20+ Content Packages

Every Content Package
Your Business Needs

From quick blog posts to enterprise white papers, social media bundles to monthly subscriptions — find the perfect content solution for your goals.

Fast Delivery
8 Deliverables Per Article
Image Prompts Included
Bulk Discounts

Every Article Includes 8 Deliverables

One order, complete content ecosystem

Long-Form Article

Content Outline

Meta Description

5 Social Posts

Email Newsletter

LinkedIn Version

3 Tweet Threads

Image Prompts

Choose Your Content Package

Specialized solutions tailored to your niche

25 packages across 16 categories. Find exactly what you need.

What's Included in Each Package

Every package includes a comprehensive content bundle with multiple deliverables, all formatted in a single, easy-to-use Markdown file:

+ Free Content Calendar — auto-schedule & track all deliverables

Starter Article

See order page
  • 1 long-form article (500 words)
  • 1 content outline
  • 1 meta description
  • 5 social media posts
  • 1 email newsletter version
  • 1 LinkedIn article adaptation
  • 3 tweet threads
  • Image prompts for every deliverable (3 variations for hero images)
Delivered within 15 minutes
MOST POPULAR

Professional Article

See order page
  • 1 long-form article (1,000 words)
  • 1 content outline
  • 1 meta description
  • 5 social media posts
  • 1 email newsletter version
  • 1 LinkedIn article adaptation
  • 3 tweet threads
  • Image prompts for every deliverable (3 variations for hero images)
Delivered within 30 minutes

Premium Long-Form

See order page
  • 1 long-form article (2,000 words)
  • 1 content outline
  • 1 meta description
  • 5 social media posts
  • 1 email newsletter version
  • 1 LinkedIn article adaptation
  • 3 tweet threads
  • Image prompts for every deliverable (3 variations for hero images)
Delivered within 1 hour

Enterprise Content

See order page
  • 1 long-form article (3,000 words)
  • 1 content outline
  • 1 meta description
  • 5 social media posts
  • 1 email newsletter version
  • 1 LinkedIn article adaptation
  • 3 tweet threads
  • Image prompts for every deliverable (3 variations for hero images)
Delivered within 2 hours

Monthly Subscriptions

Monthly Content Subscription

Standard content articles for consistent publishing

10 standard articles/month (1,000 words each)
Full 8-deliverable suite per article
Image prompts for every deliverable (3 variations for hero images)
On-demand delivery
Priority support

Does not include news-curated cluster articles. See the order page for current cluster options.

ALL-IN-ONE — CLUSTERS + NEWS CURATION

Cluster Intelligence + News Curation

The complete content cluster system with multi-layer news curation — automated scheduling, impression-triggered spoke unlocking, news-driven content, and unified performance dashboard.

10 curated news articles per month
Multi-layer news aggregation (editorial, press wire, regulatory)
Deduplication across all sources
5 related headlines per article for content planning
Image prompts for every deliverable (3 variations for hero images)
Priority news monitoring & monthly trend analysis
Free Content Calendar with auto-scheduling
Drag-drop calendar rescheduling & email reminders
Automated spoke unlock engine
Forward link push notifications
Weekly performance digest
WordPress Plugin license included
Priority support
Clusters + News Curation — All-in-One

News-Driven Content Clusters, Fully Automated

Cluster Intelligence + News Curation gives you multi-layer news aggregation, automated spoke unlocking, drag-drop scheduling, and a weekly digest.

10 curated articles/month
3-layer news aggregation
Auto-scheduled content calendar
Weekly performance digest
SEO Intelligence Built In

Every package includes Google Keyword Planner data + E‑E‑A‑T integration

Real search volume, competition metrics, and author authority signals — woven into every brief at no extra cost.

Google Keyword Planner Data

Live search volume, competition level, CPC benchmarks, and 12-month trends — pulled from Google every time you submit a brief. Your content targets real demand, not stale keyword lists.

How it works

E‑E‑A‑T Author Profiles

Build an author profile with credentials, experience, publications, and preferred citation domains. Paxelo scores it 0–100 and injects that proof into every article — so Google sees authority, not anonymity.

Setup guide
New: Hero images & visuals — done for you

Image prompts for every deliverable

Every brief now ships with ready-to-use image prompts — paste them straight into Ideogram (or any major AI image tool) to generate hero images, social visuals, and email banners that match your article.

3 hero variations

Three distinct prompt directions for your blog hero image — pick the one that fits your brand or generate all three and A/B test.

Per-channel prompts

Dedicated prompts for LinkedIn covers, email banners, Facebook posts, X posts, and inline tweet-thread images — sized for each platform.

Your style, your call

Pick a visual style preference — photo, illustration, 3D render, flat vector, minimalist, or let Paxelo decide based on the article's topic and tone.

How to use them

We recommend Ideogram — it's free, generates strong typography, and consistently follows the prompt. Compatible with DALL·E, Midjourney, Adobe Firefly, and Stable Diffusion.

