How to Generate 100 Blog Posts With Seoable in One Sitting
Generate 100 SEO-optimized blog posts in 60 seconds with Seoable. Step-by-step walkthrough from domain audit to AI content generation for founders.
The Problem With Traditional Content Creation
You've shipped. Your product works. But nobody knows about it.
The brutal truth: organic visibility requires content. Lots of it. But hiring an agency to produce 100 blog posts costs $15,000 to $50,000. Freelancers take months. Your in-house team is drowning in feature work.
Meanwhile, your competitors are ranking for keywords your customers actually search for.
There's a faster way. This guide walks you through generating 100 blog posts with Seoable in under 60 seconds—then publishing them in your own CMS. One-time fee. No retainers. No agency middlemen.
You'll get a domain audit, a keyword roadmap built from your market, and AI-generated blog posts that are ready to ship. This is how technical founders are beating agencies in 2026.
Prerequisites: What You Need Before You Start
Before you fire up Seoable, make sure you have these in place:
Your domain. Have your website URL ready. Seoable will audit it, so it needs to be live (even if it's just a landing page).
A CMS or publishing platform. You need somewhere to publish the generated posts. WordPress, Ghost, Webflow, Substack, Medium—whatever you use. If you're on WordPress, setting up SEO plugins correctly from day one will maximize the impact of your content.
Your brand voice documented (optional but helpful). A sentence or two about how you talk to customers. Seoable will generate posts that fit your brand, but clarity helps. "We're direct, no-BS, technical." That kind of thing.
Your target audience clear. Who are you writing for? Developers? Product managers? Founders? Seoable uses this to shape keyword selection and tone.
5 minutes of your time. That's how long the actual generation takes. The walkthrough below is longer because we're explaining every decision point.
If you're new to SEO entirely, onboarding yourself to SEO as a self-paced founder track will give you the context to understand why Seoable makes the choices it does. But you don't need to be an SEO expert to use it.
Step 1: Sign Up and Access the Seoable Generator
Go to Seoable and sign up. It's $99, one-time. No subscription. No monthly charges. You get access to the bulk content generator immediately.
Once you're in, you'll see the dashboard. Look for the "Generate Content" or "Bulk Generator" option. Click it.
You're now in the engine. This is where the magic happens—but only if you feed it the right inputs.
Step 2: Enter Your Domain and Trigger the Audit
The first field asks for your domain. Paste it in: yourcompany.com or yourcompany.dev.
Hit "Audit Domain."
Seoable now crawls your site and runs a technical SEO audit in the background. It's checking:
- Page speed and Core Web Vitals
- Mobile responsiveness
- Crawlability and indexation
- Existing content and keyword coverage
- Backlink profile (if public data exists)
- Schema markup implementation
- On-page SEO fundamentals
This takes 30–60 seconds. While it runs, you'll see a progress indicator. This audit is the foundation for everything that comes next. Unlike traditional SEO agencies that charge $2,000–$5,000 for an audit alone, Seoable includes it in your $99 fee.
The audit output will show you:
- Critical issues: Things that block ranking (broken redirects, crawl errors, missing indexation tags).
- Opportunities: Pages that could rank higher with minor fixes.
- Content gaps: Topics your competitors rank for that you don't cover.
Read through this. You'll need it in the next step.
Step 3: Review the Keyword Roadmap
Once the audit finishes, Seoable generates a keyword roadmap. This is a prioritized list of 50–200 keywords your target audience searches for, organized by:
- Search volume: How many people search it monthly
- Difficulty: How hard it is to rank (1–100 scale)
- Intent: What the searcher wants (informational, navigational, transactional)
- Opportunity: Where you can realistically rank in 3–6 months
This roadmap is AI-generated but grounded in real search data. It's not guesswork. Seoable uses public keyword databases and your domain's existing performance to surface keywords you can actually win.
Here's the key decision point: You don't have to use all 100 posts. The generator will create 100, but you might only publish 50 or 75 if the remaining keywords don't fit your business. That's fine. Quality > volume.
Take 2 minutes to scan the roadmap. Flag any keywords that feel off-brand or irrelevant. You can exclude them in the next step.
