About Blog Introduction Generator
Blog Introduction Generator writes the first 2–3 paragraphs that hook readers and tee up the rest of the article. Give it the topic, target keyword, and audience pain point, and it returns intros that match the article's tone and pull the reader past the first scroll.
Who this tool is for
- Bloggers who stall at the blank page and need a running start
- SEO writers who have an outline ready but want a stronger opening than the usual fluff
- Editorial teams ensuring every intro hits brand-voice standards
- Ghostwriters drafting on tight turnarounds for multiple clients
- Newsletter writers using the first 2 paragraphs as both intro and preview snippet
Real use cases
- Open a how-to article with a relatable problem statement that names the reader's frustration
- Hook a listicle with a surprising stat or contrarian claim
- Lead a comparison post with a decision-pressure scenario ("you have 24 hours to pick a CRM…")
- Open a thought-leadership piece with a personal anecdote in the first 2 sentences
- Rewrite a flat intro on an existing post to lift dwell time and reduce bounce
How to use Blog Introduction Generator
- Enter the article title or H1 so the intro previews exactly what the post delivers
- Describe the reader's pain or trigger — what made them search this topic today
- Specify the tone (warm / direct / academic / playful) and the article length so the intro's pace matches
- Generate 2–3 variants and pick the one with the strongest hook in the first sentence
- Edit in your own voice — swap a generic anecdote for a real one to feel human
Tips for better results
- The first sentence does 80% of the work — ban "In today's fast-paced world" and similar AI cliches
- Drop the keyword in the first 100 words but make it feel natural — Google's NLP penalizes awkward stuffing
- Tell the reader what they'll get and what they won't — setting expectations reduces bounce
- Shorter intros (under 120 words) usually beat long-winded ones for blog dwell time — get to the value fast
Frequently asked questions
How long should a blog intro be?
80–150 words is the sweet spot for most blog formats. Long-form essays and narrative journalism can go longer; how-to posts should keep it tight so the reader hits the meat quickly.
Should I include the target keyword in the intro?
Yes — ideally in the first 100 words. It helps Google confirm topical relevance and signals to the reader they're on the right page. Don't force it; if it doesn't fit naturally, use a synonym.
Does it write the conclusion too?
No — that's the Blog Conclusion Generator. Use both together for a complete bookend on the article.