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Tips for Writing Your Description and Keywords with the Blog AI Writing Assistant
Tips for Writing Your Description and Keywords with the Blog AI Writing Assistant
Lauren avatar
Written by Lauren
Updated over a week ago

The Blog AI Writing Assistant is here to help you quickly and effectively create Blog Post text that can be customized to fit your voice and brand and improve your SEO.

To learn how to use the Writing Assistant, check out our article here.

Please Note: We recommend reviewing the generated text as there may be inaccuracies, such as weather, time of day, etc. There may also be bracketed text such as [Your Name] where you should add text manually.

Description

When composing your description, you do not need to write anything stylized or long, but it’s important to list the specific facts so the Assistant can be more true to the event and your individual blogs can be more unique to each other.

Here are some things to consider adding when writing your description:

  • Location: Specific names, ecoregions (forest, beach, downtown) indoors, outdoors, etc.

  • Time of day/year: Morning, noon, dusk, seasons, etc.

  • Senses: What did you see? Hear? Feel? Taste? Touch? Was your sense of time long or short?

  • Emotions: How did you and your clients feel?

  • Client/event information: Names, type of client (couple, family, studio portrait), type of event (concert, sporting event, conference, mini sessions)

  • Timeline of events: What happened throughout the day?

  • Specific moments: Unique, funny, strong, heartfelt memories. What surprised you?

Keywords

For your brand keywords, add your style of photography, the quality of light in your images, feelings you want your images to evoke or clients to feel, and tone you would use to describe your clients or subject matter.

Consider these different options for your brand keywords:

  • Style: Colorful, moody, cinematic, geometric, candid, timeless, editorial, vintage, etc.

  • Light: Ethereal, dark, contrasting, bright, airy, etc.

  • Feelings: Romantic, spontaneous, professional, strong, fast, etc.

  • Tone: Adventurous, quirky, professional, polished, subtle, loud, etc.

Mood

The Mood is how you’d like the story to be stylized in terms of word choice and semantics. It is your tone of voice as a photographer. There are a few different moods to choose from, and below are a few examples of how Mood will affect your prompts.

Simple: This will give the most clear wording, with short sentences.

Casual: This will keep the tone light and friendly as if you were talking with someone you know.

Storyteller: This will tell your tale through questions, stories, and different literary devices.

Narrative: This will keep your post more photographer-focused on your thought process, challenges, and favorite moments.

Reflection: This will dive into a more introspective look and the emotion behind the experience.

Wedding Example

Description: “Claire and Jordan were married at sunset on the Oregon coast. Their wedding was completely handmade from the bouquet to the cake to Claire's dress.”

Keywords: “intimate, adventurous, natural, candid, soft”

Simple

Casual

Storyteller

Narrative

Reflection

Family Example

Description: “The Parker family and I met at the aquarium. Their four kids ran around jellyfish and sat on the parents shoulders. We finished the photos with ice cream from an ice cream truck on the boardwalk by the ocean."

Keywords: “sunny, bold, spontaneous, carefree”

Simple

Casual

Storyteller

Narrative

Reflection

Studio Portrait Example

Description: “Micah sat in my studio for actor portraits. We started with some simple headshots, then moved onto creative photos with light reflection and candlelight to create completely different looks.”

Keywords: “cinematic, powerful, moody, contrasted”

Simple

Casual

Storyteller

Narrative

Reflection

Edit and Regenerate Blog Post

After generating your initial Blog Post, you may want to either edit the generated text manually, generate again using your same description and keywords for a slightly different result, or edit your description and keywords and then re-generate the text.

Please Note: There is not an undo button, so you won’t be able to go back to previously generated text.

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