Comparison

Keytomic vs Wordable in 2026: AI-written content vs a $29/year Docs-to-CMS export tool

One tool writes your articles for you, the other formats and publishes what you already wrote in Google Docs. At $99 a month against $29 a year, the price gap alone tells you these solve different problems.

Updated July 3, 2026
Keytomic
Wordable
Key takeaways
  • Keytomic writes articles with AI. Wordable does not generate any content; it exports what someone already wrote in Google Docs to a CMS.
  • Wordable's Basic plan is $29 a year. Keytomic is $99 a month, roughly 40 times the annual cost of Wordable's entry tier.
  • Wordable supports three export destinations: WordPress, HubSpot, and Medium. Keytomic auto-publishes to two: WordPress and Shopify.
  • Keytomic includes keyword research, a content calendar, and AI search visibility tracking. Wordable has none of these; its own documentation states no SEO or content optimization features.
  • Wordable's bulk export handles multiple Google Docs at once, useful for teams that batch-produce content and then publish a week's worth in one pass.
  • Neither tool offers API access on any published plan.
  • Keytomic includes a Reddit AI agent for brand visibility in relevant threads, a feature with no equivalent in Wordable.

Keytomic and Wordable both auto-publish to a CMS, which is where the similarity ends. Keytomic writes the article: it generates a 30-day content calendar from a website URL and pushes finished posts to WordPress or Shopify. Wordable does not write anything; it takes a Google Doc someone already wrote and exports it to WordPress, HubSpot, or Medium in one click, preserving formatting and handling images so nobody has to manually clean up a paste. If content needs to be generated, Keytomic is the tool. If writing already happens in Google Docs and the export step is what eats twenty minutes per article, Wordable is the tool, and it costs a fraction of what Keytomic does.

The tools at a glance

ToolStarting priceBest for
Keytomic$99/moFounders and small teams who need articles researched, written, and published automatically without doing the writing themselves.
Wordable$29/yearWriters and content teams who already produce articles in Google Docs and want a clean, fast path to WordPress, HubSpot, or Medium without manual formatting cleanup.

Keytomic

Full-stack SEO automation that writes, schedules, and auto-publishes content for founders and small teams

Full review →
Keytomic screenshot

Keytomic starts from a website URL and produces a 30-day calendar of keyword-targeted articles, then publishes the finished posts to WordPress or Shopify automatically once approved. Keyword research, a backlink opportunity finder, and a Reddit AI agent are bundled into the same $99-a-month price, aimed at founders with no content team.

The AI search visibility piece separates Keytomic from a pure publishing tool like Wordable: content is structured to get cited by AI assistants, and Keytomic cites an 82% first-page AI citation rate on its homepage as a platform benchmark.

The trade-off is that Keytomic is doing a lot at once, and the depth in any single piece is limited. There is no API, the pricing page returned a 404 at the time of review, and the platform is young enough that most published testimonials date from late 2025.

Pricing
Feature
All Plans
$99/mo
Keyword research
30-day content calendar
Auto-publishing to WordPress/Shopify
Reddit AI agent
LLM and GEO visibility
API access
Best for: Founders and small teams who need articles researched, written, and published automatically without doing the writing themselves.

Wordable

One-click Google Docs export to WordPress, HubSpot, or Medium with formatting and image handling built in

Full review →
Wordable screenshot

Wordable solves one specific and genuinely annoying problem: the copy-paste from Google Docs into a CMS that strips formatting, breaks headings, and forces someone to re-upload every image by hand. A single click exports a finished Doc to WordPress, HubSpot, or Medium with heading structure, bold and italic formatting, and image alt text carried over intact.

The time math is the whole pitch: a 2,000-word article that takes 15 to 20 minutes to clean up after a manual paste can go from Doc to published post in under a minute. For a team publishing 20 articles a month, that is several hours back every cycle, and bulk export handles multiple documents in one pass for teams that batch their production.

Wordable does not do anything else. There is no keyword research, no content calendar, no AI writing, and its own documentation is upfront that it has no SEO or content optimization features. It is a publishing-workflow tool, not a content platform, and the $29-a-year Basic plan reflects how narrow the scope is.

