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AI Blog Automation for WordPress

Learn how Lymwave supports AI blog automation for WordPress with 30-day content planning, daily SEO/AEO/GEO articles, featured images, Google Search Console insights, weekly reports, AI visibility checks, and WordPress publishing workflows.

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Short answer

AI blog automation for WordPress is a workflow for planning, generating, reviewing, and publishing search-focused WordPress posts without moving every detail by hand. The useful version is not a cheap AI blog writer that sends unreviewed text straight to a site. It is a controlled content system with a calendar, article quality checks, featured images, metadata, WordPress publishing steps, Google Search Console insights, weekly reporting, and visibility monitoring.

Lymwave is built for that workflow. It helps WordPress site owners create a 30-day content plan, generate premium SEO/AEO/GEO articles, create featured images, connect GSC, publish or export articles, and review weekly reports. The paid early-bird plan includes 30 premium articles/month for 1 website, which supports a practical one-article-per-day rhythm.

The 7-day trial is smaller and card-required. It includes 3 premium articles, a 30-day plan preview with titles and short descriptions only, 1 featured image/article, up to 3 image regeneration attempts/article, no translations, GSC 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.

Who this is for

This page is for WordPress site owners, small business owners, SaaS teams, ecommerce operators, consultants, agencies managing a single active website subscription, and marketers who publish through WordPress but do not want to run the entire blog workflow manually.

It is especially useful when the WordPress site has a clear offer but inconsistent content coverage. The team may have ideas, customer questions, GSC data, service pages, product pages, or old blog posts, but no repeatable process for turning those inputs into useful articles.

Lymwave fits teams that want WordPress SEO content automation with clear limits. The early-bird plan is scoped to 1 website and 1 user seat. It includes 30 premium articles/month, featured images, capped rewrites, capped image retries, weekly reports, weekly capped audits/recrawls, GSC and publishing integrations, translation credits, and AI visibility checks.

It is not the right fit if the team wants unlimited clients, unlimited websites, or a broad agency suite in one subscription. Multi-client work can use separate subscriptions for now unless dedicated multi-site support is added later.

Why WordPress sites need consistent SEO/AEO/GEO content

WordPress is easy to publish with, but that does not make the content strategy automatic. Many WordPress sites have old posts, missing internal links, thin category coverage, inconsistent metadata, and gaps between what customers ask and what the blog answers.

Consistent SEO/AEO/GEO content helps a WordPress site explain its expertise. SEO covers search intent, metadata, internal links, and crawlable structure. AEO covers concise answer blocks, definitions, and FAQs. GEO covers entity-rich context that AI answer engines can interpret more easily.

For a WordPress business site, daily SEO articles can cover service questions, product education, comparisons, buying guides, integration topics, glossary entries, local explanations, or refreshes for older posts. The cadence matters because it keeps the library growing. The quality control matters because WordPress sites can accumulate weak content quickly.

Lymwave does not promise rankings, traffic, backlinks, or AI citations. It helps create a more consistent publishing workflow and gives the team weekly signals to review.

How Lymwave creates a 30-day content plan

Lymwave starts by turning content opportunities into a 30-day plan. Those opportunities may come from site context, Google Search Console queries, existing WordPress pages, content gaps, customer questions, and weekly audit findings.

The plan should answer practical questions: what article should be published, why it matters, what search intent it serves, which WordPress page or category it supports, and what the reader should do next.

During the trial, the 30-day plan is preview-only. Trial users can see scheduled titles and short descriptions, plus target dates or topic context where available. They cannot view all 30 full scheduled articles. This protects the full paid workflow while still showing the direction of the content strategy.

Paid users can turn the plan into production. The early-bird plan includes 30 premium articles/month for one website, designed around one article per day. Calendar states can include planned, drafted, scheduled, published, and refreshed depending on the article's progress.

Daily article publishing workflow

The daily workflow starts with a planned topic, then moves through brief, draft, polish, metadata, internal links, featured image, QA, and publishing/export.

