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How I Built a 166-Post Trilingual Blog Using AI (Full Stack Revealed)

I publish 24 articles per week across 3 languages. I don't have a writing team. I don't use agency writers. It's just me and an AI-assisted workflow I built over the past year.

This is the full stack — every tool, every process, every lesson. No fluff.

The Numbers (So You Know This Is Real)

  • 166 posts published across English, Simplified Chinese, and Traditional Chinese
  • 414,000+ Google Search Console impressions
  • 3 live sites running on the same automation engine
  • 1 person managing everything
  • Content cost: pennies per article in AI API tokens

I'm not saying this to impress you. I'm saying it because most people think you need a team to scale content. You don't. You need a system.

The Stack: Every Tool I Use

Layer Tool What It Does Cost
AI Engine DeepSeek V4 Pro (NVIDIA) Generates first drafts in minutes ~$0.50/article
Quality Boost Claude Sonnet 4.6 Deep editing, fact-checking, tone refinement ~$0.30/article
Image Source Pexels API Auto-fetches royalty-free featured images Free
CMS WordPress + Kadence Publishing, SEO, multilingual management ~$15/month hosting
Multilingual Polylang Pro + OpenCC Language linking + script conversion (ZH→TW) ~$100/year
SEO Yoast SEO Premium On-page optimization, schema, XML sitemaps ~$100/year
Email Brevo Welcome sequences, newsletters, automation Free (300 emails/day)
Affiliate Links Pretty Links URL cloaking, click tracking, link management Free

The Workflow: From Topic to Published in 4 Steps

Step 1: Topic Selection & Keyword Research (10 minutes)

I don't guess what to write. I look at:

  • Google Search Console: What queries am I ranking for at positions 5-15? These are low-hanging fruit — a few tweaks and they hit page one.
  • Competitor gaps: What are my top 3 competitors ranking for that I haven't covered?
  • Commercial intent: Does this keyword suggest someone ready to buy? Terms like “best,” “vs,” “review,” and “cost” signal purchase intent.

For each topic, I identify: primary keyword, 3-5 secondary keywords, target audience, and the article type (review, comparison, tutorial, listicle).

Step 2: AI Drafting (5-10 minutes)

This is where most people go wrong. They write “write a blog post about [topic]” and get garbage.

I use structured prompts from a tested library of 55 prompt templates. Each prompt specifies:

  • The AI's role and expertise level
  • Target audience and their pain points
  • Exact article structure (H2s, word count per section)
  • SEO requirements (keyword placement, semantic keywords)
  • CTA placement and type

The output is a 1,500-2,500 word draft with proper structure. It's not publish-ready — that's step 3.

Step 3: Human Review & Editing (15-20 minutes)

AI writes the skeleton. I add the soul. Here's my editing checklist:

  • Fact-check: AI hallucinates. I verify every stat, price, and claim.
  • Voice injection: AI sounds generic. I add personal anecdotes, opinions, and specific examples from my own experience.
  • Link placement: Internal links to related posts. Product links where they naturally fit.
  • Readability pass: Shorten paragraphs. Break up walls of text. Add bold for skimmers.
  • CTA check: Does this article move the reader to do something? Download a checklist? Click a product link? Read a related post?

This step is non-negotiable. AI without human editing = content nobody wants to read.

Step 4: Publishing & Distribution (10 minutes)

  • Upload to WordPress, set featured image from Pexels
  • Yoast SEO meta description + focus keyword
  • Internal links from 2-3 existing posts
  • Submit URL to Google Search Console
  • Schedule social posts (LinkedIn, Pinterest)

Total time per article: 40-50 minutes. A skilled human writer would need 3-6 hours for the same output.

The Multilingual Layer

Here's something most people don't understand: you can't just translate content and call it done.

Each language version of my site targets a completely different audience:

  • English: Global SaaS founders, content managers, affiliate marketers. Articles about AI tools, content strategy, scaling without a team.
  • Simplified Chinese: Cross-border ecommerce sellers, Chinese brands going global. Articles about independent store SEO, English content for Chinese sellers, overseas marketing tools.
  • Traditional Chinese: Taiwanese bloggers, digital marketers. Articles about content monetization, passive income through blogging, localization strategies.

Same topic, three different articles. Different keywords, different product recommendations, different CTAs.

My workflow: DeepSeek writes the English original → I review and publish → DeepSeek localizes to Simplified Chinese (not translates — adapts examples, keywords, cultural references) → I review → OpenCC converts to Traditional Chinese → DeepSeek reviews Taiwan-specific terminology.

What This System Doesn't Do

Let me be honest about the limitations:

  • It doesn't guarantee rankings. SEO still takes time, backlinks, and domain authority. The system handles content production, not link building.
  • It doesn't replace strategy. You still need to know your audience, choose the right keywords, and understand what converts.
  • It doesn't write like a Pulitzer winner. AI content is workmanlike. Good enough to rank and convert. Not literary art.

What it does: removes the bottleneck. Content production is no longer the thing holding you back.

Want the exact prompts and templates I use?

I packaged all 55 prompts, the complete SEO checklist, and 20 email templates into the AI Content Automation Playbook. It's the exact system described in this post. Get it here for $27 →

The Real Lesson

When I started this site, I published one article per week. It barely moved the needle.

The difference between one article a week and 24 is not “working harder.” It's having a system that makes volume possible without sacrificing quality.

Most content creators are stuck at 1-2 articles per week because the writing process itself takes too long. AI doesn't write better than humans — but it writes faster. And in content marketing, speed compounds.

If you're building a content site, stop asking “how can I write faster?” Start asking “what parts of this process can I systematize?”

That's the whole game.

Don't want to build the system yourself?

I write SEO content for SaaS companies, ecommerce brands, and content teams — blog posts, product descriptions, email sequences. See my content services →

First published June 2026. Updated as my stack evolves.

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