30-Day AI Content Calendar
Learn how Lymwave's 30-day AI content calendar turns opportunities, GSC insights, SEO/AEO/GEO goals, and publishing schedules into a daily article plan with clear trial preview and paid-plan rules.
Short answer
A 30-day AI content calendar is a planned month of SEO/AEO/GEO article topics, target dates, short descriptions, workflow states, and publishing actions. In Lymwave, the calendar turns content opportunities into a daily SEO article schedule so users can see what should be planned, drafted, scheduled, published, or refreshed next.
The calendar is also where Lymwave's trial and paid-plan rules become visible. Trial users can preview the 30-day content plan as titles, target dates, topic or keyword context where available, and short descriptions only. They cannot view all 30 full scheduled article bodies. Paid users can use the calendar with 30 premium articles/month, one article/day, for one active website.
Lymwave is not a generic spreadsheet replacement or a cheap AI writer. The calendar connects planning to premium article generation, featured images, internal-link context, metadata, publishing integrations, Google Search Console insights, weekly reports, AI visibility checks, translations, and optional relevant partner citations from opted-in sites.
What a 30-day AI content calendar is
A 30-day AI content calendar is the planning layer for a month of content production. It shows what the site should publish, why each article exists, when it should move forward, and what state each article is in.
In a basic manual calendar, an item might only have a title and date. In Lymwave, a useful calendar item can include a scheduled date, article title, short description, target topic or keyword where available, content opportunity source, workflow state, publishing destination, and next action.
The feature matters because daily publishing needs structure. If a team wants to publish one SEO article per day, it needs more than 30 random prompts. It needs a sequence of articles that supports the website's offers, topic clusters, buyer questions, internal links, and publishing workflow.
The calendar should also help with AEO and GEO. Each planned article should have a clear answer target and entity context so the final page is easier for readers, search engines, and AI answer systems to understand. That does not guarantee AI citations, but it makes the content more structured and useful.
Who this feature is for
The 30-day AI content calendar is for founders, small business owners, SaaS teams, WordPress site operators, developer-owned GitHub or MDX sites, consultants, and lean marketing teams that want a steady content workflow for one website.
It is useful when a team has plenty of ideas but no reliable publishing rhythm. Ideas may come from customer questions, Google Search Console queries, product features, service pages, comparison terms, integration pages, glossary topics, older posts, and content gaps.
The feature is also useful for teams that need review before publishing. A calendar should not automatically turn every idea into a live post without visibility. Users should be able to review planned topics, edit drafts, regenerate featured images within limits, approve publishing, schedule articles, or pause work that needs more context.
Lymwave's current early-bird plan is intentionally focused: one website, one user, 30 premium articles/month, and one article/day. Teams that need complex multi-site operations, many seats, or agency workspaces should treat those as future plan needs, not current early-bird inclusions.
How Lymwave creates a monthly content plan
Lymwave creates a monthly content plan by turning content opportunities into scheduled article ideas. Opportunities can come from website context, content clusters, product priorities, Google Search Console insights, audit findings, and existing page gaps.
The plan should balance different types of content. A SaaS site might need feature explainers, integration pages, alternatives pages, comparison pages, use-case articles, glossary pages, and pain-point content. A small business might need service explainers, local topics, buyer questions, seasonal content, and refresh candidates.
Each planned article should have a clear job. One article might answer a question a buyer asks before booking a call. Another might support a product feature. Another might improve a weak topic cluster. Another might refresh an older topic where GSC shows impressions but weak engagement.
The calendar makes this visible. Instead of hiding strategy inside a generation prompt, it shows the user what the next 30 days are supposed to cover. That makes approval easier and helps the user catch off-brand or low-priority topics before article credits are spent.
How the calendar connects opportunities, GSC insights, SEO/AEO/GEO goals, and publishing schedules
The strongest content calendars are connected to signals. Google Search Console can show queries, pages, impressions, clicks, positions, low-CTR topics, rising impressions, ranking pages, and refresh candidates. Those signals can become planned articles or updates.
SEO goals shape the calendar through topic coverage, intent matching, metadata, and internal links. AEO goals shape it through direct answers, question-led sections, definitions, and FAQs. GEO goals shape it through consistent entity language, category clarity, and claims that can be summarized without losing context.
Publishing schedules keep the workflow realistic. A calendar item should not only say "write this article." It should show whether the article is planned, drafted, scheduled, published, or refreshed. It should also connect to the destination, such as WordPress, GitHub, MDX, or another supported CMS integration.
This is how Lymwave keeps the 30-day SEO content plan practical. The calendar is not just a list of titles. It connects opportunity, article generation, quality review, publishing, and reporting.
Trial preview rules
The Lymwave trial lasts 7 days and requires a credit card. During the trial, the calendar preview shows only scheduled article titles, target dates, topics or keywords where available, and short descriptions.
Trial users cannot view or generate all 30 full scheduled articles. That boundary is important because the 30-day AI content calendar is meant to preview the monthly strategy, not give away a full month of content during trial evaluation.
The trial includes 3 premium articles, 1 partial rewrite/article capped at 500 words, no translations, 1 featured image/article, up to 3 image regeneration attempts/article, content opportunities, 1 capped site audit, Google Search Console connection with preview insights, integration connection, 1 publish/export action, and 1 limited AI visibility scan.
Bulk generation and daily auto-publishing stay locked during the trial. This keeps the trial focused on quality, workflow fit, integration connection, and the first few article outputs.
Paid-plan calendar rules
The early-bird paid plan is EUR49/month for a limited time. It includes 1 website, 1 user, 30 premium long-form SEO/AEO/GEO articles/month, and one article/day.