If you want to go deeper into keyword strategy, the busy founder's AI stack for SEO explains how to validate keywords before content generation. But for this walkthrough, trust Seoable's algorithm. It's been trained on thousands of founder domains.
Step 4: Customize Your Content Brief
Before Seoable generates the 100 posts, you set a content brief. This is a short template that tells the AI how to write:
Tone. "Direct, no corporate jargon, technical but accessible." Or "Playful, irreverent, founder-focused." Seoable uses this for every post.
Target audience. "Indie hackers and bootstrappers." "Technical founders." "Product managers at early-stage startups." The AI shapes keyword depth and examples around this.
Brand voice. Any specific phrases or values? "We ship fast." "No BS." "Built for people who code." Seoable weaves these in.
Post format. Do you want how-to guides? Think pieces? Case studies? Seoable can mix formats or stick to one. For bulk generation, variety usually performs better.
Length. Seoable defaults to 1,500–2,500 words per post. You can adjust up or down. Longer posts rank better for competitive keywords; shorter posts work for long-tail queries.
Call-to-action (CTA). What do you want readers to do? "Sign up for the free audit." "Check out the platform." "Read the next post in this series." Seoable adds a contextual CTA to each post.
Links to include. If you have internal pages or resources, give Seoable a list. It will link to them naturally within the posts. This keeps readers on your site longer and distributes SEO authority internally.
If you're unsure about your brief, the busy founder's brief template for AI-generated content has templates you can steal. Copy one, paste it into Seoable, and you're done.
This step takes 3–5 minutes. Don't overthink it. You can always regenerate posts later if the tone feels off.
Step 5: Exclude Keywords or Topics (Optional)
After reviewing the roadmap, you might see keywords that don't fit. Maybe Seoable surfaced a keyword in a vertical you don't serve. Or a topic that conflicts with your positioning.
Seoable lets you exclude these before generation. Click the keywords you want to skip. They'll be grayed out.
You can also add custom keywords if there's something you know your audience searches for that Seoable missed. Paste them in, and they'll be added to the generation queue.
This is optional. Most founders use Seoable's roadmap as-is. But if you have strong opinions about your keyword strategy, this is where you enforce them.
One warning: Don't exclude keywords just because they're competitive. High-difficulty keywords are often the ones worth ranking for. If you're unsure, keep them in. Seoable's AI knows how to tackle tough keywords.
Step 6: Hit Generate and Watch It Work
You've entered your domain, reviewed the audit, set your brief, and finalized your keywords.
Now click "Generate 100 Posts."
This is the moment. Seoable's AI engine fires up and begins writing.
What's happening behind the scenes:
Keyword clustering. The AI groups related keywords into topic clusters. Instead of 100 random posts, you get 10–15 topic clusters with 6–8 posts each. This creates topical authority and internal linking opportunities.
Content generation. Using Claude Opus and GPT-4 (depending on your settings), Seoable writes each post from scratch. It's not scraping competitors or using templates. Each post is original.
SEO optimization. Every post includes:
- Target keyword in the H1 and first 100 words
- Natural keyword variations throughout
- Proper heading hierarchy (H2, H3)
- Internal links to related posts
- Meta descriptions (155–160 characters)
- Schema markup for FAQ or article type
- Readable paragraph structure (short sentences, active voice)
Quality checks. Seoable runs plagiarism detection and readability analysis. Posts that don't meet quality thresholds are flagged or regenerated.
The entire process takes 45–60 seconds for 100 posts. Yes, you read that right. This is why content velocity matters in SEO—publishing 100 posts at once signals to Google that your site is an authority on these topics.
While generation runs, you'll see a progress bar. Don't close the tab. Let it finish.
Step 7: Review the Generated Posts
Once generation finishes, you'll see a list of all 100 posts. Each one shows:
- Title (the H1 and meta title)
- Target keyword
- Meta description
- Word count
- Estimated reading time
- SEO score (1–100)
Scroll through and spot-check 5–10 posts. Read the first paragraph of each. Does the tone match your brand? Are the keywords natural? Is the information accurate?
