Dojo Vault

AI Content Strategy Resources

Browse guides on Prompt Mastery, SEO, Editing, and Article Structures to get the most out of ArticleDojo and dominate your niche.

The Dojo Vault is ArticleDojo's working resource library for one specific job: producing AI-assisted articles that are specific, structured, edited, and actually publishable. Every guide here comes out of the same brief-first workflow ArticleDojo itself uses — start with a clear audience, argument, and keyword target, generate against that brief, then edit to an editorial standard before anything goes live. No padded word counts, no "10 tips" filler, no advice we haven't run through our own pipeline.

The ArticleDojo Content Quality Framework

Most AI content fails for predictable reasons: vague inputs, generic structure, and zero editorial review. Our framework attacks those in order. First, the brief — audience, purpose, target keyword, and the argument the article makes. Second, structure — an outline that answers real search intent instead of restating the title six ways. Third, editing — cutting robotic phrasing, adding specifics, and checking facts. If your drafts feel interchangeable with everyone else's, start with 8 signs your AI content is too generic to rank and why AI writing tools produce thin content.

Start Here: Brief-First AI Article Generation

The single highest-leverage change you can make is upgrading what you feed the generator. "Write an article about email marketing" produces a commodity draft; a brief with an audience, a stance, and a reader outcome produces something worth editing. These three guides walk the full path:

Ranking and E-E-A-T for AI-Assisted Content

Google doesn't penalize AI content; it penalizes unhelpful content, and undifferentiated AI output is reliably unhelpful. What earns rankings is evidence of experience and editorial judgment: concrete examples, first-hand testing, and pages that resolve the query. Read why AI content fails E-E-A-T for the failure modes, then how to scale your blog with AI without a manual penalty for the guardrails that let you publish at volume safely.

AI Detection, Humanization, and Editorial Review

Detection scores are a symptom, not the disease. Content flags as AI because it reads like AI — uniform sentence rhythm, hedged claims, no specifics. The fix is editorial, not cosmetic. Why AI content sounds robotic breaks down the tells; 7 reasons your AI article failed detection covers the common mistakes; how to write AI content that passes AI detection gives the workflow; and why undetectable AI is the wrong goal explains where to aim instead.

Comparison Guides and Buying Decisions

If you're choosing tooling, the honest comparison is between general-purpose chat and a dedicated, workflow-driven generator. ChatGPT vs dedicated article generators lays out the trade-offs. For ArticleDojo specifically, the pricing breakdown and our transparent self-review cover what the tool does and doesn't do.

Examples, Templates, and Workflows

The Vault also covers applied playbooks for specific site types: comparison articles that convert, scaling an Amazon affiliate site with AI product reviews, and AI content for local SEO and small-business blogs. Each one includes the input structure we'd use, not just the theory.

How We Use These Guides Ourselves

Every article in this library was produced with the same workflow it teaches. The brief comes first — a working title, a purpose statement, and target keywords go into ArticleDojo before a word is generated. The draft comes back structured against that brief, gets an editorial pass for factual accuracy and hedged language, and only then gets published with its SEO description written from the brief's argument rather than reverse-engineered from the finished text. That's also why these guides skew opinionated: a brief that doesn't take a position produces an article that doesn't earn one.

Two practical suggestions for getting value out of the library quickly. First, read the ranking guide and the keyword-to-post walkthrough back to back — the first explains why briefs matter, the second shows a full worked example with the actual brief, outline, and edit checklist on the page. Second, pick one article you've already published that isn't ranking, run it against the generic-content checklist, and rewrite its brief before you rewrite a single paragraph. Diagnosing one of your own pieces teaches the framework faster than reading ten more guides.

Everything below is organized by category in the library. Start with the brief-first guides, then branch into whichever problem is currently costing you rankings.

Browse the Full Library

Practical guides and templates, organized by category.