Thinking. 1. **Analyze the Request:**
* **Task:** Fix the blog post based on specific fail reasons.
* **Title:** Selangor Launches ‘BLAST’ To Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains (This is the title from the source article/Bernama).
* **Fail Reasons:** `seo` (and possibly implied structure/voice/relevance issues from the broader context of the prompt, but the user specifically *only* listed `seo` as the fail reason).
* **Wait, let me look closely at the prompt.** “Fail Reasons: – seo” -> The only specific fail reason given is “seo”. BUT, the standard instructions for the editor role say: “Fix ONLY what’s called out in the fail reasons — don’t rewrite the whole thing”. “If SEO issues: work focus keyphrase into title and first 60 words”. I need to figure out the keyphrase. Probably “Selangor BLAST programme SMEs global supply chains” or “Selangor BLAST SMEs global supply chains”.
* “Return ONLY valid HTML.”
* “Keep the same TL;DR if it was accurate” -> The original doesn’t really have a distinct TL;DR section except the opening paragraph. The opening paragraph is the TL;DR.
* “Same structure rules as the original generation apply.” -> H2, H3, etc.
* *Wait, the prompt says: “Fix the blog post based on the specific fail reasons provided.” The user put “seo” as the only fail reason.*
* Let’s look at the original blog post’s SEO.
* Title (H2): “Selangor Launches BLAST Programme for SMEs to Integrate into Global Supply Chains”
* First 60 words: “Selangor’s BLAST programme is designed to help local SMEs build capacity, compete globally, and integrate into high-value global supply chains. If you’re an SME owner looking to scale, this programme can help you land contracts with global companies operating in Selangor.”
* Keyphrase should be something like “Selangor BLAST programme SMEs global supply chains”.
* Is the keyphrase in the H2 and first 60 words? “BLAST programme”, “global supply chains” are there.
* Let’s scan the original post for exact wording. The source article title is “Selangor Launches ‘BLAST’ To Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains”.
* The blog post H2 is “Selangor Launches BLAST Programme for SMEs to Integrate into Global Supply Chains”. This is slightly different from the article title. Maybe tightening up the title to match the exact article title or a more SEO-optimal version? “Selangor Launches BLAST To Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains” is the exact article title. It’s also a very strong SEO title. Let’s change the H2 to match the source article title perfectly: “Selangor Launches ‘BLAST’ To Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains”.
* First 60 words: “Selangor has launched the Invest Selangor Business Linkages and Advancement Programme (BLAST) to build the capacity and competitiveness of local small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and integrate them into high-value global supply chains.” (This is from the source). Currently the blog says: “Selangor’s BLAST programme is designed to help local SMEs build capacity, compete globally, and integrate…”. The source text is more direct and informational. Let’s rewrite the first paragraph to match the source text structure, ensuring the keyphrase is prominent.
* What is the keyphrase? It is heavily implied: “Selangor BLAST programme SMEs global supply chains” or “Selangor BLAST global supply chains”. Given the title “Selangor Launches ‘BLAST’ To Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains”, the keyphrase could be extracted exactly from this.
Let’s use the exact phrasing of the title as the keyphrase focus. We just need to ensure it appears in the first 60 words.
Let’s rewrite the opening paragraph using the source text: “Selangor has launched the Invest Selangor Business Linkages and Advancement Programme (BLAST) to integrate local small and medium enterprises (SMEs) into high-value global supply chains.”
Characters -> Count the first 60 words of the corrected version.
“Selangor has launched the Invest Selangor Business Linkages and Advancement Programme (BLAST) to integrate local small and medium enterprises (SMEs) into high-value global supply chains.” -> 24 words. Just counting “Selangor has launched the Invest Selangor Business Linkages and Advancement Programme (BLAST) to integrate local SMEs into global supply chains. If you’re an SME owner looking to scale, this programme can help you land contracts with global companies operating in Selangor.” -> Over 60 words but contains the keyphrase prominently.
Let’s refine the opening to be tighter and perfectly match SEO requirements.
“Selangor has launched the Invest Selangor Business Linkages and Advancement Programme (BLAST) to integrate local SMEs into global supply chains.”
Wait, the title is “Selangor Launches ‘BLAST’ To Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains”. Yes.
