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How to use AI to write articles without getting hit by Google penalties
AI content is often discussed as if generation itself creates risk for a website. That is the wrong frame. Google does not ban AI content as such. In its official explanation, Google Search Central says the important issue is not how content is produced, but whether it is high-quality, original, helpful, and people-first. Automation, including AI, can be used responsibly when it helps create useful material rather than mass-produce pages for rankings.
How to Plan Content for a Website or App Over 6-12 Months
A 6-12 month content plan is often treated as a calendar: an article on Monday, a post on Wednesday, a roundup on Friday, a new landing page next month. That kind of calendar may look impressive, but it does not prove much. It can describe either a growing system or a random set of URLs that compete with each other, stay disconnected from the product, and need cleanup six months later.
Content Pipeline: How to Publish 20-50 Articles a Week Without Turning Your Site Into a Factory of Weak URLs
There are two very different ways to publish 20-50 articles a week. The first is to simply speed up text production: more topics, more drafts, more automated generation, more URLs. The second is to build a pipeline where every article passes through clear stages: idea, intent validation, draft, edit, publication, indexation, monitoring, and update.
Site Structure for SEO: How to Build Sites That Grow
People often try to buy search growth with URL count: one page for every wording, segment, language, filter, or microtopic. That is a bad bet. Search engines do not evaluate the number of pages by itself. They evaluate whether the site makes sense as a system: which URLs are actually important, how they are connected, whether users and crawlers can quickly reach the right section, and whether the architecture is spreading into duplicates, empty archives, and orphan pages.
Long-Tail SEO: How to Get Traffic Without Competing Head-On
The promise of "getting traffic without competition" sounds great, but taken literally, it is wrong. Competition in search does not disappear. What changes is something else: instead of going head-to-head for the broadest and most expensive high-volume keywords, you can work with more specific queries where user intent is clearer and the page has a better chance of actually solving the problem.
Why Small Sites Lose Without Systematic Content
Small websites often have the same problem: they look neat, load fast, have a product description, a couple of service pages, a blog with three articles, and almost no growth. Not because the site is "bad," but because in search that is almost always not enough. If a project has only 5-10 pages, it is competing with sites that have hundreds or thousands of entry points from search. This is not a question of "SEO magic," but of demand coverage.