Marketing Route

Build a Blog Content Calendar With AI in 90 Minutes

Stop staring at an empty spreadsheet every month. Follow a 9-step route and walk away with 30 days of blog topics, keywords, outlines, and a publishing schedule.

9 steps ~1h 30min For marketers Free

Building a blog content calendar with AI starts with your business goals and audience questions, not random topic ideas. On aidowith.me, the 30-Day Content Plan route (9 steps, about 90 minutes) walks you through the full process. You'll tell AI about your product, target readers, and SEO goals, then generate topic clusters, assign keywords to each post, create brief outlines, and map everything to a publishing schedule. The route covers pillar content, supporting posts, internal linking strategy, and how to balance SEO-driven topics with thought leadership pieces. You'll finish with a complete calendar you can hand to writers or use yourself. Each entry includes the topic, target keyword, outline with subheadings, word count target, and publish date. The calendar is built in a format you can drop into Notion, Google Sheets, or any project management tool your team already uses.

Last updated: April 2026

The Problem and the Fix

Without a route

  • You plan blog content month by month and run out of ideas by week two
  • Posts don't connect to each other, so you get traffic but no topical authority
  • Writers ask for briefs and you spend more time briefing than they spend writing

With aidowith.me

  • 30 days of topics organized into clusters that build topical authority over time
  • Each post comes with a keyword, outline, and word count target ready for writers
  • A publishing schedule that balances SEO posts with thought leadership pieces

Who Builds This With AI

Marketers

Content, campaigns, and briefs done in hours instead of days.

Founders

Move fast on pitches, pages, research. AI as your first hire.

Managers & Leads

Reports, presentations, and team comms handled faster.

How It Works

1

Define your content goals and audience

Tell AI your product, target reader, and what you want the blog to do: drive signups, rank for keywords, or build authority. The calendar is shaped around this.

2

Generate topic clusters and assign keywords

9 steps produce pillar topics, supporting posts, keyword assignments, and internal linking maps. AI drafts the plan while you approve and adjust.

3

Export your calendar with outlines

Get a 30-day calendar with publish dates, topics, keywords, outlines, and word count targets. Drop it into Notion, Google Sheets, or your project tool.

Plan a month of blog content with AI

9 steps. About 90 minutes. A full calendar your team can start executing today.

Start This Route →

What You Walk Away With

Define your content goals and audience

Generate topic clusters and assign keywords

Export your calendar with outlines

A publishing schedule that balances SEO posts with thought leadership pieces

"Our blog went from random posts to a real content engine. Three months in, organic traffic doubled."
- Content lead, B2B startup

Questions

Yes. The route produces a 30-day calendar by default, but the process is fully repeatable. Run it again with updated goals and you'll have the next 30 days planned in under an hour since you already know the steps. Many users batch two months at once during a single planning session. The topic clusters from your first run also carry over, so your second month builds on the topical authority you started in month one instead of starting from scratch.

The route handles that. Step 3 uses AI to research keywords in your niche and suggest which ones to target based on difficulty and estimated search volume. You don't need existing keyword research or any SEO tools to get started. The route walks you through picking keywords that are realistic for your domain authority and relevant to your product. By the end of that step, you'll have a keyword map tied to your topic clusters.

Both. Solo bloggers get a realistic schedule based on their publishing capacity, whether that's one post a week or three. Teams get a calendar with assignments, briefs, and deadlines they can distribute across writers. The route asks how many posts per week you can handle and adjusts the 30-day plan accordingly. You won't end up with an ambitious calendar that falls apart by week two because it assumed a five-person content team.