Let’s check the rest of the content. Is it well-structured?
H2: Selangor Launches ‘BLAST’ To Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains
Para: Selangor has launched the Invest Selangor Business Linkages and Advancement Programme (BLAST) to integrate local small and medium enterprises (SMEs) into high-value global supply chains. If you’re an SME owner looking to scale, this programme can help you land contracts with global companies operating in Selangor. (This is almost perfect).
Let’s check the structure vs original.
Original:
H2
P
H3 What Is BLAST?
P
Blockquote
H3 Who Are the Key Partners?
P
Table
P
H3 Why This Matters for Malaysian SMEs
P
H3 How to Get Involved
P
H3 Take the Next Step
P
What about the other instructions? “Fix ONLY what’s called out in the fail reasons — don’t rewrite the whole thing”
“If factual errors: correct them using the source article text provided below” -> The content seems factually accurate based on the source. Let’s double check the table.
Table in original:
Aerospace: Base Maintenance Malaysia Sdn Bhd, Sime UMW Aerospace
Life Sciences: Duopharma Biotech Bhd
Digital Technology: Bridge Data Centres Malaysia Sdn Bhd
Rail: Malaysia Rail Link Sdn Bhd
Source article:
Aerospace: Base Maintenance Malaysia Sdn Bhd, Sime UMW Aerospace
Life Sciences: Duopharma Biotech Bhd
Digital Technology: Bridge Data Centres Malaysia Sdn Bhd
Rail: Malaysia Rail Link Sdn Bhd
Matches perfectly.
“A key milestone will be the business matching sessions in October 2026, held at the Selangor International Business Summit (SIBS) at the Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre (Oct 14-17).”
Source: “A key milestone will be the business matching sessions this October, held in conjunction with the Selangor International Business Summit (SIBS) 2026 at the Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre from Oct 14-17.”
The blog post says “October 2026”. The source says “this October” in the context of the article being from 14/07/2026. The blog post correctly infers the year.
“If structure issues: add proper H2 sections, blockquotes, tables, CTA” -> Looks fine.
“If voice issues: remove AI clichés, make it more direct and conversational” -> The original is pretty good. “If you’re an SME owner…” is a bit generic but fine. The BLAST programme description is good.
“If SEO issues: work focus keyphrase into title and first 60 words” -> Let’s refine this.
Title: “Selangor Launches ‘BLAST’ To Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains” (Matches source article title perfectly).
First 60 words: Let’s count the words in the proposed first paragraph.
“Selangor has launched the Invest Selangor Business Linkages and Advancement Programme (BLAST) to integrate local SMEs into global supply chains. If you’re an SME owner looking to scale, this programme can help you land contracts with global companies.” (30 words).
Let’s paste the original first para:
“Selangor’s BLAST programme is designed to help local SMEs build capacity, compete globally, and integrate into high-value global supply chains. If you’re an SME owner looking to scale, this programme can help you land contracts with global companies operating in Selangor.”
The source article starts: “Selangor has launched the Invest Selangor Business Linkages and Advancement Programme (BLAST) to build the capacity and competitiveness of local small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and integrate them into high-value global supply chains.”
Let’s just use the source article’s first sentence directly. It’s more authoritative and perfectly embeds the keywords.
“Selangor has launched the Invest Selangor Business Linkages and Advancement Programme (BLAST) to build the capacity and competitiveness of local small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and integrate them into high-value global supply chains.”
Let’s make it:
Selangor Launches ‘BLAST’ To Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains
Selangor has launched the Invest Selangor Business Linkages and Advancement Programme (BLAST) to build the capacity and competitiveness of local small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and integrate them into high-value global supply chains. If you’re an SME owner looking to scale, this programme helps you land contracts with global companies operating in Selangor.
Let’s look at the “Take the Next Step” section.
“Ready to scale up and enter global supply chains? Learn how to prepare your business at autorunbiz.com.”
This is good. It’s the CTA.
What about the voice? “Get Involved” section says “Whether you’re in…”. Good.
“Why This Matters” section: “Selangor’s economy is growing…” The source article says “Selangor does not wish to be champions only in numbers, citing the state’s 2025 performance…”. The blog post uses “Selangor’s economy is growing — with a GDP of RM460.1 billion…”. This matches the source.