You'll probably find 95% are solid. A few might need tweaks. That's normal. AI-generated content is 80% there; you polish the last 20%.
If you see a post that's off, you have two options:
- Regenerate it. Click the post, hit "Regenerate," and Seoable will rewrite it in 5 seconds.
- Edit it manually. Download the post, open it in your text editor, and make changes. It's markdown or HTML, so it's easy to edit.
Don't spend hours perfecting every post. The goal is to publish fast and iterate based on real data. How I published 100+ organic SEO blogs in 1 minute shows exactly this workflow: generate, spot-check, publish, measure.
One more thing: Check the internal links. Seoable should have linked related posts together. If you see a post that should link to a product page or resource, note it. You can add those links manually before publishing.
Step 8: Export and Prepare for Publishing
Seoable gives you three export options:
Option 1: Markdown. Download all 100 posts as markdown files. This is best if you're using a static site generator (Hugo, Jekyll, Next.js) or publishing to a platform that accepts markdown (Ghost, Substack).
Option 2: HTML. Export as raw HTML. Use this for WordPress, Webflow, or any CMS that accepts pasted HTML.
Option 3: CSV with metadata. Get a spreadsheet with title, slug, meta description, content, tags, and categories. This is useful if you're bulk-importing into WordPress using a plugin like WP All Import.
Choose the format that matches your CMS. If you're on WordPress, HTML is usually easiest. You can paste each post into the editor, set the featured image (Seoable doesn't generate these), and publish.
Before you export, Seoable asks if you want:
- Scheduled publishing. Instead of publishing all 100 posts at once (which can trigger spam filters), schedule them to go live over 4–8 weeks. Seoable can do this automatically if your CMS supports it.
- Auto-tagging. Seoable suggests tags and categories for each post based on keywords and topic clusters. Review these before publishing.
- Featured images. Seoable doesn't generate images, but it suggests free stock image searches (Unsplash, Pexels) for each post. You can bulk-download these and add them to your CMS.
For a technical founder, here's the pro move: Schedule the posts to publish over 6 weeks, not all at once. This looks more natural to Google and gives you time to monitor performance and make tweaks.
Step 9: Bulk Import Into Your CMS
Now the posts are ready. Time to get them live.
If you're on WordPress:
- Download the HTML export from Seoable.
- For each post, create a new draft in WordPress.
- Paste the HTML into the "Code" editor (not the visual editor).
- Add a featured image (optional but recommended for CTR).
- Set the post status to "Scheduled" and pick a publish date.
- Hit "Schedule."
If you want to automate this, use WP All Import with the CSV export. It can bulk-import all 100 posts in 5 minutes.
If you're on a different platform (Ghost, Webflow, Substack, Medium), the process is similar: paste content, set metadata, schedule, publish.
Pro tip: Don't publish all 100 at once. Stagger them over 4–8 weeks. This keeps your site looking active, gives you time to monitor rankings, and reduces the risk of triggering spam filters.
For WordPress specifically, setting up SEO plugins on WordPress for first-time founders will ensure your posts are optimized for search from day one.
Step 10: Monitor, Measure, and Iterate
Your 100 posts are now live (or scheduled). But the work isn't done. Publishing is step one. Ranking is step two.
Set up tracking:
Google Search Console. Link your domain and monitor impressions, clicks, and average position for your new posts. After 2–4 weeks, you'll see which posts are getting clicks.
Google Analytics. Track organic traffic, bounce rate, and time on page for each post. Posts with high bounce rates need editing. Posts with high time-on-page and low bounce rate are winners—write more like them.
Rank tracker. Use Ahrefs, Semrush, or a free tool like Rank Tracker to monitor where your posts rank for their target keywords. Most posts will rank in positions 11–30 in the first month. Your job is to get them to positions 1–10.
The optimization loop:
- Week 1–2: Posts go live. Monitor for technical errors (broken links, formatting issues).
- Week 2–4: First keyword rankings appear. Most will be positions 10–50.
- Week 4–8: Top performers emerge. Identify posts with high CTR and time-on-page. Understand why they're winning.
