Introducing Post-Generation Article Templates

Announcing the release of a new functionality called Post-Generation templates on 3rd Nov 2025.

Post-Generation Article Templates is a new feature that allows users to change the structure of their articles instantly without regenerating content. With this update, customers can choose how each article is presented to better fit their audience and their website look-and-feel.

What Are Post-Generation Templates?

After generating an article, you can choose how you want the article to be presented from the article page by choosing templates which is presented to you on the top right corner.

kafkai.com Article Page: 'Is Your SEO Strategy Ready for the Age of AI?' with Article Template options and target keyword 'seo in the age of ai'

An overview of how the template pulldown looks like.

Templates define how a generated article is structured and displayed. Users can now select from three distinct formats:

  1. Standard
    • The original and default article layout.
    • Includes title, headings, paragraphs, conclusion, and FAQs.
    • If “Include Source Citations” is enabled, citations appear within sections followed by small reference subsections — enhancing SEO through contextual linking.
  2. Navigational
    • Adds a Table of Contents (ToC) at the top for quick navigation.
    • Ideal for long-form articles, helping readers understand the overall structure and jump directly to sections of interest.
    • Improves user experience and can increase click-through rate (CTR) as readers quickly access the information they seek.
    • Additionally adds a “Read More” section after the conclusion with internal links to related articles, boosting engagement and internal SEO.
    • Automatically skips the “Read More” section if no related content exists on the user’s site.
  3. Bibliographic
    • Creates a cleaner layout for cited content.
    • Moves all references to a unified bibliography at the end while keeping in-context footnote markers for SEO.
    • Ideal for research-style or citation-heavy articles.
    • Automatically disabled for articles without citations.

When to Use Which Template

  • Standard: Best for general articles and blog posts.
  • Navigational: Perfect for long or detailed content where navigation and internal linking improve user retention.
  • Bibliographic: Recommended for citation-heavy, research, or educational pieces where a clean, authoritative reference section adds credibility.

How It Helps You

  • No regeneration required: Saves time by instantly change layouts post-creation.
  • Improved SEO through structured internal links and contextual citations.
  • Enhanced readability and engagement with clear navigation and reference organization.
  • Flexible presentation that adapts to article length, topic, and style.

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