WriteGap doesn't start with a blank prompt. It starts with a keyword that has proven search volume, a SERP analysis, and a brief. The article it writes is structured to rank — not just to fill a page.
900–1,100 words · H1 + sections + schema · markdown / HTML / preview
WriteGap only generates a draft for a keyword that passed the full analysis pipeline: real search volume, winnable difficulty, commercial or task intent, and not already in a previous brief. By the time you click "Generate draft", you already know the article is worth writing. Most AI article tools leave that judgment to you.
The draft isn't structured by guessing what "a good article" looks like. The sections, H2 headings, and content angle are informed by what the top-ranking pages cover and what they miss. WriteGap uses this to structure the brief — and the draft is written against that brief. The result is an article that covers the right ground, not just any ground.
Every draft comes with a metadata block at the top: suggested title tag (under 60 chars with keyword), meta description (under 155 chars), target slug, and semantic keywords. Schema markup (FAQ, HowTo, or Article) is generated separately in the Schema tab. You don't need to write any of this yourself.
The workflow is fundamentally different. With ChatGPT, you bring the keyword, describe your audience, and hope the output is structured to rank. WriteGap starts from data: it identifies the keyword gap, checks the SERP, determines what top-ranking pages cover, builds the brief, and then writes the article against that brief. You don't prompt it — it does the research step first, then writes. The draft comes out structured for SEO (correct H1, section hierarchy, semantic keywords) because the strategy was defined before the writing started.
900–1,100 words for standard keyword-gap articles. This matches the length of top-ranking content for most SaaS keyword gaps — long enough to cover the topic properly, short enough to edit in 20 minutes. The draft is not padded to hit a word count. Length follows what the keyword and SERP intent require.
Markdown, with a metadata block at the top containing the suggested title tag, meta description, target slug, and semantic keywords. The dashboard has four tabs per draft: Markdown (editable), HTML (copy-paste ready), Preview (rendered), and Schema (the JSON-LD markup separately). Copy whichever format your CMS needs.
It will sound like a competent first draft — not your voice. That's intentional. The draft handles the research, structure, and SEO scaffolding. You handle the 20% that makes it yours: your specific examples, your opinions, your product context. Google doesn't penalize AI-assisted content; it penalizes low-quality content with no original perspective. Add yours and publish.
Each keyword in the brief generates one draft. Once a draft exists for a keyword, the "Generate draft" button becomes "Show draft" — clicking it opens the existing draft rather than regenerating. If you want to rewrite from scratch, you can edit the draft directly in the Markdown tab.
From €14.99/month. Draft is ready in ~30 seconds. You edit 20 minutes. Publish.
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