Briefs and drafts now start from accepted search opportunities
Accepted opportunities can now become SEO-led briefs and human-review drafts grounded in Search Console data, site context, and practical recommendations.
SearchTriage now turns accepted search opportunities into SEO-led briefs and human-review drafts.
This is a key part of the workflow. SearchTriage is not designed to generate generic blog posts from a keyword. It starts with real Google Search Console exports, site context, and a decision: write, update, link, fix, ignore, or brief.
When an opportunity is worth acting on, it can move into a brief.
What a SearchTriage brief includes
Briefs are built to help a human create or improve content with a clear search purpose. They can include:
- search intent
- direct answer direction
- outline sections
- source evidence from Search Console data
- internal link suggestions
- metadata ideas
- FAQ ideas
- review checklist
- notes about whether to write new content or update an existing page
The goal is to reduce blank-page thinking. The user should not have to stare at a query export and guess what to do.
Drafts are for review, not blind publishing
Plans with draft access can generate full draft content from approved briefs. The draft system is deliberately framed as human-review content.
That matters for quality. Search-led content still needs judgment: factual checks, brand fit, examples, product knowledge, screenshots, quotes, and edits from someone who understands the audience.
SearchTriage helps with structure and momentum. It does not remove responsibility from the publisher.
Why this is better than generic AI content
Generic AI writing tools often begin with a prompt like "write an article about this keyword." SearchTriage starts from a different place:
- what real users searched
- which pages already receive impressions
- where CTR or position suggests a gap
- whether an existing page should be updated
- how the page fits the site's Content Map
That context makes the brief more useful. It also helps avoid creating unnecessary duplicate content.
A practical workflow
A user imports Search Console data, reviews opportunities, accepts the ones that matter, then creates briefs or drafts for the most valuable actions. The result is a content queue based on evidence rather than guesswork.
For a closer look at plan access, see SearchTriage pricing.