- Week 8+: Edit underperforming posts. Add more internal links from high-ranking posts. Update outdated information. Republish.
This is where the quarterly SEO review becomes your repeatable process. Every 90 days, audit your top posts, identify gaps, and plan the next batch of content.
If you're tracking the right metrics, SEO reporting basics: the 5 metrics that tell you if it's working will show you exactly what to measure.
The Math: Why 100 Posts Works
Let's talk about why bulk generation actually works.
Most founders publish 1–2 posts per month. That's 12–24 per year. After a year, they have maybe 30 posts ranking. Most are still on page 2 or 3 of Google.
With Seoable, you publish 100 posts in 60 seconds. After 8 weeks of staggered publishing, you have 100 posts live. Even if only 30% rank in the top 10, that's 30 keyword positions. That's 30 sources of organic traffic.
Here's the compounding effect:
- Month 1: 100 posts go live. Mostly ranking 20–50.
- Month 2: First posts hit page 2 (positions 11–20).
- Month 3: Top 20% of posts hit page 1. You're getting 50–100 organic clicks per day.
- Month 4–6: You edit underperformers. Top posts climb to positions 3–8. Organic traffic hits 200–500 clicks per day.
- Month 6+: The compounding kicks in. Each post links to others, building topical authority. New posts rank faster. You're getting 500–2,000 organic clicks per day.
This is what content velocity means. You're not competing on one post at a time. You're competing with 100 posts that all support each other.
A traditional agency would charge $30,000–$50,000 for this. Seoable does it for $99.
Common Questions and Troubleshooting
Q: Will Google penalize me for publishing 100 posts at once?
No, if you stagger them. Publishing all 100 on day one might trigger spam filters. Publishing 3–5 per week over 6–8 weeks looks natural. Seoable handles this with scheduled publishing.
Q: Are the posts unique, or are they templates?
Each post is written from scratch. Seoable uses different AI models and prompt variations for each post, so they're unique. Plagiarism detection is built in.
Q: Can I edit the posts after they're generated?
Yes. Download the markdown or HTML, edit in your text editor, and paste back into your CMS. You own the content.
Q: What if a post ranks for the wrong keyword?
Edit the post. Change the H1 to target a different keyword. Reoptimize the first 100 words and meta description. Republish. Google will re-crawl within days.
Q: How long until I see organic traffic?
First impressions in Google Search Console: 1–2 weeks. First clicks: 2–4 weeks. Meaningful traffic (50+ clicks per day): 6–12 weeks. It depends on your domain authority and keyword difficulty.
Q: Do I need to link to external sites?
No. Seoable focuses on internal linking to keep readers on your site. But linking to authoritative sources (like Ahrefs' content strategy framework or HubSpot's guide to high-quality blog content) improves credibility and can help you rank.
Q: What if my CMS doesn't support bulk import?
You can manually paste each post one by one. It takes longer (2–3 hours for 100 posts) but still beats hiring a freelancer. Or use a tool like Zapier to automate the import.
Q: Can I use Seoable for multiple domains?
Yes. You can buy multiple $99 kits, one per domain. Or use the same kit on different domains at different times.
From Generation to Visibility: The Real Timeline
Here's what actually happens after you hit publish:
Days 1–7: Google crawls your new posts. You'll see them in Google Search Console.
Days 8–14: First impressions in search results. Most posts show up in positions 20–50 for their target keywords.
Days 15–30: Your top posts start climbing. Some hit positions 10–15. You're getting 10–50 organic clicks per day.
Days 31–60: More posts hit page 1. Organic traffic ramps to 50–200 clicks per day. You start seeing which topics resonate with your audience.
Days 61–90: Optimization phase. You edit underperformers, add more internal links, and expand top posts. Traffic hits 200–500 clicks per day.
Days 91–180: Compounding. Your 100 posts are now a network. Each post links to 5–10 others. New posts rank faster. Traffic hits 500–2,000 clicks per day.
This is the timeline from busy to cited: a founder's roadmap from day 0 to day 100 maps out in detail. It's not a guess. It's based on real founder data.