The brief should define the reader, search intent, target answer, related entities, internal-link candidates, WordPress category or tag context when useful, and CTA. The draft should explain the topic clearly. The polish step should remove vague claims, sharpen examples, and align the article with the business offer.

Metadata should match the published page. Internal links should connect readers to helpful WordPress pages, such as service pages, product pages, comparison pages, existing blog posts, or relevant category hubs. The article should be reviewed before it becomes a draft or scheduled post.

Partial rewrites are capped. Trial users get 1 partial rewrite per article, capped at 500 words. Paid users get 3 partial rewrites per article, capped at 500 words each. These rewrites are for improving sections, not for unlimited full article regeneration.

WordPress integration and publishing workflow

Lymwave's WordPress workflow is designed to reduce copy-paste publishing work. Where configured and supported, the integration can help move an article into WordPress as a draft or scheduled post, attach or reference the featured image, preserve metadata, and support categories or tags.

The exact publishing behavior depends on the WordPress setup. WordPress.com and self-hosted WordPress sites may use different authentication paths. Some sites use custom fields, SEO plugins, editorial plugins, or theme-specific layouts. Lymwave should prepare the article package while keeping final review and destination settings visible.

Trial users can connect WordPress but are limited to 1 publish/export action. This lets them test the handoff without unlocking daily auto-publishing. Paid users can use WordPress publishing for the active website, with daily auto-publishing available under the paid workflow.

The early-bird plan is preferably limited to 1 active publishing destination unless the existing architecture safely supports more. That keeps the user experience simple: one website, one WordPress destination, one daily content rhythm.

Each Lymwave article includes 1 featured image. For WordPress, that matters because themes, archives, related-post widgets, social previews, and category pages often rely on featured images to make posts feel complete.

Both trial and paid plans include up to 3 image regeneration attempts per article. A user can reject an image that does not fit the topic, brand tone, or WordPress layout, then try again within the limit.

Image retry usage should be visible per article and enforced by the backend. The user should understand how many attempts remain and what happens when the limit is reached.

Featured images still need review. A WordPress operator should check whether the image fits the topic, whether the alt text is useful, whether the image works in the theme's crop ratio, and whether it makes sense in the post list.

GSC insights and content opportunities

Google Search Console can help WordPress sites choose better topics. It can show queries, impressions, clicks, average positions, and pages that are already earning search visibility.

Lymwave uses GSC connection and preview insights in the trial, then ongoing GSC-informed planning in paid workflows. Opportunity types can include low-CTR queries, rising impressions, ranking pages that need supporting content, content gaps, and refresh candidates.

For WordPress, those insights may point to a new blog post, a stronger category page, a refreshed older article, or a supporting page for an existing service or product. The important step is filtering opportunities through business relevance. Not every keyword deserves a post.

Weekly capped audits and recrawls help identify additional issues, such as missing metadata, outdated articles, weak internal links, or pages that need clearer answers.

Weekly audits, reports, and AI visibility checks

Lymwave's paid plan includes weekly capped audits/recrawls and weekly reports. A useful weekly report should summarize articles created, scheduled content, published posts, GSC insights, audit findings, AI visibility checks, translation usage, and optional partner citation status where available.

The report should be easy for a founder or WordPress site owner to scan. It should answer: what shipped, what is scheduled, what changed, and what needs attention next.

The trial includes 1 limited AI visibility scan. Paid users get 1 capped AI visibility check/week. A check should have defined bounds, such as prompts and platforms, so the user understands the limit and the next available scan date.

AI visibility checks are monitoring signals. Lymwave does not guarantee mentions in ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, or any other AI answer surface.

Translations and optional partner citations

The trial includes no translations. Paid users get 30 translated article credits/month total and can configure up to 5 target languages. One article translated into one language uses 1 credit, so 30 credits can translate all 30 articles into 1 language or 10 articles into 3 languages.

