Editorial process
How we plan, draft, review, and publish every article on the X Bot blog. AI-assisted, human-reviewed, and always verified against the live bot.
Why we publish this#
The X Bot blog exists to help crypto community managers and KOL agencies make sound decisions — how to configure filters, when the PRO plan is worth it, how to track a token launch, and how X Bot compares to real-time tools. Every one of those decisions has real cost and workflow implications. So we take the accuracy of what we publish seriously, and we think you should know exactly how the content on this blog is made.
What sets our content apart#
- Product-verified. Every
/setupmenu path, pricing figure, and X API behavior is checked against the live bot at draft time. If a claim is untestable against production, it doesn’t ship. - Written by operators, not marketers. The person reviewing each post also runs the bot day to day, fields the support tickets, and reads the operational signals it emits.
- Comparisons are honest. When we write “X Bot vs X Pro / TweetDeck” we cite their public docs and pricing verbatim. Nothing is strawmanned. If they’ve shipped something we haven’t, we say so — including when X Bot is the wrong tool for a job.
- AI-assisted, human-owned. A named human approves every article before it publishes. AI helps with scale; human judgment gates the ship.
How each article gets made#
1. Brief creation#
Every article starts from a real signal — a support-ticket pattern, a Search Console query cluster, or a customer setup question. The brief captures the audience, the promise the article makes, and the search intent it targets.
2. Research + product verification#
We read the primary sources for any claim: the X Bot docs, the official X API documentation, and competitors’ current pricing and feature pages. Every /setup flow and pricing figure is checked against the live bot. If something doesn’t work as documented, we file it as a product bug before we ship the article.
3. Drafting#
Most drafts are produced with AI assistance (Claude, by Anthropic) under a content-generation prompt that carries the article brief, the verified facts from step 2, and our voice guide. Drafts land in the repo as a .md file with full frontmatter, ready for review — no marketing template, no separate CMS.
4. Human review#
A named reviewer reads every draft end-to-end. Their job is to catch:
- Any claim that isn’t supported by the primary sources or doesn’t reproduce against the live bot
- Comparisons that overstate our position or misrepresent a competitor’s current offering
- Advice that would cost the reader real money if they took it — pricing math, plan selection
- Copy that reads like marketing rather than practical guidance
5. Refinement + final read#
The reviewer’s flags come back as revisions, applied by AI against the original draft plus the reviewer’s specific feedback. The reviewer then reads the revision to confirm every flag was addressed — not just acknowledged.
6. Publication + AI disclosure#
Every published article carries a visible AI-content disclosure (bottom of every post) explaining that the article was AI-assisted and human-reviewed. This is a Google helpful-content signal and a promise to the reader that the provenance of what you’re reading is not hidden.
Keeping content fresh#
X, the X API, and the competitive landscape move quickly. Prices change. Features ship. Best practices evolve. Content that was accurate when it shipped can become misleading a year later.
We run an automated SEO and freshness tracker over the whole corpus every week. It pulls Search Console signals, does a per-page on-page audit, and identifies posts that are ranking for outdated queries or referencing changed behavior. The result becomes a work-list of concrete edits — mostly mechanical (fix an outdated price, correct a menu path), some human-judged (whether an article needs a substantive rewrite vs retirement).
Every post carries an Updated: date in the hero, distinct from its original publish date, so you know how fresh the content in front of you actually is.
Our editorial principles#
Product accuracy over speed#
We’d rather ship one accurate, verified article than four that skim a topic. If a claim can’t be supported against the live bot, it doesn’t ship. Full stop.
Named humans review everything#
Every article’s editorial review is done by a specific, named person — see the byline of any post. We don’t publish anonymously and we don’t hide behind institutional voice.
Comparisons cite primary sources#
Every competitor claim references the competitor’s own current docs or pricing. If a competitor’s offering has changed since we wrote about it, we correct the article — we don’t leave stale comparisons in place.
Practical over clever#
We optimize for whether the article helps a real community manager make a real decision — not for how clever the framing is or how novel the take.
Transparent about AI#
Every AI-assisted article says so, at the bottom, on every publication. No hedge, no marketing framing.
Our commitment#
If you find something on this blog that’s factually wrong, outdated, or misrepresenting a competitor’s product, we want to know. Reach us in the bot via /setup → ❓ Help & Support. We correct articles openly — every substantive edit bumps the Updated: date and preserves an audit trail in Git history.
Trust is the whole point of publishing verifiable analytics content in the first place. We hold ourselves to the same standard.