Content marketers

How content marketers use AI agents

Content marketing is a pipeline problem. A single pillar post has to be researched, outlined, drafted, edited, then cut down into a LinkedIn post, an X thread, a newsletter, an Instagram caption, and a meta description, all without sounding like the same sentence five times. Then it has to be briefed for SEO, given three subject lines for the email, and scheduled. Any one piece is easy. The pipeline is what burns out a one-person content team.

An AI agent fits the pipeline well because most of the work is transformation: take the thing that exists and reshape it for a new channel and a new reader. The agent can search the live web for what is currently ranking, read the competitor pages and your own brief, do the keyword math, and hold your brand voice steady across every format. It does not replace your judgment about what is worth saying. It removes the hours between deciding and shipping.

Keimodel adds one thing a single chatbot cannot: you can run the same prompt across Claude, GPT, and Gemini side by side and pick the line that actually lands, instead of taking the first model's word for it. For a headline, a hook, or a subject line where the exact phrasing is the whole job, that comparison is the difference between fine and good. Set your voice in Memory first, then use the prompts below to run the pipeline.

Open the Agent10 min read

Capabilities this leans on

Web search File upload Memory Session memories Skills Scheduled tasks

Set up Memory once

Do this first. Every draft and headline below comes back on-brand instead of generic, because the agent already knows your voice and your reader.

Remember these facts about our content: we're a B2B project management SaaS for marketing teams at 20 to 200 person companies. Our voice is clear, practical, lightly opinionated, and we never use buzzwords like 'leverage,' 'unlock,' 'seamless,' or 'game-changer.' Our reader is a marketing manager who is busy and skeptical of fluff. We write to help, not to hype. Primary keyword themes: marketing project management, campaign planning, creative workflow. Always lead with a concrete example, not a definition.

1.Draft long-form from an outline

Hand it your outline and brief; get a real first draft you can edit, not filler.

Here's my outline for a 1,500-word post on 'how to plan a quarterly content calendar.' Write the full draft in our voice: lead each section with a concrete example, keep paragraphs short, no buzzwords, and end with a practical checklist the reader can act on today.

The intro is too slow. Rewrite the first 120 words so it opens on a specific, recognizable pain a marketing manager feels in week one of the quarter, then earns the rest of the post.

Now add a short, honest section on when NOT to use a content calendar, so the piece doesn't read like an ad.

What you get: A real long-form draft in your voice, structured and example-led, ready for a human edit.

2.Atomize one post into every channel

Turn the published pillar into a week of channel-native posts in one pass.

Take the content-calendar post and turn it into a LinkedIn post written for a marketing manager: a strong first line, no hashtag soup, one clear takeaway, under 200 words.

Now give me an X thread of 7 posts from the same piece, a 150-word newsletter blurb with a link CTA, and an Instagram caption. Keep the voice consistent but make each one native to its platform, not a copy-paste.

Write the SEO meta title under 60 characters and meta description under 155 characters for the pillar post.

What you get: A full channel set from one post, each version written for where it actually runs.

3.Build an SEO content brief

Live search the SERP, then hand a writer a brief they can act on.

Search the current top 10 results for 'campaign planning template' and tell me what subtopics they all cover, what questions they answer, and what angle is missing that we could own.

Build a content brief from that: target keyword, 3 secondary keywords, a recommended H2 structure, the questions to answer, suggested word count, and 2 internal link ideas.

Turn this brief format into a reusable Skill called 'SEO brief' so I can generate one for any keyword by just giving you the term.

What you get: A SERP-grounded brief plus a saved Skill that produces one for any keyword in seconds.

4.Compare models to pick the best line

Use Keimodel's core move: same prompt, three models, you pick the winner.

Write 5 options for the H1 of our content-calendar post. Make them specific and benefit-led, no clickbait, under 60 characters each.

Run that same headline prompt across Claude, GPT, and Gemini and show the results side by side so I can compare which model's phrasing lands best for our skeptical reader.

I like option 2 from one model and the rhythm of option 4 from another. Combine them into one final headline and give me two close variants.

What you get: Headlines chosen by comparison, not by trusting the first model that answered.

5.Test subject lines and hooks before you send

Generate, compare, and tighten the lines that decide whether anyone reads.

Write 8 subject line options for the newsletter featuring this post: half curiosity-led, half value-led, all under 45 characters, no false urgency.

Run the same subject-line prompt across two models and show both sets so I can see which phrasing feels more like a human wrote it.

For my top 3, write a matching preview text under 90 characters that adds to the subject instead of repeating it.

What you get: A short list of tested subject lines with preview text, chosen across models.

6.Keep the content cadence on schedule

Scheduled tasks turn the calendar into prompts that fire on their own.

Every Monday at 9am, give me this week's content plan from our calendar: the pillar topic, the 4 channel cuts to make from it, and the one keyword we're targeting.

On the 1st of each month, search for what's newly ranking and being discussed in marketing project management, and send me 5 fresh post angles with a one-line case for each.

What you get: A weekly plan and a monthly idea refill that show up without you chasing them.

Run your first prompt

Open the Agent, paste any prompt above, and change the details to fit your business.