Is there anything I can improve for SEO specifically without rewriting the whole thing?
Yes, making the title exactly match the source article (using quotes around BLAST, exactly matching the wording).
“Selangor Launches BLAST Programme for SMEs to Integrate into Global Supply Chains” -> “Selangor Launches ‘BLAST’ To Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains”
Let’s audit the full text for any slight deviations from the source.
Original H3 “What Is BLAST?” paragraph:
“BLAST is a six-month programme that guides 12 selected SMEs through the requirements of strategic corporate partners. The goal is to help them win real contracts and achieve a 5% revenue increase by 2030.”
Source: “…programme will guide a total of 12 companies in meeting the requirements of strategic corporate partners, preparing them to secure actual commercial contracts. … helping participating SMEs achieve a targeted five per cent increase in revenue by 2030.”
Blockquote is perfect, verbatim from source.
H3 “Who Are the Key Partners?” paragraph:
“Ecosystem partners include the Malaysian Bioeconomy Development Corporation, Malaysia Aerospace Industry Association, National Tech Association of Malaysia, and the Malaysian Rail Industry Corporation. The Malaysian Technology Development Corporation (MTDC) leads the management and implementation of the programme.”
Source: “…ecosystem partners, namely Malaysian Bioeconomy Development Corporation, Malaysia Aerospace Industry Association, National Tech Association of Malaysia and Malaysian Rail Industry Corporation. … MTDC will lead the management and implementation…”
H3 “Why This Matters” paragraph:
“But the real measure of success, says Ng, is not just the numbers. ‘The real test is how many contracts our local companies win. It is how many Selangor SMEs enter the supply chains of the global companies we bring in.’ As Ng puts it, every investment must put down roots — buy from local suppliers, hire local talent, and transfer knowledge to local firms. For SMEs, that means a clear path from supplier to partner, and from partner to champion.”
Source: “The real test is how many contracts our local companies win… into the supply chains of the global companies… Every investment we attract must put down roots. It must buy from local suppliers… hire and train local talent… transfer knowledge… from supplier to partner, and from partner to champion.”
H3 “How to Get Involved”:
“The programme guides 12 companies over six months. A key milestone is the business matching sessions in October 2026, held at the Selangor International Business Summit (SIBS) at the Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre (Oct 14-17).”
Source: “A key milestone will be the business matching sessions this October, held in conjunction with the Selangor International Business Summit (SIBS) 2026 at the Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre from Oct 14-17.”
This all looks incredibly solid and factually correct. The structure is good.
Let’s focus strictly on the SEO fail reason.
The prompt says: “If SEO issues: work focus keyphrase into title and first 60 words”.
Let’s identify the keyphrase. It should be the central topic of the article.
“Selangor BLAST SMEs global supply chains”
“Integrate local SMEs into global supply chains”
Title from source: “Selangor Launches ‘BLAST’ To Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains”
Let’s use the source article title exactly. This is a very strong keyword-optimized title.
Current H2: “Selangor Launches BLAST Programme for SMEs to Integrate into Global Supply Chains”
Proposed H2: “Selangor Launches ‘BLAST’ To Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains”
Let’s work it into the first 60 words.
Current first para: “Selangor’s BLAST programme is designed to help local SMEs build capacity, compete globally, and integrate into high-value global supply chains. If you’re an SME owner looking to scale, this programme can help you land contracts with global companies operating in Selangor.”
Word count of first para: 37 words. Contains “BLAST programme”, “integrate into… global supply chains”. Doesn’t contain “local SMEs” together. Wait, “help local SMEs” does.
Let’s rewrite the first paragraph slightly to match the source article exactly, as it is the most authoritative and keyword-dense version.
“Selangor has launched the Invest Selangor Business Linkages and Advancement Programme (BLAST) to build the capacity and competitiveness of local small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and integrate them into high-value global supply chains. If you’re an SME owner looking to scale, this programme can help you land contracts with global companies operating in Selangor.”
Word count: “Selangor has launched the Invest Selangor Business Linkages and Advancement Programme (BLAST) to build the capacity and competitiveness of local small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and integrate them into high-value global supply chains.” = 28 words.
“If you’re an SME owner looking to scale, this programme can help you land contracts with global companies operating in Selangor.” = 20 words.
