Writing
AI Content Writer
Generate first drafts of blog posts, social captions, and marketing copy in minutes. Powered by AI.
AI-generated first draft — review and edit before publishing. We don't store your inputs or results.
✳ Free · No signup · Runs in your browser — we never store your numbers
Small business guide
What this tool helps you do
Use this free AI content writer to get a solid first draft of the everyday copy a small business needs: product descriptions, social captions, email newsletters, Google Business posts, blog intros, and about-page paragraphs. Tell it what you are writing about, who it is for, and how your brand sounds, and it drafts something you can edit and publish in minutes.
It is a first-draft tool, not a replace-your-voice tool. The draft gives you structure and momentum; you add the details only you know — the real story, the exact offer, the thing your customers actually say. That last 10% is what makes the copy yours.
How to use this tool
- 1
Pick the content type — a product description behaves differently from a newsletter or a caption.
- 2
Describe what you are writing about in a sentence or two. The more concrete, the better the draft.
- 3
Optionally add your audience and a few words describing your brand voice ("warm and down-to-earth," "expert but plain-spoken").
- 4
List any key points that must appear — prices, deadlines, differentiators — so the draft includes them.
- 5
Generate, then edit: fix any details, add your specifics, and cut anything that doesn't sound like you.
Examples
Product description
A coffee roaster launching local delivery for their cold brew.
Inputs
- Content type: Product description
- Topic: Small-batch cold brew, roasted in-house, delivered locally
- Key points: Free delivery over $25; organic beans; family-owned
Result
A tight 3-paragraph description that leads with the product, weaves in the delivery offer and organic sourcing, and ends with a clear call to action.
The draft handles structure and flow; the owner swaps in the exact tasting notes and delivery zones only they know.
Google Business post
A plumber announcing weekend availability.
Inputs
- Content type: Google Business post
- Topic: Now offering weekend appointments, no extra charge
- Audience: Local homeowners
- Tone: Reliable, no-nonsense
Result
A short post that states the news, the benefit (no weekend surcharge), and how to book.
Short local posts reward plain language. The tool resists the urge to pad — and you should too.
Key terms
First draft
A complete, structured version of the copy that is 90% there. Editing a draft is far faster than staring at a blank page — that speed is the whole value.
Brand voice
The consistent personality in your writing — word choice, rhythm, formality. Describing it in a few words ("playful but never silly") steers the draft noticeably.
Call to action (CTA)
The one thing you want the reader to do next: book, order, reply, visit. Every piece of business copy should end with exactly one.
How to interpret the result
Edit before you publish — always
The draft is competent, but it doesn't know your prices, your dates, or your customers. Read every line, correct anything factual, and add the concrete details that make it credible. Publishing unedited AI copy is how businesses end up sounding like everyone else.
Use it for volume, not for strategy
The tool shines at the recurring copy that piles up — weekly captions, product blurbs, seasonal announcements. What to offer, to whom, and why: that is still your job. Garbage in, generic out; a sharp brief gets a sharp draft.
Common mistakes
- Giving a vague topic ("write about my business") and expecting a specific draft — the input quality sets the output ceiling.
- Publishing without editing, including AI-sounding filler or details that don't match reality.
- Skipping the key-points field, then noticing the draft missed the deadline or the price.
- Using one draft everywhere: a caption, a newsletter, and a product page need different lengths and energy — pick the right content type.
- Letting the tool invent claims. If the draft states a number or superlative you didn't provide, cut it or verify it.
Frequently asked questions
Is this AI content writer really free?+
Yes — free, no signup, no word-count paywall. We rate-limit heavy use so it stays free for everyone.
Do you store what I type or what it writes?+
No. Your brief is sent to the AI model to produce the draft and the result is shown to you — we don't save either.
Can I use the content commercially?+
Yes, the drafts are yours to edit and publish. You are responsible for accuracy — always review claims, prices, and dates before publishing.
Will the content hurt my SEO because it's AI-generated?+
Search engines rank helpful content regardless of how the first draft was made. Unedited, generic AI text performs poorly; a draft you've edited with real specifics and experience performs like anything else you'd write.
What kinds of content does it write?+
Product descriptions, social media captions, blog post intros, email newsletters, Google Business posts, about-page paragraphs, and promotional announcements. For email subject lines specifically, use the Email Subject Line Generator.
Why is the draft capped at around 450 words?+
Short-form business copy is where a first-draft tool is genuinely useful — and where you can realistically review every line. For long-form guides, use it to draft the intro and outline, then write the body yourself.