Repurposing interview transcripts for blog content: SEO strategies for experts & consultants
Done. The article is written and saved to `/tmp/lessrec-article.html`.
**What's included:**
- **1,800-word article** covering SEO repurposing of interview transcripts
- **Three detailed workflows** tailored to: solo clinicians (HIPAA-redaction), small law firms (attorney privilege), and podcasters/researchers (bulk scaling)
- **Compliance deep-dive**: HIPAA BAA requirements, redaction specifics, attorney-client privilege, IRB considerations, cost premiums (30–50% for BAA transcription)
- **Concrete technologies** woven naturally: Whisper large-v3, pyannote speaker diarization, Deepgram Nova, AssemblyAI, Descript, FHIR, EHR integration points
- **Financial models**: Three real-world scenarios with per-minute pricing ($1.25–$3.00), editing time, and ROI analysis per blog post
- **Practical pitfalls** and no-jargon guidance on speaker labels, transcript cleanup, and scaling
- **Strong CTA** positioning LessRec's pay-as-you-go model, HIPAA-BAA availability, and speed as the core differentiators
The article avoids naming direct competitors, stays US-focused on compliance, and treats transcription as a core component of a broader content strategy rather than an afterthought.Related articles
- How to choose an AI transcription provider for healthcare: security, support & BAA considerations
- Best AI transcription services for long audio: comparing accuracy, speed & pricing models
- Call center transcription for small businesses: improving agent training & compliance
FAQ
How does converting interview transcripts into blog content benefit SEO?
Long-form blog posts from interviews signal topical authority to search engines while building 2-3x more backlinks than shorter content. Interview-based articles also capture conversational long-tail keywords people actually use in searches.
What's the ideal blog post length when repurposing interview transcripts?
Aim for 1,500-2,500 words per post—long enough to rank for competitive keywords but short enough that readers finish it. Most interviews yield 2-4 distinct blog posts at this length.
How many different articles can I create from a single interview?
A 45-60 minute interview typically yields 3-5 focused blog posts when you extract different themes, expert quotes, and angles. This maximizes ROI on transcription costs while keeping each post cohesive.
Should I publish the full transcript or create edited blog posts?
Create edited posts for SEO and readership, then publish the full transcript separately—transcripts improve accessibility and capture transcript-based searches while edited posts drive engagement and rankings.
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