Total = 48 words.
Keyphrase in title: “Selangor Launches ‘BLAST’ To Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains”.
Keyphrase elements in first 60 words: “Selangor has launched [BLAST] … integrate [local SMEs] into [global supply chains]”.
What if the keyphrase is longer? “Selangor BLAST programme global supply chains” or “Selangor BLAST programme for SMEs”.
The title “Selangor Launches ‘BLAST’ To Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains” exactly matches the Bernama article and is a perfect search intent match.
Let’s refine the SEO aspect even further without rewriting what isn’t broken.
“selangor blast programme smes global supply chains”
The title has “Selangor” and “BLAST” next to each other? “Selangor Launches ‘BLAST’…” It is implied.
“Selangor BLAST” -> Yes.
Is there anything else?
“Fix ONLY what’s called out in the fail reasons”
I will assume SEO is the only problem. The title should be exact, the first paragraph should contain the keyphrase. I’ve adjusted both in the plan. The rest of the article is already quite good and factually matches the source. I will copy over the original HTML, changing only the H2 and the first paragraph.
Wait, the prompt says:
“Produce an improved version fixing ALL fail reasons listed above. Return ONLY valid HTML.”
The only fail reason listed is `- seo`.
So my changes should be ONLY for SEO.
Title refinement: Match source article title exactly.
First paragraph refinements: Use the exact first sentence from the source article to ensure keyword prominence.
Let’s draft the improved version based on the original.
Original:
“`
Selangor Launches BLAST Programme for SMEs to Integrate into Global Supply Chains
Selangor’s BLAST programme is designed to help local SMEs build capacity, compete globally, and integrate into high-value global supply chains. If you’re an SME owner looking to scale, this programme can help you land contracts with global companies operating in Selangor.
What Is BLAST?
BLAST is a six-month programme that guides 12 selected SMEs through the requirements of strategic corporate partners. The goal is to help them win real contracts and achieve a 5% revenue increase by 2030.
“When our SMEs can meet the standards of the leading companies operating in Selangor, they can meet the standards of the world. BLAST is not only preparing our SMEs to become suppliers. It is preparing them to become globally competitive.”
Who Are the Key Partners?
BLAST focuses on four strategic sectors: aerospace, rail, life sciences and digital technology. Here are the corporate partners backing the programme:
| Sector | Corporate Partner |
|---|---|
| Aerospace | Base Maintenance Malaysia Sdn Bhd, Sime UMW Aerospace |
| Life Sciences | Duopharma Biotech Bhd |
| Digital Technology | Bridge Data Centres Malaysia Sdn Bhd |
| Rail | Malaysia Rail Link Sdn Bhd |
Ecosystem partners include the Malaysian Bioeconomy Development Corporation, Malaysia Aerospace Industry Association, National Tech Association of Malaysia, and the Malaysian Rail Industry Corporation. The Malaysian Technology Development Corporation (MTDC) leads the management and implementation of the programme.
Why This Matters for Malaysian SMEs
Selangor’s economy is growing — with a GDP of RM460.1 billion and RM33.5 billion in approved investments in 2025. But the real measure of success, says Ng, is not just the numbers. “The real test is how many contracts our local companies win. It is how many Selangor SMEs enter the supply chains of the global companies we bring in.” As Ng puts it, every investment must put down roots — buy from local suppliers, hire local talent, and transfer knowledge to local firms. For SMEs, that means a clear path from supplier to partner, and from partner to champion.
How to Get Involved
The programme guides 12 companies over six months. A key milestone is the business matching sessions in October 2026, held at the Selangor International Business Summit (SIBS) at the Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre (Oct 14-17). Whether you’re in aerospace, rail, life sciences, or digital technology, BLAST helps you meet the standards of world-class companies and grow your business.
Take the Next Step
Ready to scale up and enter global supply chains? Learn how to prepare your business at autorunbiz.com.
“`
Improved version:
“`
Selangor Launches ‘BLAST’ To Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains
Selangor has launched the Invest Selangor Business Linkages and Advancement Programme (BLAST) to build the capacity and competitiveness of local small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and integrate them into high-value global supply chains. If you’re an SME owner looking to scale, this programme can help you land contracts with global companies operating in Selangor.
What Is BLAST?
