Content that actually ranks — now written with an AI assist ⓒ Unsplash
How to use ChatGPT to write search-engine-optimized content that actually ranks.
You can pour hours into a blog post, but if it never shows up in search results, nobody reads it. SEO sounds intimidating, but once you understand the core principles, ChatGPT can help you write genuinely search-friendly content. Here are the prompts and checklist that actually move the needle.
1. Core Principles of SEO Writing
🎯 Natural keyword placement — in the title, subheadings, and body text without forcing it
📐 Clear structure — organized logically with H2 and H3 subheadings
📏 Sufficient depth — substantive content over thin, surface-level filler
❓ Genuinely answers search intent — solves what people are actually looking for
2. Keyword Research With ChatGPT
“I’m writing a blog post about [topic]. Suggest 10 long-tail keywords people might search for related to this topic, and note the search intent behind each (informational, transactional, or navigational).”
3. Requesting a Fully SEO-Structured Draft
“You’re an SEO content writer. Write a blog post on ‘[target keyword]’.
Requirements:
– Use H2/H3 subheading structure
– Naturally include the target keyword in the opening paragraph
– Answer real questions someone searching this topic would have
– Add 3 FAQs at the end
– Aim for at least 1,200 words”
4. Requesting Titles & Meta Descriptions
📌 Title request
“Suggest 5 clickable titles including the keyword ‘[keyword].’ Give me a variety — a question-style one, a numbered list one, and a problem-solving one.”
📌 Meta description request
“Write a meta description for this article, under 155 characters. Include the target keyword and make it compelling enough to earn the click.”
5. SEO Writing Checklist
| Check Item | How to Verify |
|---|---|
| Primary keyword in the title | Confirm it’s placed naturally near the front |
| Keyword appears in the opening paragraph | Verify the topic is clear from the very start |
| Structured with H2/H3 subheadings | Confirm the article breaks into logical sections |
| Includes internal links | Check whether it links to other related content |
| Has an FAQ section | Confirm it directly answers common search questions |
6. Should You Publish AI-Written Content As-Is?
A ChatGPT draft is genuinely useful, but publishing it verbatim isn’t recommended.
✔ Double-check facts and current information independently
✔ Add your own experience or perspective to differentiate it
✔ Smooth out awkward phrasing or repetitive sentences
✔ Search engines increasingly favor content with genuine, demonstrable value over purely AI-generated text
7. Good SEO Writing vs. Bad SEO Writing
| Good SEO Content | Bad SEO Content |
|---|---|
| Answers real questions specifically | Repeats keywords with no real substance |
| Delivers genuine value to the reader | Written to please the search engine, not the reader |
| Reads naturally, with smooth flow | Keywords crammed in awkwardly |
| Kept up to date regularly | Written once and left stale for years |
Writing entire blog posts with ChatGPT — from series planning to publish-ready drafts.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q. Can content written with ChatGPT actually rank well?
Yes, it can. What matters more than who wrote it is the real value the content delivers. Search engines prioritize how genuinely helpful content is to readers over the tool used to produce it.
Q. How many times should I repeat the keyword?
There’s no fixed number. Keyword density used to be heavily emphasized, but modern SEO favors naturally weaving in related terms and synonyms within genuinely useful context, rather than repetition for its own sake.
Q. Can I get a perfect, publish-ready SEO article in one shot?
You can get a solid draft quickly, but genuinely strong SEO content still requires a follow-up pass: fact-checking, adding your own voice, and refining the structure based on that first draft.