Most technical founders do not ignore SEO because they think it is useless.
They ignore it because it often feels like a second product: audits, keyword tools, content calendars, technical checks, backlinks, reporting, and now AI search visibility.
If you are building a SaaS product, that is too much process.
What you need is a small operating loop that fits around product work.
The loop
Use this sequence every week:
- Audit the site for blockers.
- Pick keywords based on customer intent.
- Publish or improve one useful page.
- Track movement.
- Improve what is close to working.
That is it.
The hard part is not understanding SEO. The hard part is making it repeatable while you are still shipping product.
1. Audit only what can block discovery
Technical SEO matters, but it can easily become a rabbit hole. Google's own SEO starter guide is a useful reminder that the basics are still about making pages easy to crawl, understand, and use.
For early SaaS teams, prioritize:
- Broken important pages
- Blocked indexation
- Missing or duplicated title tags at scale
- Broken internal links
- Slow templates
- Incorrect canonicals
- Pages that cannot be crawled
Do not spend a week chasing cosmetic audit warnings unless they affect pages with real search intent or business value. When a page matters commercially, check the fundamentals: crawlability, indexability, canonicalization, internal links, and whether Search Console can inspect it. Google's crawling and indexing documentation is the reference point here.
2. Choose keywords like a product person
Start with intent, not volume. Ahrefs has a good beginner-friendly keyword research guide, but the practical founder version is simple: a keyword is only useful if it maps to a real customer question.
Useful SaaS keyword groups:
- Problem-aware: people describing a pain
- Solution-aware: people looking for a tool or method
- Comparison: people choosing between options
- Trust: people checking examples, pricing, reviews, or use cases
A low-volume keyword can be more valuable than a high-volume one if it is closer to purchase. This is why search intent matters more than raw traffic estimates for early SaaS teams.
3. Publish pages that answer real buying questions
Good SaaS SEO is not just blog content.
It includes:
- Use-case pages
- Comparison pages
- Integration pages
- Tutorials
- Checklists
- Product-led guides
- Pages that answer implementation questions
The best content helps someone move from "I have this problem" to "I understand my options."
4. Track the few numbers that change decisions
Do not create a reporting ritual nobody uses.
Track:
- Pages gaining impressions but not clicks
- Keywords ranking on page two
- Pages attracting traffic but not converting
- Content themes that are compounding
- Important pages that are not indexed or moving
Tools like Wisseo are useful when you want keyword research, audits, content analysis, rank tracking, and AI visibility monitoring in one workflow. For small teams, the value is not more dashboards. It is knowing what to do next.
5. Treat AI search visibility as part of SEO
Search behavior is changing. Buyers now ask Google, ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, and other systems for recommendations, alternatives, summaries, and buying advice.
That means your website needs to be easy to understand.
Google's guidance for AI features in Search points in the same direction: keep the fundamentals strong, make content helpful and reliable, and ensure structured data matches what users can actually see on the page.
Make sure your site clearly explains:
- Who the product is for
- What problem it solves
- Which use cases it supports
- How it compares to alternatives
- What proof exists
- Where the product is mentioned elsewhere
AI systems tend to summarize what is already clear, visible, and corroborated.
Weekly routine
Here is the practical version:
- Monday: review movement
- Tuesday: fix one blocker
- Wednesday: improve one existing page
- Thursday: publish one new asset
- Friday: build one signal
That is enough to keep the loop alive.
SEO becomes useful when it stops being a mystery project and becomes a habit.
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