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How to Write SEO Content Using AI Agents

Stop guessing keywords and writing blog posts yourself. Here's how to use AI agents to research, write, and optimize SEO content — step by step.

Dharmendra Jagodana·March 31, 2026·5 min read

Most solo founders know they need SEO content. Blog posts, landing pages, product descriptions — the stuff that brings in organic traffic month after month without paying for ads.

The problem isn't knowing. It's doing. Writing one solid blog post takes 3–5 hours when you factor in keyword research, outlining, drafting, editing, and on-page optimization. Do that weekly and you've just created a part-time job for yourself.

AI agents change the math entirely. Not a chatbot you paste prompts into — actual specialized agents that handle distinct parts of the SEO content workflow. Here's how to set it up.

What "SEO content with AI agents" actually means

This isn't about typing "write me a blog post about X" into ChatGPT and hitting publish. That produces generic content that ranks for nothing.

SEO content requires a chain of specialized tasks: keyword research, search intent analysis, competitive gap identification, structured outlining, drafting with keyword placement, internal linking, meta tag optimization, and readability editing. Each task requires different expertise.

With Single Founder Company's Marketing department, you get agents built for each stage. The SEO Specialist handles keyword strategy and on-page optimization. The Content Creator handles drafting and editing. The Growth Hacker identifies content gaps and distribution angles.

They work like a content team — except they cost $25.45/month instead of $4,000.

Step 1: Research keywords with the SEO Specialist

Start by giving your SEO Specialist agent a seed topic. Something like "solo founder productivity" or "AI tools for small business."

The agent analyzes search intent, identifies long-tail variations, and maps keyword difficulty. You get back a prioritized list — not just keywords, but the type of content each one needs (how-to guide, comparison, listicle, product page).

The key difference from doing this manually: the agent cross-references your existing content to find gaps. If you already have a post targeting "AI tools for startups," it won't suggest that again. It finds the adjacent keywords you're missing.

Step 2: Build a content brief

Once you've picked a target keyword, the SEO Specialist creates a content brief. This includes:

  • Primary keyword and 3–5 secondary keywords
  • Search intent (informational, commercial, navigational)
  • Suggested H2 and H3 structure based on what's currently ranking
  • Word count target
  • Internal linking opportunities to your existing pages
  • Notes on what top-ranking pages cover (and what they miss)

This brief becomes the blueprint. Without it, you're guessing. With it, every piece of content has a clear SEO target before a single word is written.

Step 3: Draft the post with the Content Creator

Hand the brief to your Content Creator agent. This agent writes the actual post — following the keyword targets, heading structure, and internal linking plan from the brief.

The Content Creator isn't a generic writer. It's configured to match your brand voice, use your product terminology, and write for your audience. It places keywords naturally in the first 100 words, in headings, and throughout the body without stuffing.

A 1,000-word blog post takes about 4 minutes to draft. Compare that to the 2–3 hours it takes most founders to write one from scratch.

Step 4: Optimize on-page elements

After the draft, the SEO Specialist reviews it for on-page optimization:

  • Title tag under 60 characters with the primary keyword
  • Meta description under 155 characters that reads like a search result snippet
  • Header tags (H2, H3) containing keyword variations
  • Image alt text suggestions
  • Internal links placed contextually (not forced)
  • URL slug recommendation

This is the part most founders skip because it feels tedious. But on-page SEO is where rankings are won or lost. The agent handles it in seconds.

Step 5: Review, approve, publish

You're still the editor. Read the draft. Check that the facts are right, the voice sounds like you, and the recommendations make sense for your audience. Make edits if needed.

Then publish. The whole process — from keyword to published post — takes under 30 minutes of your time. Most of that is your review.

A real example: weekly blog content

Say you run a SaaS product and want to publish one SEO blog post per week. Here's the workflow:

Monday: SEO Specialist identifies this week's target keyword from your content gap analysis. Creates a brief.

Tuesday: Content Creator drafts the post using the brief. SEO Specialist adds on-page optimization.

Wednesday: You review, edit, and publish. Total hands-on time: 20 minutes.

That's 52 SEO-optimized posts per year. At a content agency, that would cost $500–$1,500 per post — $26,000 to $78,000 annually. With the Marketing department, it's $25.45/month.

Common mistakes to avoid

Publishing without a brief. Skipping keyword research means you're writing content nobody is searching for. Always start with the SEO Specialist, not the Content Creator.

Over-optimizing. If every sentence contains your target keyword, Google notices. The agents are configured to place keywords naturally, but double-check that the result reads like something a human would want to read.

Ignoring internal links. Every new post should link to 2–3 existing pages on your site. This distributes authority and keeps visitors browsing. The SEO Specialist maps these automatically — use them.

Publishing and forgetting. SEO content compounds over time, but only if you update it. Set a quarterly reminder to have the SEO Specialist review older posts for keyword drift, broken links, or new ranking opportunities.

Bottom line

SEO content isn't hard. It's repetitive. That's exactly what makes it perfect for AI agents. The research, structuring, drafting, and optimization follow predictable patterns — patterns that agents execute faster and more consistently than you can alone.

You keep the editorial judgment. The agents handle everything else.


Ready to put this into practice? Browse the departments and start with the Marketing department — it covers SEO, content creation, and growth in one package.

Dharmendra Jagodana

Solo founder and AI systems builder. Creator of Single Founder Company — 95 AI agents across 11 departments that let one person run an entire business.

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