Content Marketing
Fractional content marketing leadership for B2B SaaS teams who are done publishing content that never moves pipeline. Built on subject matter expertise, AI-powered systems, and demand generation that compounds across the full funnel.
Fractional engagement. Built for founders and CMOs, not content calendars.
Trusted by B2B SaaS teams
The symptoms look familiar. Traffic is flat or declining. Rankings that used to hold are slipping. The blog publishes every week and nothing moves. Paid search results look fine, but pipeline feels thinner than it should.
None of this is a content volume problem. It's a content model problem. Three things changed at the same time:
Generic how-to posts, top-ten listicles, and keyword-stuffed explainers used to catch intent. Now buyers ask ChatGPT or Claude instead, and the answer never sends them to your site.
Organic reach is limited and shrinking. Most SaaS content teams are still building content libraries instead of building audiences.
It harvests whatever demand already exists. If it's your primary growth engine, you're draining a pool you're not refilling.
The goal isn't more content. The goal is a system that generates demand before anyone knows they need you, then captures it when they do. That system runs on three commitments most content operations skip:
Every piece of content has a real expert perspective behind it — an earned opinion, original data, or an experience the internet can't already answer. If it could have been written by a generalist with a ChatGPT tab open, it shouldn't be published.
AI is not a typewriter. It's an operating system for marketing teams when given the right context — brand, audience, positioning, writing standards — and kept in a loop where humans decide what to build and what to trust.
Content is designed to create intent, not just meet it. That means planning for YouTube, LinkedIn, Reddit, and video alongside the blog. Distribution as a first-class output, not an afterthought.
Most content operations concentrate 80% of effort on one or two stages and leave the rest of the buyer journey uncovered. A real content engine covers all seven stages of the bowtie.
Awareness. LinkedIn, YouTube, podcasts, paid social, zero-click formats. Demand generation begins outside the funnel entirely.
Education. SME-led articles, original research, webinars, expert roundups that introduce the category on your terms.
Selection. Case studies, comparison pages, product demos, third-party reviews, LLM-optimized content.
Sales enablement, proposal content, ROI proof points, competitive battlecards, and executive briefings. Strong upstream content means buyers arrive warm and ready.
Onboarding. Tutorials, in-app education, milestone checklists.
Impact. Advanced use cases, community content, case study programs.
Expansion. Feature education, cross-sell sequences, renewal content, referral programs.
A fractional content operation for B2B SaaS, delivered as a monthly partnership. Four components, working together across the full funnel:
POV development, topic pillars, publishing standards, audience definition, and a quarterly editorial roadmap tied to pipeline and retention goals. The strategy doc everyone on the team actually uses.
Interviews with your subject matter experts, original data, and earned opinions turned into articles that rank, get cited, and earn trust. Built to pass the three-question publishing filter.
Scripts, formats, and repurposing systems for the channels where your buyers are educating themselves. Executive visibility is part of this. So is a real distribution plan.
Context docs, agentic workflows, and repeatable operations that turn hours of manual work into minutes. Built inside your team's tools, with your brand, voice, and positioning loaded in deliberately.
The first question is always: what is the single most important thing content needs to accomplish in the next 90 days?
No AI-generated articles that recombine what already exists. Real opinions, from real experts, built on real data.
Every piece is designed with its distribution plan before the first word is written.
The quality of AI output is capped by the quality of the context you give it.
Executive visibility is a content channel, and it's built into the work.
AI and systems handle execution. Direction, quality, and what-to-build-next stay human.
A fractional retainer. You're not hiring a production shop. You're bringing in content marketing leadership that builds the strategy, installs the systems, and runs the operation alongside your team.
No — and that's the point. Strong content comes from your subject matter experts. The job is to extract their thinking through interviews, structure it, pressure-test it, and ship it through a system that preserves their voice and POV.
SEO agencies optimize for keyword rankings. This engagement optimizes for demand generated and pipeline influenced across the full funnel. Rankings are a byproduct.
Short-term indicators — engagement on LinkedIn, cited mentions, inbound interest from warm leads — usually show up within the first 60–90 days. Pipeline impact compounds over 6–12 months.
Yes, as part of a system with human judgment on top and expert input at the source. No, as a way to generate articles from thin air. AI built on original thinking, original data, and deep brand context accelerates without diluting.
Yes, if they're willing to start. Executive visibility is one of the highest-leverage channels in B2B right now. If the leadership team refuses to show up, the engine runs with one cylinder offline.
Both. Onboarding, impact, and expansion content are part of the engagement by default. Content that helps customers reach value faster is some of the highest-ROI work a SaaS content operation can do.
Pricing depends on scope, team size, and the mix of the four pillars. Covered on the strategy call once the priorities are clear.
Get Started
The strategy call is a focused 30-minute conversation. We look at what's working, what's quietly failing, and whether a fractional content engagement is the right investment for where the business is today. No pitch deck. No generic framework.
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