close
‹ Go Back

Subscribe For Exclusive Trends, Research & Data

Gain access to exclusive research, training, trends and support from the best marketers in the world.

Foundation Labs provides you with timely, meaningful, and relevant data that enables you to grow your company in a meaningful way. The world’s top SaaS companies subscribe to Foundation Labs to receive industry news and data driven insights to create a marketing culture that drives results.

We have two different plans:

Foundation Labs: Insider Subscription

Exclusive B2B SaaS growth, SEO & content case studies​
→ Quarterly reports on data-backed B2B SaaS trends, correlations & more​
→ Weekly Insiders-only email on trends, data & research​
→ Insiders-only webinars on B2B SaaS content marketing​
→ Two weekly newsletters with case studies & SaaS stories​

SUBSCRIBE $79/mo
SUBSCRIBE $828 annually
Foundation Labs: Inner Circle Subscription

Exclusive B2B SaaS growth, SEO & content case studies​
→ Quarterly reports on data-backed B2B SaaS trends, correlations & more​
→ Weekly Insiders-only email on trends, data & research​
→ Insiders-only webinars on B2B SaaS content marketing​
→ Two weekly newsletters with case studies & SaaS stories​
→ Invite-only fireside chats with marketing leaders at B2B SaaS giants
→ SaaS reports breaking down what’s working across industries today

SUBSCRIBE $329/mo
SUBSCRIBE $3348 annually

AI Copywriting Is Coming For SEO | Vol 105

Free Content

Welcome to Volume 105 

In case you were wondering, this newsletter has never been written by an AI tool. 

How do I know this?

  1. My fingers are currently on the keyboard typing these words
  2. Previous experiences with AI tools have produced content that’s not exactly…newsletter worthy. 

Not quite at this level, but close: 

To be fair, this was quite a few years ago, and there was most likely some user error involved as well. That said, it’s had a formative impact on how I view these tools, and I’ve resigned myself to resist them for as long as possible. 

But that could, and likely will, change in the not-so-distant future. 

For newsletters. 

For blog posts. 

For any type of text based content.

In today’s newsletter, we’re leading off with a look at the world of AI copywriting and its downstream impact on Google, SEO tactics, and my job security (…hehe…). 

Here’s a quick peek at what’s to come in this issue:  


The Uncertain Future of AI, Copywriting, and SEO

You’ll be hard-pressed to find a technology that has shaped the marketing field (and quite a few others) more than the search engine. Since its inception, our industry has been laser-focused on tailoring online content that satisfies these search engines. 

SEO, content marketing, link building, and many other sub-disciplines have emerged to leverage the powerful search engine algorithm. 

But an equally powerful technology is looming: Artificial Intelligence. 

The tech has gone from the stuff of science fiction to a disruptive technology impacting countless industries. Naturally, entrepreneurs, experts, and enthusiasts have found plenty of use cases in the marketing industry, particularly in the copywriting space. 

GPT-3, the model for training natural language processing algorithms developed by OpenAI, is now used across popular tools for copywriting, blog writing, editing, and many other semantic tasks. Copy.AI, Jasper, Copysmith, Writesonic, and the like now apply algorithms, trained using over 175 billion parameters, to generate copy that looks more and more human each time you use it. 

Naturally, improving these tools is stressful for writers (yours truly included), but it may also have downstream effects on SEO efforts. 

When the SEO industry reckoned with black hat tactics, Google rolled out algorithm updates like Panda and Farmer to penalize content spinners. These updates brought a semblance of order to the SEO space, allowing companies that invest in quality content a path to success. 

Now it’s the robots that are doing the spinning, and they’re fast learners. 

In the coming months and years, it seems like a certainty that Google will need to address the use of AI copywriters and, in turn, marketing as a whole. We’re about to enter an arms race between the most powerful search engine in the world and ever-improving language-processing AI. 

SEO and content marketing will be caught in the crossfire. 

Become An Insider
Access Everything You Need to Scale Your Content Marketing Team

LinkedIn Strategy For SaaS Brands — How To Do It Right 

Stop me if you’ve heard this before: 

“Our brand shares content on LinkedIn 2-3 times a week, but the engagement’s just not there.”

