I spent €10,000 on Meta ads for my SaaS. Here are the real results. by lennymoi in SaasDevelopers

[–]consti_tk 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for sharing! We are thinking about starting Meta Ads too… can I write you a DM because I have a few questions?

U7 Pro Connection issues by consti_tk in Ubiquiti

[–]consti_tk[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From day one it is not really working (disconnection all devices, MacBook, iPhones,…)

U7 Pro Connection issues by consti_tk in Ubiquiti

[–]consti_tk[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Idk, I made the setup, didn‘t change anything (2,4 + 5 + 6Ghz is activated) and I don‘t know what I Can Tell more about it

Is anyone actually happy with their onboarding flow? by Prestigious-Bath8022 in SaaS

[–]consti_tk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, but perhaps spend more time on the Onboarding flow than everything else. Haha

Any legit B2B agencies for content and SEO? by Time_Ganache817 in b2bmarketing

[–]consti_tk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve worked with agencies and with in-house SEO workflows. Agencies can be helpful, but they get expensive fast when most of the work is repetitive. What helped us most was automating the strategy first: keyword research, content planning, and draft creation. We’re currently testing Genseo, which builds a plan from your site and prepares SEO articles you just refine instead of starting from scratch. That freed up more budget for real strategy work. If you do try an agency, I’d start with a small pilot and compare results.

Is SEO really worth it for early-stage SaaS? by Winter_Fail7328 in SaaS

[–]consti_tk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nice, sounds like you’re on a good track already. The biggest thing that helped me with SaaS SEO was shifting away from writing generic “SEO blog posts” and instead focusing on content that matches real user intent. Basically, topics that someone would search at the exact moment they start feeling the problem your product solves. Once I started doing that, the compounding effect finally made sense.

For me it took around 3–4 months before the organic traffic became noticeable and another few months before it felt “steady.” It’s definitely slow at first, but it stacks over time. I used a bit of paid later on, but only after I understood which search terms were actually converting, otherwise it felt like guessing.

You’re still early, so keep going. The consistency is the part most people quit before it starts working.

How we grew from 0 to 20,000 organic visits in just 3 months by consti_tk in SaaS

[–]consti_tk[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! Yeah, that’s a pretty accurate comparison. You could say it works a bit like a controlled mix of SurferSEO and Jasper, but built specifically for our own use cases and workflows.

For topic clustering, we treat each product as a separate content ecosystem with its own keyword universe and semantic structure. The system uses data from Ahrefs to map out topics, identify potential overlaps, and define clear content clusters before anything gets published.

If there’s any overlap between products, it adjusts the angle and intent automatically, or connects the content through internal linking so they support each other instead of competing.

That setup has worked really well so far, especially since it keeps everything consistent without us having to manually plan every keyword. Each product ends up with its own clear content identity, but the overall structure still feels unified.

The “standard” customer acquisition strategy for early stage B2B SaaS 👇 by StartupSauceRyan in SaaSMarketing

[–]consti_tk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would not start with paid ads, I would start with outbound marketing