Use this prompt recipe for search intent analysis for a SaaS website. It gives the AI a clear job, visible source inputs and a review step so the result can be edited instead of blindly copied.

Best forSEO editors, marketers, founders and content strategists
Search intentReaders usually need a prompt that helps them plan a page around search intent, information gain and internal links.
Expected outputReader problem and page angle, Outline with questions to answer, Internal link suggestions, Metadata and verification notes

When this recipe is useful

Use this recipe when the task is specific enough to benefit from AI structure but still needs human judgment. In the situation "for a SaaS website", the prompt should make the audience, source material and quality bar explicit before asking for a finished answer.

The goal is not to make a generic search intent analysis. The goal is to create a draft that reflects the real context, avoids unsupported claims and gives the reviewer a clear path for improving the result.

Source inputs to prepare

Primary queryAdd the real detail for search intent analysis for a SaaS website. If this detail is unknown, ask the AI to return a missing-information question.
Search intentAdd the real detail for search intent analysis for a SaaS website. If this detail is unknown, ask the AI to return a missing-information question.
Existing page or source notesAdd the real detail for search intent analysis for a SaaS website. If this detail is unknown, ask the AI to return a missing-information question.
Internal links availableAdd the real detail for search intent analysis for a SaaS website. If this detail is unknown, ask the AI to return a missing-information question.
Facts that need verificationAdd the real detail for search intent analysis for a SaaS website. If this detail is unknown, ask the AI to return a missing-information question.

Copy-ready prompt

Act as a practical SEO content editor. Task: Create search intent analysis for a SaaS website. Audience: [who will read or use the output] Source inputs: [Primary query] [Search intent] [Existing page or source notes] [Internal links available] [Facts that need verification] Rules: - Use only the facts I provide. - Ask concise missing-information questions if an important input is unclear. - Mark any claim that needs human verification. - Keep the output specific to the audience and situation. Return: 1. A short planning note. 2. The finished search intent analysis. 3. A review checklist. 4. Safer rewrite options for any risky or unsupported claim.

Recommended output structure

  1. Reader problem and page angle: Make this section specific to search intent analysis for a SaaS website and easy for a human reviewer to check.
  2. Outline with questions to answer: Make this section specific to search intent analysis for a SaaS website and easy for a human reviewer to check.
  3. Internal link suggestions: Make this section specific to search intent analysis for a SaaS website and easy for a human reviewer to check.
  4. Metadata and verification notes: Make this section specific to search intent analysis for a SaaS website and easy for a human reviewer to check.

Review checklist

  • The page angle matches the search intent.
  • The outline adds examples or decision criteria beyond common advice.
  • Internal links help the reader continue the task.
  • Metadata describes the page without overpromising.

Common mistakes

  • Writing for keywords before clarifying intent.
  • Using AI to invent statistics or competitor claims.
  • Adding sections only to hit a word count.
  • Forgetting to remove thin or duplicate paragraphs.

How to adapt it

If the first output feels too broad, add one concrete example of the audience, one example of the tone you want, and one example of a claim the AI must avoid. This usually improves the next answer more than adding more adjectives.

If the output is too long, ask the AI to keep the structure but shorten each section around the decision the reader needs to make. If the output is too shallow, add source notes and ask for missing questions before another draft.

FAQ

When should I use this prompt?

Use it when you need search intent analysis for a SaaS website and want the AI output to stay tied to your real source inputs, audience and review rules.

What should I prepare first?

Prepare the practical inputs: Primary query, Search intent, Existing page or source notes, Internal links available. If one of those is missing, keep it marked as unknown instead of asking the AI to guess.

Can I publish the output directly?

Treat the output as a draft. Check facts, claims, names, dates, policies and promises before using it in public or customer-facing work.