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YouTube Video to Blog Post

Turn any YouTube video into a full, SEO-ready blog post in minutes. Transcribe the spoken content, then use AI to structure and expand it — without writing from scratch.

Transcribe a YouTube Video Free →

Why Turn a YouTube Video Into a Blog Post?

Every YouTube video you publish contains a fully formed argument, tutorial, or story — already researched, structured, and delivered. A blog post version of that same content ranks on Google, drives long-term organic traffic, and reaches readers who prefer text over video. The gap between a YouTube transcript and a published blog post is smaller than most creators think: the ideas, flow, and key points are already there. The transcript is your first draft. What's missing is formatting (headings, bullet points, intro, conclusion) and expansion (adding context that works better in writing than speech). AI handles both steps in under two minutes. The SEO benefit is compounding — a single YouTube video can generate a blog post that ranks for years after the video stops getting recommended.

How It Works

  1. 1.Paste any public YouTube URL into TranscribeVideo.ai and get the full word-for-word transcript in seconds.
  2. 2.Copy the transcript and paste it into ChatGPT or Claude with a structuring prompt.
  3. 3.Edit the AI-generated draft, add a meta description and internal links, then publish as a standalone blog post.

Why Use This Tool?

  • Repurpose one video into a piece of content that ranks on Google and drives traffic for months
  • Skip the blank-page problem — the transcript gives you a complete first draft to work from
  • Reach the large audience that searches for text answers instead of watching videos
  • Build topical authority by publishing blog posts that complement your YouTube channel
  • Capture long-tail keywords in written form that your YouTube video title alone cannot target

Use Cases

  • YouTubers who want SEO traffic but don't have time to write separate blog content from scratch
  • Content agencies converting client YouTube videos into blog articles as part of a repurposing package
  • Educators publishing tutorial videos who want a written companion post for learners who prefer reading
  • B2B marketers turning product demo or explainer videos into long-form website content
  • Freelance writers using existing YouTube interviews as the research and source material for articles

Frequently Asked Questions

What AI prompt turns a transcript into a blog post?

A reliable prompt: "Here is a transcript from a YouTube video about [topic]. Rewrite it as a structured blog post with an introduction, 3–5 H2 sections with subheadings, and a conclusion. Expand any points that feel rushed. Remove filler phrases like 'um', 'you know', and 'so'. Target the keyword '[main keyword]' naturally throughout." Paste the transcript directly after this prompt.

How long will the blog post be?

A 10-minute YouTube video typically produces a 1,500–2,500 word blog post when expanded by AI. A 20-minute video can generate 3,000–5,000 words. You can instruct the AI to target a specific word count. For SEO, aim for at least 1,200 words on competitive topics.

Does the blog post need heavy editing after AI expands it?

Light editing is recommended: check factual claims, add any visuals or examples from the video, insert internal links to related posts, and write a unique meta description. The AI handles the structural rewrite well, but a 10-minute editorial pass makes the post genuinely better.

Can I do this for someone else's YouTube video?

Technically yes — the transcription works on any public YouTube URL. However, using another creator's content to write a blog post raises copyright questions. This workflow is intended for your own YouTube content, or for research and summarization purposes where you are reporting on or analyzing the content, not reproducing it verbatim.

Will Google penalize AI-generated blog posts from transcripts?

Google's guidance is about content quality and helpfulness, not the tool used to create it. A blog post that is accurate, well-structured, and useful to readers will perform well regardless of how it was drafted. The key is editing: adding original examples, fixing any AI errors, and ensuring the post provides real value beyond just reformatting the transcript.

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