Why Founders Choose Seoable Over Agencies
Let's be direct: traditional SEO agencies are built for retainers, not results.
You pay $3,000–$10,000 per month. After 6 months, you've spent $18,000–$60,000. They've written maybe 20–30 posts. You have no idea if they're working. You're locked in.
With Seoable, you pay $99 once. You get 100 posts, a full audit, and a keyword roadmap. You own everything. No retainer. No lock-in. No middleman.
This is why how busy founders beat agencies at their own game is required reading. Founders with the right tools outperform agencies in 2026. You're reading the proof.
The key difference: Seoable is a tool. You're in control. Agencies are a service. You're dependent.
Pro Tips for Maximum Results
Tip 1: Link internally. Before you publish, make sure Seoable has linked related posts together. If you have 10 posts on "SEO for founders," they should all link to each other. This builds topical authority fast.
Tip 2: Publish on a schedule. Don't dump all 100 posts on day one. Publish 3–5 per week over 6–8 weeks. This looks natural to Google and gives you time to monitor and adjust.
Tip 3: Update your top performers. After 30 days, identify your top 10 posts (by clicks and time-on-page). Expand them by 50%. Add more examples, case studies, or data. Republish. This pushes them from position 5 to position 2.
Tip 4: Use search console data. After 4 weeks, log into Google Search Console. Find posts that are ranking in positions 6–10 for high-volume keywords. These are your low-hanging fruit. Edit them, add more depth, and watch them climb to positions 2–4.
Tip 5: Create a content hub. Group your 100 posts into 10–15 topic clusters. Create a pillar page for each cluster (e.g., "The Complete Guide to SEO for Founders"). Link all related posts to the pillar. This is how you build topical authority.
Tip 6: Repurpose for other channels. Once your posts are live, turn them into:
- LinkedIn posts (one per week)
- Twitter threads (one per post)
- Podcast episodes (record yourself reading the post)
- Email newsletter content (send one post per week to your list)
One post becomes 5 pieces of content. This multiplies your reach.
The Reality Check
Will Seoable make you rank #1 for "SEO" overnight? No. That keyword is worth millions of dollars. Ranking for it takes years and thousands of backlinks.
But will Seoable help you rank for 50–100 long-tail keywords in your niche? Absolutely. Will you get 500–2,000 organic clicks per month within 6 months? Yes. Will that traffic convert into customers? If your product is good, yes.
The math is simple: 100 posts × 30% ranking in top 10 × 5 clicks per post per day = 150 organic clicks per day. That's 4,500 clicks per month. At a 2% conversion rate, that's 90 new customers per month from organic search alone.
For $99.
Next Steps: After Your 100 Posts Go Live
Your first batch of 100 posts is published. Now what?
Monitor for 30 days. Track which posts are getting clicks and which are flopping.
Edit underperformers. Posts that aren't ranking after 30 days need help. Rewrite the H1, add more depth, or target a different keyword.
Plan batch 2. After 60 days, you'll have enough data to plan your next 50 posts. Focus on topics that complement your top performers.
Build a content system. Don't rely on one-off batches. The compounding founder: SEO habits that pay off in year two shows you how to build a repeatable content system that compounds over time.
If you want a structured roadmap, SEO bootcamp for busy founders: 14 days, 14 wins gives you one tangible win per day for two weeks. Start there, then use Seoable to scale.
For a free preview of what your domain looks like right now, drop your domain into Seoable's free check-up. See if ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, and Google can find your brand. No card required.
The Bottom Line
Generating 100 blog posts with Seoable takes 60 seconds. Publishing them takes a few hours. Ranking them takes 6–12 weeks. Getting meaningful organic traffic takes 3–6 months.
But once they're ranking, they work for you forever. Every month, they bring in clicks. Every quarter, you refine them and they climb higher. The compounding is real.
This is why technical founders are shipping their own SEO in 2026. The tools exist. The cost is low. The results are measurable.
You don't need an agency. You need a process. Seoable gives you the process. The rest is execution.
Now go generate those 100 posts. Your organic visibility is waiting.
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