  1. 1Open the deliverable email or dashboard — copy the image prompt block.
  2. 2Search "ideogram" in your browser, sign in (free Google account), then paste the prompt.
  3. 3Set the aspect ratio listed in the prompt (16:9 for blog hero, 1.91:1 for LinkedIn covers, 1:1 for social).
  4. 4Generate, download, and use it everywhere — commercially safe on Ideogram's paid plans, or check the licence for the tier you're on.

Save 10% with WordPress Plugin

The Paxelo WordPress plugin is now available in the WordPress Plugin Directory — your first 5 articles cost nothing. Upgrade to a $49/year license for unlimited single and bundled package transfers, plus a 10% loyalty bonus on every order.

5 free articles → $49/year unlimited — or included with an active subscription.

Frequently Asked Questions

Content Packages FAQ

Everything you need to know about our content packages and how they help your business grow.

The Content Packages page is where you choose the level of content depth you want (by word count) and get a full "content ecosystem" built around that article—so you're not buying just a blog post, you're buying the pieces that help it perform in search and across your marketing channels.
A long-form article is the core asset, but performance usually comes from structure + search snippet + distribution. That's why each package includes supporting deliverables that help you: • Publish with a clean SEO structure • Improve click-through from Google • Repurpose the idea across social, email, LinkedIn, and X (Twitter) • Stay consistent without rewriting everything from scratch
The packages are grouped by the length of the long-form article you receive: • 500-word article package • 1,000-word article package • 2,000-word article package • 3,000-word article package • Subscription package (built for consistent monthly publishing and multi-channel repurposing) Each non-subscription package includes one long-form article at that word count plus the same set of repurposing assets.
Each package group includes: • 1 long-form article (500, 1,000, 2,000, or 3,000 words) • 1 content outline • 1 meta description • 1 social media post • 1 email newsletter version • 1 LinkedIn article adaptation • 3 X (Twitter) thread drafts If you're trying to scale content without scaling your workload, this is the point: one topic becomes multiple ready-to-use outputs.
The long-form article is your main website asset: the piece intended to rank in search and build authority with your audience. Why word count matters: • 500 words: quick coverage, lighter competition topics, simple explanations, early-stage content • 1,000 words: strong "standard" depth—enough room to educate and rank for many practical keywords • 2,000 words: more complete coverage, stronger internal linking opportunities, better for competitive topics • 3,000 words: "pillar" content—deep guides that can attract backlinks, rank for more related queries, and become a cornerstone page Longer isn't automatically better—but depth tends to win when the topic is competitive and the search intent requires a thorough answer.
The outline is the strategic blueprint for the article—your structure before the full writing. Why it matters: • Helps ensure the article is logically organized (good for readers) • Encourages SEO-friendly structure (clear sections, scannability) • Makes it easier to review/approve direction before publishing or repurposing If you've ever read a blog post that felt rambling or repetitive, that's usually an outline problem.
A meta description is the snippet of text that often appears under your page title in Google search results. Why it matters: • It's your "ad copy" in the search results • A strong meta description can improve click-through rate (CTR) • Better CTR can indirectly support performance because it signals relevance to searchers Even if you rank, you still need the click.
This is a short, ready-to-post social update that turns the article into a shareable message. Why it matters: • Most people won't discover you through Google alone • Social distribution helps you get early traffic and engagement • It's a fast way to promote the article without writing new content from scratch It's the "signal boost" for your main asset.
This is your article adapted for email—more conversational and formatted for inbox reading. Why it matters: • Email remains one of the highest-intent channels (people opted in) • It brings readers back to your site (and back into your business) • It helps you build repeat attention, not just one-time traffic If you're publishing and not emailing, you're leaving leverage on the table.
This is your content rewritten and formatted for LinkedIn's style and audience expectations. Why it matters: • LinkedIn rewards consistent, native-feeling content • A LinkedIn adaptation is not just "copy/paste the blog" • It positions you (or your brand) as credible and helpful in a professional context If you sell B2B, LinkedIn can be a straight line to decision-makers—without paid ads.
These are three thread-style versions pulled from the long-form piece, usually organized as: • A hook + step-by-step value • A list of key takeaways • A "myths vs truths" or "common mistakes" style angle Why it matters: • Threads outperform single posts in many niches • You can schedule them across days to keep the topic alive • You get multiple "angles" to test what resonates One article becomes multiple distribution shots—without rewriting it all yourself.
If you're starting from zero (no blog, no rhythm), the 500-word or 1,000-word package can be the easiest way to build momentum. Consistency beats perfection early on.
If your primary goal is search performance, the 1,000–3,000 word tiers tend to give you more room to: • Answer the topic completely • Include supportive subtopics naturally • Build internal linking and topical authority For competitive niches, 2,000 or 3,000 words are often a better fit.
A 2,000-word article is typically a thorough guide. A 3,000-word article is typically a thorough guide plus: • More examples • More sub-sections • More "related questions" covered (which can help capture more search variations) If you want a "pillar page" you can keep referencing for months, 3,000 words is built for that.
The subscription package is designed for consistent publishing and scaling output month after month. It includes: • 10 long-form articles per month • Outlines • Meta descriptions • Repurposing for social media • Email versions • LinkedIn adaptations • X (Twitter) content • On-demand delivery • Priority support • White-label integration This is built for agencies, serious brands, and anyone pursuing consistent content velocity.
