For writers who analyse brands for clients, and businesses that want articles referencing their actual products and services — not a generic version of their industry.
$9.99 CAD per article. No subscription. Preview the opening free before you pay.
We tested the preview on Originality.ai, ZeroGPT, and GPTZero. It came back human every time.
The writing system was built to avoid every pattern those tools flag. The more brand detail you put in, the harder it is to detect — because specific details about a real business don't look like generated content.
Generic output happens when the tool knows nothing about the brand. Each of these is a direct fix for that.
01
It reads the brand's public pages first
BrandDraft reads the website — products, services, how the brand explains what it does, the exact names they use. Every other tool starts from a prompt. This one starts from the business.
02
What the website doesn't say — you add it
The brand notes field takes anything: paste the full text from a product page, drop in notes from a client call, add spelling preferences or restrictions. The more you put in, the less it reads like AI wrote it.
03
The output references actual products and services
Not "our range of solutions." The real names. The specific offerings. The terminology the brand actually uses. If it reads like the brand wrote it, that's because the article was built from their own pages.
04
Yes, you could use ChatGPT. Here's the difference.
Any AI can write an article. But this system was built by a writer who'd published 3,000 of them before writing assistants existed — which means every rule came from real client work, not a prompt. The patterns AI detectors flag were ruled out because they'd already failed in practice. That's not something you can replicate by asking ChatGPT nicely.
Industries covered
B2B and B2C. Six sectors.
If the website has enough pages to read, there's enough to write from.
💻 Technology & SoftwareSaaS, platforms, telecom, digital tools
📋 Professional & Business ServicesAgencies, consulting, strategy firms
🌿 Consumer & LifestyleWellness, education, service brands
How it works
Five steps. One publish-ready article.
From blank form to full article with SEO fields in under five minutes.
1
Paste the website URL
BrandDraft reads the public pages — products, services, how the brand talks about what it does — and builds from that before writing anything.
2
Add the title and pick a keyword
Type your article title and a primary keyword. Hit "Suggest keywords" to pull terms from the site itself — language that already fits how the brand talks, not a generic topic list.
Keywords pulled from the brand's own pages
3
Add brand notes — what the website doesn't say
Paste product page copy, drop in notes from a client call, add spelling preferences or topics to avoid. Write "Canadian spelling" and the article uses it. Write "Canadian sources only" and external links pull from Canadian publications. The more you add, the more specific the output.
The field that does more work than it looks like
4
Read the opening — then decide
You see the first few paragraphs before paying. Walk away if they don't land. Unlock the full article when they do — SEO fields labelled exactly as Wix and WordPress show them, ready to paste and publish.
5
Check the links before you publish
Every internal link, external source, statistic, and product name is listed at the end of the article. One pass through that list is all it takes — everything else is ready to go.
The only part that needs a human eye
What's included
Not just the article.
Every $9.99 comes with the SEO work already done.
📄
Full article, 1,000–2,000 words
References your actual products and services by name. Keywords placed where a real writer would put them.
🔍
SEO fields, ready to paste
Meta title, meta description, and URL slug — keyword in each, labelled exactly as Wix and WordPress show them.
✂️
Two snippet formats
One for LinkedIn or email, one shorter for social — written from the article, not rephrased from the meta.
🔗
Verify before publishing list
Every link, statistic, product name, and external source listed at the end. Check them before you publish — that's all that needs a human eye.
Early feedback
From people who've used it.
★★★★★
"First draft I didn't have to gut completely. It referenced the client's actual product line — not a generic version of it."
M
Freelance Content Writer
B2B Tech
★★★★★
"The keyword suggestions matched what we were targeting. Saved me 20 minutes per article on research alone."
S
Content Strategist
Agency Owner
★★★★★
"I pasted the product page copy into brand notes and it stopped sounding generic immediately. That field is doing more work than it looks like."
R
Marketing Manager
Professional Services
Pricing
One price. No surprises.
No subscription. No seat limits. Pay when you need an article — after you've seen the opening.
Pay per article
$9.99
CAD per article
You see the opening paragraphs free. Pay only if you want the rest.
Full article, 1,000–2,000 words — references your actual products and services
Brand notes field — paste product copy, client notes, or anything the site doesn't cover
Keywords pulled from the brand's own pages — suggested or your own
Meta title, description, and URL slug with keyword placed
1–3 internal links to your existing pages, products, or blog posts
1–2 external links to authority sources in your industry
Two snippet formats for social and email
Verify before publishing list — links, stats, product names, sources
No account needed. Pay once, download immediately.
FAQ
Common questions.
That depends on what you put in. BrandDraft reads the brand's public pages first — products, services, how they explain what they do — so it's already working from real content before it writes a word. The brand notes field is where it gets specific: paste text from a product page or notes from a client call, and the output references those exact details. One user described it this way: "I pasted the product page copy into brand notes and it stopped sounding generic immediately." The more you add, the less you'll need to fix.
Most AI tools write from a blank slate. BrandDraft reads the brand's public pages first — products, services, how they explain what they do — then writes from that. The output references specific product names, service details, and the terminology the brand actually uses. Add brand notes with anything the website doesn't cover, and the article reflects the business, not a generic version of the industry.
From the brand's own pages. Suggestions are pulled from the website content and article title you enter — so they fit how the brand already talks, not just the topic in general. Use them as-is or swap in your own.
Anything the website doesn't already say. Paste text directly from a product page or service description. Add notes from a client call — pricing details, positioning, a feature the site glosses over. Include restrictions like UK English spelling, topics to avoid, or a note that the article should be written in first person with a named author. The more specific, the better the output.
The article comes with a meta title, meta description, URL slug, 1–3 internal links to your existing pages, and 1–2 external links to authority sources in your industry — keyword placed in each SEO field, labelled exactly as Wix and WordPress show them. Paste and publish.
Every internal link, external source, statistic, and product name is listed at the end of the article — nothing is buried in the copy. Click through the links before publishing; external sources occasionally move or update their URLs, which isn't common but does happen. The Google check is optional and purely for your own peace of mind. If a fact in the article makes you want to verify it, copy the sentence, paste it into Google, and add "is this true" before it. That's the whole process.
Yes. The writing system covers technology, healthcare, manufacturing, finance, professional services, and consumer lifestyle brands.
No. You read the opening before you paid. If those paragraphs were good enough to buy, the article is good enough to use.
The first few paragraphs are free.
Paste a URL, pick a keyword, add your brand detail. Read the opening.
$9.99 CAD to unlock the full article. No account needed.