The Multi-Site Content Challenge
Content agencies and power bloggers face a common problem: you have multiple websites, each with a different niche, audience, and publishing schedule. Managing them individually is unsustainable at scale.
Blogree was built specifically to solve this. Every feature in the platform is designed with multi-site workflows in mind.
How Multi-Site Publishing Works in Blogree
When you connect multiple websites to Blogree, each site gets its own API key, webhook endpoint, and niche profile. Here is what that unlocks:
Site-Specific Niche Detection — Blogree detects the niche for each connected site independently. Your tech blog gets tech topics. Your finance site gets finance topics. No crossover.
Selective Publishing — When publishing a post, you can choose to deliver to one site, a subset of sites, or all connected sites simultaneously. One click, multiple deliveries.
Per-Site Analytics — The analytics dashboard shows delivery success, failure, and retry status broken down by site. You always know the state of every piece of content.
Setting Up Multiple Sites
In Blogree, go to Sites and click Add Site for each website you manage. The setup for each site takes under 5 minutes. For Next.js sites, install the adapter. For WordPress, paste the webhook URL in your settings.
Publishing Strategy for Agencies
For agencies managing client sites, we recommend creating a publishing calendar per site rather than publishing everything at once. Use Blogree's scheduling feature to spread delivery across the week, ensuring each site gets fresh content at the optimal time for its audience timezone.
Delivery Reliability
Every post is delivered via HMAC-SHA256 signed webhook. If a delivery fails, Blogree retries automatically at 30 seconds, then 5 minutes, then 30 minutes. Failed deliveries are flagged in your dashboard with the failure reason so you can investigate and manually retry if needed.
Ready to automate your blog?
Start publishing AI-generated, SEO-optimized posts to any platform — free.
Start Free — No Credit Card →