Paid calendar items can move from planned to drafted, scheduled, published, or refreshed according to the user's article credits and publishing workflow. The article allowance is monthly, so the calendar should show usage clearly: articles used out of 30, upcoming scheduled items, and any blocked items.
Paid articles are designed to be approximately 1,500 to 2,500 words/article. Each article includes one featured image/article and up to 3 image regeneration attempts/article. Paid users also receive 3 partial rewrites/article with a 500-word limit each.
Translations are credit-based. Paid users get 30 translated article credits/month total and can configure up to 5 target languages. That means 30 articles into 1 language, or 10 articles into 3 languages, not 30 articles multiplied by 5 languages.
Calendar states: planned, drafted, scheduled, published, refreshed
Calendar states help users understand the real status of the workflow. A planned article is an approved idea that has not been drafted yet. A drafted article has generated content but still needs review. A scheduled article has been prepared for a publishing date. A published article is live or exported. A refreshed article has been updated after performance, audit, or GSC signals.
These states reduce ambiguity. Without states, a calendar can look full while nothing is actually ready. With states, the user can see where the bottleneck is: topic approval, article generation, image review, metadata, publishing integration, or post-publication refresh.
States also support reporting. Weekly reports can summarize how many articles were planned, drafted, scheduled, published, or refreshed. They can also show what is blocked, what usage remains, and which calendar items need a decision.
For daily SEO article schedules, states are especially useful because one blocked article can affect the next several days. If tomorrow's article is drafted but missing a featured image, the user can fix that specific step instead of reworking the whole calendar.
Review, edit, publish, or schedule articles
A useful AI blog content calendar should let users take action. Users should be able to review planned article ideas, edit titles or descriptions, approve or adjust drafts, use partial rewrites for focused improvements, regenerate featured images within limits, and choose whether to publish, export, schedule, or hold an article.
Review matters because AI content still needs human judgment. The user should confirm product facts, examples, claims, internal links, positioning, and any regulated or sensitive language before publication.
Publishing should respect the connected destination. For WordPress, that may mean drafts, scheduled posts, categories, tags, metadata, and featured images where supported. For GitHub or MDX sites, it may mean Markdown/MDX files, frontmatter, slugs, branches, pull requests, or commits where supported. For other CMS integrations, the destination should define the formatting and publishing action.
Trial users can connect integrations and publish/export 1 article. Paid users can use available publishing integrations for the active website. For the early-bird plan, one active publishing destination is the safest assumption unless the account setup safely supports more.
Featured images, translations, weekly reports, AI visibility checks, and integrations
The calendar connects to featured images because publishing workflows need more than text. Lymwave includes 1 featured image/article and up to 3 image regeneration attempts/article. The calendar should make image status visible so the user knows whether an article is ready to schedule.
Translations connect to the calendar after article creation. Trial users have no translations. Paid users have 30 translated article credits/month total and up to 5 configured target languages. The calendar should not automatically translate every article into every configured language unless credits are available and the user has enabled that workflow.
Weekly reports summarize the calendar in plain terms. They can show articles created, scheduled, published, refreshed, blocked, or waiting for approval; GSC-driven opportunities; audit or recrawl notes; AI visibility check status; translation credit usage; and partner citation preference status.
AI visibility checks are capped. Trial users get 1 limited scan total. Paid users get 1 capped AI visibility check/week. These checks can help users monitor selected prompts/platforms, but Lymwave does not guarantee AI citations, AI assistant mentions, rankings, backlinks, or traffic.
Integrations complete the workflow. The calendar can connect to Google Search Console for insights and to publishing destinations such as WordPress, GitHub, and supported CMS platforms. The goal is a practical content operating system: plan, generate, review, publish, report, and improve.
Frequently asked questions
What is a 30-day AI content calendar?
A 30-day AI content calendar is a month-long plan of article topics, dates, descriptions, workflow states, and publishing actions. Lymwave uses it to organize daily SEO/AEO/GEO article generation and publishing for one active website.
What can trial users see in the calendar?
Trial users can see scheduled article titles, target dates, topic or keyword context where available, and short descriptions. They cannot view all 30 full scheduled articles during the trial.
How many articles does the paid plan include?
The early-bird paid plan includes 30 premium long-form articles/month for one website and one user, designed around one article/day.
What are the calendar states?
Calendar states can include planned, drafted, scheduled, published, and refreshed. These states help users see where each article is in the workflow.
Can users edit calendar articles?
Yes. Users should be able to review article ideas, edit drafts, use capped partial rewrites, regenerate featured images within limits, and choose whether to publish, export, schedule, or hold content.
Does the calendar include translations?
Trial users have no translations. Paid users get 30 translated article credits/month total and can configure up to 5 target languages. Translation is credit-based, not unlimited.
Does Lymwave auto-publish during the trial?
No. Trial users can connect integrations and publish/export 1 article, but bulk generation and daily auto-publishing are locked during the trial.
Does a 30-day AI content calendar guarantee rankings or AI citations?
No. The calendar helps plan and execute content consistently, but Lymwave does not guarantee rankings, traffic, backlinks, AI citations, or AI assistant mentions.
Start your 7-day Lymwave trial
Start your 7-day card-required trial to preview a 30-day AI content calendar with titles and short descriptions, generate your first 3 premium articles, test featured images, use capped rewrites, connect integrations, and publish or export 1 article.
When you are ready for the full monthly content workflow, activate the EUR49/month early-bird plan to unlock 30 premium articles/month, one article/day, weekly reports, GSC and publishing integrations, 30 translation credits/month total, weekly AI visibility checks, and optional relevant partner citations from opted-in sites.
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