Because it shifts content from being an occasional project to a system. In marketing terms, it's the difference between: "We post when we have time" and "We publish consistently, distribute everywhere, and build compounding traffic" That compounding effect is where long-term SEO and audience growth come from.
It's best for: • Agencies managing multiple clients • E-commerce brands that need consistent product/category content • SaaS and tech companies building topical authority • Founders who want marketing consistency without hiring a full team
They support SEO in different ways: • Long-form article: relevance + depth (ranking potential) • Outline: better structure (readability, topical completeness) • Meta description: better CTR (more clicks when you show up) • Social/email/LinkedIn/X: distribution (early traffic, engagement signals, potential links) SEO isn't "publish and pray." It's publish + structure + promotion.
Search engines change over time, but the practical truth is: meta descriptions strongly influence clicks, and clicks influence outcomes. Even if it's not a direct ranking lever, it's a direct traffic lever.
Sometimes, yes—especially in low-competition topics. But usually the winners are consistent publishers who build clusters (multiple related posts) and distribute them. That's why the subscription and the repurposing assets matter: they help you show up more often and get more mileage per topic.
That's the intent: deliver content that's clean and ready to publish. Many users will still add: • A personal story or example • A specific CTA (book a call, buy now, etc.) • Links to their products/services But you should not have to "rewrite from scratch" to use it.
Yes—that's one of the major use cases, especially with the push toward a professional, white-label experience. The idea is that you can deliver content to a client without it reading like an AI chat.
It means the content is designed to be client-ready—professional output without "AI assistant chatter" like "Here is your article…" so it can be used under your brand (or your client's brand) cleanly.
Tone sets the writing style across all seven deliverables. You can choose from five options: • Conversational — warm and direct, like a knowledgeable colleague (this is the default) • Authoritative — confident expert voice, no hedging • Empathetic — understands frustration before offering solutions • Educational — step-by-step, plain language • Direct — short sentences, no preamble Tone works alongside Brand Voice: Brand Voice provides your company-specific language and messaging, while Tone controls the stylistic register. You might use the same Brand Voice with an "Authoritative" tone for a whitepaper and a "Conversational" tone for a blog post.
Product / Brand Name tells the AI which product or company to mention in the article. When provided, the name only appears in the final two paragraphs and is never used in any heading — so the article delivers genuine value first, then introduces your solution organically. CTA URL is the link you want readers to visit. When provided, the call-to-action gives a specific, direct instruction with this URL instead of a vague suggestion like "explore content tools." The AI avoids weak CTA words like "might", "could", "consider", or "perhaps." Both fields work together: the name appears naturally in the closing paragraphs and the CTA URL directs readers where to go next.
These are two optional toggles on the order form: References Section (on by default): Appends a formatted "References" list at the end of the article citing every external source used. Each reference includes the article title, publication name, and date, hyperlinked to the original source. Turn it off for shorter pieces or opinion content where formal citations feel out of place. Transparency Note (off by default): Adds an italicised footer paragraph disclosing how the article was produced — including that the brief took about 5 minutes, the package was generated in under 20 minutes, and the article was reviewed before publishing. It's ideal for product blogs where the article itself demonstrates what your product can do.
No — Paxelo doesn't generate or host the actual images. We deliver detailed image prompts that you copy into a free AI image tool (we recommend Ideogram). This keeps the price low and gives you full control over the final visual. Why prompts and not images? Hosting and generating commercial-grade images at scale would push the price up significantly. With a 30-second copy-and-paste, you get an Ideogram-generated image you fully control — and you can regenerate variations until it's perfect, at no extra cost.
Every standard, news curation, and subscription article includes: • 3 hero image prompt variations (16:9, perfect for blog headers) • 1 LinkedIn cover prompt (1.91:1) • 1 email banner prompt (3:1) • 5 social post prompts (1 each for Facebook + X) • 1 inline tweet-thread image prompt Bundle and visual-only packs (product descriptions, landing pages, real estate) include 1 image prompt for the primary visual asset.
Ideogram has three advantages: 1. Free tier — 25 images per day at zero cost, more than enough for typical Paxelo orders 2. Strong typography — Ideogram is currently the best AI tool at rendering text inside images correctly (logos, captions, callouts) 3. Prompt fidelity — it follows long, descriptive prompts more literally than competitors DALL·E (built into ChatGPT Plus), Midjourney, Adobe Firefly, and Stable Diffusion all work with the same prompts — pick whichever tool fits your existing workflow. Our prompts are written in plain natural language, so they're portable across every major image AI.
Yes. On the order form there's an "Image style preference" dropdown with options including: • Let Paxelo decide (default — picks based on topic and tone) • Photorealistic • Illustration / Editorial • 3D render / Isometric • Flat vector / Iconographic • Minimalist / Whitespace • Bold / Magazine-style Whatever you choose flows into every prompt for that order, so all your visuals stay visually consistent across the article, social posts, and email banner.

Ready to Scale Your Content?

Join thousands of marketers, agencies, and businesses who trust Paxelo for production-ready content delivered fast.