This is important for WordPress sites with multilingual ambitions. Lymwave uses translation credits, not unlimited translations, so users can plan localization without assuming every article is automatically translated into every configured language.

Optional partner citations are also scoped carefully. Lymwave uses "optional relevant partner citations from opted-in sites" because the feature should be relevance-filtered and consent-based. It should not be described as guaranteed backlinks, link schemes, ranking manipulation, or guaranteed AI citations.

Users should be able to opt in or out. If matching is not ready for a category or market, the product can store the preference and show that partner citation matching is coming soon or enabled when available.

Lymwave trial and EUR49 early-bird plan

The Lymwave trial runs for 7 days and requires a card. It includes 3 premium articles, 1 partial rewrite per article capped at 500 words, no translations, 1 featured image per article, up to 3 image regeneration attempts per article, content opportunities, a 30-day content plan preview with titles and short descriptions only, 1 capped site audit, GSC connection with preview insights, WordPress integration connection where configured, 1 publish/export action, and 1 limited AI visibility scan. Bulk generation and daily auto-publishing are locked during the trial.

The early-bird paid plan costs EUR49/month for a limited time. It includes 1 website, 1 user seat, 30 premium long-form articles/month, article length of approximately 1,500 to 2,500 words, 1 featured image/article, up to 3 image regeneration attempts/article, 3 partial rewrites/article capped at 500 words each, weekly capped audits/recrawls, weekly reports, GSC and WordPress publishing integration, 1 weekly AI visibility check, optional relevant partner citations from opted-in sites, 30 translated article credits/month total, and up to 5 configured target languages.

The offer is intentionally simple for WordPress operators: test the workflow with 3 premium articles, then activate daily publishing for one website when the system is ready.

Frequently asked questions

What is AI blog automation for WordPress?

AI blog automation for WordPress is a workflow for planning, generating, reviewing, and publishing search-focused WordPress posts with less manual coordination. Lymwave adds a 30-day calendar, premium articles, featured images, GSC insights, publishing integration, weekly reports, and AI visibility checks.

Can Lymwave publish to WordPress?

Yes. Lymwave supports WordPress publishing workflows where configured. Depending on the setup, this can include drafts, scheduled posts, featured images, metadata, and categories or tags.

Does the trial include full WordPress auto-publishing?

No. Trial users can connect WordPress and use 1 publish/export action, but daily auto-publishing and bulk generation are locked during the trial.

Does Lymwave include daily SEO articles for WordPress?

Yes. The paid early-bird plan includes 30 premium long-form SEO/AEO/GEO articles/month for one website, designed around one high-quality article per day.

Yes. Each trial and paid article includes 1 featured image, with up to 3 image regeneration attempts per article.

Does Lymwave include translations?

Trial users get no translations. Paid users get 30 translated article credits/month total and can configure up to 5 target languages.

No. Lymwave helps WordPress sites publish useful, structured content and monitor visibility signals, but it does not guarantee rankings, traffic, backlinks, or AI citations.

Is Lymwave just an AI blog writer for WordPress?

No. Lymwave can generate AI-assisted articles, but it is positioned as a daily SEO/AEO/GEO content growth system with planning, publishing workflow, featured images, reports, GSC insights, and usage limits.

Start your 7-day Lymwave trial

Start your 7-day Lymwave trial if your WordPress site needs a more consistent way to plan, generate, review, and publish useful SEO/AEO/GEO articles. You can generate your first 3 premium articles, preview a 30-day calendar with titles and descriptions, create featured images, connect GSC, connect WordPress where configured, run a limited AI visibility scan, and publish or export 1 article.

Use Lymwave when you want a focused WordPress content workflow for one website: 30 premium articles/month on paid, one article per day, featured images, capped rewrites, 30 translation credits/month, weekly reports, GSC insights, WordPress publishing integration, and optional relevant partner citations from opted-in sites.

Start your 7-day Lymwave trial

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