When I talked about machine learning in SearchLove a few years ago, I said that SEO wasn't enough and I should avoid ML-driven content creation. There is a well-known case of lying sideways when this type of content is used to generate financial reports or sports summaries. Did Robot Reporter Ruin AP's Netflix Revenue Story? Some companies, such as Narrative Science and Automated Insights, have occupied this space for years. advertisement Continue reading below These solutions rely heavily on templates with variations and variable insertions, rather than generating truly unique text.
When I talked about it, I thought there was nothing feasible for effective and clear copy generation for at least another 10 years. I was wrong, so I fixed myself with TechSEO Boost two years ago. I expected text generation to be ubiquitous over the next five years. Now it's time to start using this technology for SEO. Incomplete and self-referential history of Real Estate Photo Editing content generation in SEO Early in my SEO career, I didn't know much about the SEO community as a whole, so I reinvented the wheel several times. This is because the concept of content spinning is effectively explained by how I arrived. In 2007, there was a song called "Poet Laureate Infinity" by rapper Cannibus. The main premise of the song was that the moderator recorded five versions of a 200-bar poem that could be used to form a new poem. advertisement Continue reading below The poems were multitracked to each other, but one version of bar 1 rhymed with bar 2 of another poem. The song was presented on the
Canibus.com website using a visual interface that allowed listeners to switch between which version of the poem they were playing at any time. In effect, you can sort the 200-bar poems you hear indefinitely based on what you switch. Poet Winner Infinity When it was released, I was working for a company where the site's network really differed only in location and company name. I thought the same concept could be applied to content. advertisement Continue reading below So I used the math in the Discrete Structures textbook to create a business case, and then worked with the team's copywriter (What's wrong, Jack!) To create five versions of the content. He made every paragraph the same number of sentences so that every sentence in each version would work with the next sentence.