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Examples · Last updated May 20, 2026

Example: an SEO article

This is the most common kind of article AutoPublish generates — an informational long-form guide built from a SERP brief. Below is the brief that drives it and an illustrative sample of the output.

About this example

An informational SEO article answers a question a searcher typed. To rank, it has to cover what the query actually needs — the subtopics, the structure, and the depth that the currently ranking pages share — and it has to read as genuinely useful, not padded. This example shows how AutoPublish approaches that: a SERP-driven brief sets the spec, the article is drafted against it in your brand voice, and the 14-signal quality gate scores the result before it can publish. The sample below is illustrative — a generic topic, written to show the format.

The brief behind it

Every AutoPublish article starts from a structured brief. This is the kind of input that drives a seo article:

Target keywordhow to speed up a slow WordPress site
Search intentInformational — the reader wants concrete, ordered fixes they can apply themselves
Word-count target~1,800 words (derived from currently ranking pages)
Must-cover subtopicsHosting, caching, image optimization, scripts/plugins, measuring results
Brand voicePractical and plain-spoken; no jargon, no filler
Internal link targetsExisting posts on hosting, caching, and image optimization

Illustrative sample output

Illustrative example. The excerpt below is a representative sample of the structure and depth of article AutoPublish produces. It is written to demonstrate the format — it is not a real customer's published post, and no claim is made that it ranks or has traffic.

sample article preview — illustrative

How to Speed Up a Slow WordPress Site (2026 Guide)

Why your WordPress site is slow

Most slow WordPress sites are slow for two or three specific, fixable reasons — not a hundred vague ones. The usual culprits are under-powered hosting, no caching layer, oversized images, and too many scripts loading on every page. Before changing anything, measure: a tool like PageSpeed Insights tells you which of these is actually costing you, so you fix the real bottleneck instead of guessing.

Start with hosting and caching

Hosting is the floor your performance sits on. Budget shared hosting can cap your speed no matter what else you optimize, so if your site is on an overloaded plan, that is the first thing to address. Caching is the highest-leverage change after hosting: a caching layer serves a pre-built version of each page instead of rebuilding it on every visit, which often cuts load time more than any other single fix.

Optimize images and trim scripts

Images are the largest thing on most pages. Serving them in a modern format and at the size they actually display — rather than shipping a 4000px photo into an 800px slot — can dramatically cut page weight. After images, audit your plugins: each one can add scripts that load everywhere. Remove what you do not use, and the pages get lighter without losing anything you needed.

How this kind of article is produced

AutoPublish built a SERP brief for the target keyword — reading the intent, subtopics, and heading structure of the currently ranking pages — then drafted the article against that brief in the site's brand voice. A featured image and meta were generated alongside it, internal links to related posts were injected from the sitemap, and the finished article was scored by the 14-signal quality gate before becoming eligible to publish.

Frequently asked questions

Is this a real published article?

No. It's an illustrative example written to demonstrate the structure and depth of an informational SEO article AutoPublish generates. It is not a real customer's post, and no claim is made that it ranks.

How long are real generated articles?

The word-count target comes from the brief, which derives it from what's actually ranking for the keyword. Informational guides like this one typically land between roughly 1,200 and 2,500 words. You can override the target per article.

Will my articles read this way?

The structure — SERP-matched headings, subtopic coverage, an FAQ — is consistent. The voice is not: your articles are generated against your brand voice profile, so they read like your brand, not like this generic sample.

Does every article get internal links like the brief shows?

Yes, when relevant targets exist on your site. AutoPublish reads your live sitemap and injects contextual internal links into the body, and internal linking is one of the 14 quality-gate signals.

What stops a generated article from being thin?

The 14-signal quality gate. It scores depth, originality, structure, internal linking, and more, and holds back any article below threshold. A thin article does not publish automatically.

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