Pricing
Feature
Basic
$29/year
Pro
$149/year
Premium
$349/year
Google Docs export
WordPress and HubSpot support
Image auto-upload
Bulk exportLimited
Best for: Writers and content teams who already produce articles in Google Docs and want a clean, fast path to WordPress, HubSpot, or Medium without manual formatting cleanup.

Head-to-head feature comparison

Feature
Keytomic
Wordable
Core functionAI writes articles, schedules them, and auto-publishesFormats and exports Google Docs to a CMS in one click
AI content generationYesNo
Google Docs export / formatting preservationNo (does not work from Google Docs)Yes
Auto-publishing to CMSYes (WordPress, Shopify)Yes (on export, not scheduled)
CMS destinations supported2 documented (WordPress, Shopify)3 (WordPress, HubSpot, Medium)
Bulk / batch publishingYes (30-day calendar publishes on schedule)Yes (bulk export)
Keyword researchYesNo
AI / LLM search visibility trackingYes (82% first-page AI citation rate claimed)No
Reddit or community engagementYes (Reddit AI agent)No
API accessNoNo
Starting price$99/mo$29/year

Which should you choose?

Founders who need AI to write and publish articles from scratchKeytomic
Writers who already draft in Google Docs and need clean CMS publishingWordable
Teams needing built-in keyword research and a content calendarKeytomic
High-volume publishers who just need the paste-and-format step automated cheaplyWordable
Teams wanting AI search visibility tracking bundled with content productionKeytomic
Teams whose writing process is already solid and only the export step is brokenWordable
Budget-first buyers comparing a year of Wordable to a month of KeytomicWordable

These tools sit at opposite ends of the same pipeline. Keytomic replaces the writer; Wordable replaces the fifteen minutes of manual cleanup after the writer is done. A team that already has a writing process that works has no use for Keytomic's content calendar and would find Wordable's $29-a-year price close to a rounding error. A team with no writer at all gets nothing from Wordable, since there is no Google Doc to export in the first place.

Bottom line

Choose Keytomic if content needs to be written for you and $99 a month for that on top of publishing is acceptable. Choose Wordable if writing is already handled and the actual pain is the Docs-to-CMS export, since $29 a year is close to free next to the hours it saves. Running both is redundant only if Keytomic is already doing the publishing; if a human writer is still drafting in Google Docs, Wordable is the cheaper fix for the last step.

Frequently asked questions

Is Wordable a replacement for an AI writing tool like Keytomic?

No, Wordable does not write content at all. It exports finished Google Docs to WordPress, HubSpot, or Medium with formatting intact, which assumes a human or another tool has already written the article. Keytomic is the tool that generates the article in the first place.

Why is Wordable so much cheaper than Keytomic?

Wordable solves a narrow, single-purpose problem, formatting and exporting a Google Doc, while Keytomic bundles keyword research, a content calendar, AI writing, auto-publishing, and AI search visibility tracking into one $99-a-month subscription. Wordable's Basic plan at $29 a year reflects how much smaller its scope is.

Does Wordable have any SEO or content optimization features?

No. Wordable's own documentation states it has no SEO or content optimization features; it is strictly a publishing-workflow tool. Keytomic includes keyword research and AI search visibility tracking as core features, which Wordable does not attempt to replicate.

Can Keytomic import content from Google Docs the way Wordable does?

Keytomic's documented workflow starts from a website URL and generates its own content calendar; it is not built around importing and exporting existing Google Docs. Wordable is the tool built specifically for that Docs-to-CMS handoff.

Which tool is better for a high-volume content team publishing 20+ articles a month?

It depends on where the volume comes from. If a team of writers is already producing 20 articles a month in Google Docs, Wordable's bulk export and $29-a-year Basic plan handle the publishing step cheaply. If nobody is writing yet and the goal is to generate that volume with AI, Keytomic is built for that instead.

Does either tool support HubSpot?

Wordable does, alongside WordPress and Medium. Keytomic's documented CMS integrations are WordPress and Shopify; HubSpot is not listed as a supported publishing destination.

Found this useful? Share it: