These samples are drafts and scaffolding the software produces. A human on your team reviews, finishes and ships them — nothing is auto-published to your accounts.
Content brief
The Complete Guide to Getting Licensed
🎯 getting licensed📣 Blog📅 2026-07-11From the site's live “Getting Licensed” section
Outline
- Direct answer (40–60 words) — open with the one-sentence answer so AI answer engines can quote it verbatim
- Why this matters for repeater business readers
- The specifics — 3–5 scannable H2 subsections a reader can jump between
- A plain-English FAQ (3–4 real questions) — answer engines lift these directly
- Call to action + built-in lead capture
Key points
- Anchor to the homepage's live “Getting Licensed” section and cross-link it — the homepage already carries 14 internal links to weave from.
- Primary keyword “getting licensed” goes in the H1, the URL slug and the first sentence.
- Close a real gap while you publish — XML sitemap depth: Publish a deep /sitemap.xml (50+ real URLs) so crawlers find every page.
- Playbook technique applied: Move agents from chat to autonomous action
Call to action
Invite readers to join the Repeater newsletter for the next guide — build the capture into the piece itself (separate assistants that help from agents that act; automate the act path).
Title tag rewrite
Now
Repeater — Ham Radio, Amateur Radio & Repeater Directory
Recommended
Ham Radio , Tuned In | Repeater
Current title is 56 chars. This leads with the primary phrase and stays inside Google's ~60-char cutoff.
Copy-paste
<title>Ham Radio , Tuned In | Repeater</title>
Meta description rewrite
Now
Ham radio repeater directory, amateur radio resources, getting your license, equipment guides, and the worldwide ham radio community.
Recommended
Ham Radio , Tuned In — Repeater. What to know, where to start, and how to choose the right repeater business. See the guide.
Current description is 133 chars. Target 150–160 with the phrase, a benefit and a soft CTA.
Copy-paste
<meta name="description" content="Ham Radio , Tuned In — Repeater. What to know, where to start, and how to choose the right repeater business. See the guide.">
Social draft · LinkedIn
New from Repeater: “Getting Licensed”. A plain-English read for anyone weighing repeater business — the criteria that actually matter, and the questions worth asking first. Full guide linked below.
Ties to: Getting Licensed
Ready to ship these to repeater.org?
You approve each one — then the department publishes it to your live site the way that fits you: copy‑paste, we host it, or a platform connector. Nothing ships without your yes.
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