
You are moments away from a polished, fully SEO-optimized article tailored to your audience. To get it right, I need five quick inputs from you: Topic, Target Country, Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, and Meta Description. Once I have that, I will handle the structure, on-page optimization, and flow.
Think of this as handing a chef your favorite ingredients. I will season it with search intent, readability, and a healthy pinch of psychology wit.
What I need from you
The essentials
– Topic: the core idea. Example, How attachment styles shape dating decisions.
– Target Country: where your readers live. Example, Canada or India.
– Primary Keyword: the exact phrase you want to rank for. Example, attachment styles in relationships.
– Secondary Keywords: 3 to 6 supporting terms. Example, anxious attachment, secure attachment, relationship dynamics.
– Meta Description: one sentence, 150 to 160 characters, inviting and specific.
Optional extras
– Any outline you like. I can follow it or improve it.
– Audience angle. Example, young professionals, new managers, therapy seekers.
– Constraints. Example, avoid clinical jargon, prefer practical tips.
How I will optimize your article
Search intent first
If your query is informational, I focus on clarity, credible insights, and examples. If it is transactional, I address comparison points and next steps. Navigational intent gets concise guidance and smart internal links.
I will mention your primary keyword in the opening paragraph, then once in each major section. This signals relevance to search engines without stuffing.
On-page structure that skims well
– Clear H2 and H3 headings, short paragraphs, and scannable bullets.
– Natural LSI terms. For a post on emotional intelligence, you might see empathy, self regulation, social awareness, and leadership tone.
– Examples woven into the narrative. For instance, a manager in Sydney using reflective listening to defuse conflict, or a couple in Nairobi practicing secure base language.
Image SEO baked in
I will generate an editorial style featured image prompt using your primary keyword, plus section images aligned to headings. All prompts will be hyper realistic, 16:9, and descriptive for alt text.
Quick examples you can copy
Example brief 1
– Topic: Growth mindset at work
– Target Country: United Kingdom
– Primary Keyword: growth mindset in the workplace
– Secondary Keywords: fixed mindset, learning culture, psychological safety, manager coaching
– Meta Description: Learn how a growth mindset improves performance, feedback culture, and career resilience at work in the UK.
Example brief 2
– Topic: Love languages and long distance relationships
– Target Country: United States
– Primary Keyword: love languages long distance
– Secondary Keywords: quality time, words of affirmation, relationship maintenance, secure attachment
– Meta Description: Practical ways to use love languages in long distance relationships, from calls to micro rituals that deepen connection.
What happens after you send the brief
The writing process
I tailor tone to your audience, balance science with story, and keep readability high. Each section earns its place. I avoid fluff, I favor clarity, and I keep clinical terms approachable.
Final deliverables
– WordPress ready JSON with meta description, keywords, tags, categories, CTAs, and image prompts.
– Internal link suggestions to strengthen topical authority and user flow.
– A friendly wrap up, plus the classic Cerebral Quotient invite at the end.
If you prefer, you can paste your outline, and I will integrate it cleanly. Either way, you get a crisp article that reads like your smartest friend explaining psychology over coffee.
Key Takeaways
– Send five items: Topic, Target Country, Primary Keyword, Secondary Keywords, Meta Description.
– I optimize for search intent, clarity, and reader value, not keyword stuffing.
– You get clean structure, image SEO, and internal link ideas baked in.
FAQ
How do I choose a strong primary keyword?
Pick a phrase your audience actually searches, with clear intent and moderate competition. Tools like Google suggestions, People Also Ask, and basic keyword tools help. Make it specific, like emotional intelligence at work, rather than too broad, like emotions.
How many secondary keywords should I include?
Aim for three to six closely related terms. Use natural language variants and subtopics, for example empathy at work, self awareness, social skills.
Why does the target country matter?
It guides language choices, examples, spelling conventions, and search landscape. A UK audience may prefer British spelling and locally relevant scenarios, while a US audience expects American spelling and different references.
Do I need to provide an outline?
No. If you have one, great. If not, I will create a logical, SEO friendly structure with clear headings, internal links, and image prompts.
Conclusion
So here is the deal, give me the brief and I will turn it into a focused, skimmable article that ranks and actually helps people. Short, clear inputs from you translate into strong, reader friendly outputs from me.
Ready to take your next test?
🧠 Ready to take your next test?
