Writes structured long-form blog posts with TL;DR block, definition sentence, comparison table, and 5-question FAQ for SEO ranking and AEO citation. Use for articles, guides, or content needing AI extraction.
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Writes structured long-form blog posts (800–3000 words) that satisfy both SEO ranking signals and AEO citation requirements. Every post includes a TL;DR direct-answer block, a definition sentence, structured H2/H3 hierarchy, a comparison table where relevant, and exactly 5 FAQ entries written for AI extraction.
Part of the SEO-AEO Engine.
Write a 2–3 sentence direct answer to the article's core question. Place it immediately after the H1 in a blockquote. This is the first block AI engines attempt to extract.
Set H1, H2s (4–6), and H3s before writing any body content. The first H2 must be a "What Is" section with a clean definition sentence as its opening line.
Follow the section order: What Is → Why It Matters → How It Works (with H3 sub-concepts) → Practical Steps → Common Mistakes → FAQ → Conclusion.
Use long-tail and secondary keywords as questions. Each answer must be under 50 words and self-contained — readable without any surrounding context.
Verify TL;DR presence, definition sentence, FAQ count, keyword placement, and heading structure before outputting.
How to Manage a Remote Engineering Team
TL;DR: Managing a remote engineering team requires async communication tools, clear documentation standards, and timezone-aware sprint planning. Teams that nail these three areas ship consistently regardless of where members are located.
Q: What is the biggest challenge of remote engineering teams? A: Async communication. Without shared hours, decisions slow down and context gets lost. Teams that document decisions in writing and use structured standup tools close this gap fastest. Q: How do you run a daily standup with a remote team? A: Use async video or text standups posted at the start of each member's day. Tools like Loom or Slack threads work well. Avoid live calls across more than 2 timezones.
Problem: TL;DR block is too vague to be extracted as a direct answer Solution: The TL;DR must answer the article's core question in 2–3 sentences. If it doesn't answer a specific question, rewrite it.
Problem: FAQ answers reference "as mentioned above" or other context Solution: Every FAQ answer must stand completely alone — no references to other parts of the article.
@seo-aeo-content-cluster — provides the topic and keyword for this article@seo-aeo-content-quality-auditor — audits the completed post for SEO and AEO signals@seo-aeo-internal-linking — maps links between this post and related pages