*What the data actually shows:* - AI-integrated SaaS grew 40% YoY, but thin AI content gets penalized (Google's 2025 update) - Companies using AI publish 3.2x more content, but cost per article dropped from $157 to $12-18 - The bottleneck shifted from writing (AI handles this) to idea generation (still hard)
*What's actually working:* - Semi-automated ideation → AI research → LLM drafting with brand fine-tuning → Human editing → Auto-scheduling - Automate 70%, but that 30% human touch is non-negotiable for anything that matters
*The honest breakdown:* AI excels at: Blog drafts, social scheduling, email personalization, video repurposing Still needs humans: Brand storytelling, complex sales, community management, crisis comms
*My minimal working stack (<$200/mo):* - ChatGPT/Claude Pro ($20) + SurferSEO ($89) - Native APIs + Buffer free tier - Google Analytics + Search Console
The differentiator in 2026 isn't access to GPT-4 (we all have that). It's orchestration, brand fine-tuning, and knowing where/when to inject human judgment.
*Questions for the HN crowd:* - What's your actual content automation stack? - Where are you seeing real ROI vs. hype? - What's still broken in 2026?
Curious to hear what's working in production vs. what's still just demoware.
RovaAI•3h ago
What works: use AI to mine your own existing channels first. Take your email replies, support threads, sales call transcripts - run them through Claude with a "what pain points recur most" prompt. You get a priority-ranked content backlog in 20 minutes that's grounded in what your audience actually says out loud.
Most people reach for AI to generate ideas and then struggle with quality. The teams getting real ROI flip it: use traditional signal (replies, reviews, community posts) to source the ideas, then AI to execute faster.
On the stack question - the distribution layer is where money is worth spending, not the generation layer. $89/month on SurferSEO to surface the right ideas beats $200/month on better generators every time.