It’s something we hear over and over again at Foundation. What is nominally a LinkedIn strategy is little more than uploading a content calendar to Buffer, HootSuite, or some other scheduling tool and then going for a coffee break. 

Of course, we all know there’s more to social than that. Spaces like LinkedIn are prime real estate for building brand awareness, promoting products and job openings, and fostering a community of professionals. 

Still, there’s a big difference between knowing what to do and actually putting it to practice. One of the first steps towards achieving LinkedIn success is understanding The 4 E’s of content creation — educate, engage, entertain, empower.

LinkedIn is overflowing with tired, regurgitated content, it’s true. But if you take some time to sift through all the posts, you’ll notice that the companies, groups, and individuals who consistently perform well apply The 4 E’s. 

In the latest post for Foundation Insider and Inner Circle, we go over the different LinkedIn brands and accounts that use engaging, entertaining, empowering, or educational content to build clout in one of the most crowded professional platforms. We dissect how: 

  • Gong creates educational content that provides immediate value to their followers
  • The rise of “LinkedIn Rap” and other forms of entertainment that captivate users
  • The LinkedIn influencers who use engaging content to spark conversations 
  • How The Female Lead empowers millions of LinkedIn users with every post

Become An Insider
Get access to our next generation of intensive industry research reports and SaaS case studies

How PLG Companies Use Websites to Convert New Users

I’m a long-form content guy at heart, so anytime I come across an example of value-packed writing, I feel obliged to share. This week, it’s OpenView’s blog about product-led companies using branding to drive conversions. 

As the de facto experts in product-led investment (and the creators of the phrase), OpenView has played a significant role in the success of major PLG brands like Calendly, Expensify, and Datadog. They understand what it takes for a company to lean on their core product to expand its user base. 

People often forget that the OpenView team are also experts in product-led marketing

They know that even the best products need support from marketing, growth, and sales teams. For the former, it’s all about meeting potential users with powerful messaging at the most critical stage in their journey: the first visit to a brand’s website. 

PLG brands want to get their web traffic to a sign-up or free-trial CTA as quickly as possible. The faster they become a user, the better. After all, the product does most of the selling, right?

Key word being most.  

Powerful messaging and proper positioning are still what get those visitors over the threshold and into the conversion funnel. 

Check out the post from the experts at OpenView to learn how the marketing teams from PLG unicorns leverage brand messaging and web page design to convert traffic!


OTHER NEWS OF THE WEEK: 


BRAIN FOOD OF THE WEEK

Given the big splash made by Canva last month in their Design Suite announcement, we figured it’s time to revisit a gem from co-founder Melanie Perkins. 

On the Smart Company blog, the leader of the massive design company opens up about her experiences as an outsider in the male-dominated tech space. 

Whether you’re dealing with discrimination due to gender, race, religion, socioeconomic status, sexual orientation, or any other reason, Melanie lists the strategies she used to break through and become a global leader in the SaaS space. Here’s a quick look at some jewels of insight from that list: 

  • Don’t worry about being liked by everyone
  • Concentrate on your goals, not popularity
  • In the end, determination wins
  • If you need to place blame, blame things you can fix (my personal favorite)

Find the rest of Melanie’s insights here!


TWITTER THREAD OF THE WEEK

Speaking of Canva, check out this Janet Lee thread on her top design tool hacks!


INTERESTING FINDS ACROSS THE INTERNET


IN CASE YOU MISSED SOME OF OUR GREATEST HITS:


WHAT WE’RE WIRED INTO THIS  WEEK 🎧:

Fire for you — Cannons


This week’s round-up is brought to you by Ethan Crump while Jessica gets some well-deserved PTO !

Did you enjoy this post?

Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est eopksio laborum. Sed ut perspiciatis unde omnis istpoe natus error sit voluptatem accusantium doloremque eopsloi

Learn How The Best B2B SaaS Companies Do Marketing.

Subscribe today to get access to some of the best content on B2B growth & tech.
Top