Aimogen does not have a separate “YouTube to Blog” module with its own settings. Just like RSS feeds, YouTube videos are handled through the Bulk AI Post Creator, using the exact same interface and execution logic.
The only difference is the input source.
How YouTube-Based Generation Works #
From Aimogen’s point of view, a YouTube video is simply another structured input source, just like a keyword list or an RSS feed. When you paste a YouTube video URL into the Bulk AI Post Creator input field, Aimogen automatically detects it and switches the input resolver accordingly.
There are no YouTube-specific toggles, no extra configuration panels, and no separate execution path.
Where to Use It #
Everything happens in one place:
Aimogen → Bulk AI Post Creators -> YouTube
If you know how to use the bulk generator, you already know how to use YouTube captions.
Entering a YouTube Video #
Instead of entering keywords, titles, or an RSS feed, you paste a YouTube video URL into the input field. A single video URL is enough, but you can also enter multiple YouTube URLs, one per line, if supported by your setup.
Once saved or executed, Aimogen recognizes the URL as a YouTube source automatically.
What Aimogen Extracts from YouTube #
When a YouTube URL is detected, Aimogen retrieves the video’s available captions or subtitles. These captions become context, not final content.
The AI does not blindly copy subtitles into a post. Instead, the captions are passed to the model as source material, which the AI then restructures, rewrites, expands, and refines into a readable blog post.
If a video has no captions available, generation will fail gracefully and log the reason.
Prompt and Settings Behavior #
There are no YouTube-only prompts or options.
All behavior comes directly from the Bulk AI Post Creator settings you already configured. The same global instructions, provider, model, post status, taxonomy rules, and image generation options are applied exactly as they would be for keyword-based or RSS-based generation.
If you want YouTube-based posts to behave differently, you adjust the bulk prompt or run them separately, not through a special YouTube setting.
One Video, One Post #
Each YouTube video produces one WordPress post.
The video title is typically used as the semantic anchor, while the captions provide the detailed context that the AI expands into article form. The result is a proper blog post, not a transcript dump.
Execution and Error Handling #
Execution follows normal bulk behavior. Videos are processed one by one. If a video fails because captions are missing, blocked, or unavailable, that item is skipped and logged, while the rest of the run continues.
There is no retry logic specific to YouTube and no hidden fallback.
What This Feature Is Not #
This is not video scraping, not video embedding, and not transcript publishing by default. Aimogen does not download videos, bypass restrictions, or auto-embed players unless you explicitly instruct it to do so in your prompt.
It is strictly a caption-to-content transformation pipeline.
Practical Implications #
This unified design is intentional. There is no extra learning curve for YouTube content. Keywords, RSS feeds, and YouTube videos all flow through the same bulk engine, which keeps behavior predictable and easier to reason about.
If you understand the Bulk AI Post Creator, you already understand YouTube captions to blog posts.
Summary #
YouTube videos are processed through the Bulk AI Post Creator. You paste a YouTube URL instead of keywords. Aimogen extracts captions, uses them as AI context, and generates one blog post per video. There are no separate settings, no special screens, and no alternate logic paths. This keeps YouTube content generation consistent with every other bulk content workflow in Aimogen.