited AI content and they undermine credibility immediately:

delve
leverage
holistic
synergy
furthermore
moreover
tailored
robust
seamless
innovative
cutting-edge
it is worth noting

Before and after — what the difference looks like

Same brief, same topic. The difference is entirely in how the AI was instructed.

✗ Unguided AI output

In today's competitive digital landscape, it is worth noting that SEO has become an increasingly important factor for businesses looking to leverage their online presence. A holistic approach to search engine optimisation can help businesses achieve their goals by implementing robust strategies tailored to their unique needs.

✓ Briefed AI output

SEO is how your business gets found when someone searches for what you do. Not the technical version — the practical one. A Cape Town accountant who ranks for "accountant Claremont" gets calls without paying for ads. That's what SEO is for.

SA-specific content tips

Use South African spelling

South African English follows British spelling conventions. "Optimise" not "optimize". "Organise" not "organize". "Centre" not "center". Always add this to your voice brief — AI defaults to American English unless told otherwise.

Include rand pricing

One of the most effective trust signals in SA content is specific local pricing. "SEO retainers in South Africa typically start at R8,000 per month" is far more useful to a SA reader than "SEO services vary in cost". AI can't give you accurate current SA pricing — you have to add this yourself.

Reference SA-specific context

Load shedding, SARS, POPIA, BEE, South African public holidays, local directories — these references signal immediately that the content was written for a SA audience, not copy-pasted from a global template. Prompt AI to flag where SA-specific context is relevant, then fill it in yourself.

Name your location

AI content often reads as if it's written from nowhere. "In South Africa", "in Cape Town", "for Western Cape businesses" — these phrases improve local relevance for both readers and search engines. Add them naturally throughout, especially in the first paragraph and headings.

The shortcut that isn't: Asking AI to "write an SEO article about [topic]" and publishing the result unchanged is not a workflow — it's a mistake. The 10 minutes you save on the brief costs you hours of editing and months of ranking potential.

Want content written properly?

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FAQ

Can AI write SEO content that ranks?
Yes, but not on its own. AI-generated content that ranks is always AI-assisted, not AI-automated. The workflow that works: use AI to draft, then edit for voice, accuracy, and real-world experience. Google rewards genuine expertise — AI can help express it, not substitute for it.
Does Google penalise AI-written content?
Google does not penalise content for being AI-written. It penalises content that is low quality, unhelpful, or manipulative — regardless of how it was produced. Well-researched, genuinely useful AI-assisted content ranks fine. Thin, repetitive, keyword-stuffed AI content does not.
How do I make AI-written content sound more human?
The most effective techniques: give the AI a specific voice brief before writing; add a banned word list; ask it to avoid AI clichés; add specific local examples, real prices, and SA context; and do a final read-aloud edit to restore natural sentence rhythm.
How long should AI-written SEO content be?
As long as it needs to be to fully answer the question — no longer. Word count targets are a proxy for quality, not a goal. A 600-word page that answers a specific question completely will outrank a 2,000-word padded version of the same content. Use the content brief to set scope, not word count.