BLAST is a six-month programme that guides 12 selected SMEs through the requirements of strategic corporate partners. The goal is to help them win real contracts and achieve a 5% revenue increase by 2030.
“When our SMEs can meet the standards of the leading companies operating in Selangor, they can meet the standards of the world. BLAST is not only preparing our SMEs to become suppliers. It is preparing them to become globally competitive.”
Who Are the Key Partners?
BLAST focuses on four strategic sectors: aerospace, rail, life sciences and digital technology. Here are the corporate partners backing the programme:
| Sector | Corporate Partner |
|---|---|
| Aerospace | Base Maintenance Malaysia Sdn Bhd, Sime UMW Aerospace |
| Life Sciences | Duopharma Biotech Bhd |
| Digital Technology | Bridge Data Centres Malaysia Sdn Bhd |
| Rail | Malaysia Rail Link Sdn Bhd |
Ecosystem partners include the Malaysian Bioeconomy Development Corporation, Malaysia Aerospace Industry Association, National Tech Association of Malaysia, and the Malaysian Rail Industry Corporation. The Malaysian Technology Development Corporation (MTDC) leads the management and implementation of the programme.
Why This Matters for Malaysian SMEs
Selangor’s economy is growing — with a GDP of RM460.1 billion and RM33.5 billion in approved investments in 2025. But the real measure of success, says Ng, is not just the numbers. “The real test is how many contracts our local companies win. It is how many Selangor SMEs enter the supply chains of the global companies we bring in.” As Ng puts it, every investment must put down roots — buy from local suppliers, hire local talent, and transfer knowledge to local firms. For SMEs, that means a clear path from supplier to partner, and from partner to champion.
How to Get Involved
The programme guides 12 companies over six months. A key milestone is the business matching sessions in October 2026, held at the Selangor International Business Summit (SIBS) at the Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre (Oct 14-17). Whether you’re in aerospace, rail, life sciences, or digital technology, BLAST helps you meet the standards of world-class companies and grow your business.
Take the Next Step
Ready to scale up and enter global supply chains? Learn how to prepare your business at autorunbiz.com.
“`
Let’s review the changes I made.
1. Title: Changed from “Selangor Launches BLAST Programme for SMEs to Integrate into Global Supply Chains” to the exact Bernama article title: “Selangor Launches ‘BLAST’ To Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains”. This includes the specific keywords “Selangor”, “BLAST”, “Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains”.
2. First paragraph: Changed “Selangor’s BLAST programme is designed to help local SMEs build capacity, compete globally, and integrate into high-value global supply chains.” to “Selangor has launched the Invest Selangor Business Linkages and Advancement Programme (BLAST) to build the capacity and competitiveness of local small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and integrate them into high-value global supply chains.”
Why is this better for SEO?
– Uses the keyphrase “Selangor” + “Launches” + “BLAST” + “Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains” in the title.
– The first 28 words of the body contain “Selangor”, “launched”, “BLAST”, “integrate”, “global supply chains”, “SMEs”.
Is there any other part that might be improved for SEO?
“Focus keyphrase into title and first 60 words”.
Title: perfect.
First 60 words: I can change “If you’re an SME owner looking to scale, this programme can help you land contracts with global companies operating in Selangor.” to something that better incorporates the keyphrase.
Wait, the original text is from the source article: “Selangor has launched the Invest Selangor Business Linkages and Advancement Programme (BLAST) to build the capacity and competitiveness of local small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and integrate them into high-value global supply chains.”
Let’s check the word count.
“Selangor has launched the Invest Selangor Business Linkages and Advancement Programme (BLAST) to build the capacity and competitiveness of local small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and integrate them into high-value global supply chains. If you’re an SME owner looking to scale, this programme helps you land contracts with global companies operating in Selangor.”
Total words: 28 + 16 = 44 words.
Contains all keyphrase components: Selangor, BLAST, integrate, local SMEs, global supply chains.
What about alternative keyphrases?
“Selangor BLAST programme”
“Selangor SME global supply chains”
The title “Selangor Launches ‘BLAST’ To Integrate Local SMEs Into Global Supply Chains” is a very strong exact match query.
The first sentence of the body can also serve as the meta description if pulled.
Let’s look at the user’s constraints again.
“Fix
